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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75982 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+STANDARD
+
+NOVELS.
+
+N^o CXIV.
+
+“No kind of literature is so generally attractive as Fiction. Pictures of
+life and manners, and Stories of adventure, are more eagerly received by
+the many than graver productions, however important these latter may be.
+APULEIUS is better remembered by his fable of Cupid and Psyche than by
+his abstruser Platonic writings; and the Decameron of BOCCACCIO has outlived
+the Latin Treatises, and other learned works of that author.”
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHAPERON.
+
+COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME.
+
+
+LONDON:
+RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET;
+AND BELL & BRADFUTE, EDINBURGH.
+1849.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICE.
+
+
+The Proprietors of CIRCULATING LIBRARIES in all parts of the country
+are compelled by the new Copyright Act to discontinue purchasing and
+lending out a single copy of a foreign edition of an English work. _The
+mere having it in their possession ticketed and marked as a library
+book_ exposes them to
+
+ A PENALTY OF TEN POUNDS.
+
+By the new Copyright Act and the new Customs Act, even single copies of
+pirated editions of English Works are prohibited both in Great Britain
+and the Colonies. Copies so attempted to be passed are seized.
+
+☞ These measures will be rigidly enforced.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ _Clara Cawse, pinx._ _G. Cook sc._
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHAPERON.
+
+_Isabella looked surpassingly beautiful when bending over the marble
+basin, while she laughingly twisted dahlias into her hair._
+
+_London, Published by Richard Bentley, 1848_]
+
+
+
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS
+
+ OF
+
+ A CHAPERON.
+
+
+ EDITED BY
+
+ LADY DACRE.
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET;
+ AND BELL & BRADFUTE, EDINBURGH.
+ 1849.
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ SPOTTISWOODE and SHAW,
+ New-street-Square.
+
+
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS
+
+OF
+
+A CHAPERON.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
+
+
+I was left a widow with seven daughters. I have married them all, or
+rather, I have let them marry themselves; for I never took any active
+measures towards bringing about a result which I own to be a desirable
+one in a family consisting of seven daughters and one son.
+
+I have seen manœuvring mothers succeed; but I have as often seen them
+fail in their matrimonial speculations. I have seen dignified mothers
+with modest daughters, pass year after year, unnoticed and unsought;
+but I have also seen the unobtrusive daughters of retiring mothers
+form splendid alliances; and at the very beginning of my career as a
+Chaperon, I came to the conclusion that, as there was no rule which
+could ensure success, it was safer and more respectable to do too
+little than to do too much; better simply to fail, than to fail and to
+be ridiculous at the same time.
+
+Accordingly, when I had mounted my feathered hat and black velvet gown,
+or my white satin gown and flowered cap, as the occasion might require,
+and patiently taken my station upon the chair, seat, or bench which I
+could most conveniently appropriate to myself, I beguiled the weary
+hours by studying those around me, trusting for the rest to chance, and
+to the principles which I had endeavoured to impress upon the minds of
+my girls; viz. not to flirt so as to attract attention,—not to think
+too highly of their own pretensions,—and, above all, not to be betrayed
+into laughing at any man before they knew him, by which means more
+than one girl of my acquaintance has been obliged, for consistency’s
+sake, to repulse a person whom, upon further acquaintance, she might
+have sincerely preferred.
+
+My daughters were not beautiful enough, nor did they marry brilliantly
+enough, to excite the jealousy of other mothers. I had brought them
+up to avoid a fault odious in all, but especially so in the young,
+that of being more ready to perceive the failings than the merits of
+their companions: we were, therefore, a popular family. I had myself
+the happy knack of being interested in the concerns and distresses of
+others, and I listened with pleasure to details however trifling: I had
+consequently many intimate friends.
+
+As people never were afraid of me, transient emotions, and harmless
+weaknesses, which would have been concealed from a sterner, cleverer,
+or more important personage, were confessed, or, at all events,
+permitted to escape in a _tête-à-tête_ with the good-natured, quiet,
+inoffensive Mrs. ——. But what am I doing? I wish to preserve my incog.,
+and only hope I have not already betrayed myself by the mention of my
+white satin, and my black velvet gowns.
+
+I will write no more, lest some unguarded expression should give a
+clue to my name: I will simply add, that my last daughter having
+been comfortably established a year ago, “Othello’s occupation is
+gone;” and my purse being somewhat drained by the purchase of so many
+_trousseaux_, I have occupied my leisure, and, I trust, shall recruit
+my finances, by portraying characters and feelings which I believe are
+true to nature, although under circumstances and in situations not
+founded on fact.
+
+
+
+
+THE SINGLE WOMAN
+
+OF
+
+A CERTAIN AGE.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ _Duke._ And what’s her history.
+
+ _Viola._ A blank, my lord.
+
+Why is it that the bustling matron, who (having, without preference
+or selection, married the first man who proposed to her,) has spent
+her days in the unsentimental details of a household, a nursery, and
+a school-room, merely considering her partner as the medium through
+which the several departments are provided for?—why is it that the
+languid beauty, who has sold herself to age or folly for an opera-box,
+an equipage, a title?—why is it that the scold, who has jangled through
+a wedded life of broils and disputes—and the buxom widow, whose gay
+and blooming face gives the lie to her mourning garments?—why is it
+that they all cast a pitying glance of contempt on the “single woman
+of a certain age” who ventures an opinion on the subject of love? Why
+do they all look as if it were impossible she could ever have felt its
+influence?
+
+On the contrary, the very fact of singleness affords in itself
+presumptive evidence of the power of some strong and unfortunate
+predilection. Few women pass through life without having had some
+opportunities of what is commonly called “settling;” therefore the
+chances are, that betrayed affections, an unrequited attachment, or
+an early prepossession, has called forth the sentiment of which they
+are supposed incapable—and called it forth, too, in a mind of too much
+delicacy to admit the idea of marriage from any other motive than that
+of love.
+
+The following story, which is ushered into the world by so unattractive
+a title, might afford an example, that a life which appears “a blank”
+in the history of events, may be far from “a blank” in the history of
+feelings.
+
+By the death of her father, Lord T——, Isabella St. Clair found herself,
+at the age of nineteen, an orphan possessed of a considerable fortune,
+of great personal attractions, and of all the accomplishments which,
+in these days of education and refinement, are expected to grace young
+ladies of fashion. Her brother, the young Lord T——, was not of an age
+to serve as her protector, and accordingly she removed to the house of
+her uncle and guardian, Sir Edward Elmsley.
+
+Sir Edward and Lady Elmsley were of that respectable class of English
+gentry who, by not attempting to move in a more elevated circle than
+that in which they are naturally placed, command the esteem and respect
+of those above, as well as of those below them. Their daughter Fanny,
+although of the same age as her cousin Isabella, had not yet been
+initiated into the pleasures and the pains of a London campaign.
+
+Isabella, who had been accustomed to a life of excitement, was not
+sorry, at the expiration of her mourning for her father, to join in
+whatever gaiety was going forward, and to exercise once more the power
+of that beauty which, even in London, had attracted its full share of
+admiration.
+
+In the country, where beauty, rank, fashion, fortune, and
+accomplishments are not so common, of course the brilliant Miss
+St. Clair was the star of every ball; and all the young men of any
+pretensions in the county vied with each other in obtaining a word, a
+smile, a look from the lovely Isabella.
+
+Nor did the charms with which she was really endowed lose any thing
+from want of skill in the possessor. She had the art of keeping an
+indefinite number of persons occupied with her alone; she had left her
+shawl in the next room, and, with a thousand graceful apologies, she
+asked one person to fetch it for her, at the same time holding her cup
+in a helpless manner, and casting a beseeching glance around her, which
+brought a hundred eager hands to set it down. Then she looked timidly
+confused at having given so much trouble. Presently she had a message
+to send to her cousin Fanny, with which she despatched one admirer,
+while she hinted in a low voice to another, who was pressing her to
+stand up in the next quadrille, that she did not like to do so while
+Fanny was sitting still. The devoted youth flew to dance with Fanny,
+claiming as his reward the hand of Isabella for the ensuing waltz. She
+knew how to pique and to excite the vanity of each: to one she implied
+she had heard something of him which certainly had very much surprised
+her; to another that she understood he had been abusing her horridly;
+she playfully scolded a third for not admiring Fanny half as much as
+he ought, and wondered how he could be so blind. She assured a fourth
+that he and all the world had quite mistaken her disposition; indeed,
+that scarcely any one did understand her; implying there was depth of
+character and feeling beyond the reach of the multitude, and thereby
+piquing and interesting the sentimental youth to discover these hidden
+treasures.
+
+Fanny, meanwhile, placid and contented, enjoyed what she met with
+that was agreeable, without its ever crossing her imagination to feel
+envy or jealousy of her cousin. She was not mortified, for she saw
+her so beautiful, so brilliant, that all rivalry seemed out of the
+question. They were happy and affectionate with each other. Isabella,
+constitutionally gay, good-humoured, and joyous, was never crossed
+or thwarted by Fanny, and, although an acute observer might discover
+in her fondness for her cousin, a tone of superiority, a protecting
+kindness, Fanny so completely acquiesced in that superiority, that it
+never for a moment wounded her self-love.
+
+About a year after Isabella’s arrival at Elmsley Priory, the society
+of that neighbourhood received a very animating addition in the young
+Lord Delaford, who, soon after his return from his travels, established
+himself at his beautiful Castle of Fordborough. He joined to the
+most prepossessing appearance and manners, an excellent character,
+considerable talents, and extensive possessions. He paid a visit to Sir
+Edward Elmsley, and of course Isabella counted upon him as her devoted
+slave, and thought such a conquest was not to be neglected.
+
+She was rather surprised that he handed the quiet Fanny to dinner,
+but she satisfactorily accounted for this circumstance by supposing
+he considered it a courtesy to which the young lady of the house was
+entitled. But when, in the course of the evening, he voluntarily
+seated himself by Fanny, and appeared interested by her conversation,
+she certainly was very much astonished, and not much pleased.
+
+To Lord Delaford, who had lately come into the country, wearied and
+disgusted with the dissipation of Paris, and the turmoil of London,
+the style, the vivacity, and even the beauty of Isabella, were too
+much what he had been in the habit of seeing every day, to possess any
+peculiar attractions for him; while the calm brow, the placid air, the
+perfect innocence and unconsciousness of Fanny’s manner, appeared to
+him as soothing and refreshing as the green trees and verdant meadows
+after the glare and confusion of the streets. In conversation he found
+her modest and well-informed, and he sought her society the next day
+and the next. By degrees his manner assumed a tone of admiration which,
+to a person accustomed as she was to be placed in the shade, had more
+than the usual effect attributed to admiration, that of enhancing the
+charms by which it was first excited.
+
+Those who imagine they do not please, often neglect the means by which
+they might do so; whereas, if they once become aware that all they say
+and do finds favour in the sight of others, they are no longer ashamed
+of being charming, or afraid to be agreeable.
+
+People in general were astonished at the wonderful improvement in
+Fanny, but her mother remarked that, when Lord Delaford entered the
+room, her soft brown eyes shone with a lustrous consciousness, that
+if he addressed her, the colour mounted in her pale and delicate
+complexion, and she understood full well the cause of this improvement.
+
+If Lord Delaford had been originally attracted by the unruffled
+placidity of her expression, he was infinitely more so by finding
+that his presence had the power of disturbing that placidity. Though
+he could not doubt that he possessed many qualities which might make
+him an object of preference to young ladies, and every adventitious
+qualification to make him approved of by the old; though he must have
+known he had been sighed for by daughters, and sought by mammas;
+still he was not one of those men who are piqued by coldness, and
+inflamed by the difficulty of winning the object. On the contrary,
+there was a natural diffidence about him which made him vulnerable
+to the attentions of women, and easily daunted by any appearance of
+disinclination.
+
+Fanny was too amiable and too humble ever to have felt jealous of her
+cousin, but she was not insensible to the pleasure of finding herself
+suddenly preferred by the one person whose favour all were desirous
+to gain. Every thing seemed to prosper to the utmost of her or her
+parents’ wishes. Lord Delaford became every day more serious in his
+attentions, and there appeared to be no reason why Fanny should not
+yield to the engrossing fascinations of a passion which, if felt for
+the first time at the age of twenty, combines with the freshness of a
+first love the depth and strength of which the more formed character is
+susceptible.
+
+In the mean time Isabella no longer found the same gratification in
+the insipid crowd of common-place admirers, whose suffrages had before
+elated her. She felt, truly enough, of how much more value were the
+sincere esteem and affection of one true heart, than all the frivolous
+admiration of people she did not care for; all her former conquests
+lost their value in her eyes; she, for the first time, felt herself the
+forgotten and neglected one. Vanity, like ambition, only becomes the
+more insatiable by being fed, and, as the single Mordecai, who refused
+to bow before the pomp of Haman, embittered all the glories of his
+triumph, so the one person who was proof against her charms outweighed,
+in her estimation, the herd who acknowledged their power.
+
+She had too much tact, too much knowledge of the world, too much
+spirit, to allow these feelings to be visible to the eyes of common
+observers. Lord Delaford and Fanny were so completely occupied with
+each other that they could not remark any thing about Isabella;
+but Lady Elmsley, with maternal quick-sightedness, perceived her
+mortification, and with pride, which may perhaps be pardoned in a
+mother, could not help being pleased that, at length, her daughter’s
+merits should be valued, as they deserved, above those of Isabella.
+
+Occasionally Isabella caught a glance of triumph which escaped from the
+eyes of Lady Elmsley, and she resolved to let slip no opportunity of
+gaining the attention of Lord Delaford.
+
+Mortification is but half felt while it is only felt in secret. It is
+not till we perceive it has been remarked by others, that it becomes
+one of the most painful sensations to which the weak, the vain, and the
+worldly, are liable, and one from which the most humble and pure minded
+can scarcely boast of being entirely free.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ _Gerarda._—Que todo se aprende hija y no hai cosa mas facil que
+ engañar a los hombres de que ellos tienen la culpa; porque como nos
+ han privado el estudio de los ciencios en que pudieramos divertir
+ nuestros ingenios sutiles, solo estudiamos una, que es la de
+ engañarlos, y como no hay mas de un libro, todas lo sabemos de memoria.
+
+ _Dorotea._—Nunca yo le he visto.
+
+ _Gerarda._—Pres es excellente letura, y de famosos capitulos.
+
+ _Dorotea._—Dime los titulos signiera.
+
+ _Gerarda._—De fingir amor al rico y no disgustar el pobre.
+
+ De desmayarse a su tiempo, y llorar sin causa.
+
+ De dar zelos al libre y al colerico satisfacciones.
+
+ De mirar dormido, y reir con donayre.
+
+ De estudiar vocablos y aprender bailes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Y de no enamorarse por ningun acontecimiento, porquè todo se va
+ perdido, sin otros muchos capitulos de mayor importancia.
+
+ LOPE DE VEGA.
+
+Isabella had attentively studied the character of Lord Delaford, and
+she felt sure that if she could once get him within her toils, she
+should be able to keep him there. She had discovered, that although
+too refined not to be disgusted by any open attempt to attract him,
+there was a considerable mixture of vanity and of humility in his
+composition; and she flattered herself she could work upon both these
+feelings.
+
+She one day happened to sit next him at dinner, and contrived, with a
+tact for which she was peculiar, to turn the conversation upon himself.
+She said she never knew any one of whom she was so much afraid: to
+which he replied,
+
+“That is very odd! I have always been reckoned a good-natured sort of
+fellow.”
+
+“Oh, yes!” she answered; “I am sure you are good-natured; but your very
+good-nature helps to frighten me. You are so unlike other people; and I
+feel so awed when you are present.”
+
+“Well, that is strange! I don’t think I ever awed any body before. Do I
+look so cross?”
+
+“Oh! it is not that; but you are so good; and you always say just what
+you should say, and no more. I should be afraid to utter, or to do any
+thing foolish before you.”
+
+“Well, I should be as useful to you as Prince Cheri’s ring in the fairy
+tale. It is a pity I am not always by your side!”
+
+“Oh! but then I should always be in a fright;—not that I mean it is a
+disagreeable sort of fright.” And she turned the conversation, fearful
+of showing any design of attracting him.
+
+In the evening, he, as usual, turned over the leaves of Fanny’s
+music-book, while she was singing, or forgot to turn them over, while
+gazing with delight upon those melting, yet innocent eyes, which met
+his so kindly and so trustingly—eyes, that looked as if there lurked in
+the heart beneath, depths of unawakened and unexplored feelings, which
+only waited to be excited.
+
+But when he was alone, the remarks of Isabella recurred to his
+recollection, and he wondered what in him could have struck her as
+being so singular and so reserved. The next day, when they were riding,
+he found himself near her, and reverted to the conversation of the
+preceding day.
+
+“I have been quite uneasy, Miss St. Clair, at finding I am so
+disagreeable as I must be, if I am the precise, formal, measured person
+you describe me to be.”
+
+A certain step is gained, when, instead of starting a new and
+indifferent subject, the topic of the preceding conversation is
+resumed. Most coquettes know, by intuition, that the best mode of
+accomplishing this is to talk to persons of themselves. Isabella’s
+heart beat quicker at finding how well she had succeeded in awakening
+his curiosity; but assuming a nonchalant manner, she answered,
+
+“Disagreeable! Surely I never could have said any thing half so
+uncivil?”
+
+“Oh, certainly you did not tell me in so many words that I was
+disagreeable; but you implied it.”
+
+“No, no! Indeed, I think I said every thing most flattering—that you
+were so very good.”
+
+“Well, I suppose if I am so very good, I must not consider being good,
+and being disagreeable, as synonymous terms; and yet you made it appear
+yesterday as if they were!”
+
+“Oh, Lord Delaford! how can you accuse me of saying any thing so
+shocking? I only declared you were so good, so superior, I was afraid
+of you.”
+
+“But a person who makes you fear him, must be disagreeable to you.”
+
+“No, indeed: I like to be awed. I am fond of an organ in a cathedral;
+and I admire lofty mountains, and beautiful stormy skies, and every
+thing that is grand and sublime in art and in nature! Could one
+bear to hear one’s own feeble voice mingle itself with the pealing
+reverberations of the organ in the glorious pile of St. Peter’s? And
+does one not feel one’s own nothingness when among the mountains, the
+torrents, the precipices, the peaks, the glaciers of the stupendous
+Alps? Yet surely these are pleasurable emotions! With me, at least, awe
+and pleasure are very compatible sensations.”
+
+As she spoke her large and brilliant eye glanced upwards for a moment,
+with an expression of lofty enthusiasm.
+
+Lord Delaford gazed upon her, and mentally exclaimed, “That girl has
+a soul!” Presently, relaxing into a smile, as if ashamed of her own
+eagerness, she added, “I believe Doctor Spurzheim would discover in me
+the bump of veneration;” and putting her horse into a canter, the whole
+party became mixed together, and she addressed herself to some one
+else. Lord Delaford mechanically found himself by the side of Fanny;
+but it was some time before they became engaged in any thing that
+deserved the name of conversation.
+
+By degrees, however, the unobtrusive gentleness of Fanny had its
+usual effect upon him; and they discoursed calmly and agreeably upon
+subjects of literature, or the immediate events of the neighbourhood;
+but that day there were none of those flattering turns of phrase,
+that deferential manner of listening, which, not appearing in the
+common-place form of compliment, have the effect of flattery, without
+putting one on one’s guard against it.
+
+Fanny returned from her ride less exhilarated than usual. She thought
+the wind was rather cold, and her beautiful, thorough-bred horse, not
+quite agreeable.
+
+At dinner Lord Delaford sat between Isabella and herself, and his
+attention was, to say the least, divided between the cousins. Isabella
+was in high spirits. She was animated by the desire and the hope of
+pleasing. She caught an uneasy look from Lady Elmsley, and she could
+not suppress an emotion of gratified pique. She had too much the
+tone of good society ever to run the risk of being noisy; her flow
+of spirits only showed itself by being exceedingly droll and lively;
+and though perhaps she amused in some degree at the expense of the
+absent, her dancing dark eyes glanced with such brilliancy, such
+merriment, such a look of gay archness, that no one could suspect her
+of harbouring a feeling of ill-nature towards any one. Nor in truth
+did she harbour any such feeling; she only wished to amuse; and there
+are few people who have not occasionally been led by the intoxicating
+pleasure of causing a laugh, into ridiculing persons towards whom
+they felt no ill-will. Lord Delaford was entertained, and laughed
+incessantly at her quaint ideas. He wondered why Fanny did not seem
+more to enjoy sallies which appeared to him so full of talent and of
+wit. He thought it argued a want of imagination, which disappointed
+him. Fanny meanwhile was depressed, she knew not why; but when she
+retired to rest, in the stillness of her chamber, she made a discovery
+as painful as it was humiliating.
+
+Surprised to find herself so very serious when others were so much
+amused, in doubt and trembling she looked into her own heart, and
+she found it to be nearly engrossed by one overwhelming passion.
+She had always intended to keep herself “fancy free” till she could
+devote her whole soul, her pure unhacknied affections, to one only
+object for ever. From the easy footing of society in a country-house,
+her intercourse with Lord Delaford had been free and unconstrained;
+his attentions, although constant, were not marked, and nothing had
+occurred to call her mind to the effect they were gradually, but
+surely, producing. It was not till the fear came over her that he did
+not care for her, that she discovered she had ever believed in his
+preference; it was not till she felt how inexpressibly painful was that
+fear, that she discovered her affections were fixed on one only object
+for ever.
+
+She was suddenly aroused from her fancied security, and found
+within the heart which she had imagined fresh and uncontaminated,
+love,—unrequited love, and jealousy,—jealousy of her dearest friend.
+She thought herself degraded. She was miserable. But she did not allow
+her mortification to swallow up all other feelings. Maidenly pride
+remained, and she determined he should never perceive the power she
+had allowed him to acquire over her.
+
+Lord Delaford, on his part, reflected upon the increased attractions of
+Isabella, and upon the want of vivacity of Fanny. Though no coxcomb,
+he thought it possible Fanny might entertain for him feelings which,
+his conscience told him, would have been wounded by the unusual degree
+in which he had been occupied with Isabella. His goodnatured heart
+smote him at the idea of giving pain to so gentle and lovely a being,
+and he joined the breakfast party the next morning full of kindness
+and interest for Fanny, flattered by the interpretation he had himself
+given to her coldness, and well prepared to return any indications of
+preference which he might perceive in her manner towards him.
+
+Fanny had schooled her heart, and the more she was really agitated, the
+more was she resolved to wear a calm exterior; the more she knew there
+was a sentiment within her bosom which could not be confessed, the
+more was she resolved no human eye should discover it. She was aware
+that sudden coolness might be construed into pique, and she determined
+to be merely careless and indifferent. She did not remember that she
+might, by this means, lose what most she wished to gain. She did not
+calculate. The abstract idea that any woman should love any man better
+than he loved her—that any woman should be won unwooed, roused her
+pride for the sex in general; and that she herself should be one of
+these poor, weak, infatuated creatures, gave her a sense of humiliation
+against which her very soul rebelled.
+
+Lord Delaford watched for some indications of the sentiments he had in
+his own mind attributed to her; but he found her as she intended to
+appear,—gay, careless, cold. He did not perceive any affectation in her
+gaiety, or any thing studied in her carelessness.
+
+Lady Elmsley precisely read the state of her heart, and put the right
+construction upon the trifles which constitute encouragement or
+repulse, and which denote preference or indifference; but Lord Delaford
+was quite puzzled, and somewhat mortified.
+
+It is said there is an instinct which teaches every one to read
+their fellow-creatures where love is concerned. This is true of
+all indifferent spectators, who can decipher emotions, often not
+acknowledged by the individuals to themselves. Not so the persons
+most interested. Sometimes they twist appearances to suit their hopes
+or fears. Sometimes, being aware that their judgment is likely to be
+prejudiced, they dare not trust to their natural impressions. Lord
+Delaford watched the countenance, the eyes, the expression, the words
+of Fanny for a day or two, and he became each day more convinced his
+own self-conceit must have misled him. He had studiously avoided such
+attentions as might commit him, and he now took care to divide them
+equally between the two cousins. To Fanny, who had been accustomed to
+his exclusive devotion, this was a virtual withdrawal of them; and
+she set a more strict watch than ever over all her words and looks.
+Isabella, who was exhilarated at receiving half, when she had been
+accustomed to none, was _pétillante de graces_. The more Fanny was
+aware of Isabella’s attractions, and the more she perceived that Lord
+Delaford became aware of them, so much the more she wrapped herself
+up in impenetrable, but good-humoured reserve. Her manner lost that
+confiding, innocent gaiety, which a short time before had been one
+of her greatest charms, without regaining the bashful ingenuousness,
+which had at first attracted him from its novelty. She laboured hard
+to appear calm, and unfortunately succeeded but too well in her
+endeavours. Lord Delaford was half provoked with himself for having
+been so ready to fancy he was irresistible; and half provoked with
+Fanny, for having given rise to his dissatisfaction with himself.
+
+He was in this frame of mind when an accident occurred which confirmed
+him in his opinion of her coldness. He was riding a restive horse,
+which he alone had succeeded in subduing, and which he thought was so
+completely tamed, that he might venture to ride it with the ladies.
+Isabella admired a flower in the hedge, and he turned his horse round
+to gather it for her. The animal, who had proceeded quietly by the side
+of the others, did not like being separated from its companions; and
+rearing suddenly, fell backwards with its rider.
+
+Isabella was close to him at the moment of the accident, and was
+naturally dreadfully frightened. He had contrived to slip off on one
+side, and was not hurt; but there was a moment when horse and rider
+appeared as if they would be crushed together.
+
+Fanny was some yards in advance, and only turned round in time to see
+him as he was getting up from the ground, and was therefore spared the
+first alarm. She was not a nervous, hysterical person; and although
+she turned pale, and trembled, she did not fall from her horse, or
+do any thing that attracted attention to herself. Isabella, really
+agitated, and really nervous, (as indulged and flattered people are
+very apt to be,) shrieked aloud, and burst into tears—real tears—for
+she affected nothing; she only gave way to what she felt, from the
+consciousness that she was charming, and that her emotions would not
+appear disagreeable and uninteresting.
+
+She was lifted off her horse, in a fainting state. Lord Delaford was
+supporting her. Every one was busy about her. In the confusion, her
+hat fell off, and all her ringlets were floating on the wind: her
+eyes were half closed; and the long lashes looked beautifully dark on
+her cheek, which was really pale. Fanny thought she never saw any one
+look so lovely! Lord Delaford watched her revival with an expression
+of intense interest; and Fanny sat still on her horse, unnoticed and
+unregarded, with feelings of hardness and bitterness which never before
+had been the inmates of her gentle bosom. This protracted exhibition
+of sensibility appeared to her perfectly unnecessary; and she could
+not help thinking that Isabella might have recovered much sooner;
+that she might have twisted up her own hair, and tucked it under her
+hat, without any assistance from Lord Delaford; and that there was no
+occasion for several ringlets to be allowed to escape, and to stray
+over her face and shoulders.
+
+Such were her thoughts when the party remounted, and proceeded
+homewards; and she “hoped Lord Delaford was not the least hurt,” in a
+guarded, constrained, and scarcely soft voice, which grated on his ear,
+after the languid accents of the fainting Isabella. He turned away from
+Fanny, and devoted himself entirely to her cousin, whose interest in
+his safety gave her a sort of right to his care and solicitude.
+
+As soon as they reached home, Fanny rushed to her room, and there
+paced the apartment in an agony of mind which frightened herself.
+She envied Isabella the interest she had excited, while she felt she
+would rather have died than have betrayed such emotion: yet she was
+angry with herself for having appeared cold and unfeeling. Presently
+she heard footsteps approaching her door; and hastily composing her
+looks, she seized a book, and appeared buried in its contents. It was
+Lady Elmsley, who came to tell her there was some company expected at
+dinner. She longed to open her heart to her mother, who, she was sure,
+by the increased tenderness of her manner, had read the state of her
+feelings: but Lady Elmsley never sought, or encouraged confidence upon
+the subject. She saw that Isabella had superseded her Fanny in Lord
+Delaford’s heart, and that her child’s hopes were blighted—she knew
+that an acknowledged preference was far more difficult to eradicate
+than one which had never been confessed—that pride, and constancy, and
+consistency, had induced many a girl to persevere in a devotion which,
+if it had never been avowed, would have died away; and she judged of
+Fanny by the rest of the world.
+
+The end of this day passed off as many succeeding ones did—in sad and
+bitter calmness on the part of Fanny—in flattered vanity, and growing
+love, on the part of Isabella—in gratitude, admiration, amusement, and
+pique, which were fast ripening into love, on the part of Lord Delaford.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ Though Marian’s frolic mirth so gay
+ The sultry hay-field cheer,
+ Say, when the short, cold, sunless day,
+ Shall close the parting year,
+
+ Will her gay smile then beam as bright,
+ And beam for only thee?
+ Will winter’s toils to her seem light
+ As they had seem’d to me?
+
+ Say, will she trim thy evening hearth?
+ Duteous, thy meal prepare?
+ Nor know, nor dream, a bliss on earth,
+ Save but to see thee there?
+
+ _Unpublished Poems._
+
+At length the decisive moment came. Lord Delaford made his proposals
+to Isabella, and was accepted. Isabella herself, in all the flush
+and agitation of the event which decided her fate for life, came to
+Fanny’s room and told her what had happened,—not to triumph over her.
+No: she had of late been so completely occupied by her own feelings,
+that she had almost forgotten those she had suspected in Fanny, and
+she came simply in the fulness of her heart, to give vent to all
+the mingled emotions which every woman must experience on such an
+occasion. Fanny had for some time prepared herself for this termination
+to all her hopes and fears. Yet when the fact was certain, when she
+heard it with her own ears, it came upon her like a thunderbolt. She
+turned deadly pale; she thought that she was going to faint; but the
+recollection that she should be committed, not only to her successful
+rival, but through her to Lord Delaford himself, again restored her
+self-possession, and after a momentary struggle, which, thanks to
+the dim light of the embers over which they were sitting, and to the
+engrossing nature of Isabella’s own thoughts, escaped observation,
+she was able to say, “God grant you may both be as happy, as from the
+bottom of my heart I wish you both to be!”
+
+She spoke with earnestness and solemnity; and Isabella gazed on her
+for a moment with surprise. The tone was not exactly that in which
+young ladies usually converse upon such subjects, and Isabella’s former
+suspicions flashed across her mind. But she looked at Fanny’s tearless
+eyes, and satisfied herself that it was “only Fanny’s way. Her cousin
+always had a more serious turn of mind than most girls.”
+
+Perhaps she was as willing not to see, as Fanny was anxious to conceal,
+the true state of the case; for though her thirst of admiration might
+lead her to do that which was most painful to another, she was not more
+unfeeling than a coquette must necessarily be. Moreover, prosperous
+love opens and softens the heart, and for the time at least produces an
+amiable disposition of mind. Though consideration for Fanny could not
+have prevented her attempting to gain Lord Delaford, yet now that she
+had succeeded in her object, it would have been exceedingly distressing
+to her to know the pangs under which her gentle cousin was at this
+moment writhing.
+
+The half-hour bell rang. Isabella hurried away, and Fanny was left
+alone with her dreary, desolate, mortified, crushed, hopeless heart.
+
+At dinner the engaged couple did not sit next each other. As there
+were strangers among the company, Lord Delaford thought it more
+delicate towards Isabella not to bring observation upon her. As a safe
+person he offered his arm to Fanny, and consequently sat next to her.
+Totally unsuspicious of her preference, and feeling on the contrary
+that her coldness had nipped in the bud the affection he had at first
+been inclined to entertain for her, he spoke to her of his happiness
+with the frankness of a friend. He expatiated on the perfections of
+Isabella, on the beautiful union of liveliness and of gaiety with that
+depth of feeling, which, though people in general might not suspect it,
+formed the true basis of her character.
+
+Lovers always invest the object of their love with such merits as they
+have settled in their own minds to be indispensable qualifications.
+
+There is also something particularly fascinating in the idea that
+one has discovered hidden treasures of mind that have escaped the
+observation of the common herd.
+
+Every word that Lord Delaford uttered was a several infliction on
+Fanny. All he said of Isabella’s liveliness and gaiety she felt was an
+unflattering contrast to what her manner, of late at least, had been.
+All he said of Isabella’s sensibility she knew to be far from true;
+and she, who was wrestling with a thousand conflicting feelings, was
+treated by implication, as a calm, cold, philosophical automaton, by
+the very person who was torturing them almost past endurance. Every
+word that he spoke of hope and happiness, was answered by an internal
+groan of hopelessness and misery.
+
+But her countenance was unchanged; and her eyes, which were habitually
+downcast, only remained the more firmly riveted to the table-cloth, for
+fear they should allow any of the emotions that were working within, to
+shine through them.
+
+When the ladies retired, the mammas congratulated Lady Elmsley in
+audible whispers upon the brilliant prospects which they perceived were
+opening before her daughter, and the daughters looked arch when they
+asked Fanny what sort of a person their new neighbour Lord Delaford was.
+
+The fire and earnestness of his manner at dinner, and the downcast
+reserve of Fanny’s, coupled with the reports which had previously been
+abroad, in consequence of Lord Delaford’s frequent and protracted
+visits to Elmsley Priory, had been misconstrued by them all, and they
+fancied the case so clear, that it was fair to congratulate, and to
+quiz.
+
+In vain Fanny repelled all their insinuations with something
+approaching annoyance and peevishness. Isabella cast a meaning glance
+of amazement, and of mutual understanding, which only confirmed the
+young ladies in their preconceived notion; and when the gentlemen
+came into the room, they contrived to leave a place vacant by Fanny,
+while they crowded round Isabella at the pianoforte, to look at a new
+song, and be rapturous over a new _galop_. Lord Delaford, who thought
+he had done his duty in avoiding Isabella at dinner, was only intent
+upon gaining a place next her, and did not even perceive Fanny, who
+had been detained from joining the young set, by an old lady who was
+very particular in ascertaining the stitch of Fanny’s work. By the
+time Fanny had completely explained the mysteries of the stitch, Lord
+Delaford was among the youthful party, and she then felt it utterly
+impossible to get up, and to walk across the room to that side of it
+where he was.
+
+She saw Lord Delaford’s devoted manner to Isabella: she felt herself
+deserted! she knew by intuition, that all the people who had just
+been complimenting, congratulating, and quizzing, were in the act of
+becoming aware that she was not the object of his attention, that she
+was not the attraction to Elmsley Priory.
+
+Such trifles as these, when the blighted prospects of a life are in
+question, seem to an observer, and to the person concerned, when once
+they are past, as not deserving of a thought, yet, at the moment, they
+add not a little to the bitter feelings of an already crushed spirit.
+Singing became the order of the evening, and Fanny was of course called
+upon. She had had time to reflect upon her present position, and also
+to resolve it should ever remain unknown to others; she roused all her
+energies, and the unusual excitement brought colour into her cheeks,
+and animation into her eyes. There were other gentlemen in the room,
+and they were enthusiastic in their admiration of the power, sweetness,
+pathos of Miss Elmsley’s voice. But what were these praises to her?
+They fell cold and sickening on her heart; Lord Delaford had been in
+low and earnest conversation with Isabella in the embrasure of the
+window, and scarcely knew that she had been singing. When the music
+was over, however, they left their retirement, and both were struck
+with the fire, the gleam of worked-up resolution in Fanny’s eyes,
+and Lord Delaford whispered to Isabella, “How brilliant your cousin
+looks to-night!” These few words made her heart beat with a joy at
+which she was herself shocked, and when she retired for the night,
+she looked courageously into her own feelings, and severely reproved
+herself for having felt pleasure in exciting a look of admiration
+in the betrothed of her cousin. She determined no longer to give
+way to sad retrospection—to dwell no more on blighted hopes, but to
+further, as far as in her lay, their future prospects of happiness.
+She knew Isabella’s character thoroughly, and could not but be aware
+there were many points in it which were not calculated to make a
+happy _ménage_. Love of admiration, a consciousness of power, and a
+delight in exercising that power, were among the most conspicuous. She
+also thought Lord Delaford was a man likely to be much influenced by
+those he loved, and lived with—and she resolved, if possible, to lead
+Isabella’s mind towards using her influence over him for none but good
+purposes.
+
+She came down to breakfast the next morning placid, and even cheerful.
+Isabella, whose mind had been quite relieved from the lurking
+apprehension of having cut out her gentle and unpresuming cousin,
+by the brilliancy and animation of Fanny the preceding evening, and
+had settled that she could not care about Lord Delaford, as she was
+so evidently elated by the admiration of the other gentlemen, was
+completely confirmed in this notion by her cheerfulness at breakfast,
+and by the manner in which she opened the conversation upon Isabella’s
+marriage when they were alone.
+
+In vain did Fanny try to inspire her with the same notions of devotion
+and self-sacrifice which she herself entertained. Isabella was in love
+with Lord Delaford—that is to say, she preferred him to all others,
+and exceedingly liked his love of her; but as for considering his
+happiness, his pleasure, his advantage, his interests, before her own,
+the idea seemed to her an idle romantic dream.
+
+Weeks elapsed, and the settlements were arranged; the wedding clothes
+prepared.
+
+Lord Delaford had returned, after a fortnight’s absence, for the few
+days preceding the marriage, which was to take place in the village
+church of Elmsley Priory. Fanny was glad that the ceremony was to be
+performed in the church, for she thought that the solemnity of the
+scene, and the holiness of the place, would more completely eradicate
+from her bosom the feelings which she feared were rather smothered,
+than destroyed.
+
+It was, indeed, a day of trial, almost beyond the strength of even her
+chastened spirit to endure, without betraying the struggle. She was
+bridesmaid, and she had to stand unmoved during the whole of a ceremony
+which, to the least interested, is touching and affecting. She heard
+him utter the solemn vow which separated him for ever from her—she saw
+their plighted hands—she heard the priest’s benediction on the youthful
+couple as they knelt before him. She did not shed a tear, she scarcely
+trembled, when Isabella, half-fainting, leaned on her for support.
+She sustained her graceful bending form, she whispered her words of
+encouragement, till, at the close, the bridegroom proudly led his
+wedded wife from the altar.
+
+They returned to Elmsley Priory that the bride might change her dress;
+Fanny, of course, assisted her friend to take off the wedding-garments,
+the Brussells lace veil, the orange flowers, &c. which were to be
+replaced by a more quiet travelling costume, and accompanied her to
+the room in which breakfast was prepared, and the intimate friends and
+relations, who had been collected for the occasion, were assembled.
+
+Isabella flushed, agitated, happy, blushing, looked all one could wish
+a lovely bride to look. Fanny was calm, deadly calm.
+
+At length the travelling carriage came to the door; the packages were
+all arranged, the servants were on the box, and Lord and Lady Delaford
+took leave of the family party. The parting kiss went round—Lord
+Delaford, as one of the family, dutifully embraced his new uncle, his
+new aunt, his new relations. Fanny saw her turn would come, and she
+thought she could bear any coldness rather than this kindness; she felt
+her heart beat as he drew near the side of the room where she stood,
+she was almost inclined to slip away; but pride got the better; she
+resolved to do nothing that could look like emotion, or might possibly
+attract attention, and she stood her ground. When he took her hand and
+approached his lips to her cheek, she felt a cold shudder run through
+her, and she became, if possible, paler than before. He scarcely
+touched her cheek; she looked so coldly, purely immoveable, that he
+instinctively durst not give to her the kindly kiss which, in the joy
+and warmth of his heart, he had given to the elder branches of his new
+family.
+
+They hurried through the hall, and, in a moment, the sound of their
+carriage-wheels was heard rolling by the windows. All rushed to take a
+last look at them, and Fanny remained, as it were, petrified, fixed on
+the spot where she had parted from him.
+
+All the visions of her days of hope crowded on her memory; every
+sign of affection, every flattering attention he had ever shown her,
+appeared at one and the same moment present to her mind—all that had
+subsequently passed seemed like a dream; she felt for an instant as if
+she had been robbed of her betrothed; she had to rouse herself and to
+look round at the signs of the wedding feast, the cake, the ices, the
+fruits, and to assure herself of the sad reality. Fortunately, before
+the attention of the guests was withdrawn from the window, she had
+recovered her self-possession, had sent back all the feelings which she
+now considered as positively criminal, back to the depths of her heart,
+till she had leisure to drag them forth once more to the light, to
+examine into them, and to expel them resolutely from their fastnesses.
+
+Her head bewildered with all the thoughts she would not think, and all
+the feelings she would not feel, she mixed among the guests, and was
+again the kind, the gentle, the well-bred Fanny, attentive to the wants
+and wishes of every one; and although she did once help a good old
+aunt to jelly, when she asked for chicken, and gave ice to a cousin,
+who wanted champagne—though she did put a black satin cloak on the
+shoulders of a worthy old clergyman who was taking his leave, still, in
+the confusion, these inadvertencies escaped all remark, and the only
+observation made was, that Fanny was a sweet, amiable creature, but
+she had not much feeling—they never saw a girl so unmoved during the
+ceremony, which generally made people cry, and she did not show any
+sorrow at parting from her charming friend and cousin, who must be such
+a loss to her.
+
+“Well,” added a maiden friend, “there’s no use in such a deal of
+sensibility. Fanny has just enough—enough to make her amiable and kind,
+and not enough to make her unhappy.”
+
+There was one heart which had read poor Fanny’s—one person who had
+watched her during the few moments when she had stood transfixed—who
+had remarked the trifling mistakes she had made in her civilities; and
+a keen observer might have read Fanny’s secret by the devoted attention
+which her mother showed her, if he had not already discovered it by
+the coldness with which Lady Elmsley returned the affectionate embrace
+of the bride and bridegroom. Time does not stand still, though it
+sometimes moves but slowly, and at length the company dispersed.
+
+The pieces of bride-cake were all directed by Fanny, till her hand
+was weary of writing “With Lord and Lady Delaford’s compliments,” or
+“love,” or “kind regards,” according as the degree of intimacy might
+require.
+
+The dinner succeeded, a large family dinner, very formal, consisting of
+the Dowager Lady Delaford, an old admiral, uncle to Lord Delaford,—his
+wife, and a very missish daughter, who thought it odd her cousin should
+have overlooked her charms when he was thinking of a wife;—Lord T——,
+the bride’s brother, a youth at college,—two school-boys, Fanny’s
+brothers,—the clergyman who performed the ceremony, who had been Lord
+Delaford’s tutor, and was a total stranger to the inhabitants of
+Elmsley Priory,—and the lawyer, an old friend of the family, whose
+eternal flow of prosy anecdotes concerning people whom no one knew
+by name, proved, for the first time, invaluable,—they prevented the
+clatter of knives and forks, and the creaking of footmen’s shoes, from
+falling so sharp on the ear as they would have done, if they had had no
+accompaniment except the low, gentle voice of Fanny, who was imparting
+to the worthy clergyman all the details he wished to know concerning
+the charity-school in the village. When the cloth was removed, the
+health of the bride and bridegroom was drunk, and the garrulous old
+lawyer, who had not forgotten in his quirks and quibbles his original
+taste for beauty, expatiated till the tears stood in his pale glassy
+eyes upon the virtues, the discretion, the gentleness of the bride,
+all which hidden qualities had been made manifest to him by the rosy
+lips, the blooming cheeks, the dark eyebrows, the white forehead, the
+glossy ringlets which had dazzled his eyes the preceding evening when
+she had signed the settlements. Inspired by the subject, warmed by the
+generous wine, the happy lawyer, directing his eyes across the table
+to Fanny, begged leave to propose another toast—that, before six months
+were over, he might again find himself at Sir Edward’s hospitable
+board on as pleasing an errand; and he hoped the bridegroom might be
+just like Lord Delaford—he could not wish his young hostess a more
+charming husband! All eyes turned to Fanny—her brothers, with a loud
+“Ha! ha! Fanny!—catch your fish, Fanny!”—Miss Melfort, the admiral’s
+daughter, with a suppressed giggle; and Lady Elmsley, with a face full
+of anxiety and fear lest her child might betray herself. Fanny, who
+had never deviated from the calm and collected manner she had resolved
+to maintain throughout the whole of this trying day, upon finding
+herself suddenly the object of remark, felt the colour rush over her
+forehead, her neck, her arms; she scarcely knew what they were wishing
+her; she thought he was wishing her married to Lord Delaford. Every
+thing became confused—her eyes grew dim; when Lady Elmsley, pretending
+that she was overcome by the heat, made the signal for departure, and
+the ladies left the dining-room. Fanny’s trials were not yet over:
+Miss Melfort, naturally curious upon such subjects, wished to hear
+all about the whole affair—how it began—how long they had suspected
+it—whether he fell in love at first sight—whether he or she was most
+in love—whether he proposed for her to Sir Edward, or whether he spoke
+first to Isabella herself; and then, as she was dying that Fanny should
+wonder how he could have been insensible to her attractions, she began
+to wonder how it was, that he should have preferred Miss St. Clair to
+Fanny; that, for her part, she did not admire such tall people, nor did
+she admire such very long ringlets. She was little herself, and her
+hair was exceedingly _crêpé_.
+
+There is an end to all things: at length the wine and water came, and
+every one retired to rest, and Fanny found herself alone in her own
+room, and she sat down to indulge in all the luxury of grief. Yes,
+there is “a joy in grief:”—she revelled in letting her tears flow, and
+her sobs succeeded one another without interruption, till, exhausted
+and spent with weeping, she fell asleep the moment she laid her head on
+the pillow, and never woke till morning.
+
+She was not a person whose eyes betrayed that she had been weeping;
+and she went down to breakfast, with no outward traces of all she had
+suffered, but inwardly feeling guilty in having allowed herself to shed
+such bitter tears for the husband of another. They were, however, to
+be the last. She saw that her mother read her heart, and was grieved,
+and she would not throw a gloom over the declining years of the parent
+she adored, and whose health, always delicate, had of late become more
+so. She stifled all vain repinings; she was cheerful, and full of
+occupation. Her hand did shake when she opened her first letter from
+Lady Delaford, and her heart sickened when she saw her signature for
+the first time; and it took a long time to write her first answer,
+and, perhaps, when finished, it was somewhat measured and cold: but
+all such letters are more or less constrained, and Fanny was not
+_demonstrative_, and it all passed off very well.
+
+Lord and Lady Delaford went abroad soon after their marriage, and she
+was not put to the trial of a meeting.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Surtout les femmes nourries dans la mollesse, l’abondance et
+ l’oisiveté, sont indolentes et dédaigneuses pour tout ce détail.
+ Elles ne font pas grande différence entre la vie champêtre et celle
+ des sauvages de Canada: si vous leur parlez de bled, de cultures de
+ terres, de différentes natures de revenus, de la levée de rentes, et
+ des autres droits seigneuriaux, de la meilleure manière de faire des
+ fermes ou d’établir des receveurs, elles croyent que vous voulez les
+ réduire à des occupations indignes d’elles. Ce n’est pourtant que par
+ ignorance qu’on méprise cette science de l’économie.—FENELON.
+
+Poor Fanny’s thoughts were soon called off to real and actual sorrow,
+in which all other griefs were absorbed; and she almost wondered how
+she ever could have felt so much about any thing that did not concern
+her mother. Lady Elmsley’s health declined rapidly; and the whole
+family repaired to Clifton, in hopes that she might derive benefit from
+the springs. In vain! Fanny was doomed to endure that sorrow, to which,
+as being in the due course of nature, some say the mind reconciles
+itself with more calmness than to many others. But notwithstanding
+all the arguments of cool philosophy, the loss of a parent is one of
+the most acute and lasting griefs to which human nature is liable. It
+often befals the young and the prosperous, and, coming upon them in the
+midst of health, strength, and happiness, finds their minds unprepared
+and unchastened by any previous suffering. Moreover, it is a loss,
+absolutely irremediable, which, though time may soften, can in no
+length of time, ever, ever be replaced.
+
+During the whole of her mother’s illness, Fanny was so occupied in her
+anxious attendance upon her, that every other thought was banished
+from her mind. When Lady Elmsley once, and once only, alluded to the
+state of Fanny’s affections, and spoke favourably of an amiable young
+man, of excellent connexions, and fair prospects, whose attentions had
+been unequivocal, she was able to assure her mother, with truth, “That
+although Mr. Lisford had not succeeded in making himself agreeable to
+her, all prepossession for another was quite over.”
+
+It is vain to dwell on the melancholy details of gradual decay. Suffice
+it to say, that Fanny watched, with agonised feelings, the last moments
+of a beloved parent; and only conquered her own emotions, to alleviate
+those of her father.
+
+After the funeral, they returned to their desolate home. Their hearts
+sank within them as they drove along the well-known avenue, which led
+straight to the front of the house, on which the hatchment met their
+eyes, for the last half-mile of their approach.
+
+Fanny supported her father into the drawing-room, where every object
+which met their eyes was but a renewal of grief. The easy chair, with
+cushions of every shape, to procure ease to a frame wearied and worn
+out—the invalid sofa-table, the footstool, just where Lady Elmsley
+had last used it—the portable book-case, containing her favourite
+authors, stood on the table as usual—the large basket of carpet-work,
+which was deemed too cumbrous to be taken to Clifton—the glass vase,
+which Fanny always kept replenished with the choicest flowers, and
+which the gardener had now filled with care, that the room might look
+cheerful, and which the housemaid had placed on the accustomed spot,
+all combined to make their return more painful, if possible, than they
+had anticipated.
+
+The next morning, when, before her father left his room, Fanny altered
+the disposition of the furniture, and removed the things which so
+forcibly reminded them of her for whom they mourned, she felt it almost
+a sacrilegious act to touch them.
+
+Time, however, rolled on, and Sir Edward became calm and resigned;
+but Fanny’s spirits did not rally. She had fervently loved her mother;
+she missed her in every occupation, in every duty, in every amusement.
+Strange to say, her thoughts, which during her mother’s illness had
+been so completely weaned from the subject of her own disappointment,
+in her present quiet and solitude would revert to former scenes.
+
+She did not recur to the happy days of delusion, when she believed
+herself the object of Lord Delaford’s preference; she felt that
+would have been a sin: but she fancied that by dwelling only on
+recollections, in which the images of Lord Delaford and of Isabella
+were blended together, she was accustoming herself to the idea of their
+union, and preparing her mind for seeing them, as man and wife, when,
+on their return from the Continent, they were to pay their promised
+visit to the Priory. She forgot that,
+
+ “En songeant qu’il faut l’oublier,
+ Elle s’en souvient.”
+
+As she wandered about her lonely flower-garden, she at one time
+remembered how Lord Delaford had gathered some of the beautiful double
+dahlias, and had called Isabella’s attention to the rich blending of
+their various hues; how Isabella had laughingly twisted them into
+her hair: and how surpassingly beautiful she had looked when bending
+over the marble basin (she had used it, as nymphs of old, for her
+looking-glass,) while the evening sun just tipped her dark brown
+curls with a golden hue, and tinged her downy mantling cheek with a
+more mellow bloom. Fanny could almost fancy she again saw the eyes of
+rapturous admiration with which he watched her graceful action.
+
+At another time, if she were training the straggling honeysuckles
+over the treillage, she recollected how her hopes had received their
+death-blow, when, on entering the drawing-room before dinner, she found
+Lord Delaford and Isabella in their morning dress, still occupied in
+reducing the unruly tendrils to obedience; and how Isabella blushed
+to find it so late, and Lord Delaford insisted it must be Fanny who
+had mistaken the hour. In recollecting these circumstances, she again
+experienced the same painful feelings of mortification and despondency;
+she did not thus acquire forgetfulness, or indifference.
+
+After an absence of about a year, Lord and Lady Delaford announced
+their return to England, and their intention of finding themselves
+very shortly at the Priory. Fanny believed herself rejoiced at the
+intelligence, and began setting every thing in order for their arrival.
+
+She was agitated when they actually came, but at that moment the
+recollection of her mother, and of the sad change that had taken place
+in her home, was uppermost in her mind, and almost all the tears she
+shed, were from a pure and holy source.
+
+Isabella was truly sorry for the loss of her aunt: Lord Delaford was
+all kindness, although the sort of _gêne_ which exists between the
+dearest and most intimate friends, when they meet after any severe
+misfortune, prevented their at first deriving much pleasure from each
+other’s society. The persons least interested do not feel sure how far
+they may venture to allude to the sad event, how far they may venture
+to be cheerful, and their fear of not exactly falling in with the tone
+of feeling of the mourners, imparts to their manner a want of ease
+which is infectious, and prevents a free and unconstrained flow of
+confidence.
+
+This, however, did not last long. Fanny soon poured forth into
+Isabella’s ear every melancholy detail of the last moments of her
+beloved parent, and found her heart warm towards the person to whom she
+could dwell upon the subject.
+
+When nothing occurred to call forth her love of admiration, her love
+of power, or her love of the world, her naturally good heart, and her
+constitutional good temper, rendered Isabella as loveable as she was
+lovely. Her faults had been fostered by her early education, while her
+good qualities had not been cultivated.
+
+Since her marriage, the devotion of her husband had rendered her fully
+aware of her unbounded influence over him; while, at the same time, the
+society with which she had mixed on the Continent, and the unsettled
+life of travellers, had been peculiarly unfavourable to the acquirement
+of domestic habits.
+
+When Fanny, in return, inquired into the manner which Isabella had
+passed her time abroad, preparing her mind for a picture of conjugal
+bliss, and resolving to rejoice in the happiness of two people for
+whom she felt so sincere a friendship, her feelings were put to a
+very different trial from that which she anticipated. All Isabella’s
+descriptions were of the gay parties at Florence; the delightful
+riding parties from Rome; the agreeable Dukes, and Princes, and
+Cardinals, and Monsignores, they had met with: the brilliant fancy
+balls, the entertaining masquerades, the gorgeous fêtes, the select
+soirées, the exclusive _petits soupers_, and Fanny wondered that Lord
+Delaford should be grown so fond of dissipation. Yet she remarked than
+when he spoke of foreign scenes, he seldom dwelt on those which alone
+had formed the subject of Isabella’s descriptions. He frequently spoke
+of home and of rural occupations as delightful, and conversed with Sir
+Edward on the state of the agricultural interest, and that of the poor.
+On such occasions Isabella would laughingly interrupt him, and beg the
+gentlemen to be more gallant, and not to discuss subjects which could
+be of no possible interest to them. Fanny, who had been accustomed to
+consider attention to the humbler classes as one of the duties of the
+rich, could not help one day saying to her, when the gentlemen left the
+room,
+
+“But don’t you think, Isabella, it is rather interesting to us, who
+live in the country, to learn how one may do good, and not run the
+risk of doing mischief, when one wishes to be useful to one’s fellow
+creatures?”
+
+“But, my dear, you don’t imagine I am going to be buried in the country
+all my life, enacting the part of a Lady Bountiful at Fordborough
+Castle. I have no objection to supplying the money, but, as to staying
+to distribute it, I leave that to the clergyman’s wife, whose business
+it is to attend to that kind of thing.”
+
+“But Lord Delaford is so fond of the country, and he always talks
+of what he means to do at his own place. Depend upon it he means to
+live in the country a great part of the year; I have heard him say he
+thought it right.”
+
+“Oh, yes! You know it is never worth while to argue a point—I hold
+it out of the question for a man and wife to dispute; but I have not
+the least idea of letting him put these golden-age romantic notions
+in practice. Not that I have the least objection to the country at
+Christmas, or at Easter, or occasionally in the autumn, in a reasonable
+way; but, as for taking up my abode at Fordborough Castle, I shall not
+do it.”
+
+“But every thing is prepared for you now. He has had the drawing-room
+and saloon new furnished, and your own boudoir is made lovely!”
+
+“Oh, you know it could not be left as it was in my good mother-in-law’s
+time, with straight-backed chairs, and pembroke-tables; but I shan’t
+live there, you will see if I do.”
+
+“But, Isabella, I am convinced Lord Delaford wishes it.”
+
+“Oh! he fancies it would be vastly agreeable; but, in fact, he would be
+moped to death there, and so should I.”
+
+“Well, I don’t understand being moped to death with a husband one
+loves,” and she felt a slight blush rise to her cheek, which she
+attributed to the little rebuke implied in her answer; and she added,
+half smiling, “you know, you do like him very much, Isabella!”
+
+“Like him! to be sure I do. He is the best creature in the world; and,
+after all, nobody looks so like a gentleman. He was generally the
+best-looking man in the room, except Count Pfaffenhoffen, and he was
+so foolish that one was ashamed to be seen talking to him, though one
+endured his conversation for the sake of his waltzing. He is the most
+becoming waltzer! He is just the right height, and he does not bend too
+forward, nor too far back, and he holds his arm just right. What a pity
+it is he should be so silly!”
+
+Soon after this conversation Lord and Lady Delaford went to their
+own place, where they established themselves very comfortably. Fanny
+spent a day with them. She began to flatter herself that Isabella’s
+worldly notions were only to be found in her conversation, and not in
+her actions. She left her very busy, and apparently happy, in making
+discoveries of curious old China, and arranging it in the drawing-room.
+While these and similar occupations lasted, she was amused and
+contented, and her husband was delighted to see her, as he thought,
+acquiring a taste for the country.
+
+One short week afterwards, Fanny received a note from her, written as
+she was setting off for London, to meet her dear friend Lady B——, who
+was only in town for a few days, on her way from Paris to Ireland.
+
+She soon again heard from her, that she was very unwell, and that
+Doctor S—— had ordered her warm sea-baths, and that she was therefore
+obliged to go to Brighton.
+
+There they remained till Christmas, when they returned to Fordborough
+Castle, and brought with them a large party of friends. Fanny was to
+join them at the particular wish of Sir Edward, who lamented that she
+did not regain her natural spirits.
+
+She found Lord Delaford looking harassed and oppressed. His company
+was not of his own choosing, and wearied him. Of his wife he saw but
+little, and he had no time for his own occupations.
+
+One day he had to do the honours of the place to a party of particular
+friends, for whom he did not care a straw; another to provide shooting
+for a set of young men, who thought it a very bad day’s sport if the
+birds did not get up as fast as two _gardes de chasse_ could load their
+guns.
+
+There is nothing more agreeable than the exercise of hospitality
+towards those whom you like, and who like you in return; but when every
+point in which the accommodation and luxuries of your house, fall
+short of those at such a hall, or such a castle, where every amusement
+you may be able to provide, merely provokes a comparison between the
+sport Lord so and so, and the Duke of so and so, gives his friends;
+the delightful and poetical rites of hospitality, become a tiresome
+tax upon the time and patience of the luckless possessor of an ancient
+mansion and an extensive domain.
+
+This fashionable, but most unsatisfactory party dispersed, and Lord and
+Lady Delaford were on the point of going to town for the meeting of
+Parliament, when they obtained a promise from Sir Edward, that Fanny
+should pay them a visit in London after Easter. To do Isabella justice,
+she felt real affection for Fanny, and sincerely regretted seeing her
+so joyless, and conscientiously believed that the pleasures of London
+would prove a balm for every sorrow.
+
+Fanny was unwilling to leave her father, and had a vague dread of being
+so entirely domesticated under Lord Delaford’s roof. Had her mother
+been still living, she would have interfered to prevent her child’s
+feelings and principles being put to so unusual, and so needless a
+trial; she would have taken care that the peace of mind she had striven
+so hard to regain, should run no risk of being disturbed; but Sir
+Edward would not hear of her dutiful regrets at leaving him; and if she
+harboured any other thought in her mind, it was one which could not
+be hinted at,—one she scarcely dared own to her secret soul, without
+implying a mistrust of herself.
+
+To London, therefore, she went. She found Lady Delaford in the full
+vortex of dissipation. She possessed beauty, rank, talents, and riches.
+Many women who might boast of these advantages, are not the fashion.
+But Lady Delaford added to them all, the wish, and the determination
+to be a leading person in society. What wonder, then, if she instantly
+accomplished her object, when, without any of the qualifications before
+enumerated, it is often attained by simple, strong volition.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ Nae mair of that, dear Jenny: to be free,
+ There’s some men constanter in love than we.
+ They’ll reason caumly, and with kindness smile,
+ When our short passions wad our peace beguile:
+ Sae, whensoe’er they slight their maiks at haine,
+ ’Tis ten to ane their wives are maist to blame.
+
+ _Gentle Shepherd._
+
+Lord Delaford, though considerably occupied with politics, was not
+entirely engrossed by them, and he wished extremely for the quiet
+enjoyment of domestic life. When he returned from the House, he would
+fain have been greeted by his wife, or at least he would have been glad
+to know where he might join her; but among the many engagements for
+each night, he did not know where to find her; and after having once or
+twice followed her through the whole list of parties, he gave up the
+point, and went to bed, jaded and out of spirits.
+
+She seldom came down-stairs till so late, that he had long breakfasted,
+and was on the point of going out to some committee. Sometimes,
+being free from business, he determined to remain at home, and to
+devote the morning to the society of his young and lovely wife.
+On these occasions he usually found her so beset till two o’clock
+by her maid, by milliners, by tradesmen, by innumerable notes to
+answer, and arrangements to make, that she could only answer him
+with an absent air, her thoughts evidently intent on the organizing
+of some plan of amusement for that, or the ensuing day. After two
+o’clock, her drawing-room was of course crowded with dandies whipping
+their boots—with sage politicians, a race who peculiarly enjoy the
+_délassement_ of a pretty woman’s society,—and with literati, a tribe
+who are very apt to find peculiar gratification from the favourable
+suffrage of the lovely and titled, though upon the most dry and
+abstruse work, into which the fair critic had never looked, and which,
+if she had looked into it, she could not possibly have understood. This
+select crowd (for none but the most distinguished of each genus was
+admitted) did not disperse till the carriage had been long announced,
+and the hour of some appointment was long past; when, hurrying away
+from the admiring throng, she drove from her own door without having
+given a moment of her attention to her husband.
+
+Lord Delaford’s anticipated morning of conjugal felicity generally
+ended in his seizing his hat and stick, and marching forth at a quick
+pace, and in no very enviable frame of mind.
+
+Fanny was at first bewildered by this mode of life, but she accompanied
+her friend through the whole routine, till she found that neither her
+spirits nor her health could stand such constant wear and tear; she
+was obliged occasionally to remain at home, while Isabella continued
+her giddy round of pleasures; and she could not avoid perceiving that
+Lord Delaford was a man formed for all the charities of life—and that
+Isabella was throwing away happiness such as seldom falls to the lot of
+woman.
+
+The gradual decline of wedded happiness is a melancholy subject of
+contemplation to the most indifferent by-stander; how much more
+so to one deeply interested in the welfare of both parties! She
+felt justified in her dejection. Perhaps, if she had witnessed the
+unrestrained flow of confidence, the fulness of mutual devotion,
+she might not have found the sight so exhilarating as she sincerely
+believed it would have been. However that might be, reassured by her
+sorrow at not seeing her wishes for their happiness fulfilled—that her
+joy, if they were fulfilled, would be as great, she reposed in fancied
+security that the interest she took in his welfare was that of simple
+friendship, and she did not think it necessary to avoid him, if he
+found her alone in the drawing-room, where he in vain sought the wife
+of whom he was still deeply enamoured.
+
+He would sometimes sigh to find her still absent, and would
+occasionally express his desire of a more domestic life; he even
+confessed feelings of discontent and dissatisfaction—he wished his
+wife would give him more of her society—he wished her disposition was
+more like Fanny’s.
+
+These words fell on her ear with a sensation she scarcely knew how to
+define. Was it pleasure?—was it pain?
+
+It is a dangerous situation for any young woman to be the confidante
+of any young man’s sorrows, especially if they proceed from blighted
+affections and deceived hopes; but to Fanny, how tenfold dangerous!
+
+The world is scarcely sufficiently indulgent to those who are deprived
+of the tender vigilance of a mother; nor are the young who enjoy such
+a blessing, sufficiently thankful for possessing it. Had Lady Elmsley
+lived, Fanny would never have been placed in the position of confidante
+to the domestic sorrows of the man who had won her young affections, as
+the lover approved of, and courted by, her parents. Was it in nature
+that she should not think, “If I had been his choice, the happiness of
+which he so feelingly deplores the loss might then
+
+ ‘Have blest his home, and crown’d our wedded loves.’”
+
+Another circumstance occurred, which roused her from the security into
+which she had lulled herself.
+
+Among the multitudes of young men who frequented Lady Delaford’s
+house, some were sensible to the unpresuming charms of Fanny, and
+especially Lord John Ashville became seriously attached to her. There
+was no possible objection to him, and Isabella flattered herself she
+should have the pleasure of announcing to Sir Edward that, under her
+auspices, Fanny had made a brilliant match. Both she and Lord Delaford
+were astonished when he was rejected, and Fanny herself was grieved to
+find she could not love him, as she thought it her bounden duty to love
+the person to whom she should swear eternal constancy. She would have
+been glad to prove to herself that former impressions were completely
+obliterated; but she could not succeed in persuading herself that she
+preferred him to all others.
+
+Nothing is more common than that a person under the influence of
+mortification and disappointment should rush headlong into a fresh
+engagement; but this most frequently occurs when the mortification is
+one of which others are aware, and such a measure, it is hoped, will be
+a virtual disproval of the fact. Though a dangerous experiment, it is
+one which succeeds oftener than might be expected from so desperate a
+remedy. Fanny’s sense of right and wrong, however, could not reconcile
+itself to the plain fact of solemnly vowing an untruth, and she already
+found the duty of watching over her secret affections sufficiently
+difficult, not to venture to impose upon herself the additional one of
+loving where she was not inclined to do so.
+
+Perhaps time and perseverance might have conquered her objections,
+but, a proposal once made, and once rejected, an opportunity is seldom
+afforded for further acquaintance.
+
+This event had an unfavourable effect upon her mind. It proved to her
+that her heart was not free, that she had combated in vain.
+
+She was one day looking back upon her wayward fate, and reproaching
+herself for her weakness, when Lord Delaford entered the room, and
+inquired for Isabella.
+
+Fanny told him “she was walking in Kensington Gardens with the Miss
+Merfields.”
+
+“And when do you expect her home?”
+
+“Lady B—— takes her from Kensington Gardens to Grosvenor Place, where
+they dine together; and she accompanies her to the French play in her
+morning dress, so I am afraid she will not be at home till she returns
+to prepare for the balls.”
+
+“Balls! why how many is she going to to-night?”
+
+“Oh, there are five on the list; but she is only going to two.”
+
+“And what becomes of you?”
+
+“I dine with my father’s old friend, Mrs. Burley, and then I shall go
+quietly to bed; for I was at the Duchess’s ball last night, you know.”
+
+“So, I suppose, I must dine at my club, for I hate a solitary dinner
+in my own house. If I cannot have the comforts of home, I will play at
+the independence of a bachelor. Well, when I married, this was not the
+life to which I looked forward. But how comes it you are so quiet? Why
+do not you run the same course? Why are you not at all in the ring?
+You can endure the sight of your own fireside. You can find time for
+conversation, for reading. Your mind is not in a perpetual whirl.”
+
+“Oh, but you know I am not very strong; I could not do so much.”
+
+“But have you, then, the inclination?”
+
+“Why, not quite; I like it very much in its way; nobody can enjoy
+society more, I am sure, only——”
+
+“Only you have room in your heart for other things; you are not wholly
+engrossed by that all-devouring passion for the world. Ah, Fanny, if
+you had been able to like me when first we were acquainted, I should
+have been a happier man.”
+
+“Lord Delaford!” exclaimed Fanny, in a voice of doubt and fear.
+
+“Why, you know, when first I went to Elmsley Priory, you were the
+person I should naturally have liked, only you did not care for me,
+and Isabella did. Kind and affectionate as you are in other respects,
+you seem to have no room in your heart for love, as poor Lord John has
+experienced also. But Isabella! she then seemed made up of feeling!”
+
+Fanny dared not speak, breathe, move, for fear of betraying her
+agitation. Did she hear from his own lips that he had loved her? Did
+she hear him accuse her of coldness, while her brain was dizzy, and
+her heart throbbing with feelings, which, for two long years, she had
+attempted (she now felt how vainly attempted) to quell? And must she
+sit still and allow him to think her insensible and heartless? Yes!
+religion, principle, and duty, forbade her betraying, by word or look,
+emotions which might have invested her in his eyes with the only charm
+in which he fancied her deficient. Impossible to let him ever guess she
+could harbour an unlawful preference for the husband of another, that
+other her kind and unsuspecting cousin. The very idea made her recoil
+with horror from herself. A pause ensued. She longed to break it—could
+she trust her voice to speak? What would Lord Delaford think of her
+silence? But, if he should perceive that her voice trembled! She was
+relieved from her difficulty by his exclaiming,—
+
+“No! it could not have been my own infatuation! Isabella was then all I
+believed her to be!”
+
+Fanny perceived he was not thinking of her, and she had time to compose
+herself. The love to which he had so calmly alluded, had left not a
+trace behind, unless the confidence he felt in her now, might owe its
+origin to the esteem he had then imbibed for her character.
+
+Following the course of his own thoughts, he continued to compare what
+Isabella once was, to what she was now become. He regretted their tour
+on the Continent, and attributed her present dissipation to the habits
+acquired in Italy and at Paris.
+
+Fanny was able to utter common-place hopes that her cousin would soon
+be weary of this useless life, and assurances that her heart was still
+true and warm.
+
+When she was alone, Fanny found herself fearfully happy. A load seemed
+taken off her mind. Painful as it might be to know that, by her own
+pride, (false pride, perhaps,) she had lost the happiness of her life;
+the joy of finding that she had not let herself be won unsought,—that
+she had not wasted the whole affections of her young pure heart upon a
+person to whom they had always been a matter of perfect indifference;
+that her love had not been wholly unrequited,—relieved her from that
+humiliation which had constantly sunk her to the earth.
+
+She was, however, convinced, that a longer residence under Lord
+Delaford’s roof would not be conducive either to the peace or the
+purity of her mind. She had been considering what excuse she should
+make for wishing to return to Elmsley Priory, when, in the course of
+conversation, Lord Delaford one day spoke of her presence, her example,
+her advice, as the pillar on which he rested his hope of reclaiming
+Isabella to the quiet duties of a wife, and he entreated her to use all
+her influence over her cousin towards the accomplishment of this object.
+
+This request gave a new current to her thoughts. If it was true that
+she had influence over Isabella, that she might reclaim her from the
+worldly course she seemed likely to run, would she be justified in
+leaving her friend at this moment? If she could be the means of causing
+his happiness, though through another, would she refuse to attempt it?
+
+People often argue themselves into believing it their duty to do what
+their inclination prompts. In this case, however, Fanny really wished
+to find herself once more under her father’s roof. She trembled at
+the undertaking before her—she felt a salutary fear and doubt of her
+own heart, which she had found so weak, and she humbly strengthened
+herself for the task imposed upon her. She looked with satisfaction to
+the prospect of being really useful to others, and she thought that,
+next to being the object of his love, the most enviable situation was
+to be the object of his gratitude.
+
+Modest and unpresuming, she had never ventured to remonstrate seriously
+with Isabella upon her mode of life; indeed, she had always experienced
+a degree of shyness in alluding to Lord Delaford, and to the feelings
+of a wife, which had prevented her saying what she might naturally have
+done. She had also an instinctive horror of interfering between man and
+wife—on most occasions, a praiseworthy fear; but which, in complying
+with Lord Delaford’s wishes, she thought it right to overcome.
+
+But how to introduce the subject?
+
+Common and trite observations upon the duties of matrimony, she knew
+would only excite Isabella’s raillery upon her antiquated notions; but
+perhaps, by alarming her fears, she might have some chance of arresting
+her attention.
+
+Fanny was so little accustomed to having any plan, any ulterior object
+in her communications with her fellow-creatures, that her heart beat,
+and she felt almost guilty, as she seized the first opportunity when
+they were alone, to say,—
+
+“I wonder, Isabella, you are not afraid of quite losing Lord Delaford’s
+affections.”
+
+“Quite lose his affections, Fanny! What can you mean? I certainly do
+not anticipate any such misfortune,” she answered, smiling; and her eye
+glanced complacently over the mirror, at which she was trying on the
+hat which she was to wear that evening at a _bal costumé_.
+
+“Why, my dear Isabella, you must be aware he is not what he was—that
+your indifference is beginning to have a corresponding effect upon him.”
+
+“Nonsense, Fanny, you are joking!” But she took off the beautiful hat,
+and sat arranging and re-arranging the feathers, though in a manner
+which would have been far from satisfactory to the artiste, who had hit
+off that particular disposition of feathers, in a fortunate moment of
+inspiration.
+
+Instinct had served Fanny on this occasion, as well as a deeper
+knowledge of the world; for vanity and affection can both take alarm
+at the idea of losing the devotion they have been accustomed to. She
+now remained silent, simply because she did not know what she had best
+say; but her silence had the effect of piquing Lady Delaford. After a
+pause of several minutes, Isabella added:
+
+“Lady B—— and Mrs. Clairville tell me they never saw any husband so
+devoted as mine; they wish I would impart my secret, that they might
+profit by it.”
+
+“They mean he is kind, and lets you have your own way; that he is
+the least selfish of human beings: but you must know, and feel, that
+he is not the contented, cheerful person, he once was; that his
+countenance does not brighten when he sees you, as it once did; that
+he is silent, abstracted. You cannot be happy, Isabella, and see
+your husband—and such a husband!—gradually weaning himself from your
+society, his confidence lessening, his affections cooling? Did I say
+he was indifferent? No, not indifferent! But he is hurt—wounded! he
+is shutting up his heart from you! Oh, Isabella! and can you let such
+a heart close itself to you? you, who might have all the treasures of
+that noble mind, that manly understanding, that warm generous soul,
+poured out at your feet—can you throw away such happiness?—you, who
+might be the happiest woman in the whole world!”
+
+Her voice faltered—a tear trembled in her eye—she dared not trust
+herself to speak another word. Isabella was struck by Fanny’s manner,
+though she jestingly replied:
+
+“One would think I was the worst wife in the world! Now, I could name
+you a dozen, much worse, among our most intimate acquaintances.”
+
+“But, Isabella, are you satisfied with not being a bad wife? Don’t you
+wish to be a good one?”
+
+“Well, I do not see what harm I do. I am never cross; I never worry
+him; I do not run in debt; and I am very civil to all his friends,
+whenever he asks them to dinner, however great bores they may be: and
+it is not every wife who can say as much for herself!”
+
+“But, Isabella, of what comfort are you to him? If he has any
+annoyance, does he find you ready to sympathise with him? If he has
+any joy, are you there to share it with him? When do you communicate
+your thoughts, opinions, pleasures, pains, to each other? You do order
+dinner for him; but really I cannot see what other advantage he
+derives from having a house, a home, a wife, _une maison montée_.”
+
+“Well, I see what you are driving at, all this time; I will make
+breakfast for him to-morrow morning—that will be quite right and
+wife-like.”
+
+At this moment, the servant entered to say that the box at the French
+play, which her ladyship had wished to have, had been given up, and
+that it was at her service for that evening.
+
+“Oh, Fanny, that is charming! We can go there for the two first pieces,
+and come home to dress.”
+
+“But Lord Delaford was to dine at home, and he will dine alone if we
+go.”
+
+“Oh! he does not mind that.”
+
+“Doesn’t he?” said Fanny, in a low, marked tone.
+
+Lady Delaford desired the servant to let the man wait; and Fanny felt
+she had gained something.
+
+“Now, I don’t think he will care a pin whether we are at home or not;
+and he goes back to the House afterwards.”
+
+“Not till ten o’clock, he said.”
+
+“Married people should not see too much of each other. _Toujours
+perdrix_ is insipid!”
+
+“How much have you seen of him to-day?”
+
+“Why, let me see! he looked in, did he not, just as we had done
+breakfast, about one?”
+
+“Yes; and your Italian improvisatore came two minutes afterwards, whose
+energetic rhapsodies of gratitude for your patronage, and admiration
+of your talents, were delivered in so stentorian a voice, that he took
+his departure, to prevent the drums of his ears from being broken. And
+yesterday—what did we see of him yesterday?”
+
+“Why, he dined out, you know, at a political man-dinner—that was not my
+fault—and in the morning we were at Lady F.’s breakfast.”
+
+“And the day before?”
+
+“Oh! that was the day of our water-party to Greenwich; and that
+occupied the whole day. Well, I see how it is—but you will make me
+spoil him; and then, when he is quite unmanageable and untractable, I
+shall reproach you!”
+
+“Well, dearest Isabella, I give you full leave to do so—then!”
+
+Lady Delaford rang the bell, and sent back the tickets.
+
+“Now, how bored we shall all three of us be to-day at dinner! I shall
+be thinking all the time of that dear little Mademoiselle Hyacinthe.”
+
+“No, no, you won’t, dear Isabella. You will be your own gay, agreeable
+self.”
+
+Lord Delaford came home to dinner, and seemed pleased to find so small
+a party. Isabella told him, with an arch glance at Fanny, that he was
+very near finding a still smaller one; that the tickets for the best
+box at the French play had been sent to them after all.
+
+“And why did you not go?” asked Lord Delaford.
+
+Isabella did not like to take all the credit, when she felt she
+deserved but little, and she answered: “Why, I believe Fanny suspects
+you of having a bad conscience; at least she thought you would not like
+to be alone.”
+
+Lord Delaford cast a glance of gratitude towards Fanny, which made
+her heart beat with a joy for which she had no occasion to reproach
+herself. He thanked them both for their attention to him, and was more
+gay and communicative than he had been for some time. The dinner was
+agreeable. Isabella was pleased to feel she was doing right, although
+she did not know that was the reason she was in spirits. Lord Delaford
+was gratified, and full of hope that more domestic days were about
+to dawn upon him. Fanny was animated; but there was a flutter in her
+animation, she scarcely knew wherefore.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ Trepideva pur anche per quel pudore che non nasce dalla triste scienza
+ del male, per quel pudore che ignora se stesso, somigliante alla paura
+ del fanciullo che trema nelle tenebre senza saper di che.—_I Promessi
+ Sposi._
+
+The next morning Isabella did come down to breakfast; but it was a
+great effort, and she soon relaxed into her former habits. Engagements
+previously formed could not be broken through, and one engagement led
+to another. Occasionally, however, Fanny persuaded her to give up one
+or two of the many evening-parties, and she succeeded in making her
+rather more quiet in the morning, so that her husband sometimes found
+her at liberty, and he could sit down and converse upon the passing
+events.
+
+When he was alone with Fanny he almost invariably talked over his
+future prospects, and attributed to her every symptom of improvement
+in his wife. Though these thanks and praises fell on her ear as the
+most delightful music, still she felt rather uneasy at the kind of
+understanding that existed between them. Though the subject was one
+so wholly unconnected with herself, and so conducive to his future
+conjugal felicity, she could not help a guilty consciousness, when,
+upon the entrance of Isabella, they changed the topic of their
+conversation. She resolved, when once she had accomplished the grand
+object of persuading Isabella to take up her abode at Fordborough
+Castle, she would rescue herself from her trying situation, return to
+her father’s house, and devote herself with redoubled energy to being
+the consolation and solace of his widowed home.
+
+London was growing thin. Balls became more rare: water-parties more
+frequent; well-laden carriages, awfully encumbered with wells,
+imperials, boots, trunks, and bonnet-boxes, &c., were constantly seen
+whirling along the streets. One day they happened, all three, to be
+standing at the window debating whether the weather was sufficiently
+settled for Mrs. Clairville’s rural fête to take place, when they were
+amused by watching the immense number of nurses, children, boxes, and
+bundles, which were crammed into an immense coach, one of the three
+carriages which were getting under weigh at the opposite door. Lord
+Delaford thought this would be a good moment to enter on the subject,
+by asking, in an easy tone, but well aware of the difficulties he was
+going to encounter,
+
+“And when shall we go to Fordborough Castle, Isabella?”
+
+“Heavens, Lord Delaford! London is just beginning to be agreeable. All
+the bores are gone, or going, and society is becoming really select,
+and every thing on an easy, sensible, pleasant footing. The sight we
+see opposite, gives one a delightful promise of what London will be!
+Don’t you hear that sound?” as the three carriages were set in motion,
+and rumbled heavily along the street. “Society will be as light and
+elastic when cleared of such heavy component parts, as the air after a
+thunder-storm!”
+
+“And have you not had enough of society yet? I am almost sick of my
+fellow-creatures’ faces, and yet I am no misanthrope! Do you not long
+to see green fields and trees and flowers, and to smell the sweet
+smells of the country?”
+
+“That is just the reason why I like water-parties, and excursions into
+the country, and Mrs. Clairville’s breakfasts, so much! How lovely
+the evening was as we rowed down the river from Richmond! and as for
+flowers, where can you see any half so beautiful as at Lady P——’s
+enchanting villa? You can have no taste, no refinement, if you do not
+doubly enjoy all the beauties of nature in the society of the most
+polished, the most gifted, in short, of the master spirits of the age!
+to say nothing of all the prettiest women.”
+
+“I do not wish to see all the pretty women;” and he added with some
+bitterness, “I only wish to see one woman, who, if she was as perfect
+in mind as she is in person, would be all-sufficient for my happiness;
+though,” and his tone changed to one of deep mortification, “I see how
+little I am so to hers,” and he left the room.
+
+Isabella was somewhat startled. Fanny looked at her with a beseeching
+face of woe, and eyes full of tears.
+
+“You are playing a dangerous game, Isabella. Heaven grant you may not
+repent it! You have nearly destroyed the happiness of one of the most
+perfect of human beings. Heaven grant you may not alter his nature
+too! Heaven grant that may remain unchanged! To see his kindly temper
+soured, his manly character degraded into the mere obsequious husband
+of a London fine lady,—I beg your pardon, Isabella, but it would indeed
+be a melancholy sight!”
+
+“You seem to take a very lively interest in his welfare,” answered
+Isabella, a little frightened at the effect she had produced on her
+husband, and consequently half inclined to be pettish.
+
+Fanny rejoined with warmth,—
+
+“Who can see one woman wilfully cast from her a fate which would be the
+summit of happiness to almost every other, and not feel warmly?”
+
+“Why, Fanny, I never saw you so animated; I believe you have fallen in
+love with him yourself, and are envying me this same fate of mine.”
+
+Fanny’s face became suddenly crimson. She had been carried away by her
+feelings—she had forgotten her own secret, she was so moved at seeing
+him mortified, and wounded, that she thought only of him.
+
+Isabella’s half-joking speech recalled it all to her; she felt
+betrayed, discovered, and her confusion knew no bounds. Isabella,
+surprised at the effect she had produced, in a moment recollected the
+suspicions she had once entertained, but she was just smarting under
+the mortification of finding she had over-calculated her complete
+influence over her husband, of finding that Fanny was right in her
+advice, and of feeling she deserved her rebuke, and she exclaimed,—
+
+“Well, I never saw such a guilty face.”
+
+Fanny was thunder-struck, bewildered—she burst into tears, and, hiding
+her face with her hands, she exclaimed—
+
+“Spare me, Isabella! spare me! if you have discovered my secret, spare
+me!” and, throwing herself on her knees, she hid her face in Isabella’s
+lap. “Yes, I have loved your husband, but I loved him before you
+thought of him, and I have struggled and combated, and fought to subdue
+my feelings; indeed I have. And I have loved him with a holy love,”—and
+she lifted up her tearful face with an expression of solemn grief and
+earnestness which was almost sublime: “Yes! I call Heaven to witness,
+never, for a moment, have I ceased to wish for your happiness, to pray
+for it, to use every endeavour to forward it. Is it not true? Isabella,
+I appeal to yourself?”
+
+“Get up, my dear Fanny! For Heaven’s sake! I had not an idea—I did not
+mean”—and Isabella burst into tears also. She remembered, what she had
+almost forgotten, how she had once believed him attached to Fanny; she
+remembered, what she had often persuaded herself was not so, how she
+had used every art in her power to wean him from her, and she felt
+almost as guilty as Fanny did.
+
+She had never intended to inflict such keen anguish on any one, and
+she was grieved to see what she had done. Had there been any thing to
+excite jealousy, or that might have touched her vanity, perhaps she
+would not have felt so amiably; but she was perfectly certain poor
+Fanny’s love was unrequited, and there was nothing mortifying in her
+husband’s having inspired so deep and fervent an attachment. Moreover,
+an uncontrolled burst of feeling, in a person habitually placid and
+reserved, is in itself almost an awful sight.
+
+The two friends stood mutually abashed before each other, when Fanny
+exclaimed,—
+
+“Do not utterly despise me, Isabella. Oh! if you knew half what I feel
+at this moment you would pity me. And I have been venturing to lecture
+you, to teach you your duty! But, indeed, I spoke from pure motives,
+indeed—though—I have—loved him”—and she again blushed crimson, her
+cheeks, her temples, her neck, at hearing herself speak words which,
+till that day, had never found utterance from her lips, “it was for
+your sake, as well as for his——”
+
+“Dearest Fanny,” interrupted Isabella, “do you think I doubt your
+motives? No! they are pure and excellent as your own innocent heart. I
+spoke in jest—you so entirely succeeded in concealing your feelings——”
+
+“But do you not utterly despise me now? Me, whom you once thought
+retiring and dignified, to have been so lavish of my affections as
+to love one who is devoted to another, to pass my life nurturing a
+hopeless and an unlawful preference! Oh! that thought almost maddens
+me sometimes. You must look down upon me as a poor, abject, weak, and
+wicked creature.”
+
+“Fanny, don’t speak so of yourself, you make me miserable—it is I who
+ought to beg your forgiveness—it is I who have been guilty towards
+you—my foolish, selfish vanity could not bear to see him prefer you,
+and I did all I could to take him away from you; but I had no idea you
+really cared about him so much; I only meant to try my own power; and
+then, if you had seemed unhappy, I would have desisted,—at least I
+thought I would. But you appeared so cool, so indifferent, and then I
+liked him myself, and then I thought, if you cared so little, why there
+was no reason why I should give up so brilliant a _parti_, and then—I
+forgot all about you, and thought only of myself.”
+
+“You do think, then, he did like me once?”
+
+“It was that which piqued me so much; but, if I had known what you were
+feeling, dear Fanny——”
+
+“Oh, Isabella, this is ridiculous! You are, as it were, defending
+yourself to me—to me, who stand here self-betrayed—self-accused. Oh!
+it is all wrong; this must not be; we must forget all this—bury it in
+oblivion—let it be as though it had never been. Only make him happy,
+dearest Isabella, for your own sake—for his sake, and a little for my
+sake too. Make him happy, and I shall rejoice in the fate that has made
+you his wife; make him happy, as you value your own happiness and his,
+in this world and the next. But I forget myself again. It is not for me
+to guide others—weak, erring, sinful creature that I am.”
+
+She sank on the sofa, and, pressing her hands upon her eyes, and
+resting her head on the arm of the sofa, she strove to command and to
+subdue herself.
+
+Isabella stood motionless beside her, in thought as deep and as
+painful. A mist seemed to have fallen from her sight. She looked on
+life with different eyes from what she had done an hour before.
+
+The broken-hearted quivering form before her read her a lecture upon
+the effects of worldliness, which she had never thought of before. She
+saw, for the first time, what havoc blighted affections might cause.
+She thought of her husband, and she said to herself, “Shall I, through
+my own wilful folly, cause the misery of two good and amiable beings? I
+have already blasted the prospects of one, shall I throw a blight over
+those of the other, and that other the being I have sworn to love as
+long as I have life? Shall I have robbed poor Fanny of what would have
+made her happiness, and shall I not value the prize myself?”
+
+A flood of tender and self-reproachful feelings rushed over her soul.
+Fanny’s grief cut her to the heart; she gazed upon her till she felt
+herself cruel and odious. She pictured to herself what sufferings she
+must have inflicted upon her during the days of her courtship, on
+her wedding-day, on a thousand other occasions; she remembered her
+unfailing, uncomplaining gentleness; she thought of the good advice she
+had given her at various times, and felt how generous and how judicious
+it had been.
+
+Seating herself by her side, she gently lifted her head from the
+sofa—she kissed her—she wept with her—she used every tender and
+endearing epithet—she implored her to be comforted.
+
+“I am weeping for my own degradation,” she replied, “that the secret I
+scarcely dared own to myself should be uttered in positive words, and
+to you, to his wife!—and you will betray me to him, you will tell him,
+I am sure you will. Oh! that I should have come to this!—I, who hoped
+to have passed through life with a fair, untarnished name, though my
+wretched heart might break! Oh, Isabella! in pity keep my secret—spare
+me this last bitter drop in the cup of life! He respects me now, and I
+think it would kill me to be despised by him.”
+
+Her broken voice was choked by sobs—she again hid her face in her
+hands—she seemed to shrink into herself.
+
+“Dearest Fanny! what shall I say, what shall I do? If you knew how your
+anguish harrows my very soul! I will promise any thing, I will do any
+thing that can relieve your mind.”
+
+“Will you indeed do any thing that I ask?” said Fanny, looking up from
+her tears with a face in which beamed a high and lofty hope: “Then, all
+I ask of you is, to be happy: and to be truly so, you must place all
+your happiness in him; you must let no other feelings interfere with
+what is conducive to his welfare, his respectability. Promise this,
+Isabella, and I ask no more.”
+
+“I promise you, dearest Fanny!” and, kneeling at her feet, her hands
+clasped and laid on Fanny’s knees, Isabella solemnly repeated, “I
+promise you that, for your sake, as well as for his own, I will love,
+cherish, and obey him, in sickness and in health, in joy and in sorrow,
+in poverty or in wealth: I will strive to be unto him a loving,
+dutiful, and virtuous wife.”
+
+“Thank you, my own Isabella!” exclaimed Fanny, and, throwing themselves
+into each other’s arms, they mingled tears and embraces. At length
+Fanny added, “It is a weight off my mind that I have no longer anything
+concealed from you, Isabella; and if I could but feel sure that you,
+and you only, should know my weakness——”
+
+“Shall I promise?”
+
+“Do, dearest Isabella; let me hear a vow of secrecy pass your lips, and
+I think it will go farther towards eradicating every vestige of former
+folly than anything else can do.”
+
+“I promise you that no one word of this day’s conversation shall pass
+my lips; and I promise that, except by my future conduct, you shall
+never be reminded of it. Will that satisfy you?”
+
+“Oh, yes, generous, kind, good Isabella! You are only too good, too
+kind, and make me feel so inferior to you.”
+
+“But, Fanny, we must make haste and go into the country. How soon
+can we go? I wish we could set out to-morrow; I long to begin my new
+career; I am so afraid of growing worldly again in London,—I mean
+worldly in my inclinations; my actions I can control, and my vow is
+sacred. But how shall I set about opening the subject to my husband? He
+was really angry to-day.”
+
+“What so easy, dearest Isabella? Go at once to him, and say you saw he
+was annoyed, and that you are sorry he was so, and that, rather than
+annoy him, you are ready to go whenever he wishes.”
+
+“He will think a very sudden change has come over me: however, I will
+try.”
+
+That evening Fanny pleaded a headache, and went to bed. She was totally
+unfitted for society, and could not have ventured into Lord Delaford’s
+presence; so that, when he came in, he found Isabella alone.
+
+For the first time he wished for company; he felt a _tête-à-tête_ with
+his wife awkward and unpleasant. He was displeased and disappointed:
+it was evident to him he was not loved as he loved, and he was not
+yet worked up to the point of accomplishing by authority, what he
+fain would have accomplished by affection: his manner was cold and
+abstracted.
+
+Isabella perceived that Fanny’s advice was not given before it was
+needed.
+
+After a silence of some minutes, during which she had twisted a note
+into every variety of form of which a note is capable, and he had
+turned over the leaves of a very old Review, in which there was not one
+entertaining article, she resolved to break the ice at once. Shaking
+back her long locks, she looked up in his face, and, holding out her
+hand to him, she said—
+
+“I want to make friends, Henry.” Then, smiling with a frankness of
+manner, which, when combined with any thing of emotion, was in her
+almost irresistible—“I don’t want to lose your affections by being
+obstinate and wilful, and I am ready to go into the country whenever
+you please.”
+
+“Are you in earnest, Isabella, or am I dreaming?”
+
+“I am in real good earnest, and you had better take me in earnest, for
+fear my good resolutions should evaporate. I do really wish to go into
+the country, and to be very good;—as good as Fanny.”
+
+“But can you be happy with only me?”
+
+“Why, I mean to try;” and she gave him a glance, such as a pretty woman
+can give when she feels she has regained her power, but means to use it
+in the most agreeable manner.
+
+“Then I am the happiest of men!” said, and thought, Lord Delaford.
+
+Reconciliations, joy and peace of mind, are totally uninteresting;
+therefore, the sooner the present story is brought to a close the
+better. Lord and Lady Delaford went almost immediately to Fordborough
+Castle—Fanny returned to her father. She experienced real pleasure in
+finding herself again at home, and in ministering to the comforts of
+her kind parent.
+
+By some odd turn of the human mind, the avowal of her secret feelings
+to the very person towards whom they were an injury, went farther
+towards eradicating them, than all her own reflections and resolutions.
+Her conscience felt lighter; she looked back upon them as a matter of
+history; and her affection for Isabella had warmed into a real and
+ardent friendship. Every one loves a person whom they have served,
+essentially served; and every one loves a person over whose conduct
+they feel they have great influence.
+
+One morning, Lord Delaford, having rode over to Elmsley Priory, took an
+opportunity of telling Fanny that he was the happiest of men, and that
+he was aware he owed all this happiness to her. Then did Fanny enjoy
+pure and unalloyed satisfaction! She felt she had not lived in vain:
+she had been of service to her fellow-creatures, and she felt raised in
+her own estimation.
+
+Isabella, meanwhile, laboured hard to put in practice all the good
+advice she had received from Fanny. The happiness she found she had the
+power of bestowing, repaid her for her self-denial in relinquishing the
+exciting pleasures of the great world; and before she had time to weary
+of her domesticity, she found herself in a situation which called forth
+other, and as tender, feelings.
+
+While she was in Italy, a premature confinement had prevented her
+knowing the engrossing affection of a mother, and had allowed her to
+plunge again into the vortex of dissipation.
+
+A growing family is an excellent nostrum for keeping down an active,
+restless spirit. Time, health, and thoughts must be, in a great
+measure, devoted to their children, by those mothers who do not utterly
+neglect their duty; and the constant intercourse with such a mind as
+Lord Delaford’s, and the frequent visits which, after a time, Fanny
+paid at Fordborough Castle, gradually produced in her character a
+reformation of all that was reprehensible.
+
+Fanny found new objects of interest in Isabella’s children: she was
+full of occupation at home; she was her father’s darling. Her life was
+a retired one, especially when Lord and Lady Delaford were in London
+in the spring; and as there are not many very charming _partis_ in the
+immediate neighbourhood of Elmsley Priory, and as she would doubtless
+be somewhat difficult in her choice, and as she is no longer quite as
+young or as blooming as she has been, it is more than probable she may
+become a “single woman of a certain age.”
+
+Though such should be her fate, may she not be allowed to have an
+opinion, should “affairs of the heart” be discussed in her presence?
+
+
+
+
+MILLY AND LUCY.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ Affection true and strong, and simpleness
+ His goods and chattels, and her bridal dower!
+ Riches more sure two wedded hearts to bless
+ Than fortune’s proudest gifts in partial hour:
+ Unknowing to define by words the power,
+ That held their spirits in that blissful thrall;
+ Pride cannot chill nor jealous anger sour,
+ Each other’s wish they evermore forestall,
+ And of Love’s darts and flames they never talk at all.
+
+ _Manuscript Poems._
+
+“Well, nurse, a wedding is not a merry thing, after all. I could not
+help crying bitterly to-day when my sisters were married, and yet it
+is what we have all been wishing for so much. I am sure papa and mamma
+were in the greatest of frights when they thought Captain Langley
+would sail without proposing to Lizzy; and when Sir Charles spoke out
+to papa, after we were all gone to bed, I never shall forget what a
+banging of doors there was, mamma popping into all our rooms to tell us
+the good news!”
+
+“Ah, poor young ladies!” said nurse Roberts, as she was undressing the
+blooming Lucy, the evening of the day on which two of her sisters had
+been safely disposed of to two gentlemen, the connection with whom gave
+great satisfaction to Colonel and Mrs. Heckfield.
+
+“Poor young ladies!” repeated Lucy in a tone of surprise: “why do you
+pity my sisters, nurse?”
+
+“La, Miss, I don’t justly know; but somehow ’tisn’t the sort of wedding
+as I likes.”
+
+“Why, what sort of wedding do you like?”
+
+“Ah, Miss Lucy, I am an old woman, and I have old-fashioned notions;
+but I likes to see young people marry as has a respect for one another.”
+
+“Why, nurse, I am sure Captain Langley and Sir Charles were quite
+respectful. What can you mean?”
+
+“There wasn’t no time, Miss, no time for them to get to have a respect
+for one another. I have heard talk of love at first sight, to be sure,
+but to my mind there wasn’t no love at all; and that’s the truth of it.
+’Tis my belief the Captain he wanted to take a wife to India, because,
+as I’ve heard say, ladies are scarce there, and here there’s more of a
+choice; and Sir Charles he wanted a lady to sit at t’other end of the
+table, and be civil and genteel to the gentlefolks when they comes a
+visiting to him; and as for poor Miss Sophy and Miss Lizzy, I don’t
+see that they liked these two gentlemen a bit better than twenty other
+gentlemen as have been here at one time or another.”
+
+“Well! I never should have guessed you were so romantic, nurse. Do you
+know this is really the true spirit of romance?”
+
+“No! no! ’Tan’t romance, nor book-nonsense, as I’m talking about. But
+when a woman’s once married, she may have many trials and troubles.
+There’s Miss Lizzy going into foreign parts, and there’s no knowing
+what a wife may have to go through for her husband, first or last,
+whether at home or abroad; and if she has not a spirit in her that she
+does not care where she goes, nor what she does, as long as it’s for
+his sake, why, sometimes ’tis hard to bear.”
+
+“But when people marry, they marry to be happy, not to go through
+trials and troubles.”
+
+“And do you think, Miss, unless Miss Lizzy loves Captain Langley
+dearly, she will be happy when she is a thousand and a thousand miles
+away from her friends, and in a strange country? No! no! I knows what
+’tis to be alone among strangers, and I knows ’twould have been hard to
+bear, if it had not been for poor John’s sake!”
+
+“Were you very much in love, then, nurse?” and Lucy’s eye twinkled
+with an arch glance of amusement as she asked the question, for at the
+moment she saw reflected in the glass her own blooming cheeks, rounded
+chin, rosy lips, and flowing locks, and the withered face, thin lips,
+grey hair, and close-crimped cap of the old woman. “Were you very much
+in love?” she repeated, in rather a drawling sentimental tone.
+
+“I don’t know about that, Miss; but he was true to me, from the time I
+was quite a slip of a girl, and it would have been hard if I had been
+the one to change. I told him I never would; and I kept my word.”
+
+“And did he keep his?”
+
+“That he did, poor soul! There was not a better nor a truer-hearted man
+anywhere, than my poor John was. And though I had known some trouble
+before, I never knew what ’twas really to grieve till I lost him!” The
+poor old woman gave a deep sigh; and Lucy said, in a kind and feeling
+tone of voice,—
+
+“Was it in America you lost your poor husband? I know you once were
+there.”
+
+“Ah! sure enough was it, my dear young lady; and not a friend nor a
+relation (besides my two fatherless babes) had I that side of the
+water, when I saw my poor John put into the ground. ’Tis that makes
+me think so much about Miss Lizzy. I am old, Miss, and I have known
+troubles and crosses; and I can’t help looking forward to what may
+happen.”
+
+“But Captain Langley, you know, has friends and relations in India;
+and every body says Lizzy will have so many people to wait on her, and
+beautiful jewels, and all kinds of things! How could you, dear nurse,
+go into a foreign land, if you had no friends and relations there?”
+
+“Oh, Miss Lucy! ’tis a long story; and you had better go to bed, and go
+to sleep.”
+
+“Now do tell me to-night, nurse? I can’t go to sleep, I am sure; and I
+do feel so interested about you and your poor John.”
+
+The old woman’s heart warmed at hearing her husband’s name spoken so
+kindly; and she was nothing loth to begin her story.
+
+“Why, you see, Miss, John and I, we were neighbours’ children, and
+we used to come home from school by the same path; and we often went
+nutting and gathering blackberries together, and he was always a
+civil, good-tempered boy, and the folks used to call us the little
+sweethearts; and so, when we grew bigger, we wished to get married: but
+father he said, ‘No, by no means! he would not hear of it!’”
+
+“But why did your father object to such a respectable young man?”
+
+“Why, you see, Miss, he was a ropemaker, and was in a good way
+of business, and had got above the world; and John, he was only
+under-gardener at the Squire’s. He was a handy, sharp young man; but
+he had not any thing but just what he earned from week to week; and
+father said, he would not hear of no such nonsense, and we must leave
+off courting. We both saw that father was right not to agree to our
+marrying then; but we thought it hard that we were not to speak to each
+other any more. My own mother was dead; and my father’s second wife she
+aggravated him against us, and said, if we saw each other as usual,
+we should be sure to marry; and then he would have to keep us off the
+parish; and that I was a likely, fresh-coloured girl, and might do
+better for myself, and might get somebody who would be a help instead
+of a hindrance to the family. So I told John I would not marry without
+father’s leave, for I knew that would be wrong; but that I would never
+have any body but him, if it was ever so.
+
+”My stepmother, she never let me out of her sight, and always kept me
+to my work at home; and I never saw John to speak to him. Of a Sunday,
+when we came out of church, he always stood near the hand-gate, and
+sometimes, if there was only father, he opened it for us: and as long
+as he did that, I was sure he was true to me.
+
+“One morning, about a year after my father had said he would not hear
+no more of John Roberts, and that his girl should marry somebody as
+had a house to take her to, and enough to keep her when he had got her
+there; ’twas a Monday-morning, and I had washed up the tea-things, and
+swept up the hearth, and was just holding a bit of wood-embers in the
+tongs for father to light his pipe by, before he went to his work,
+when what should I see but John’s face as he went by the window to the
+door. I was like to let the tongs fall, it came upon me so sudden!
+John knocked at the door, and I shook all over, as if I had got the
+ague; for I thought, to be sure, father would be in a towering passion.
+Father, he never turned round; but he kept drawing in his breath to
+make the pipe light, and he said, ‘Why don’t you go and open the door,
+girl?’ So I went to the door, and opened it, and in stepped John; and
+he said never a word to me, he only just gave me a look, and he went
+straight up to father, and said:—
+
+“‘Mr. Ansell, don’t take it amiss if I am come to say a few plain words
+to you. You won’t let me have your daughter—you think we shall come
+into trouble, and be a burthen upon you; and you think Milly can do
+better for herself?’
+
+“‘Yes!’ said my father; ‘you speak right enough.’
+
+“‘But Milly has told me, she’ll never have nobody but me; and you know,
+Mr. Ansell, she’s a girl of her word; and you know you could not get
+her to marry Mr. Simpkins, the tailor; no, nor you won’t be able to
+get her to marry no other lover, if she should have a dozen—I know you
+won’t; and I won’t have no other girl! But that’s neither here nor
+there—what I’ve got to say is this:—I have just had sent me a letter
+from my brother as is in Canada; and he tells me, if I want to make
+my fortune, I have only to take ship at Liverpool, and come to him at
+Halifax; and there, he says, any man as knows a little of gardening,
+and such like, has no more to do, but to get as much land as he likes,
+to set to work, and he will have a good market for his vegetables, and
+he can be made a man of in no time. He sends me money enough to pay my
+expenses out, and he says he will see that I want for nothing, till I
+get into a regular way of business. And now, Mr. Ansell, if Milly an’t
+afraid to venture over the seas with me, I think we shall be able to
+shift for ourselves; and we need never be no burthen to you, nor none
+of our friends; and if she won’t go,—why, I’ll go by myself; and I’ll
+try to make my fortune alone, and come back and marry her some day or
+another, please God to spare me.’”
+
+“What did your father say to this, nurse?”
+
+“Why, father seemed very angry when first John began to speak. I
+looked at him, and my heart sank within me; then I looked at John, and
+his face was flushed like, and his eyes seemed quite bright, he was
+so full of hope, and I thought I could never bear to disappoint him.
+My stepmother had come in when she heard John’s voice, and so father
+turned to her, and said,—
+
+“‘Well, Sarah, what do you think of this young chap’s notion? I don’t
+much like to have my Milly go away from me altogether, and beyond seas
+too; though she has been a little testy, or so, about John—I don’t half
+like it!’
+
+“I felt so, I did not know what to do; and I began to cry and to sob;
+and John said to me then,—
+
+“‘Milly,’ said he, ‘speak your mind. Do you think you could venture
+across the water, all the way to America, with me? You know I’ll work
+hard for you, and I’ll be as tender of you as if you were a babe; and
+whichever way it is, I’ll be true to you, if so be I live.’
+
+“Then father said,—‘Milly, if you an’t willing to go along with him,
+why there’s an end of it at once, and so speak out.’
+
+“I looked at John again, and the longest day I have to live I never
+shall forget his face that minute. He was as pale as ashes, and his two
+eyes were fixed on me with such a beseeching look! I thought I could do
+any thing, and bear any thing, sooner than have him go quite away by
+himself, and so I said,—
+
+“‘Father, I am ready to go anywhere that John takes me to; I know he
+will always be kind to me. I an’t afraid with him.’
+
+“Poor John! To be sure, how his face did change! his colour came again,
+and he looked up so proud and so kind like! I thought nothing would be
+a trouble to me for his sake then.
+
+“Father did not half like what I answered; but his wife was very
+good-natured, and said, that perhaps we should do very well in America;
+she had a cousin once that made a great fortune somewhere beyond seas,
+and that it was very true what John said, we should be no burthen to
+our friends when we were so far off.”
+
+“She was evidently very glad to get rid of you,” interrupted Lucy.
+
+“Maybe ’twas so, for sometimes father and she had words about me.
+Father never could bear to see me put upon; however that was, she was
+very kind now, and by degrees we brought father to think about it. And
+then John, he had to tell him we must get married out of hand, for the
+ship was to sail in a week, and we had to go to Liverpool, and to buy
+the things as were wanted on board ship.”
+
+“Only a week! That was very short notice indeed!”
+
+“Yes, Miss, and father flew out sadly at first. But there was no help
+for it, if I went at all. So John went to the minister, and talked to
+him about it, and the minister helped him how to get a licence; and on
+the Tuesday, John walked to the town, seven miles off, and he bought a
+licence, and a deal of money he paid for it; but his sister gave him
+something towards it, and he bought the wedding-ring, and he came to me
+Tuesday evening, and showed them both to me, and I thought to be sure
+it was a dream. Next morning I was to be married, and I dressed myself
+as neat as I could.’
+
+“Ah, by the by, what did you do for wedding clothes?”
+
+“Why, I had a light-coloured gown as good as new, and the minister’s
+daughter gave me a new straw bonnet, and my stepmother gave me her
+second-best shawl, and we went to church, and my little sister was
+bridesmaid, and all the girls round about, as I knew, came to the
+wedding. Poor father, how he did cry! and the minister, he was obliged
+to stop once, and put down the book to wipe his eyes. He said it was
+awful to see two such young things going out into the wide world, so
+left to themselves like—but he was not against it, for all that; and
+John, he cried too. The rector told father he had never seen so many
+people crying at a wedding in all his ministry. Well, it was a sad day
+to us all; now that I was married to John, and was sure I was not going
+to lose him, it almost broke my heart to see father take on so, and
+to look round at the chairs and tables, and the dresser I had cleaned
+so many times, and the plates and jugs and cups I took such pride
+to set in order, and the strings of birds’ eggs as I had hung over
+the chimney-piece, with two peacock’s feathers John and I had picked
+up in the Squire’s park, and the sweet-brier we had planted when we
+were children, and which grew up quite tall by the house. Ah, sure,
+it seems all as plain before me as if it was yesterday. Father sat
+with his hands on the top of his stick, and his chin resting on his
+hands, looking at the fire, and he took little notice of any of us. My
+stepmother, she was bustling about, and seemed to wish to do all she
+could for us the last day.
+
+“Next morning, Thursday, we parted from father, and brothers, and
+sisters, and all, and we got on the top of the coach, and we went off
+so fast, it made me quite dizzy as it were. We got to Liverpool, Friday
+evening; I seemed as though I was lost in that great busy place, but,
+whenever John saw me begin to look sad or frightened, he thanked me so
+for coming along with him, that I felt I cared for nothing as long as
+he was contented.
+
+“On the Saturday we got all the things they said we must take in the
+ship with us, for there are shops as sell every thing ready to hand.
+And Sunday we went to church for the first time together as man and
+wife, and for the last time together in our own country. As we came out
+of the church-door, John said to me, ‘Milly, I am glad we have been
+able to go to church together once more in Old England; we don’t know
+what places of worship there may be in this new country. But we can
+read our Bible wherever we go.’
+
+“The vessel was to sail Monday, just one week from the day John
+surprised us so as I was making our own little kitchen tidy at home. We
+were all on board ship early in the morning. To be sure, how frightened
+I was! but I had made up my mind not to be down-hearted, and I bore up
+against it all. We had a good passage, and, as soon as we had got our
+little matters safe on shore, we set out to look for John’s brother,
+who kept a shop for seeds and such like; we soon found the shop, but
+it was a sad time for us when we got there. But la, Miss,—there’s the
+clock striking twelve, and you not in bed! What will your mamma say to
+me for keeping you awake with my old woman’s tales? but it is not often
+I talk of by-gone days, and when once I begin I hardly know how to
+stop.”
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ What spirit e’er so gentle shall be found,
+ So softly reared in humble privacy;
+ What form so fragile on wide earth’s vast round,
+ Shrinking from every blast beneath the sky,
+ That will not brave severest destiny.
+ Bear, uncomplaining, want and cruel wrong,
+ And look on danger with unblenching eye,
+ If love have made that gentle spirit strong,
+ Love, pure, approved by Heav’n, led that frail form along.
+
+ _Manuscript Poems._
+
+Lucy would not hear of going to bed till she had heard the rest of
+Milly’s adventures.
+
+“You must go on, nurse. I cannot let you stop—you know I love any
+story, and you know I love you, and so you may guess how much I must be
+interested.”
+
+“You are very good, Miss, to say so. Mine’s a very plain homely tale,
+but you always was a kind young lady, and somehow, when I have got over
+the first talking about my poor husband, and all our troubles, I can’t
+say but there is a kind of pleasure, like, in going over it all again.”
+
+“Now there’s a good nurse, mind you tell me every thing. What had
+happened when you got to your brother-in-law’s?”
+
+“Ah! poor man! he was dead—dead and buried. He died just three weeks
+after he wrote to John; and, though the widow kept on the shop, she
+could not do for us as he would have done. Poor soul! she was left with
+five young children, and she was almost beside herself with care and
+trouble. However, she took us in, and told us we should not have to pay
+for lodging while we stayed there, but she could not afford to keep us.
+She told John who was the proper person to apply to, to get what they
+call a grant of land, and he went next day to see about it, for he was
+loth to be a burthen to the poor widow.
+
+“He found he could not get any garden nor any land near the town, but
+he must go a great way off to the back woods, where there were new
+settlers, and where he must cut down the trees and dig up the soil
+fresh for himself. This was a great disappointment, and he lost a deal
+of time trying if he could not get something that would suit better.
+But you see, ma’am, every thing goes by interest in one country just
+like another; and now his brother was gone he had nobody to put in a
+good word for him, and he found there was no use in haggling on any
+longer. So he set about buying the goods and the tools which they said
+were quite necessary for a new settler, and by the time he had got his
+grant of land, and had bought his things, all our money was pretty well
+gone, and I was not in a way to be much of a help to him. Poor John!
+He said he would not have me begin a long journey in this condition,
+and when I got to the end of it have no roof over my head, and be in
+a lonesome place with nobody to do for me when the time of my trouble
+came. My sister-in-law was very good, and she promised to take care of
+me. She got me needlework, and I could earn enough for my own keep; and
+so John set off all alone to this land that was to be his. He was to
+get the trees felled, and a log-house built, and some ground trenched,
+and every thing quite comfortable in a manner; and he was to come back
+for me in the spring. I did not half like this. As long as I was with
+him I felt as if I could do any thing; but when he was gone, I don’t
+know how it was, but I had no spirit to any thing. But he would not let
+me go. He said, ‘No! he had told father I should be treated tenderly,
+and he would never let me be worse off than the very gipsies in Old
+England.’
+
+“The autumn seemed very long to me; but I worked hard, and earned
+enough to get every thing nice for my baby, and to have a few household
+things ready to take with me when the spring came. After my child was
+born, I began to grow quite happy with thinking how pleased John would
+be to see it. I had got together all my little goods, and had packed
+them up, and I was waiting every day for him to come. I thought every
+step I heard at the door might be him; for there was no post in those
+outlandish parts, and I had only heard from him twice by a private
+hand since he went. One day I was startled by hearing a strange voice
+ask for me. It was not John, I knew well enough; and there came such
+a fright over me I could not answer, nor I could not go to the door.
+Though I was always wishing John would come, and wondering he did not,
+yet it never before came into my head to be frightened, I felt so sure
+he would come at last; but I don’t know how it was, I thought now there
+was something bad in store for me.
+
+“My sister-in-law went to the door, and she brought me up a letter. It
+was in his own hand-writing. But when I had got it, I could hardly read
+it, I was in such a hurry, and all over in such a tremble. However, it
+told me he had been very ill; he had had a bad rheumatic fever, and
+was not able to come for me yet; but he was getting better, and hoped
+to be able to set off before summer came. I made up my mind directly
+what I would do—to set off the next day as ever came, and go to him.
+So I went down stairs to the man as brought me the letter, and I asked
+him which was the road, and what were the names of the places I had to
+go through, and how I was to find out his settlement. I was a pretty
+middling scholar, so I wrote it all down from his mouth. That night
+I packed up my bundle, and I sold the linen and things I had bought,
+for I could not carry them, and I knew I should want the money. My
+sister-in-law lent me a little she was able to spare, and next morning
+I set out. I reckoned I could walk fifteen miles a-day, and that, as it
+was three hundred miles up the country, it would take me about three
+weeks to get to him. I was very tired the first day, for I had to carry
+my bundle on my back, and my child in my arms; but I did not care. I
+thought so of getting to John, I hardly knew that I was tired. I found
+a decent little inn, and a civil woman, who made me pretty comfortable
+that night, and I had nothing to complain of for several days more; but
+after a week or thereabouts, the country was very bare, and there were
+but few houses to be seen. One day I had to walk better than twenty
+miles before I could get taken in, and, after all, the place was a
+miserable hovel, and the woman as kept it was so old, and dirty, and
+smoky, and she spoke so short to me, and looked at me so sharp, that
+I felt frightened, and almost sorry, when, after a little haggling,
+she let me into the hut. It seemed to belong to her; but some men who
+came in after me, ordered her about as if they were masters of her and
+all she had; and she did not think of refusing them any thing, and
+they swore at her terribly, and made themselves quite at home. I had
+got away into the inner room when I saw them coming, and I never went
+back into the kitchen. The old woman seemed no ways anxious that I
+should. I begged her to let me lie down, and she said I might do as I
+would; so I tried to get some rest; but I could see these men through
+the chinks of the logs, and I could hear most of what they said. They
+drank, and they sang, and, by their way of talking, I think they led a
+rough sort of robber-like life; but I could not half understand what
+they said. At last they rolled themselves up on the floor, and went to
+sleep, and I went to sleep too. All my little stock of money, which
+was getting very low, but which was my only dependence for reaching my
+poor husband, was under my pillow, and I resolved I would not part with
+it if I could help it. In the middle of the night my child began to
+cry; I felt sure these strange men would wake and rob me, and perhaps
+murder me too. I heard one move, and I could see him sit up, rub his
+eyes, stretch himself, and he wondered what the noise could be; but I
+managed to pacify the child, and he settled himself again. To be sure,
+I was glad when I heard him breathe quite hard! I did not sleep any
+more that night, and by day-break the hunters (for they had guns, and
+powder-pouches, and bags—so I suppose they were hunters) were astir,
+and left the hut. I asked the old woman who they were, and which way
+they were likely to take; but she did not like being questioned, and
+so, when I thought they had been gone about an hour, I set out again on
+my lonesome journey.
+
+“That day the road lay through a great forest of very tall trees,
+taller than any trees we have here. I never did feel so lonesome
+before; there was not a creature to be seen anywhere, and the tall
+trees made the road so dreary, and it was all dark and hollow each
+side; for in those great woods the trees stand clear of each other,
+and there is no underwood, nor bushes, nor briers, but the boles go up
+straight, and the branches meet at top, and one may go miles and miles
+and never see the blue sky over one’s head. There was no telling what
+might come out from those dismal hollows, and I kept looking round
+every minute, and trying to see into them, but ’twas impossible: I
+could see the trunks of the trees for a little way, and then ’twas all
+as black as night. It made one feel so alone, and yet one did not know
+what might be near one; and I thought what would become of me if I was
+benighted in this dreary place; and I thought of the wild Indians, and
+of the bears, and of my poor innocent babe; but then I thought again of
+my husband on his sick-bed, and I took courage.
+
+“It was past the middle of the day, and the sun had sunk some way below
+those tall dark trees, when I sat down to rest myself, and to drink
+from a clear stream by the roadside. I was wondering how much farther
+it could be to the end of the forest, where I had been told I should
+find something of a decent hut, when I was startled at hearing voices
+and the report of a gun; and presently three of the men who had passed
+the night in the old woman’s hovel came out from among the gloomy trees
+on the other side.
+
+“They looked surprised to see me, and came straight up to me. I don’t
+know how it was, but when the time came I did not seem so timid as I
+thought I should. I remembered how poor I was, and it could not be no
+object to any body to rob me; and I knew I was doing my duty in going
+to my husband, and I thought God would protect me. I sat quite still,
+and did not tremble nor shake. One of them asked me how I came there?
+So I told him the truth, and spoke quite civil, and yet, as it were,
+bold and steady, that I was walking from Halifax to my husband at the
+far settlement. So another of the men said, quite sharp—‘If you have
+got a husband, he had better keep a sharper look-out after such a tight
+lass as you are.’
+
+“The first man said—‘You have got a long journey before you, my girl.’
+
+“And I answered, ‘Yes, sir; but I have got safe through more than half
+of it, and I hope, with the blessing of God, to get safe through the
+rest of it to my husband, to nurse him in his illness.’
+
+“‘Oh! he’s ill, that’s it,’ said the second.
+
+“‘Well, you can’t be travelling all this way without money,’ says the
+third, who had not spoken yet.
+
+“‘Come, come, poor girl,’ interrupted the first, and gave a wink to the
+last speaker, ‘we won’t hinder your journey any longer: you had better
+push on, or you’ll be in the dark.’ And he took the other by the arm,
+and he seemed to persuade them both to go away; and when I saw them go
+off into the woods again, I thanked God for his goodness, and thought
+he was indeed a Father to the fatherless, and that he never did desert
+them as put their trust in him in the time of their need.
+
+“I hugged my baby close, and quite forgot how tired I had been a little
+while before, and walked and ran till it was nearly dark, when the
+trees grew thinner, and I thought I could see lights glimmer in the
+distance. I made all the haste I could, and at last I got to a small
+settlement of half a dozen log-houses. I stopped at the first door, and
+I never felt so happy as when I saw a light, and a fire, and a woman’s
+face again. She had a child in her arms too, and I felt quite safe.
+
+“Next day I was very tired, and the woman at the little inn wished me
+to stay all day, and rest myself; but when I was walking and toiling,
+I did not feel so much about John: the moment I was still, I thought
+how ill he might be, and I could not bear to keep quiet. Besides, the
+woman’s husband was going part of the same road, to make a bargain
+about some furs; so he kept me company through the rest of the forest,
+and he begged the fur-merchants, as he came to speak to, that they
+would see me safe to the village where I was to stop that night. This
+day my baby began to grow fretful, and no wonder; for, though I did the
+best I could for it, ’twas next to impossible to get any thing fit for
+a baby at the places I stopped at, and I lived so hard myself that I
+made but a poor nurse.
+
+“My shoes were quite worn out, and my feet were so sore, I thought
+I must afford myself a pair of shoes, as I should not have another
+opportunity. They were very dear, for every thing was brought from
+Halifax. I was sorry afterwards I did not make shift without them.
+Next morning my baby was so ill I went to the doctor, for there was
+a doctor there, and they said he was the only real doctor anywhere
+for miles and miles. He gave me something as quieted the child; but,
+when I had paid for this too, my purse was so low, I began to fear I
+should not have enough to buy me any thing to eat after the two next
+days; and as for begging, I had never been brought up to think of such
+a thing. I touched nothing but the coarsest and cheapest food I could
+get, and drank nothing but cold water, and I walked farther each day to
+get sooner to the end of my journey. I was almost worn out, and (as I
+reckoned) I had still three days’ travelling between me and my husband
+when I paid away my last farthing. I scarcely hoped ever to reach him,
+but I walked on till I got to a small settlement, and then I sat down
+by the way-side, and thought what should I do?
+
+“I could not help crying, and thinking what would father say if he
+could see me then; and it hurt me so! for I knew he would feel angry
+with John, and fancy it was through him his child was brought into such
+trouble, and forced to beg her bread; for there was no help for it, if
+I wished to see my husband, and not to let my baby die, I must that
+night ask charity of strangers. So I knocked at the nearest door, and
+I told my story, and asked for food and lodging. I have often thought,
+a mother with her infant in her arms has something which goes to the
+hearts of their fellow-creatures, if they have any kindness left in
+them. I’m sure I never see a poor beggar-woman with a baby at the door
+but I think of myself that weary night, and I never have the heart to
+send them away without some little trifle, though, maybe, I’m often
+imposed upon.
+
+“Well! the man as opened the door took pity upon us directly, and bade
+me come in and sit by the fire. His daughter, a nice girl of fourteen,
+brought us some potatoes and some milk, and let me share her bed. They
+would have given me enough to pay my way for the next two days if they
+had had it to give; but I was forced to ask charity again that night,
+but it did not seem to give me such a choking in the throat as it did
+the first time; and I thought how soon we lose our spirit when we get
+low in the world, and how easy it is to go on from bad to worse! The
+next night I hoped to get to my husband. They told me to keep along
+the banks of a great river on my left, where there was something of a
+path, but ’twas so overgrown with the long rank grass, ’twas not easy
+to find. The new settlement was near the river-side, for the trees,
+which the settlers cut some way higher up, drifted down the river till
+they came to this place, where the ground was particular rich, and
+then they pulled them ashore, and built themselves log-houses. There
+were about seven families together, as they told me, and my husband’s
+house was the farthest but one. How my poor heart did beat all the way
+I went! I longed so to get there, and I dreaded it so too. I walked on
+and on, and still I saw no people, nor no huts, nor no fields, and I
+began to think I must have come wrong; for, though it was all open and
+flat, I could not see very far before me, for the grass was long, and
+the rushes very tall, sometimes, by the river-side. Of all the day’s
+journeys I had come, this did seem to me the longest; but I suppose
+’twas only because I was so impatient to get to the end of it. I looked
+at the sun, and it was not above half-way down. Just then there was a
+rise in the road, and I could see some smoke, and the roofs of some
+low huts, and some little patches of ground that were cultivated, and
+I strained my eyes to try and make out the last but one. I don’t know
+how I got over the ground, but I soon did reach the first house, and I
+saw a child at play, and I asked him which was John Roberts’s. I could
+hardly breathe while he answered, ‘He lives out yonder.’ He lives! and
+when I heard him say that, I first knew I had been afraid of never
+seeing John again.
+
+“I ran as well as I could to the hut. It looked wretched and half
+finished; the door was ajar—I pushed it open—there was nobody in the
+kitchen—I heard no noise—I listened—I did not dare step on. Just then
+my child cried, and a voice from within said, in a hollow tone, ‘Who’s
+there?’ I ran into the bed-room, and there lay my husband, sick, pale,
+and weak, but it was my husband alive, and all seemed well.”
+
+“Oh, nurse,” exclaimed Lucy, “I never heard any thing half so
+interesting in my life. Poor souls! and how was your husband? He got
+well?”
+
+“Yes, Miss, he did get well after a time. He fretted so much to think
+he could not go for me, that it had kept him back, and he had nobody
+to make him any thing nice, nor to do for him; leastways not to do for
+him as I could, though the neighbours looked in now and then and made
+his bed, and boiled his potatoes for him, and such like. Sure! how
+overjoyed he was to see me, and how pleased he was to see the babe. He
+soon began to mend, and then he was so vexed to think he had not been
+able to get the place to rights a bit before I came.
+
+“The fence outside was all broken down, and the garden was only
+half-planted; but I had not been there a fortnight before I got it all
+to look quite different. I cleaned up the house, and settled the few
+things he had got in it, and I helped him to mend the fence, and he was
+soon able to dig again, and the things grow very quick in that rich
+soil, and our house and garden were quite decent, and we were so glad
+to be together again, that we did not see no faults in any thing.
+
+“In the winter-time John had been lucky in shooting, and had sold
+some furs for enough to buy him a cow, and some chickens; and then,
+being a pretty middling gardener, he had helped his neighbours, and
+put them in the way to crop their gardens as they should be; and most
+of them gave him a trifle, some one thing and some another, so that
+now he was pretty well, and I was there to keep matters tidy, we were
+very comfortable. The winter was cold and long, and in the spring he
+had another touch of that nasty fever, as was so common in them low
+swampy grounds. In the summer I had my Betsy—you know my Betsy, as is
+married to Farmer Crofts?—some of the neighbours were very kind to me,
+and I got over it pretty well. Of a Sunday we used to read our Bible
+together, and think how true John’s saying was, when we came out of
+church at Liverpool, that there was no knowing what places of worship
+we might find where we were going to. But John often said all places
+might be made places of worship if one had but the mind to it, whether
+it was a real church, or the tall, dark, still woods, or the damp wide
+savannah, or our own log-hut; and so, I hope, when we read our prayers
+there, it did us as much good as if there had been a minister and a
+pulpit, and all as it should be.
+
+“I believe I was too happy then for it to last. With the spring came
+the rheumatic fever again, and my poor husband was quite laid up. He
+could not do any thing, and he fretted so to think his land was not
+trenched, nor any thing seen to! and, what with the children, and the
+house, and the cow, and the things out of doors, and poor John to
+nurse, I had more than one pair of hands could well do. This would not
+have signified if John had but mended when the summer came, but he got
+worse and worse. He was so weak, and he suffered a deal of pain, and
+there was no doctor. Then I did wish we had never left England, and
+I thought it would have been better we should both have worked and
+laboured in our own country, till we had got old, and earned enough
+to marry upon. But we did for the best; and if John was so set upon
+coming, even without me, why, then, it was best I came too, for he had
+some one to do for him. It was all written, I suppose; and perhaps
+’twas for our good—but this was hard, very hard to bear.
+
+“One evening I had got the children off to sleep, and I had taken my
+bit of work, and was sitting by John’s bedside, when he said to me—
+
+“‘Milly, you must not stay here when I am gone. If you sell all the
+little matters we have got together here, you’ll have enough to pay
+your journey to Halifax, and your passage home too, as I reckon. Your
+father will be good to you, I think—I hope. Tell him I meant for the
+best when I persuaded you to come.’
+
+“Oh, Miss Lucy, I never thought to see that day: I had always hoped I
+should have been the first to go. But it pleased God otherwise.”
+
+The poor old woman sat with her apron to her eyes, in quiet, silent
+tears. Lucy took one of her withered hands, and pressing it between her
+own, told her, with tears in her eyes, how much she felt for her, and
+how much she admired her husband’s kind and manly character. She found
+this was the chord to which, after so many years, the old nurse’s heart
+still vibrated.
+
+“Yes, Miss Lucy,” and her faded eyes flashed with almost youthful
+brightness; “he was the kindest-hearted, the truest-hearted, and the
+bravest-hearted man as ever lived. He feared nothing, but to do wrong,
+and to part with me. His thoughts were always on me; and when he was
+taken, the last words he ever spoke were, ‘my own Milly,’ and the last
+look he ever gave was for me, and my hand felt the last pressure his
+ever gave.”
+
+Lucy’s tears flowed fast. She had read many novels, but the fictitious
+woes of their heroines did not seem to her half so touching as her old
+nurse’s plain story.
+
+“Well, Miss Lucy, I buried him there; he lies by the banks of that
+great river, and there’s the roaring sea, and miles and miles of dreary
+land between me and my poor John; and, what’s more, when I die, we
+shan’t lie near each other; that frets me sadly sometimes; but he told
+me to come home, and so, Miss, I could not do no other. I thought when
+I turned my back on the log-hut, where we had passed some such happy
+days together, and when I passed by the place where he was buried, at
+the other end of the settlement, I thought my heart must have broke;
+and, if it had not been for the children, I should have thought it a
+mercy if it had.
+
+“There was some people going to Halifax, and I travelled with them.
+I fancied myself in trouble when I went that road before, but now I
+thought how happy I was then, for I was going to see my husband’s
+face again. But God is very merciful, he never gives us more than
+we can bear. I bore it all, and I got to Halifax, and I went to my
+sister-in-law. She was a kind woman, and she was sorry for me, for she
+knew what it was to be a widow. I took my passage on board a vessel for
+England, and I and my two children left America. Though my husband’s
+grave was so far up the country, I felt when I left the land, as if
+I was more parted from him than ever. But ’twas on board ship that I
+learned to be thankful to God for what was left, and not to grieve too
+much for any of his creatures. My little boy sickened and died, and he
+was not buried, decently buried in the earth, but my poor child was
+thrown into the sea. I could not get over that for a long time. It did
+seem so unnatural like. But I learned then never to think myself so
+low, but what God might afflict me more, and I learned to be grateful
+for my Betsy. And she has been a blessing to me—a kind and a dutiful
+girl—and one as will never let her old mother come to want, as she gets
+in years.”
+
+“My poor, dear nurse,” exclaimed Lucy, “I can’t bear to think I should
+ever have been a naughty pettish child, and have plagued and worried
+you when I was little, and you with all these heavy afflictions on your
+mind.”
+
+“Lord bless your sweet heart! you never plagued me; and, as for your
+little vagaries, I believe they made me love you all the better.”
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ “Il faut très peu de fond pour la politesse dans les manières: il en
+ faut beaucoup pour celle de l’esprit.”
+
+ LA BRUYERE.
+
+This simple history of such interesting feelings made Lucy reflect a
+good deal. She looked back on her sisters’ courtships and weddings, and
+could not persuade herself they had either felt or inspired sentiments
+half so noble, or so disinterested, as John’s and Milly’s; and she
+resolved, in her own mind, she would never marry unless she was really
+in love—very much in love.
+
+It seldom happens that people, on the subject of matrimony, act
+according to the plan they have proposed to themselves. The girl who
+settles she will marry a tall dark man, is sure to marry a little fair
+man; the man who resolves he will have a meek and gentle wife, is
+caught by some wild coquette, to whom he tamely submits for the sake of
+a quiet life. So the young lady, who has made up her mind that love is
+folly, and that, if she repents, it shall be in a coach and six, runs
+away with a pennyless captain; and Lucy, though extremely anxious to
+emulate Milly, never found the object to which she could thus devote
+herself, and ended by repenting in a coach and six.
+
+In the empty dandies and lounging officers who frequented L——, the
+watering-place near which Colonel Heckfield’s small property was
+situated, she saw nothing superior to Captain Langley, or to Sir
+Charles Selcourt; and Nurse Roberts had decidedly not thought Sophy or
+Lizzy in love with either. But she was very young, and she had plenty
+of time to look about her. Her three elder sisters were married; her
+two younger ones had not yet emerged from the school-room; her numerous
+brothers looked on her as the pet and the beauty of the family, and
+they all reckoned she was to captivate something brilliant in the way
+of a _parti_. There was a floating wish in her mind to be heroically
+devoted, as, through her homely language, she perceived Milly Roberts
+had been; and yet a desire not to disappoint the expectations of
+father, mother, brothers, sisters, and governess.
+
+All their acquaintances exclaimed at the good fortune of the Heckfields.
+
+“They did not know how Mrs. Heckfield managed it, but her daughters no
+sooner appeared than they were snapped up—they were pretty, certainly.
+Harriet, the eldest, was a fine rosy girl, but she never had an air of
+fashion. Lizzy had pretty eyes and fine teeth, but her features were
+decidedly bad. Sophy had a beautiful figure, but she was so pale!”
+(Sir Charles Selcourt thought that a little rouge would make her look
+exceedingly well at the head of his table.) Lucy was the beauty, so
+they supposed she looked very high.
+
+About this time Lord Montreville came to the watering-place of L——.
+He had but lately succeeded to the title of his elder brother;
+having passed through the career of a gallant gay Lothario, with the
+reputation of having been the most irresistible, and the most discreet,
+but the most general of lovers.
+
+As the charming, but half-ruined Lord Arthur Stansfeld, he had been
+safe from the machinations of mammas; but the hearts of the daughters
+had not been safe from his. Secure in the impossibility of his being
+considered as an eligible _parti_ for the very lovely and high-born
+beauties who alone could attract his notice, he had not feared to
+pay such attentions as generally excited a preference on the part
+of the young ladies. As to the married women, whose names had been
+coupled with his, in a manner more gratifying to his vanity than to
+their honour, the list would be painfully long. Still he had avoided
+any _éclat_, and no one could accuse him of betraying, by a word or
+a look, any consciousness of his own powers of attraction. On the
+contrary, he preserved enough of the tone of the _vieille cour_ to
+make his manner respectful and devoted, and he had acquired enough of
+the ease of the present day to prevent its being the least formal.
+He had arrived at that age when, if he had not been so good-looking,
+so attentive to his dress, so lively in society, he would have been
+called by the young an old man; but, as it was, he was only called an
+agreeable man, without any reference being made to the number of years
+that had passed over his head. Having now succeeded to the family
+title and estates, he began for the first time to think seriously of
+marriage. But every charm which had formerly proved attractive to him
+now filled him with alarm. He had had every opportunity of becoming
+acquainted with the foibles and the faults of ladies of fashion, and
+none of estimating their good qualities. He regarded with suspicion
+style, manner, vivacity, talents, grace; and he resolved to choose some
+young, unsophisticated creature whom he could mould according to his
+own views, and who should be as unlike as possible to all those with
+whom he had had any former connexion.
+
+He was accidentally introduced to Lucy, and she appeared to him
+precisely the thing of which he was in search. She was decidedly very
+pretty, and lacked nothing but what a week’s tuition would give, to
+have _un air distingué_. Her head was small—it was naturally well put
+on. Her figure was slender, her foot was not large; and, though her
+hands were a little red, they were well-shaped. Some almond-paste, the
+best shoemaker, and Mademoiselle Hyacinthe, would set all quite right.
+He thought he should not alter the style of her coeffure. The back of
+her head was so Grecian in its contour, she might venture upon her own
+simple twist and long ringlets.
+
+Having thus made up his mind, he proceeded to ingratiate himself with
+the family. There was a public ball at the concert-rooms, and thither
+he went.
+
+He never danced: he knew he was too old, and he never affected youth.
+But, when Lucy was dancing, she often found his large, intelligent,
+expressive eyes fixed on her from beneath the very dark eyebrows which
+shaded them, without giving them any look of harshness. She felt
+flattered, without being distressed, for the expression was that of
+kindly pleasure in seeing a lovely young woman innocently gay. The gaze
+expressed that he did think her lovely, though it contained nothing
+that could alarm the most shrinking modesty.
+
+In the course of the evening he conversed a good deal with Mrs.
+Heckfield, in whose common-place remarks he seemed to find much pith
+and substance.
+
+Between the dances, when Lucy returned to her mother, he rose to give
+her his seat, not as if he was merely doing an act of common courtesy,
+but as if it afforded him real heart-felt pleasure to be of any
+possible use to her, and it was with kindliness, rather than gallantry,
+that he flew to fetch her some tea, or some lemonade.
+
+He handed Mrs. Heckfield to supper, and sat between her and Lucy, who
+found her partner quite dull and stupid, in comparison with this very
+agreeable new acquaintance. He did not talk much; he said nothing which
+she could afterwards remember as being either clever or amusing. But
+he had a manner of listening with a deferential air, his eyes fixed
+with attention on the speaker, while his countenance seemed to say, the
+remark made was new and luminous, something which had never struck him
+before, so that people believed themselves delighted with him, while,
+in truth, they were delighted with themselves.
+
+In a cabinet-council, Colonel and Mrs. Heckfield agreed that, as he
+appeared to find so much pleasure in their society, they might venture
+to ask Lord Montreville to dinner. But who to invite to meet him? That
+was a question of much consideration. The Bexleighs were agreeable, but
+they were so numerous, that it would make the party dull to have so
+many of one family. It is dreadful if members of the same household get
+near each other; they cannot seize that moment for talking of family
+affairs, neither can they make conversation like strangers.
+
+“Let us have the Thompsons, my dear,” said the Colonel.
+
+“La! Colonel Heckfield! Mrs. Thompson! so fat and vulgar, and Mr.
+Thompson, so silent, unless you talk of stocks or consols.”
+
+“Well, then, Colonel Danby and his daughter.”
+
+“They will do pretty well; but I was thinking of Mrs. Haughtville, who,
+you know, has always lived in the first circles.”
+
+“What! that deaf old woman? I can’t see of what use she can be.”
+
+“Why, my dear, it won’t do to ask just common-place country neighbours.
+We must get somebody Lord Montreville is likely to know.”
+
+“Very true! And then my friend Dolby, he knows every body, and can talk
+thirteen to the dozen.”
+
+“He knows every body who has been in India, but I very much suspect he
+does not know any body that Lord Montreville would think any body,”
+answered the lady, who never could endure her husband’s jolly friend,
+who certainly did eat, drink, talk, and laugh thirteen to the dozen,
+but who, she not unwisely thought, would be a very bad ingredient in
+this refined party; “Surely Sir James Ashgrove, the member for the
+county, would be a better person; we can give him a bed, you know.”
+
+“Very well—Ashgrove is a good fellow, and a sensible fellow, but he
+never gives you much of his conversation, unless you talk of the last
+division in Parliament, and then he will tell you which way every
+member voted, and the reasons of his vote into the bargain.”
+
+“But he is a man of good birth and good connexions, and quite a friend
+of the family besides; James’s godfather and all.”
+
+“Then, if we ask our good parson and his two daughters, we shall have
+quite enough. I don’t like a great let-off; it is much best to take
+matters quietly.”
+
+“Good heavens, Colonel Heckfield! you cannot be in earnest. What!
+that old proser, who makes a comma between every word, and a full
+stop nowhere! and those two Misses, one as old as the hills, and the
+other as giggling a girl as ever I saw. Besides. Lucy and she will get
+laughing and gossiping together, and Lucy never appears to advantage
+when Bell Stopford is with her.”
+
+“Whom had we best have then, my love?” responded the Colonel, who began
+to be weary of the discussion.
+
+“Why, first of all, Mrs. Haughtville,” answered Mrs. Heckfield, who
+had long ago prepared her list in her mind, “and Sir James Ashgrove
+(as _you_ wish), and young Mr. Lyon, Lord Petersfield’s nephew, and
+Sir Alan Byway, the great traveller, and Miss Pennefeather, who wrote
+those sweet novels; she is quite the lion of these parts, and people of
+fashion like to meet a genius; and then, my dear, I thought of asking
+Lord and Lady Bodlington.”
+
+“Mercy upon us, wife! why I don’t know them by sight.”
+
+“But I do, Colonel Heckfield, and a sweet woman she is. I was
+introduced to her at the ball the other night, and it would be but
+civil to ask them to dinner.”
+
+“I think it would be much better to have Mr. Denby and his nice
+daughter. But it is all the same to me; I don’t like running after fine
+folks, who care not a rush for us, that’s all.”
+
+“Well, if Lord and Lady Bodlington cannot come, then we will ask the
+Denbys. But I really am half pledged to ask them, for Lady Bodlington
+said the other night she heard I had the prettiest green-house in the
+world: and I said I hoped to have the pleasure of showing it to her.”
+
+“But we do not dine in the green-house?”
+
+“I assure you, my love, I understand these little matters better
+than you do, and it would seem quite marked if we did not ask the
+Bodlingtons.”
+
+Colonel Heckfield did not quite understand what would seem marked, but
+he acquiesced.
+
+The distinguished personages mentioned by Mrs. Heckfield proved
+propitious, with the exception of Sir Alan Byway, whose place was
+filled, though most inadequately filled, by a young shy lordling, who
+was at a private tutor’s in the neighbourhood. Mrs. Heckfield preferred
+him, on account of his name, to the Indian friend Dolby, whom Colonel
+Heckfield, on the secession of the loquacious traveller, made another
+attempt to insert.
+
+The eventful day arrived. Mrs. Heckfield, in her secret soul, was in a
+great fuss, though she maintained a tolerably placid exterior; she was
+so afraid, after all her pains to exclude any unworthy guests, that
+the party might prove dull, or not _bien assorti_. Colonel Heckfield
+was really composed and easy: he did not like seeking great people,
+but, if they fell in his way, they did not annoy him. The place, though
+small, was pretty; the house was _bien montée_; there was nothing to be
+ashamed of, and he did not see how it could much signify whether one,
+out of the many pleasant, cheerful dinners, which had taken place under
+his hospitable roof, proved, or did not prove, the quintessence of
+perfection.
+
+Not so Mrs. Heckfield. She had settled that, on the impression made
+that day, depended the future fate of Lucy. When she let herself alone,
+she was a pleasing, popular woman; but on this occasion, she wished to
+be more elegant and well-bred than usual. Mrs. Haughtville being rather
+deaf, could not hear a word she said; and, as Mrs. Heckfield would not
+commit the vulgarity of speaking loud, every word they addressed to
+each other, might have figured very well in the game of cross questions
+and crooked answers. Lady Bodlington was a good-humoured very insipid
+little woman! Lord Bodlington the most common-place man imaginable.
+Mr. Lyon was an empty dandy, and he was unfortunately seated next to
+Miss Pennefeather, whom he regarded with horror, fear, detestation,
+and contempt, as a blue—and, worse than all, a country blue! Miss
+Pennefeather, in a yellow toque and red gown, sate up, waiting to be
+drawn out—but—she waited in vain. The fashionably low tone of voice in
+which the mistress of the mansion spoke, and her studied desire to be
+perfectly well-bred, communicated a _gêne_ and formality to the whole
+party, which, re-acting upon the suffering hostess, would have made the
+evening one of unmitigated pain to herself, and of unmitigated bore to
+her company, if Lord Montreville’s tact and good breeding had not come
+to the relief of all parties.
+
+He asked Miss Pennefeather some questions upon modern literature, which
+gave her an opportunity of pouring forth her stores of information
+into the ears of the loathing dandy. He made a remark concerning the
+number of members who had paired off upon the last important division
+in the last session of Parliament, and Sir James Ashgrove was in his
+element. He informed Lady Bodlington what was the proper name for that
+species of sable of which her boa was composed, and she became eloquent
+to prove that, whatever its name, it was of the most approved sort—in
+Paris at least—whatever it might be in Russia. He told young Lord
+Slenderdale he ought to look at Captain Charles Heckfield’s brown mare,
+for she was the cleverest hack he had seen for a long time, and the two
+young men soon found themselves able to speak. He complimented Colonel
+Heckfield on his wines, and Mrs. Heckfield on the beautiful china of
+which the dinner service was composed; and he told her in a friendly,
+confidential manner, the only place where such rare china could be
+matched. By degrees the conversation became general, and then he
+listened to each, so as to make each person—each lady at least, believe
+herself an object of interest and attention to him.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield felt quite at her ease concerning the fate of her
+dinner, and perfectly intimate with Lord Montreville, but not quite
+happy about Lucy, who, since the first awful silence, had given way
+to a comfortable universal clatter, had grown so merry with her
+brother and Lord Slenderdale, that Mrs. Heckfield felt convinced Lord
+Montreville would set her down in his mind as a missish hoyden, and
+entirely dismiss her from his thoughts. In vain were sundry maternal
+glances levelled at poor Lucy—knittings of the eyebrows (suddenly
+smoothed and converted into sweet smiles if any one looked her way),
+all were wasted on the unconscious girl, who, in the gaiety of her
+heart, continued to laugh and to talk till she was on the verge of
+laughing a little too loud, and, as Mrs. Heckfield thought, of losing a
+marquisate.
+
+But she was mistaken. Lord Montreville knew the sex well, and he saw
+that it was an innocent, gay, natural laugh—that there was neither
+freedom nor coquetry in her merriment; he knew how quickly women catch
+the tone of good society, and he still thought she would do.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield hastened the signal for the departure of the ladies,
+in consequence of Lucy’s ill-timed mirth, and they all sailed out,
+Lady Bodlington first, the Honourable Mrs. Haughtville next, Miss
+Pennefeather followed after, and Mrs. Heckfield was able quietly, but
+angrily, to whisper to Lucy, “that she giggled just as if Bell Stopford
+had been with her.”
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ Il n’est pas bien honnête, et pour beaucoup de causes,
+ Qu’une femme étudie et sache tant de choses.
+ Former aux bonnes mœurs l’esprit de ses enfans,
+ Faire aller son ménage, avoir l’œil sur ses gens,
+ Et régler la dépense avec économie,
+ Doit être son étude et sa philosophie.
+ Nos pères sur ce point étaient gens bien sensés,
+ Qui disaient qu’une femme en sait toujours assez
+ Quand la capacité de son esprit se hausse
+ A connaître un pourpoint d’avec un haut de chausse.
+ Les leurs ne lisaient point, mais elles vivaient bien,
+ Leurs ménages étaient tout leur docte entretien;
+ Et leurs livres, un dé, du fil, et des aiguilles,
+ Dont elles travaillaient au trousseau de leurs filles.
+ Les femmes d’à present sont bien loin de ces mœurs,
+ Elles veulent écrire, et devenir auteurs.—MOLIERE.
+
+There is no moment more trying to the mistress of a house than that
+in which the ladies first gather round the fire when they leave the
+dining-room. If a silence ensues, or if the conversation is begun in
+too low a tone of voice, that voiceless utterance which denotes and
+produces shyness, the die is cast—the character of the evening is
+stamped.
+
+Unfortunately Mrs. Heckfield, in her anxiety to be attentive, just as
+the ladies were crowding round the fire, asked them if they would not
+“take a seat,” and was sufficiently wanting in tact to allow them to
+settle themselves, in something very nearly approaching a circle, and a
+circle some way removed from the fire.
+
+In vain were the sofas stuffed with cushions, in vain were the ottomans
+as low as possible, and the arm-chairs so deep that no one under seven
+feet high could reach the back of them; in vain were all the tables so
+orthodoxly covered with snuff boxes under glass cases, miniatures in
+beautiful frames, French souvenirs with liliputian artificial flowers,
+annuals in every variety of binding, prose albums, poetry albums,
+drawing albums, china cups and Sevres vases, Dresden inkstands, and
+mother-of-pearl letter pressers, till it was impossible to find a spot
+on which a cup could be safely deposited; all these appliances and
+means to boot will not produce ease if it is wanting in the mind of the
+hostess. From which, by the by, might be deduced the superiority of
+mind over matter.
+
+Mrs. Haughtville was a fine lady, and was anxious Lady Bodlington
+should not labour under the erroneous impression that she was in her
+element with Miss Pennefeather and the Heckfields. She therefore took
+an early opportunity of asking Lady Bodlington how many Miss Heckfields
+there were, and whether this Miss Heckfield was older or younger than
+Lady Selcourt. Lady Bodlington answered truly and simply, that she
+did not know, as she had only met them once before at the ball. Mrs.
+Haughtville did not hear, and Lady Bodlington, who was straightforward
+and good-humoured, and did not wish to be uncivil, was quite distressed
+to know how to answer. Mrs. Haughtville continued to ask questions
+about the people present, forgetting that though she asked in a
+whisper, she could not hear the whispered answer.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield, who thought if Miss Pennefeather would talk every one
+must be delighted with her cleverness, was occupied in leading her to
+subjects on which she fancied she would shine and edify her audience;
+but Miss Pennefeather, who had found the dandy very unsatisfactory, and
+was not much pleased with the _insouciance_ of the ladies of fashion,
+and who thought herself privileged to have the sensitive pride of
+genius, was not so easily drawn out. Lucy, who had been daunted by her
+mother’s remark as they left the dining-room, was meek and silent.
+
+It was up-hill work for Mrs. Heckfield. At length she thought of some
+Italian views which had lately been sent to her by her eldest son, who
+was on his travels.
+
+“Have you seen these prints, Miss Pennefeather, that Henry has sent me?
+They are quite in your way, such an Italian scholar as you are.”
+
+Miss Pennefeather revived; she piqued herself on her pronunciation of
+Italian. She looked at them with interest, read the names of each with
+great emphasis, scrupulously called Leghorn, Livorno, and Florence,
+Firenze; and expatiated on the beauties of each place, as if she had
+lived there all her life.
+
+“I thought you had never been abroad, Miss Pennefeather?” said Lucy,
+timidly and simply.
+
+“No! I have never been abroad, exactly,” replied Miss Pennefeather,
+with a slight embarrassment, but, instantly recovering, she added
+with enthusiasm, “but I have heard and read so much of these hallowed
+spots, I feel as if I knew them perfectly; as if I had roved with
+Il Petrarca, through the shady groves and by the purling streams of
+Valchiusa; as if I had accompanied the great author of the Divina
+Commedia in his wanderings; and I can almost fancy I had made one of
+that party of congenial souls in the enchanted skiff with Guido and
+Lappo,
+
+ ‘E Monna Vanna, e Monna Bice poi,
+ E quella sotto ’l numer delle trenta!’
+
+I never see a print of La bella Firenze, without thinking of her exiled
+poet, and,” she added with a sigh, and an upward glance, which was
+intended to speak volumes, “feeling with him—
+
+ ‘Come sa di sale
+ Lo pan altrui, com’ è duro calle,
+ Lo scender, e ’l salir per l’altrui scale.’”
+
+Miss Pennefeather was poor, and her friends were extremely kind in
+frequently inviting her to stay at their houses, where she appeared to
+enjoy herself exceedingly, and gave no signs of sympathising with Dante.
+
+“What did she say?” asked Mrs. Haughtville.
+
+“Something about salt bread, and its being very hard to go up and down
+stairs,” answered the good-humoured Lady Bodlington.
+
+“Oh!” said Mrs. Haughtville.
+
+Miss Pennefeather cast a glance of contempt at the high-born pair,
+and relapsed into a dignified silence. Coffee came: that was a real
+blessing. Tea succeeded, which was some comfort. Mrs. Heckfield’s eyes
+turned frequently and more frequently towards the door; still the
+gentlemen came not. In her despair she bade Lucy give them a little
+music.
+
+“You are fond of music, I believe, Lady Bodlington?”
+
+“Oh, yes! passionately fond of music!” answered Lady Bodlington, with a
+suppressed yawn, and poor Lucy seated herself at the pianoforte.
+
+She had a pretty voice, but she was very much frightened. Miss
+Pennefeather was a critic, and Mrs. Haughtville looked so cold.
+Lady Bodlington she did not mind—she seemed good-natured, and the
+circumstance of her being a viscountess, had not the same effect on
+Lucy’s nerves as on her mother’s.
+
+She did her best, and Lady Bodlington, with a sweet smile, thanked her
+for that pretty Spanish air.
+
+“It is German!” said Lucy, with the _naïveté_ of youth; and both felt
+uncomfortable. Lady Bodlington, at having made a wrong hit, Lucy,
+at not having pronounced her words more distinctly. Lady Bodlington
+should have known better than to utter any phrase of commendation which
+committed her, as to the language in which a young lady’s song is
+couched. Lucy should have known better than to set her right, when she
+had made the mistake.
+
+“If Miss Pennefeather would favour us!” humbly suggested Mrs.
+Heckfield: “One of your own unique compositions, my dear Miss
+Pennefeather. Miss Pennefeather composes words, and music, and all,
+Mrs. Haughtville, and they are the sweetest things!”
+
+This account of Miss Pennefeather’s multifarious talents excited
+a slight emotion of curiosity in Mrs. Haughtville’s mind, and she
+accordingly begged Miss Pennefeather to grant their request. Lady
+Bodlington was very anxious indeed; and the poetess, whose pride,
+though easily wounded, was, through the medium of her vanity, as
+easily soothed, found the two fine ladies were more intellectual, and
+consequently more worthy of the efforts of her genius, than she had at
+first imagined.
+
+After a little bashful reluctance, she seated herself upon the round
+stool. She was short and thick, with a very small waist and a very full
+gown, and she sat extremely stiff and upright. Her arms were short, and
+when she meant to play _staccato_, she caught up her hands as high as
+her shoulders, and then she pounced down again on the affrighted notes
+as a kite upon a brood of chickens. The “sweet thing” she selected for
+the occasion was in a German style. A love-lorn damsel who sold herself
+to the spirit of darkness, that she might rejoin her murdered lover’s
+ghost in another, but not a better, world. Miss Pennefeather’s nose was
+small, and somewhat _retroussé_; her eyes were large, black, and round
+(they were her beauty); her mouth would not have been ugly, but that it
+was difficult to decide where her chin ended and her throat began, so
+that, during the vehement and energetic passages which the nature of
+the subject called forth, when the head was thrown back, and the black
+eyes were darting their beams towards the ceiling, the double chin
+protruded rather beyond the natural and original one.
+
+The gentlemen entered just as the maiden was torn away to the realms
+below by the infernal crew, and, having repented her of her unholy
+compact, was invoking beings of the upper air to her rescue. The poor
+pianoforte reeled under the astounding accompaniment, in its lowest
+bass to the deep-toned exultation of the demons, and to the shrieks of
+the maiden in its highest treble; the Sappho’s cheeks were suffused
+with the excitement of the moment, the feathers in her yellow toque
+were waving as rapidly as the plume of a hero in the thickest of the
+fight. The sight, the sounds, were awful!
+
+The dandy reached the door—he saw—he heard—and, he fled. He retreated
+to the hall, and hastily seizing a hat (which, by the by, happened to
+be Lord Montreville’s instead of his own,) and throwing around him his
+military cloak, he boldly sallied forth in a drizzling wet night to
+walk two miles to his lodgings.
+
+ “He’d brave the raging of the skies,
+ But not”—Miss Pennefeather.
+
+The other gentlemen were less easily intimidated, and made good
+their entrance. Lord Montreville seated himself by the side of Lucy,
+and, without speaking enough to be uncivil towards the performer,
+he contrived to make Lucy perfectly understand that he preferred
+her conversation to Miss Pennefeather’s singing, although he was
+passionately fond of music, and should like of all things to hear her
+sing.
+
+When the performance was concluded, he assured the Corinne of the
+evening that her composition was one which could be heard with
+indifference by no one. Miss Pennefeather was charmed, and asked if his
+Lordship was an admirer of the new style of English music, which had
+been introduced since the Captive Knight and the Treasures of the Deep
+had made such a sensation.
+
+“Of course you know the Treasures of the Deep? They tell me I have
+caught something of the inspired authoress’s expression.” Lord
+Montreville really trembled. He had heard it sung by the inspired
+authoress, and he hastened to avert the sacrilegious attempt, by
+begging for another of her own composition.
+
+Charmed and flattered, Miss Pennefeather again burst forth in a
+perfectly original piece, under cover of which Lord Montreville
+entered into a most agreeable conversation with Lucy. His dark,
+lively, expressive eyes, looked at her with so much consciousness
+of being understood, that she immediately felt quite intimate, and
+perfectly satisfied that he was as much amused as she was, by Miss
+Pennefeather’s exhibition. These looks of mutual intelligence and
+amusement prevented her feeling any awe of his age or his rank, while
+his very age made her feel perfectly safe and innocent in immediately
+giving in to the intimacy which so suddenly sprang up between them.
+Their communication did not confine itself to a little good-humoured
+ridicule of the self-constituted Corinne; he had the happy knack of
+leading the conversation to topics interesting to the individuals with
+whom he conversed; and Mrs. Heckfield overheard Lucy, in the fullness
+of her heart, giving a detailed account of the death of a Newfoundland
+puppy, which was supposed to have been bit by a mad dog!
+
+Mrs. Heckfield was in agonies: she looked unutterable things; but her
+looks were utterly thrown away. Lucy’s heart and soul were in her
+subject, and her eyes were sufficiently tearful to look very bright
+and melting. Lord Montreville thought this extremely countrified
+simplicity, charming, though he did not intend it should last for
+ever. He was himself a professed lover of animals, and he gave her, in
+return, an account of a horse who neighed when he came into the stable,
+and would put his nose into his pocket to find the bread he was in the
+habit of feeding him with.
+
+Lucy thought him the nicest, best-natured creature she had ever met
+with; and Mrs. Heckfield saw her, in the midst of his story, draw her
+chair nearer to him, her whole mind intent upon the sensible horse.
+Mrs. Heckfield thought, “How improper! how forward! how vulgar! What
+can ail Lucy to-night?”
+
+When the company dispersed, what was her horror to see Lucy put out
+her hand towards Lord Montreville, and shake hands with him cordially,
+heartily, and frankly; but her horror was mixed with astonishment, when
+Lord Montreville begged permission to call the next morning, as Miss
+Heckfield had promised to show him some beautiful puppies, and to allow
+him to select one, as he was a great dog-fancier.
+
+“What can be the meaning of this?” thought she, “he must be disgusted
+with Lucy’s manners to-day! They could not have been worse if Bell
+Stopford had been here!”
+
+When the last carriage had driven from the door, Mrs. Heckfield threw
+herself into a chair.
+
+“Well, Lucy! I think you have done it to-day! When you knew I wished
+you to behave like a girl of fashion. When we had all the best
+company within ten miles round assembled here, just this one day, to
+giggle and laugh all dinner-time, and then to entertain a man of Lord
+Montreville’s refinement and taste with your dog’s death, and your
+puppies’ birth! He must think you have been brought up in the stables,
+rather than in the drawing-room.”
+
+“Oh, dear mamma! I assure you he asked me all about poor dear Hector’s
+death!”
+
+“Asked you about Hector’s death! How could he have known such a dog as
+Hector ever existed, if you had not begun about your own dog and your
+own affairs? Don’t you know that egotism should be avoided in every
+way, and that it is the most ill-bred thing in the world to talk of
+yourself and your concerns?”
+
+“So it is, mamma;—very true. I did not mean to talk of myself, and
+I am sure I do not know how I fell into it: but you don’t know how
+interested he seemed. I do not think he was bored, really: he says he
+is so fond of animals—just like me.”
+
+“Pooh, child!—he is a very well-bred man, and was too polite to let you
+feel you bored him. You must learn not to be led into pouring your own
+histories into people’s ears.”
+
+Mrs. Heckfield forgot that at dinner she had given Lord Montreville a
+very long account of the manner in which she had become possessed of
+the china he had admired.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ “Enfin ils me mettaient à mon aise: et moi qui m’imaginais qu’il y
+ avait tant de mystère dans la politesse des gens du monde, et qui
+ l’avais regardé comme une science qui m’était totalement inconnue,
+ et dont je n’avais nul principe, j’étais bien surprise de voir qu’il
+ n’y avait rien de si particulier dans la leur, rien qui me fût si
+ étranger; mais seulement quelque chose de liant, d’obligeant, et
+ d’aimable.”
+
+ MARIVAUX.
+
+Lucy went to bed uneasy at having had such bad manners, and yet not
+altogether mortified; for, though she implicitly believed all her
+mother said of her behaviour, she did not think it had quite produced
+the effect she imagined upon Lord Montreville, “for mamma did not know
+how good-natured he was.”
+
+She generally chatted with Milly, as she was undressing; and Milly,
+who was aware that the party of that day was one which had excited
+some anxiety in her mistress’s bosom, inquired of Miss Lucy “how the
+gentlefolks had been pleased, and whether every thing was right at
+table.”
+
+“We were all pretty well placed, I believe, only mamma says I am not to
+sit so near Charles again, for if we get near each other we make too
+much noise; and Mr. Lyon did not like Miss Pennefeather at all.”
+
+“I am sorry for that, miss; but I meant how the cross-corners did, for
+poor Mrs. Fussicome was in such a way. The jelly would not stand, and
+it looked so shocking bad when it was in the dish, that what did we do
+but beat up some raspberry cream in no time, and sent it in instead;
+but then it made two reds at the cross-corners; but I should hope
+nobody noticed it.”
+
+“I am sure I did not, nurse, and I don’t think mamma did; at least
+she said nothing about it. Every thing looked very nice, tell Mrs.
+Fussicome.”
+
+“Yes, miss, that I will, for she has been quite put out about it; she
+said she could not enjoy her supper a bit, and she thought the soufflet
+was not quite right.”
+
+“Mamma did not say any thing about it: indeed she saw no faults in the
+dinner, they were all in me. How I do wish I had not such spirits. I
+mean to be so quiet and demure, and as soon as the people begin to
+talk to me I forget. I do really believe Lord Montreville is very
+good-natured, and will not think the worse of me.”
+
+“La! miss, I’m sure your mamma can’t think there is any harm in talking
+and laughing with such an old gentleman.”
+
+“He is not so very old, Milly,” answered Lucy, though if Milly had not
+said so, she might have been the first to say it herself.
+
+About one o’clock the next morning, Lord Montreville arrived at Rose
+Hill Lodge, and was surprised to find Lucy shy, reserved, timid,
+and rather awkward. Mrs. Heckfield, anxious to efface from Lord
+Montreville’s mind all impressions concerning the kennel, and the
+stables, and the dog-hutches, led his attention to the flower garden,
+which was remarkably pretty, and to her small conservatory, which was
+in excellent order, at the same time taking care to let him know that
+the disposition of the flower-beds was according to Lucy’s taste, that
+Lucy had arranged the vases in the manner which excited his admiration,
+that the training of the creepers in festoons from one tree to another
+was Lucy’s fancy. She pointed out a beautiful new geranium which had
+been named after her little “madcap Lucy; for madcap as she is, Lord
+Montreville, she has a decided taste for botany and that kind of
+thing,” added Mrs. Heckfield, with a sweet smile at Lucy, who certainly
+that morning had not deserved the name of “madcap.”
+
+Lord Montreville immediately understood the state of the case, and
+was well pleased; he thereby perceived that Lucy was docile, easily
+subdued, and easily managed. However, as his present object was to win
+her confidence, preparatory to attempting her heart, he alluded to Miss
+Heckfield’s promise of a puppy of their beautiful breed of setters, and
+he begged to be taken to the kennel, as he was to be allowed to choose
+for himself. Mrs. Heckfield entreated Lord Montreville would allow
+her to send for the dogs. Lord Montreville insisted on not giving so
+much trouble, when the servant was seen issuing from the drawing-room
+windows, showing the way to Lord and Lady Bodlington, who had called
+to see the conservatory. Mrs. Heckfield had a fresh demand on her
+politeness, and after the proper greetings, Lord Montreville whispered
+Lucy that she must not allow him to be cheated of his puppy, that he
+had quite set his heart upon seeing the whole family, and entreated
+her to lead the way. She was at first somewhat confused, and looked
+uneasily towards her mother, who was some way in advance; but she did
+not know how to refuse, so they proceeded through the back-yard, by the
+coal-hole, and the bottle-rack, through the drying-ground, past the
+pigsties, to a range of out-houses, where Lufra and all her family were
+shut up.
+
+The moment Lucy opened the door, up jumped Lufra, to the great
+detriment of the pretty muslin gown which that day made its first
+appearance.
+
+“Oh, my best new gown!” exclaimed Lucy. “O dear! Why would mamma make
+me put it on?”
+
+She had scarcely uttered the words when it flashed across her why mamma
+had wished her to be smart and to look well. She stopped short, and
+blushed up to the eyes.
+
+“This is too _naïf_,” thought Lord Montreville; “but _naïveté_ soon
+dies away if it is not encouraged. Her mother wishes to catch me, I
+know; but the girl has no plan; I shall be able to mould her to my
+liking.”
+
+A young man would have flown off upon perceiving the mother’s views;
+but Lord Montreville had seen them plainly from the very beginning, and
+it did not affect his opinion as to whether Lucy _était son fait_, or
+not. Because Mrs. Heckfield wished to catch him, there was no reason he
+should be caught; and he continued his observations of Lucy, and his
+calculations whether she would easily become the sort of wife he wished
+to have.
+
+After a long discussion concerning the several merits and beauties
+of the several puppies, in which Lucy found Lord Montreville’s taste
+in dogs perfectly coincided with her own, the puppy was selected,
+and Lucy’s heart had again opened, her reserve had vanished, she had
+made up her mind that, for once, mamma was wrong, and she was right;
+that her’s had been the most correct estimate of Lord Montreville’s
+character. She asked him if he admired young donkeys. He confessed that
+if he had a weakness, it was for a little baby donkey, with a shaggy
+forehead and a pointed nose. Lucy’s eyes sparkled at such a proof of
+sympathy in her companion. She proposed to show him her pet. He eagerly
+assented, and they proceeded through the chicken-yard to the paddock
+where the donkeys were grazing. The chickens expected to be fed, and
+all gathered round Lucy’s feet; the donkeys instantly set up a most
+sonorous braying, and galloped to her with their uplifted heads. Lucy
+was amused, and began to laugh, and to pat, and stroke, and pinch the
+dear sensible creatures, when a turn in the shrubbery walk brought Mrs.
+Heckfield, Lord and Lady Bodlington, and Mr. Lyon to the opposite side
+of the paddock, which commanded a view of Lucy and Lord Montreville.
+Lucy felt her cheeks glow, and her mirth subside. Her mother, who
+could not but know through what ignoble paths she must have led Lord
+Montreville, would be more displeased than ever. She was sobered in an
+instant. Lord Montreville perceived the blush, and the change in her
+countenance, and flattered himself there was something gratifying to
+himself in her emotions. They retraced their steps, but Lucy was silent
+and abashed, and looked heartily ashamed of herself when they rejoined
+the party.
+
+Lord Montreville immediately addressed Mrs. Heckfield, informed her
+that “Miss Heckfield, at his earnest request, had allowed him to
+inspect the puppies, and to select the one he fancied; and that he had
+a childish passion for young donkeys, which she had also most kindly
+indulged.”
+
+Mrs. Heckfield saw that no harm was done, and she was soothed. Lucy
+thought him more good-natured than ever in thus averting the storm she
+saw impending, and gratitude was added to cement the union of their
+congenial souls.
+
+He now became a frequent visitor at Rosehill Lodge, and his manner
+gradually assumed more the tone of gallantry. Reports arose. Lucy was
+rallied by her young friends, and began to look into her feelings.
+
+She had seen his beautiful equipage, his four blood bays; she had
+seen engravings of his magnificent seat in Staffordshire, of his
+lovely villa near London, of his ancient castle in Wales. She was
+proof against the splendour of Ashdale Park, and the elegancies of
+Beausejour, but the castle had a decided effect upon her heart. The
+walls were nine feet thick; there was a donjon keep, at the top of a
+tower nine hundred and forty-one years old; and Lord Montreville’s
+teeth were extremely good, almost as good as Captain Langley’s. From
+the vaults under the Caërwhwyddwth Castle subterraneous passages, to
+the end of which no one within the memory of man had penetrated, were
+supposed to extend to the ruined monastery of Caërmerwhysteddwhstgen;
+and then Lord Montreville was quite thin, not the least inclined to
+corpulency. He was older than Sir Charles Selcourt, but he was much
+more agreeable; he was certainly a great deal older than Captain
+Langley, but then Captain Langley was not the least clever. All
+their tastes agreed exactly. He was enthusiastic upon the self-same
+subjects,—puppies, donkeys, goslings, and Lord Byron.
+
+Her mind was in a wavering state, when the following conversation took
+place between herself and Milly:—
+
+“This is poor Miss Lizzy’s birth-day, miss, and we have all been
+drinking her health and happiness to-night at supper. She is twenty-two
+this very day.”
+
+“And I shall be nineteen next birthday, Milly. We are all growing very
+old. It is almost time I should be married. How old were you when you
+married?”
+
+“Nineteen, Miss Lucy.”
+
+“Just about my age. And how old was John?”
+
+“In his twenty-one, miss.”
+
+“Dear! I don’t think that was difference enough. A man ought to be a
+good deal older than his wife, that he may advise her, and guide her,
+and all that, as mamma says, when she is out of sight of her mother.”
+
+“I can’t say, miss. The Bible says, ‘I will make an help meet for
+him;’ so I suppose the woman is to help the man, as well as the man to
+help the woman; and if they are to help one another, why I reckon they
+should be something of an age.”
+
+“Perhaps that may be best, nurse, where they both have to work, and
+where the man should be young and strong to labour for his family; but
+in another line, nurse,—among richer people, you know,—where there is
+no occasion to be strong and to work hard, it is such a thing for a
+giddy young girl to have a steady sensible man, who can tell her all
+she ought to do—a man much cleverer than herself, a person she can
+quite look up to.”
+
+“Maybe it is, miss.”
+
+“And then, as mamma says, a married woman, if she is not quite ugly,
+is liable, you know, to have men—young men—talk to her,—talk to her a
+good deal,—more than they should; and then it is such a thing to have a
+husband who can tell her exactly whom she should talk to, and whom she
+should not talk to.”
+
+“But sure, miss, I should think every woman, married or single, might
+know when a gentleman said any thing as was not becoming for her to
+listen to.”
+
+“Yes, certainly; but mamma says that in the great world a young woman
+might get herself talked about just for talking all about nothing
+at all, to one of those fashionable dandies, and that if she has a
+husband who knows the world well, he will tell her just how far she may
+listen to such people.”
+
+“Well, my dear Miss Lucy, we poor folks don’t understand about talking,
+and being talked about, and listening, and not listening. For my part,
+for as long as I have lived in this wicked world—and a wicked world it
+is in some ways—I never knew a young woman as was married to a young
+man as was the man of her heart, as ever lost her good name for all
+she might be affable and pleasant like with her neighbours. But the
+gentlefolks knows best, to be sure.”
+
+Milly was unsatisfactory: she saw what was going on in the family, and
+she could not like it: it was no business of hers, and she would never
+think of stepping out of her place. Lucy was uncomfortable. She loved
+Milly, and, moreover, she had settled in her own mind to love like
+Milly. She longed to know what she thought of Lord Montreville, and at
+length she plunged into the subject.
+
+“Don’t you think Lord Montreville is a very pleasing-looking man,
+Milly?”
+
+“Yes, miss; he looks very well for his years.”
+
+“He is so clever, you can’t think.”
+
+“Is he, miss?”
+
+“And so very good-natured!”
+
+“That is a good thing for all his servants, I am sure, miss.”
+
+“And for every one else who is connected with him.”
+
+“Yes, certainly, miss.”
+
+“He is the most agreeable person, and loves all sorts of animals, and
+seems to like to have every thing about him happy.”
+
+“Sure, miss.”
+
+“Do you know, Milly, I should not be very much surprised if you might
+some day have an opportunity of trying whether he made those around him
+happy or not.”
+
+“Indeed, miss!”
+
+“Mamma says she is convinced he likes me very much;” and she added, in
+a coaxing manner, “now what shall we do, you and I, Milly?”
+
+“I am sure, miss, it is just as you please.”
+
+“Yes, I know that well enough,” answered Lucy, with a shade of
+pettishness in her tone; “I can say no as well as anybody, if I please,
+and mamma says she would not influence my choice for the world; but
+it certainly is very true what mamma says, that I am so giddy I should
+always be getting into scrapes if I was to marry anybody as young
+and as giddy as myself. It was only yesterday she was talking about
+it, after Lord Montreville had brought me that beautiful bouquet of
+orange-flowers; and she asked me whether I had any objection in the
+world to him, and whether I did not think him clever, and agreeable,
+and good-natured, and whether there was any body else I thought more
+clever, or more agreeable, or more good-natured, and I’m sure I can’t
+think of any body just now. Lord Slenderdale and Mr. Desmond are
+handsomer, to be sure; but mamma would be shocked to hear me talk about
+beauty in that kind of way. It does not sound well in a girl, you
+know,” Then, after a pause, she added, “Did you think John handsome?”
+
+“I believe other folks called him a fine young man, but I am sure I
+never thought nothing at all about his looks.”
+
+“Oh!” thought Lucy, “mamma is quite right; girls should not set any
+value on the exterior—one should only think of the mind. Besides, Lord
+Montreville is still very good-looking.” Presently she continued, “Did
+you think John very clever, Milly?”
+
+“La! miss, I don’t know, I am sure. The schoolmaster never said no
+other than that he was a very good boy at his book, but I never thought
+about his scholarship. That was no business of mine.”
+
+“Was John agreeable, and pleasant, amusing, you know, to talk to.”
+
+“He was always pleasant to me, I’m sure; he never gave me a bad word
+nor an unkind look in his life, and he was always very agreeable to
+any thing I wished; and, as to being amusing, why we always had other
+things to think of, than amusing ourselves, so I can’t justly say.”
+
+“Oh!” thought Lucy, “he was a good creature, but evidently very stupid
+and dull; and Lord Montreville is so lively and agreeable!”
+
+The result of this conversation was, that Lucy went to bed, pleased
+with Lord Montreville, and not quite pleased with Milly. She went to
+sleep and dreamed she was the Marchioness of Montreville, chaperoning
+her sister Emma to Almack’s. People cannot prevent their dreams. “In
+vino veritas.” Likewise, in dreams, there is truth. Many a weakness,
+many a secret preference, which the waking thoughts would not be
+guilty of harbouring, have been revealed to the dreamer in visions
+over which he, or she, had no control. The emulator of Milly’s pure,
+disinterested, uncompromising, uncalculating affection, would never
+wittingly have allowed the idea of worldly vanities and splendours
+to have influenced her mind; but I fear we should lower our heroine
+too much in the opinion of the young and romantic reader, were we to
+inquire too deeply into the degree in which they did influence her view
+of the subject.
+
+The next morning she jokingly repeated her dream to Emma.
+
+“Oh! Lucy,” exclaimed Emma, “what a charming dream! And you know mamma
+says, if you marry, I may come out at seventeen, and, if you don’t, I
+must stay in this poky school-room till I am eighteen. You never can
+refuse Lord Montreville.”
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ “A l’age où j’étais on n’a pas le courage de résister à tout le monde,
+ je crus ee qu’on me disait tant par docilité que par persuasion; je me
+ laissai entraîner, je fis ce qu’on me disait, j’étais dans une émotion
+ qui avait arrêté toutes mes pensées; les autres decidèrent de mon
+ sort, et je ne fus moi-même qu’une spectatrice stupide de l’engagement
+ éternel que je pris.”—MARIVAUX.
+
+What with the jests of others and her mother’s counsels, both open
+and implied, Lucy had no doubt of Lord Montreville’s intentions. The
+whole affair seemed only to depend upon herself. What was her surprise
+when at seven o’clock, instead of Lord Montreville, a note arrived,
+apologising for his absence, on the plea that he had been summoned away
+upon business. Lucy thought lovers were to be devoted things, who were
+to have no business but that of gaining their lady’s favour.
+
+There was a party that day, and she saw people looked surprised at
+hearing Lord Montreville was gone away so suddenly, and she felt a
+little mortified. “I am certainly in love,” she thought, “for every
+thing seems dull to-day. Yes, it is all a blank now he is gone (how
+much is implied by the simple pronoun _he_ or _she_); just as Milly
+said when John was gone to the back woods, and she was left at Halifax.”
+
+The resemblance between her situation and feelings, and those of Milly,
+would not have been so evident to others.
+
+Several days elapsed, and nothing was heard of Lord Montreville. His
+saddle-horses were seen to pass towards London with their horse-cloths
+packed upon their saddles, in travelling costume. Lucy thought he was
+certainly gone quite away, without proposing, and she felt acute pangs
+of mortification and disappointment. She was ready to cut out her
+tongue for having, of her own accord, spoken to Milly of her prospects
+in life, when those prospects were evidently mere conjurings of her
+own self-conceit; she could have beat herself for having repeated her
+foolish dream to Emma, who had repeated it to Mary, who had repeated
+it to the governess, who had made Lucy blush more than once by her
+allusions to it,—she could cry at thinking how faintly she had rebutted
+Bell Stopford’s innuendoes, and she worked herself up to a state of
+soreness and agitation, not unlike that which might be produced by the
+tender passion itself.
+
+It is not easy to distinguish how much of the emotions on such
+occasions proceeds from real preference, and how much from gratified or
+mortified vanity. I believe it does not often fall to the lot of any
+one, to feel the real, pure, passion of love to the highest degree of
+which their nature is capable; but the combination of other, less noble
+passions, will produce considerable pains, pleasures, blushings, and
+flushings; hearts will beat, cheeks turn pale, hands shake, knees even
+will knock a little together, and the symptoms pass muster very well,
+as love, true love. If the affair ends in marriage, and the parties
+suit, it does as well as love, and often ends in becoming love itself.
+If, on the contrary, the flirtation ends, as many flirtations do, these
+symptoms are mentally laughed at and forgotten, as having only been
+passing ebullitions of gratified vanity, or indignant pride; the heart
+is supposed, and really is, free, and ready for a real true passion
+whenever it may be called forth.
+
+Lucy passed a restless and uncomfortable week—annoyed, when they were
+asked where Lord Montreville was gone—annoyed, when they were obliged
+to answer they did not know—annoyed, when they were asked when he
+returned—annoyed, at being again obliged to reply they could not
+tell—annoyed, when people looked surprised at their answers—annoyed,
+when they looked wise and cunning, and treated these answers as
+discreet evasions.
+
+At length, on the tenth day from Lord Montreville’s departure his
+servant was seen riding up the coach-road, towards the back-door.
+Lucy’s heart beat very quick, and she thought it quite abominable of
+John not to bring the note up-stairs immediately. She would fain have
+told her mother that she had seen the servant arrive, and that John was
+evidently waiting to finish his dinner, and to prepare the luncheon,
+before he brought the note; but she was ashamed to show her impatience,
+and she resolutely continued to copy music.
+
+John, it is presumed, had a good appetite that day, at least the
+time appeared unaccountably long. At length, however, luncheon was
+announced, and the note delivered, with the information that Lord
+Montreville’s servant was to wait for an answer.
+
+“It must be the proposal; and the servant is not to return without the
+answer,” thought Lucy, and her eyes felt dizzy. She glanced at the
+exterior of the note—it was three-cornered! It could not be a proposal.
+No! Never did a proposal come in the shape of a three-cornered note! It
+was very short, announcing his return, and begging if Mrs. Heckfield
+had finished the third volume of some novel which he had lent her,
+that she would return it, as he was sending back a box of books to the
+library.
+
+Lucy durst not ask what were the contents of the note; but her mother
+threw it to her, bidding her look for the book. She read the momentous
+communication, the withholding of which by John had so excited her
+internal wrath, and she thought it the shortest, oddest note, she ever
+read!—so abrupt! evidently written in such a hurry! There could be no
+doubt, however, what it meant to convey—a complete breaking off of the
+intimacy with their family;—even sending for his book in such haste!
+
+Meanwhile, she hunted for the volume, and she packed it up, resolving
+in her own mind to beware of the base deceiver, man; and feeling
+herself a slighted damsel.
+
+Lord Montreville’s absence had been caused by business connected
+with the intentions he entertained towards Lucy; but if he had acted
+upon a plan, he could not have shown more consummate policy. Every
+one values more highly whatever they have lost, or believe themselves
+on the point of losing; and when, in the course of that very day, he
+himself called at Rosehill Lodge, Lucy felt very happy, and greeted him
+with a blushing cheek and conscious face, which made him think he had
+really inspired the young thing with the tenderest interest; and Lucy,
+when she felt her heart beat, said to herself, “This is love—it can be
+nothing else.”
+
+They were prepared for their walk, when Lord Montreville called; and
+he begged leave to accompany them. Mrs. Heckfield stopped to give
+some directions to the gardener, Lord Montreville proceeded along
+the shrubbery-path with Lucy, and Mrs. Heckfield was not so swift
+of foot as to overtake them without exerting herself more than she
+thought there was any occasion to do. The three-cornered note had not
+appeared to her such decisive evidence of a wish to withdraw from their
+acquaintance.
+
+Lord Montreville expressed his pleasure at returning to Lyneton,—not
+that he liked Lyneton—he thought it an odious place; but he was so glad
+to find himself once more in the neighbourhood of Rosehill Lodge: but
+great as was the pleasure he felt, he could hardly flatter himself his
+return could give any corresponding pleasure; if he could suppose so,
+he should indeed esteem himself fortunate.
+
+“It is coming,” thought Lucy; and she now felt as much afraid he should
+propose, as she had before felt afraid he would not. Her whole wish was
+to avert the momentous explanation.
+
+“Oh, yes,” she answered, “mamma is always very glad to see you. Where
+is mamma? perhaps she has missed us; we had better find her;” and she
+turned and mended her pace.
+
+“May I not hope to detain you one moment, Miss Heckfield?” asked Lord
+Montreville, in a voice of earnest persuasion.
+
+“Oh! it is as good as come!” thought Lucy; “what shall I do?—Oh yes,
+certainly,” she answered, but walked on faster than ever.
+
+“If you would allow me a few moments’ conversation, Miss Heckfield, I
+have much to say that interests me deeply.”
+
+“Where can mamma be?” rejoined Lucy, in a tone of fear and trepidation.
+
+“For a few moments you must listen to me!” &c. &c. &c.
+
+Suffice it to say, Lord Montreville then proposed. The words of a
+proposal are horridly stupid to the ears of all but the parties
+concerned; and in what precise terms Lord Montreville couched the offer
+of his hand, heart, fortune, and titles, has remained, and will ever
+remain, unknown. A terrified “O dear!” uttered by Lucy when he began to
+unfold his mind, were the only words which escaped her lips. When he
+pressed for an answer, she did not say “No!” but she still walked on,
+her pace increasing every second, her close garden-bonnet well pulled
+over her face, which was rigidly directed on the gravel-walk before
+her, so that no one who was not immediately opposite had a chance of
+catching a glimpse of her countenance. Even Lord Montreville began
+to feel a little awkward. He had made love often enough, but he had
+proposed but once before; and that was in his early youth, to a very
+rich heiress, who had soon after married a duke. Fortunately for the
+nerves of both, they came upon Mrs. Heckfield at a turn in the walk.
+She saw with a glance that something decisive had taken place, and she
+hastened to relieve Lucy, and also to clench the matter.
+
+Lucy slipped her arm within Mrs. Heckfield’s, and feeling comparatively
+easy and secure, now she had interposed her mother between herself and
+her suitor, she walked on in silence, carefully contriving to make each
+step so exactly keep time, that the somewhat rounded form of the matron
+should completely eclipse the slender form of the girl.
+
+Lord Montreville explained himself in becoming and graceful terms; and
+Mrs. Heckfield, in a rapture of scarcely concealed joy, declared with
+what pleasure she should communicate Lord Montreville’s flattering
+declaration to Colonel Heckfield.
+
+“But, my dear Mrs. Heckfield, I have not yet been allowed to hope. Your
+daughter has not given me one word, one look of encouragement, and I
+need your kind influence to induce her——”
+
+“Lucy, my dear, you have not been so uncivil as to—My dear child, don’t
+be so silly. You must excuse her, my dear Lord Montreville, she is so
+young, and so little used to these agitating scenes. _I_ know what her
+feelings are, and although she is not at this moment able to speak for
+herself, I think I may answer for it you need not despair. Perhaps, if
+you were to leave her for a short time to compose herself, she would be
+more able to enjoy your society by dinner-time.”
+
+“Must I then depart without hearing my fate? But I would not distress
+Miss Heckfield on any consideration, and I had rather pass some hours
+of suspense and wretchedness myself than that she should feel one
+moment’s annoyance. I trust she will allow me to prove by my future
+life that such are my sentiments.” He took her unresisting hand, and
+pressing it between his own with an air of gallantry, he took his
+departure with very little doubt or suspense as to the result of
+the family colloquy. But he wished not only to be accepted, but to
+be preferred. He was himself totally incapable of again feeling the
+passion of love, if indeed any of the _liaisons_ and flirtations in
+which he had been engaged deserved such a name; but he wished to excite
+it, and it was to him an amusing and a gratifying study, to watch the
+flutter and the trepidations of the young thing who was apparently now
+experiencing them for the first time.
+
+As soon as he was fairly out of sight, Lucy burst into tears, and threw
+herself upon her mother’s shoulder, saying, “Oh, mamma, I am as good as
+married!”
+
+“Well, my love, and do you wish to live single all your life?”
+
+“O no, mamma!”
+
+“And do you dislike Lord Montreville?”
+
+“O no, mamma!”
+
+“You seemed to me very uneasy and restless when he went away without
+proposing.”
+
+“Yes, mamma, so I was, certainly.”
+
+“And you looked very happy when he called just now. Were you not glad
+to see him?”
+
+“Yes, mamma, I certainly was.”
+
+“Well, my dear, if you were sorry he went away without proposing, you
+must be glad he has come back, and has proposed.”
+
+“Yes, I suppose I am, but I do not feel as if I was.”
+
+“Do you wish me, then, to refuse him? I would never force any girl’s
+inclinations, as I have always told you, and I am ready to take
+the whole thing upon myself if you please; for really, after the
+encouragement you have given him, I do not see how you can consistently
+say he is not agreeable to you.”
+
+“Have I encouraged him so very much?”
+
+“I do not know, my love; but you allowed him to take your hand just
+now, and you always appeared to have neither eyes nor ears for any one
+else when he was present.”
+
+“He always had so much the most to say.”
+
+“Well, you know best: I can say no more than that if you dislike him, I
+am ready to refuse him for you. Do you wish me to do so?”
+
+“Oh, no! not that——”
+
+“Then you wish me to accept him, in your name?”
+
+“Oh, not quite that, mamma.”
+
+“My dear, girls must say Yes or No. As I have always told you, I will
+not put any force on your inclinations.”
+
+Nothing persuades people so much, as saying you would not persuade
+them,—nothing constrains them so much, as saying you would put no
+constraint upon them. This Mrs. Heckfield felt from female tact. It
+was from intuition, not by design, that she used these expressions,
+while at the same time she thereby re-assured herself that she was not
+hurrying Lucy into a worldly marriage.
+
+“Do you wish me to tell Lord Montreville that, although you may have
+seemed to prefer his society to that of others, you do not in fact
+prefer him, and that therefore you must decline the offer he is so
+flattering as to make you. Shall I say so?”
+
+“No, mamma; I should be very sorry, I am sure.”
+
+“Then you wish me to say yes?”
+
+“I suppose I do, mamma.”
+
+“Well, my love, I think you have decided very wisely for yourself, and
+no girl ever had more reason to be delighted with her prospects. You
+have been selected from all the rest of your sex by a man who has been
+universally reckoned most fascinating and irresistible, and whom all
+the ladies were in love with, when he was only a younger brother; and
+now that he has a noble fortune, and high rank, and might choose from
+all the first beauties in the land, he picks out my little Lucy, who is
+crying like a child, at having got—just the very thing she was ready
+to cry because she thought she should not get, for I saw your face this
+morning when the note came.”
+
+Lucy smiled through her tears; the picture of the conquest she had made
+was agreeable to her self-love, and the picture of her inconsistency
+was undeniably true.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield kissed her, and hastened to Colonel Heckfield to
+communicate the important intelligence.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Oh, never may the hope that lights thine eyes,
+ Sweet maid, be changed to disappointment’s gloom;
+ Never th’ ingenuous frolic laugh I prize
+ To the forced smile that care must oft assume;
+ But may the blissful dream of thy young heart,—
+ That dream from which so many wake too late,—
+ Of joys that love requited shall impart,
+ Be realised in thy approaching fate!
+
+Colonel Heckfield was a quiet, easy, amiable man, whom everybody loved.
+He was in the habit of thinking his wife understood such matters
+better than he did, and that as she had hitherto married all his girls
+extremely well, there was no need of his interference. He always
+considered the affair as appertaining to Mrs. Heckfield, and never felt
+as if his daughters had any other share in the whole transaction, than
+that of being the instruments employed by Mrs. Heckfield’s master-hand.
+So much did he look upon her as the principal, that he was once heard
+to say, “when my wife married Sir Charles Selcourt—”
+
+The happy mother proceeded to inform Mademoiselle Hirondelle of the
+high honours which awaited her pupil.
+
+“Ah, madame, I thought well when Miss Lucy had such a bad headache
+yesterday _que c’était l’objet_. Miss Lucy was in anger with me, but I
+had reason. I know myself what it is _de se consumer dans l’absence_.”
+
+Mrs. Heckfield dreaded the history of mademoiselle’s faithless lover,
+the bookseller at Caen, who had not written to her for three years,
+seven months, and three weeks, and she hastened to tell Emma that she
+might now look forward to coming out very soon.
+
+“And I shall go to Almack’s with Lucy, after all, mamma?”
+
+Neither did Mrs. Heckfield fail to tell Milly of the lofty station to
+which her nurseling would be raised.
+
+“Sure, ma’am! and so Miss Lucy is going to leave us,” said Milly,
+with a calm and stoical manner, very unlike that she usually had when
+any thing most remotely affecting one of the “dear children” was in
+question.
+
+“Yes, nurse; and I do think I am the most fortunate of mothers.”
+
+“La! ma’am, to have all your children leave you so soon? Sure, you will
+be very lonesome when they are all married and gone?”
+
+“Oh, nurse, we mothers are never selfish. We wish for nothing but our
+children’s advantage.”
+
+How many parents sacrifice the happiness, under the firm conviction
+they are promoting the welfare of the children, for whom they would
+themselves be ready to endure every privation.
+
+Lucy had received her father’s cordial blessing, Mademoiselle’s
+Frenchified embrace, her sister’s thoughtless, merry congratulations,
+and Milly’s thoughtful, serious, good wishes. She came down to dinner
+with a cheek flushed by vague emotions, and conscious eyes, which durst
+not rest on any one. She looked really lovely.
+
+Lord Montreville was received by Mrs. Heckfield with unfeigned joy, by
+Colonel Heckfield with heartiness, by Lucy with a pleased tremor which
+was perfectly satisfactory. A look from Mrs. Heckfield, and he seated
+himself by Lucy’s side.
+
+“You will, then, allow me to prove by my future life, as I did this
+morning, when I sacrificed my own wishes to yours, that I prefer your
+gratification to my own.”
+
+“Indeed you are very good. I hope always——”
+
+Dinner was announced. Lord Montreville offered his arm to Lucy as the
+accepted lover, instead of to Mrs. Heckfield, as merely the visitor of
+highest rank.
+
+There was no retreating after this, even supposing she had wished to do
+so, for the Denbys and several others were present. He was more than
+usually amiable. His attentions were not too marked; his manners were
+so frank, and so polite to every one, there was nothing that could
+make her shy or uncomfortable, so that she felt quite grateful to him
+for putting her so much more at her ease than, under the circumstances,
+she could have thought possible.
+
+In the course of the evening, Mrs. Heckfield communicated the great
+event of the day to her friend Mrs. Denby, under a strict promise of
+secrecy, to which Mrs. Denby rigidly adhered; notwithstanding which,
+the small town of Lyneton, and the adjoining village of Purley, and
+half the country houses in the neighbourhood, were apprised of the
+fact before the next sun sank into the Western Ocean. The propagation
+of a secret is a mystery; every body promises, and nobody breaks their
+promise; and yet the propagation of the secret is rapid in proportion
+to the strictness of the promise; I cannot, and therefore will not
+attempt to explain this paradox.
+
+That night, when Milly attended Lucy’s _coucher_, her countenance was
+unusually serious, and Lucy felt uncomfortable in her presence. She
+knew not what to say; and yet she was so much in the habit of making
+Milly a party to all the innocent pains and pleasures of her short
+life, that she felt awkward in not discussing this most momentous
+occurrence.
+
+“Nurse, I hope you will like Lord Montreville.”
+
+“I am sure, my dear Miss Lucy, I shall like any gentleman that makes
+you a good husband.”
+
+“He told me, to-day, he had rather be wretched himself than give me one
+moment’s annoyance.”
+
+“Sure, miss! No gentleman can’t speak no fairer than that.”
+
+“I suppose that is what all lovers say, though. I suppose John said
+that kind of thing to you?”
+
+“Lord save your sweet heart, miss! John never said such fine things
+to me. He was but a plain-spoken young man; though he was always for
+saving me any trouble that he could, poor fellow, and nobody could work
+no harder for his family while he had health to do it.”
+
+“Won’t it be nice, having Emma to stay with me, and taking her out to
+the great balls? And then mamma has been longing to give Mary a good
+singing master. I can have her with me, you know, in London, where
+there are all the best masters; and poor mademoiselle would be so glad
+to see her sister; and I will have such a charming school for poor
+children (by-the-by, they shan’t have brown frocks, I like green so
+much better); and I shall be sure to have a beautiful horse, for all
+the ladies ride in the Park now. Oh! and I can give Dame Notter the new
+red cloak I have so long wanted to get her, only my pocket-money was so
+low. Do you know the Montreville diamonds are supposed to be the finest
+in England after the Duchess of P——’s? And when I am in London, where
+you know I must be while Lord Montreville is attending Parliament, I
+shall see Harriet every day, and all those dear children! I wonder how
+far St. James’s Square is from Upper Baker Street?”
+
+“I can’t say for certain, miss; but I think ’tis a good step.”
+
+“Well, it does not signify, for of course I shall have carriages; and I
+can send for them constantly when I do not go to Baker Street.”
+
+“Ah! you are a kind-hearted young lady; and good night, and God bless
+you, and may you be as happy as you expect to be, and as you deserve to
+be.”
+
+Milly sighed to think how much the notion of grandeur and of fine
+things of this world had taken possession of her young lady’s mind;
+“Though, to be sure, ’twas all in the way of being kind and good to
+others.”
+
+The next few days passed off agreeably enough. When among the rest
+of the family, Lord Montreville was so generally pleasing, that she
+felt happy and contented; but whenever they were alone, she felt
+unaccountably shy, and, if possible, she either left the room with
+her mother, or detained her sister by her side. The kind, protecting,
+almost parental manner, which had at first so won upon her confidence,
+while at the same time it flattered her vanity, was exchanged for
+something more of the lover; and the ease she had felt in his society
+was gradually diminishing, at the very moment it was most desirable
+it should increase. Moreover, she occasionally found that it was not
+impossible for her to do amiss in his eyes. Her inordinate passion for
+animals, which he had appeared to think so very _naïf_ and fascinating,
+did not always meet with the same looks of amused admiration, which
+had, unknown to herself, encouraged her in her avowed fondness for
+them. He frequently remonstrated with her upon running out without her
+bonnet, and upon taking off her gloves when she was arranging the
+flowers, by which means she dirtied, and occasionally even scratched
+her fingers. He was dreadfully particular about shoes!
+
+These were trifles; but it seemed to her odd, that the very things he
+had appeared to think natural charms, “snatching a grace beyond the
+reach of art,” should now be the very points he wished altered.
+
+She was not aware how often the fault which excites disapprobation,
+allures, while it is condemned;—how often, also, the virtue which
+charms, is most perseveringly undermined by the person who peculiarly
+feels its attraction.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield insisted upon going to London to procure the
+wedding-clothes. Poor Lucy! Many people have a distinct abstract
+love of dress;—happy is it for them!—for as there is no doubt that
+a tolerably good-looking woman, very well dressed, will, in these
+days, eclipse a much handsomer one who is ill-dressed, surely it is a
+fortunate thing for those who can thus amuse, and embellish themselves
+at the same time. But this was not Lucy’s case. She was glad to look
+as well as she could, but the means of doing so were to her irksome;
+and she would fain have trusted the whole affair to mamma and to
+Mademoiselle. But no! Lord Montreville was exceedingly particular and
+anxious upon the subject. He especially recommended the only shoemaker
+who, to his mind, had an idea of making a shoe; and Lucy had at least
+half-a-dozen pair made, fitted, and descanted upon, before he was
+satisfied that they did justice to the shape of her foot, which proved
+extremely good when it was properly _chaussé_. She was half angry
+at his numerous criticisms and remarks upon the make of her gowns,
+and considerably bored at the number of times he wished to have them
+altered; still he did it all in so kind and so good-humoured a manner,
+she could not do otherwise than submit. But when he recommended his
+own dentist, and various tinctures, and tooth-powders, she felt half
+insulted. With the full consciousness about her of youth, and health,
+and ivory teeth, she thought, though he might have occasion for
+dentists and dentifrices, she needed not such things, and she felt for
+a moment the full difference of their ages. It was but for a moment—she
+was his plighted wife—her young affections were vowed to him; and she
+would have fancied herself guilty, to wish him other than he was.
+
+There were moments when her spirits were somewhat depressed; but at
+others, she was dazzled and excited by the beautiful presents that
+arrived every day. The diamonds, the Montreville diamonds, which were
+now her’s. The large pearl, which had belonged to Henrietta Maria, and
+which had been given by her to an ancestress of Lord Montreville’s;
+a diamond ring, placed by Charles II. on the taper finger of the
+beautiful wife of a Sir Ralph Montreville, a short time previous to
+his elevation to the peerage; an antique aigrette, presented by Queen
+Anne, on occasion of a royal _fête_! Ornaments of more modern date
+were showered upon her; but the heirlooms which assorted so well with
+the Welsh Castle, with its unpronounceable name, its donjon-keep, its
+subterranean passages, and its massive walls, were much more suited to
+her taste.
+
+Lord Montreville had neither father, mother, brother, nor sister, to
+whom he need introduce his bride elect; and as all his cousins and
+other relatives were out of town at this season of the year, he lived
+entirely with his future family, without being called upon to introduce
+them to any of his own circle. This was precisely what he wished.
+Little did Lucy imagine, when, in the warmth of her heart, she was
+anticipating the kind things she would do to brothers, sisters, aunts,
+uncles, and cousins, how little Lord Montreville intended to marry the
+whole family. Want of knowledge of the world, or rather of _l’usage du
+monde_, was _naïveté_ in the blooming youthful Lucy, but not so in the
+middle-aged parents, or the hoyden younger misses. Lord Montreville
+was not much of a politician; he was not a man of deep reading, though
+his mind was sufficiently cultivated to give grace, if not depth,
+to his observations: he was not witty, though he was often droll,
+and consequently it was on living people and passing events that his
+conversation chiefly turned. Any one who knows every one worth knowing,
+and can talk of them and their concerns with some tact, and not much
+ill-nature, is reckoned agreeable; but he felt that his _histoirettes_
+lost half their piquancy from the ignorance of his audience respecting
+the persons alluded to. Though it had amused him to enchant the whole
+family, especially while he had an ulterior object in view,—that object
+once gained, he found their society insipid, and in London he became
+peculiarly sensible how inexpedient it would be to transplant them
+into his own circle. Mrs. Bentley, the eldest daughter, and the dear
+children of whom poor Lucy meant to see so much, were wholly out of the
+question.
+
+Country gentlefolks not of the first water of fashion (for the
+Heckfields were not vulgar—their dress, their house, their equipage
+were all perfectly presentable), are infinitely less objectionable to
+the very refined, than London gentility not of the first class. Mrs.
+Bentley was very rich, and her house in Upper Baker Street was a very
+good one, and she dressed in the extreme of the fashion; but she wanted
+the air _distingué_ which was natural to Lucy. Though handsome, she was
+inclined to be large and red, and withal, she was a little languishing,
+and she was especially languishing for Lord Montreville. She looked as
+strong as a horse, but she complained of nerves; she was a good woman,
+and loved her children, but she talked as if she could not bear to have
+them with her, and declared that their noise distracted her; and, in
+short, she took every possible pains to make herself appear as little
+amiable, and as unlike what she really was, as possible.
+
+Sir Charles and Lady Selcourt came to attend the wedding, and Lord
+Montreville soon perceived that Lady Selcourt was an unexceptionable
+person for Lady Montreville, or any other lady, to appear with in
+public; but he doubted whether her society at home would be as
+advantageous for any newly-married young woman. Her figure, which was
+always beautiful, was dressed in the most perfect taste; her eyes,
+which were very large and very dark, became lustrous from the addition
+of rouge, which, as we anticipated, she now habitually wore; and in the
+evening her skin, which by daylight was yellowish, became brilliantly
+white. There was not a fault to be found in her own manner; but Lord
+Montreville soon perceived by Sir Charles’s that she had proved not the
+weaker, but the stronger vessel.
+
+The morning after Lady Selcourt’s arrival in London, the sisters went
+shopping together; and after tossing over various silks and gauzes,
+they both fixed upon one which they pronounced to be quite lovely; when
+Lucy suddenly checked herself, saying—
+
+“Oh, no, I won’t have it though, for Lord Montreville does not like
+pink!”
+
+“Well, but he is not going to wear it himself,” answered Lady Selcourt.
+
+“But, I mean, he does not like that I should wear pink.”
+
+“My dear Lucy, you are not going to yield to all his fancies in this
+manner? You will entirely spoil him; you will make a tyrant of him. It
+would not do with a young man!”
+
+“It would not do with a young man,” grated rather unpleasantly on
+Lucy’s ears. However, when they were once more seated in the carriage,
+she resumed,
+
+“But, my dear Sophy, one must please one’s husband, you know; and
+though you would have that pink gauze sent with the others we are to
+look at by candle-light, I do not mean to buy it. Surely it is not
+worth while to annoy any one, for the colour of a gown.”
+
+“My dear Lucy, you are very young; you do not know what you are about;
+of course, in marrying, your idea is not to be merely an old,—a
+middle-aged man’s, play-thing. You owe it to yourself, to the station
+you will hold in society, I may almost add to Lord Montreville himself,
+not to be a mere cipher, but to be an independent and a reasonable
+person—a free agent. And, depend upon it, if you begin in this manner,
+you will never be able to rescue yourself from any thraldom in which
+he may wish to keep you. Every thing depends on the first start—I know
+it—and so did Sir Charles’s old French valet, for when we got into our
+carriage on the wedding-day, I had my beautiful in-laid India work-box,
+which you know is rather large, and I overheard old Le Clerc whisper
+to his master, ‘Sire Charles, Sire Charles—you band-box to-day, you
+band-box all your life!’ Sir Charles accordingly complained of the size
+of the box, and begged me to let the servant take care of it behind,
+but I felt, if I yielded then, I was undone. I explained to him the
+value I had for this particular box, and that it would break my heart
+to have it spoiled: and he saw I was so hurt at the idea of its being
+scratched or injured, that he gave up the point. Indeed, I must say,
+I have always found him very reasonable, and it is quite impossible
+for two people to go on better together. I never think of opposing
+his wishes when I am indifferent upon a subject. He knows, therefore,
+my anxiety to oblige him, and so he never thwarts me when he sees I
+am determined on any thing. Depend upon it, Lucy, if you begin in
+this manner before marriage, you will be no better than a slave after
+marriage.”
+
+Sophy always had such a flow of words, and such a multitude of good
+arguments to adduce, that Lucy knew it was useless to dispute with her;
+besides, she was older, and she was a married woman, and she always
+was the cleverest; and Lucy was more than half persuaded there was a
+good deal of truth in what she said. Accordingly, she showed Milly the
+gauzes as she was dressing for dinner, and promulgated her intention of
+having a gown of the pink one.
+
+“La, Miss!” said Milly, “I thought my Lord did not like pink, and that
+he made you send back the pink hat.”
+
+“Yes, but do you not think it is great nonsense to let one’s husband
+interfere about such trifles? What can it signify to him whether I wear
+pink or blue?”
+
+“I don’t know, Miss, as it can signify much to anybody; but I should
+think it signified more to him than to anybody else.”
+
+“But this is to be a smart gown to wear in company, and not at home
+with him.”
+
+“But sure, Miss Lucy, you don’t want to look well in any body’s eyes
+more than in your own husband’s.”
+
+“That is very true,” thought Lucy; “it would be very wrong to wish to
+be admired by other people, and not by one’s husband.”
+
+In the evening the gauzes were spread out, and Sophy expatiated on the
+beauties of the pink one. Lucy timidly admired it, and cast a glance
+towards Lord Montreville; she was half ashamed of appearing afraid to
+buy it, and was acquiescing in its merits, when Lord Montreville said,
+
+“I suppose you are afraid of my admiring you too much, as you are bent
+upon the only colour which I do not think becoming to you.”
+
+“Do you really dislike pink so much?” asked Lucy.
+
+“The colour is a pretty colour, but you know I think you look prettier
+in any other. Perhaps other people may admire you in it.”
+
+“I am sure I do not want other people to admire me. It would be very
+wrong if I did, now. Do you like that _vapeur_, Lord Montreville, or
+this white one? The white is the prettiest after all. Yes, I do like
+the white best, Sophy, and the white I will have.”
+
+And she put a resolute tone into the last sentence, that her
+submission should not look like submission in Sophy’s eyes. Why is it
+many amiable people are as much ashamed of appearing amiable, as many
+unamiable ones are of appearing unamiable?
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ _Calantha._—To court, good brother, ere her bloom of mind
+ Be set for fruit? Oh, take her not to court,
+ Where we be slaves to petty circumstance
+ Of empty form and fashion. Where the laugh
+ Pealed merrily from the joy-freighted heart,
+ Gives place to measured smiles still worn by all,
+ As ’twere a thing of custom, and alike
+ Lavished on friend and foe; where your fair child,
+ For coronals of buttercups and hare-bells,
+ Must prank her youth in gorgeous robes of state,
+ And where sweet nature’s impulses must all
+ Be curbed, suppressed.
+
+ _Manuscript Poems._
+
+At length the awful day arrived. Lucy was married, and the Marquess
+and Marchioness of Montreville drove from St. George’s Church in the
+neatest of dark-green chariots, with four grey horses, leaving Colonel
+Heckfield sad, but satisfied, Mrs. Heckfield joyful, but dissolved in
+tears, Emma full of delight, wonderment, and awe, at her sister Lucy
+being actually a marchioness, Mademoiselle feeling herself the person
+most peculiarly concerned, inasmuch as it must have been entirely owing
+to the superior education she had given her pupil that she had been
+deemed worthy to be raised to so lofty a station in the peerage. Milly
+watched the carriage till it was out of sight, with tearful eyes, and
+left the window with a foreboding shake of the head.
+
+The bride and bridegroom spent the honeymoon at Ashdale Park, and Lucy
+was much edified by the grandeur of the place. The park was extensive,
+the pleasure-grounds immense, the gardens perfect. She had nothing
+to do but to enjoy all she saw. She went round the pictures several
+times, till she thought there was no pleasure in making her neck
+ache with looking up, and her eyes ache with peering through Claude
+Lorraine glasses; she repeatedly walked about the gardens, but she
+dreaded the sight of the gardener; he used such hard names, and he
+was such a gentleman, that she scarcely ventured to ask him the name
+of a flower, much less to suggest any fancy of her own. The house was
+completely _montée_. The _maître d’hôtel_ sent in the bill of fare, but
+she could never have presumed to propose any alteration in the repast.
+She had heard that Ashdale Park was famous for bantams, and she one day
+expressed a wish to see them. Lord Montreville ordered the pony phaeton
+to drive her to the poultry establishment.
+
+“Oh, let us walk, dear Lord Montreville; I had much rather walk.”
+
+“It has been just raining, my dear Lucy, and your shoes are thin.”
+
+“But I can put on thick ones in a moment.”
+
+“I hate to see a woman’s foot look like a man’s. Nothing so ugly as
+great coarse shoes upon a pretty woman’s little foot.”
+
+“Oh! but nobody will see me.”
+
+“Yes, I shall see you,” answered Lord Montreville, and Lucy felt
+frightened lest he should think she could have meant he was nobody. So
+the pony phaeton was ordered. In about three quarters of an hour it
+appeared, and a groom on another beautiful little long-tailed pony to
+follow, and Lucy’s wadded cloaks, and Lord Montreville’s fur cloak, and
+the boa, and the parasol, and the umbrella, and the reticule, &c. were
+all duly packed and arranged, and they entered the carriage, and drove
+about a mile to the end of the park.
+
+Having summoned the poultryman, Lady Montreville was introduced to
+all the different yards and coops, the winter roosting-place, and the
+summer roosting-place, and the coops for early chickens, and the places
+for fatting; and Lucy soon felt that the poulterer, who did the honours
+of the establishment, was much more the master of the whole concern
+than she could ever be; so, having bestowed the requisite portion of
+approbation and admiration, she was departing without any particular
+desire to revisit the scene, when a young gosling waddled past her
+feet. She stooped to pick it up—it escaped her—she ran after it—she
+succeeded in catching it—she brought the pretty little yellow thing
+back to Lord Montreville in great delight at having secured it, and
+fully expecting that he would sympathize in her feelings.
+
+“Look at the pretty creature!—Is it not a love?—dear little thing!”
+
+“My dear Lady Montreville, it will dirty you all over—its feathers
+are coming off: I beg, I entreat, you will put it down!” added Lord
+Montreville in a tone of annoyance.
+
+Lucy let the gosling go, and followed Lord Montreville to the carriage.
+When they had remounted, and again arranged the cloaks and shawls, Lord
+Montreville said—
+
+“My dear Lucy, you must remember that now you are a married woman, and
+my wife: these are little girlish ways that do not sit well upon you. I
+am sure your own good sense will point out to you that there ought to
+be something more _posé_ in manner for your present situation.”
+
+Lucy acquiesced, and resolved not to catch goslings any more.
+
+They lived in the most perfect retirement. Lord Montreville did not
+mean to enter the world till he had tutored his wife into being
+precisely the thing he wished.
+
+She found the time hang rather heavy on her hands; she read, but she
+could not read all day; she wrote to her mother and sisters, but she
+had not much to say, and a bride’s letters are always very dull. No
+part of the household required her superintendence: she did not work
+much, for where was the use of working when she had plenty of money,
+and could buy every thing so much better than she could make it? She
+always hated torturing a piece of muslin, till the muslin was dirty
+and the pattern out of fashion. She played and sang a little; but Lord
+Montreville liked Italian music, and she sang English ballads. She
+liked long walks; but Lord Montreville always thought she would get
+tanned if the sun shone, and red if the wind blew, and wet if it had
+been raining, or was likely to rain. Then there were so many rooms,
+she never found any thing at the moment she wished for it: when she
+was at luncheon in the ante-room, she missed her reticule, which was
+left in the library, where she passed the morning; when she retired to
+her boudoir after her drive, she found she had left her letters in the
+saloon, where they breakfasted: in the evening, when they sat in the
+great drawing-room, she wanted her work, and the work-box was in the
+library. Lord Montreville rang the bell, and a servant was despatched
+to bring the work-box. He returned, but the one skein of silk of the
+right shade was missing, and it ended by her lighting a candle and
+going to look for it herself. In the morning, after hunting all over
+the library for the book she was reading, she remembered she had left
+it the preceding evening in the drawing-room; and she sometimes thought
+it would be vastly comfortable to live in one snug room, where one had
+all one’s things about one.
+
+Lord Montreville had so far tamed her, that she did not think of
+setting out to trudge alone beyond the precincts of the shrubbery: she
+had learned not to pat every dog she met, or to kiss a donkey’s nose;
+and she was as steady from a gosling or duckling as a good fox-hound
+from a hare. When she wanted any thing at the other end of the room,
+she did not run, neither did she ever jump over the footstool, and
+she carried a candle perpendicularly, instead of horizontally. Lord
+Montreville thought it was time to ascertain a little what her manners
+would be in society, before he ventured to ask any of his own set to
+his house; and they sent forth a regular invitation to Mr. and Mrs.
+Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Delafield, Major and Mrs. Smith, and Mrs. Smith’s
+sister, Miss Brown.
+
+Lucy was a little appalled at the prospect of making the signal after
+dinner. Every woman must have felt that the first time of making
+this little mysterious bow is an epoch in her life. Lucy was sure
+she should stay too long or too short a time. Then, to which of the
+ladies was the sign to be made? Lord Montreville told her that when the
+conversation took the turn of horses, hunting, dogs, or partridges,
+which it invariably did somewhere between twenty minutes and half an
+hour after the servants had left the apartment, all women with any tact
+or discretion took advantage of the first pause to depart; and that the
+lady whom he should hand in to dinner would almost invariably prove the
+one towards whom she should direct her eyes.
+
+The dinner went off very well. Lucy’s manners were perfect. She never
+was awkward, and her thoughts were sufficiently occupied with the
+idea of making the dreaded signal at the right moment to render her
+rather shy, and to prevent her spirits running away with her. She
+watched narrowly every thing that was said after dinner; and upon
+Major Smith asking her if she was fond of riding, she cast a glance
+towards Lord Montreville, to see if that was near enough the mark for
+her to rise; but, upon the whole, she thought not, as the question was
+addressed to herself. This occurred precisely eighteen minutes after
+the last servant had changed the last plate on which there had been
+ice; and sure enough it led the way to the usual turn of gentlemen’s
+conversation before twenty-two minutes had expired.
+
+Lucy had answered, “Yes, but Lord Montreville had not yet found a horse
+he thought fit for her.”
+
+Mr. Johnson remarked, that “Nothing was so difficult to procure as a
+good lady’s horse.”
+
+“Except a good hunter for a heavy weight,” said Mr. Delafield.
+
+“I can scarcely agree with you, Delafield,” rejoined Mr. Johnson; “for
+a lady’s horse should be so very safe, and all horses will stumble
+sometimes, and temper and mouth are so indispensable, besides action
+and ease.”
+
+“Temper is as necessary for a good hunter,” interrupted Mr. Delafield,
+“or they knock themselves to pieces; and I know that a heavy man like
+me can’t afford to have a horse take too much out of himself at first.”
+
+The moment was decidedly come; and Lucy, with a slight palpitation of
+the heart, looked at Mrs. Johnson. But Mrs. Johnson did not give a
+responsive glance: she was talking to Miss Brown. Lucy looked again;
+Mrs. Johnson was putting on her gloves, and did not raise her eyes.
+The conversation became every moment more sporting, and Lucy felt
+that if she had any tact or discretion she ought to depart. Her heart
+positively beat, but she could not venture to say any thing out loud,
+and she kept looking and looking, when Major Smith again addressed her,
+and she was obliged to answer him. He rejoined, and she found herself
+entangled in a fresh discourse. The half hour—more than the half hour
+must have elapsed! She answered with an absent air, still glancing
+uneasy glances, till at length Miss Brown nudged Mrs. Johnson, and Mrs.
+Johnson looked up, and Lucy hastily rose from her chair in the middle
+of Major Smith’s sentence.
+
+Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Delafield made a great ceremony at the door,
+during which time the gentlemen stood bolt upright, with their napkins
+in their hands, waiting with exemplary patience while the ladies gave
+each other _le pas_. At length they marched out arm-in-arm, with a
+slight laugh to carry off their uncertainties. Lady Montreville, in
+her shyness, slipped her arm within Miss Brown’s, and thanked her for
+making Mrs. Johnson look round.
+
+“Why could I not catch her eye before?”
+
+“Oh, don’t you know? She is only the wife of a younger son of a
+Baronet, and Mrs. Delafield is the wife of the eldest son of a Knight,
+so you know she was afraid of putting herself forward.”
+
+This was a new light to Lucy, who had never before been aware of these
+niceties.
+
+Miss Brown was rather pretty, with gay laughing eyes, and a lively
+countenance; and Lucy was so glad to meet with a person of her own age,
+and who looked as if she could be merry, that she forgot it was her
+duty to attend to the married ladies.
+
+She had shown Miss Brown all her diamonds and trinkets, and the
+wedding-gown. Miss Brown had half confessed she should soon be in
+want of such an article herself. Lady Montreville was in the act of
+trying to find out who was to be the happy man. They were in deep,
+interesting, and rather giggling conversation, somewhat apart, while
+Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Johnson, and Mrs. Delafield were sitting up quite
+prim, when the gentlemen entered. Lord Montreville was not pleased.
+Lucy, who was accustomed to her mother’s countenance when Bell
+Stopford was in question, instantly recognised the expression, and was
+frightened out of her wits. She was conscience-stricken; she broke off
+her discourse with Miss Brown; she came forward to the other ladies,
+and began talking to them with all her might.
+
+If people are easily offended by any want of attention from the great,
+in return they are easily soothed. The consciousness of being slighted
+is so unpleasant to the _amour propre_, that if the intention to be
+civil is made manifest, they readily accept the will for the deed; and
+they soon forgave the lovely young Marchioness when they found there
+was no intentional neglect.
+
+The evening passed much like other evenings after a dinner in the
+country. There were no new people whom Lord Montreville wished to
+charm; they were old country neighbours, with whom there was no object
+to gain, and he let things take their course. He had merely wished to
+accustom Lucy to sit at the head of her table.
+
+When the company had all departed, he thus addressed his wife—
+
+“Lucy, my dear, what did I hear you saying to Miss Brown about Monday?”
+
+“I only asked her to come here. She is such a nice girl—is she not? I
+said I would send for her, that was all.”
+
+And Lucy began to fear that “all” was a great deal. It seemed so
+natural to ask Miss Brown to her own house at the moment she did so;
+but now that she told Lord Montreville what she had done, it did not
+seem so natural.
+
+“This will never do, my dear Lucy: Miss Brown is not at all the sort
+of person I wish you to be intimate with,—not at all the sort of
+person with whom I wish my wife to appear in public; and, if you are
+intimate in private, you must be the same in public. I hold it out
+of the question to begin intimacies you cannot keep up;—it exposes
+people to being accused of caprice and finery, which are very different
+things from the proper pride and self-respect which should make them
+move in their own sphere, and associate with persons in their own
+station. You understand me, my near Lucy?—and you will remember what
+I say:—and now let us see what can be done. Her coming here is wholly
+out of the question. If she is the first person who visits you after
+your marriage, it is proclaiming her your friend. I want to see my
+lawyer some time soon, and, instead of sending for him here, we will go
+to St. James’s Square for a few days; and you can write a very civil
+note—mind, a very civil note—(I never affronted any body in my life),
+and tell her we are obliged to go to town on particular business.”
+
+All this was said in the sweetest and kindest tone imaginable; but
+Lucy was confounded and stupified when she found her having invited
+Miss Brown to her house for a day had brought on this complete
+_déménagement_. She felt herself a cipher; she felt herself perfectly
+helpless. But the tone was so kind, and at the same time so decided,
+that she had not a word to say. Lord Montreville turned to other
+subjects,—told her he had seen her distress after dinner,—laughed with
+her at the rival dignities of the lady of the Baronet’s youngest son,
+and the lady of the Knight’s eldest son,—and was most gay and agreeable.
+
+Lucy did not quite like so entirely giving up her point without a
+struggle. If he had spoken a little longer, if he had harped upon the
+subject, she would have rallied, and said something; but before she had
+recovered her first surprise, the whole affair was settled and done,
+and she did not know how to recur to it.
+
+The next morning, after breakfast, Lord Montreville said, “Lucy, my
+love, write your note; and, as I am going to the stables, I will order
+a groom to be ready to take it to Miss Brown.”
+
+He left the room. There was no time to remonstrate. Lucy thought of
+Lady Selcourt,—she thought of her mother. Lady Selcourt would simply
+not have written the note; her mother would have had a thousand
+arguments before Colonel Heckfield had finished half his first
+sentence. She had not cool courage for the first line of conduct, nor
+had she had presence of mind for the latter. There was nothing left
+for her to do but to submit; so she wrote the note (not without three
+foul copies), sealed it very neatly, rang the bell, and gave it to the
+servant with a heavy heart; not that she cared for Miss Brown, but she
+felt herself imprisoned and enthralled.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Une belle femme est aimable dans son naturel, elle ne perd rien à être
+ negligée, et sans autre parure que celle qu’elle tire de sa beauté
+ et de sa jeunesse. Une grace naïve éclate sur non visage, anime ses
+ moindres actions: il y aurait moins de péril à la voir avec tout
+ l’attirail de l’ajustement et de la mode.
+
+ LA BRUYERE.
+
+To London they went on Monday. Lucy was languid and out of spirits
+during the first part of the journey, but the rapid motion of the
+swinging vehicle and the four horses revived her young spirits, and the
+busy streets of London roused her, and the first sight of her house in
+London pleased her. The excitement, however, did not last. The hall was
+grand, the staircase noble, the rooms were vast, but they were not set
+out in order, as the family were not to take up their abode in London
+till the meeting of Parliament.
+
+The magnificent lustres were in canvass bags, the sofas in brown
+holland covers, the carpets only put down in the dining-room and the
+smaller back drawing-room. One day, while Lord Montreville was occupied
+with his lawyer, Lucy, from real _désœuvrement_, perambulated the
+desolate apartments, and uncovered the end of a sofa and the corner of
+an ottoman. She found them beautiful,—she longed to see the effect; she
+set to work, removed canvass bags, and paper coverings, &c. Her blood
+began to flow, and her spirits to rise, at being actively employed: she
+took care not to send for the housemaid; she was quite glad to work
+hard. She was in the act of dragging forth a beautiful _chaise-longue_,
+her bonnet tossed aside, her hair all out of curl, her gloves as gloves
+must be that have come in contact with London furniture, her shawl
+having slipped off her shoulders on the floor, her fine embroidered
+handkerchief covered with dirt and dust off some delicate little
+ornaments on the chimney-piece, the room spread with all the different
+envelopes she had abstracted from the furniture, when Lord Montreville
+entered, and, with him, a very handsome, very well-dressed, very
+pleasing-looking young man.
+
+Lucy stopped short in her employment, and no little boy caught by
+his schoolmaster in the act of stealing apples ever looked more
+shame-faced, more confused, more guilty. Worse and worse. Lord
+Montreville introduced the stranger as his cousin, Lionel Delville.
+Lucy knew he was the oracle of the world of fashion, and the person for
+whose opinion Lord Montreville had more deference than for any other
+person’s living. She stammered, blushed, and stood abashed.
+
+Lord Montreville, however, showed no outward signs of annoyance; but,
+with a smiling countenance and easy manner, he said:—
+
+“You seem to have been very busy! Well! I dare say you will settle the
+rooms with much more taste than ever they were arranged before: women
+have ten times more tact in making a house look inhabited, than any
+man—always excepting my cousin Lionel. You must take him into your
+counsels, Lucy, if you wish your suite of apartments to be perfect;”
+and Lord Montreville led the way back into the boudoir.
+
+Lucy was comforted at Lord Montreville appearing to take her _équippée_
+so quietly, and she in some measure recovered her self-possession.
+
+She looked exceedingly pretty in her dishevelled state, and Lionel
+Delville thought his cousin, the untutored, rustic Marchioness, a
+most piquante creature. But though Lord Montreville himself had been
+originally attracted by this same manner, it was not the manner by
+which he intended that his wife should charm; and when Mr. Delville
+took his leave, the lecture which Lucy flattered herself had passed
+away, arrived with accumulated seriousness.
+
+His wrath was not disarmed by the degree in which he had seen Lionel
+pleased. He wished him to approve; but he did not at all wish to see
+him attracted. When he advised Lucy to take him into her counsels, it
+was from the fear Mr. Delville should read how little he wished she
+should do so.
+
+Lucy quaked at the tone in which he addressed her.
+
+“Do you think, Lucy, I have had reason to be pleased at the mode
+in which I have been obliged to present my wife to the first of my
+relations who has seen her? Do you think your appearance and your
+occupation were calculated to make a favourable impression upon my
+family?”
+
+“I am so sorry, dear Lord Montreville! but I did so long to see those
+pretty things!”
+
+“Could you not send for the housemaid?”
+
+“Yes; to be sure I might; but I had nothing to do; and I only meant
+to take one peep, and I never thought of any body calling; I thought
+there was not a soul in London; and then, I know so few people—I never
+thought of being caught!”
+
+“You forget that I have a very large acquaintance, and that you are
+my wife; and you also forget one thing, which I have often tried
+to impress upon your mind—that a woman should never be unfit to be
+seen—that she should never be _caught_, as you term it, employed in any
+manner unsuited to her rank and station in life—that your pleasures
+should be such as befit the situation in which I have placed you; and
+that my wife should always act as if the eyes of the world were upon
+her. Let me hear no more of being _caught_—the expression is worthy of
+a school-miss in her teens.”
+
+Lucy blushed rosy red. She blushed for shame; for she felt there was
+something undignified in the expression: but she blushed more from
+anger at being treated as a missish girl—at being, in fact, accused of
+vulgarity. She was on the point of crying, but the servant entered with
+the tickets for the play; and he put on coals, and swept up the ashes,
+and lighted the lamps, and shut the shutters. Lucy had time to recover
+herself, and Lord Montreville to reflect that he should not do wisely
+to frighten her too much; that his own annoyance had perhaps caused him
+to speak more angrily than the thing deserved.
+
+It was, therefore, in a gay and good-humoured tone, that he bade her
+make haste and dress; though, at the same time, he gave her a hint to
+be simple in her costume, as it was not good _ton_ to be too smart at
+the play.
+
+They dined alone; but Lionel Delville and a friend joined them late in
+the evening. If he thought her pretty in the morning, he thought her
+lovely in her present quiet, but most _soigné_ and fashionable attire.
+
+He seated himself by her side, and gave her very little opportunity
+of enjoying the drollery of the afterpiece. But he did not, he could
+not, flirt with her. There was a complete simplicity—a straightforward
+frankness in her manner, which rendered it impossible to know how to
+begin. Moreover, she believed herself in love with her husband; and
+besides, being dutifully and religiously devoted, she was particularly
+anxious to give him satisfaction after her errors of the morning; and
+her real thoughts and attention were on him and for him alone. He could
+not but be pleased; knowing women to their heart’s core, as he did, he
+saw the genuine innocence of her manner, and he felt assured that it
+must take a long apprenticeship to the world to contaminate the purity
+of her mind. He resolved to watch attentively over it.
+
+The kindness of his manner towards her the next day gratified her. He
+presented her with a magnificent real Cashmere; and the next day with a
+beautiful guard-ring. She thought him very kind, and she determined to
+do every thing to please him, which was, in fact, never to do any thing
+except to dress well, sit on the sofa buried among cushions (not bolt
+upright engaged in any employment), and especially to fling herself
+back into the corner of her carriage with an elegant _abandon_ when she
+went out airing.
+
+Her efforts to do nothing were crowned with success: he thought her
+extremely improved; but this _dolce far niente_ to her was not _dolce_,
+especially when they returned into the country, and she could not go
+shopping every day—an occupation to which he had no objection, as her
+pin-money was so ample that she could not easily be distressed.
+
+He now thought he might venture to gather some of his own friends and
+relations around him, and before Christmas there arrived a large party,
+all people of the very highest fashion, pleasing and agreeable. They,
+like their host, seemed in their conversation to have adopted the motto
+of “_Glissez mortels, mais n’appuyez pas_;” and though the hours might
+fly swiftly and pleasantly in their society, there was nothing about
+them sufficiently original or individual to deserve recording.
+
+Lucy behaved exceedingly well; she had been properly drilled before
+their arrival: she was in an interesting state, which, assisted by
+the lectures of the apothecary, and the constant solicitude of Lord
+Montreville, and the ennui occasioned by being headed, as a sportsman
+would term it, whenever she attempted to stir hand or foot, gave to
+her whole carriage and deportment a most excellent languor. She no
+longer felt any flutter when she made the signal after dinner, and,
+upon the whole, Lord Montreville thought the result all he could wish,
+except that he would fain have had her join a little more in general
+conversation, if he could have been quite sure of no exuberance of
+spirits.
+
+Was she happy in the midst of her splendour? Her husband exceedingly
+attentive, and the most agreeable society collected around her. No: she
+was bored—from morning till night, constantly suffering from ennui.
+She was grateful for her husband’s attentions, but they invariably
+prevented her doing the thing she wished to do; and she sometimes
+wondered how so many little chubby children were running about the
+village in health and safety, who were not heirs to titles and
+properties.
+
+The society of her husband’s friends did not amuse her; they were
+all the intimates of one clique; and, notwithstanding their habitual
+good-breeding, she could not help often being unable to understand,
+or, at all events, to join in their conversation. A slight tone of
+persiflage and of quizzing in their mode of treating all subjects, also
+made her feel less at her ease, than she would otherwise have done
+after ten days’ residence under the same roof; and she often longed for
+a hearty laugh with Bell Stopford, a long scrambling walk with Emma
+and Mary, or a quiet chat with the dear, honest, affectionate Milly.
+
+Lucy occasionally suggested how glad she should be to see her parents;
+but the house was always filled with a succession of visitors. The
+Duke and Duchess of Altonworth announced their intention of taking
+Ashdale Park in their way to London, and Lord Montreville inadvertently
+exclaimed, “Whom shall we get to meet them, for this party disperses on
+Wednesday?”
+
+“Oh, then, now we can have papa and mamma, and Emma and Mary!—that will
+be nice!”
+
+Lord Montreville’s countenance fell—he looked blank and dismayed. Lucy
+saw she was wrong, but she could not imagine that papa and mamma were
+not fit company for any duke or duchess in the land; so she awaited the
+result, blank and dismayed in her turn, but wholly at a loss to guess
+what was the matter. Lord Montreville soon rallied.
+
+“I do not think that would quite do, my dear Lucy: a family party is
+always a dull thing, and the Duchess is very clever, and altogether——My
+dear Lucy, I am sure you perfectly understand me.”
+
+This time, however, Lucy could not and would not understand.
+
+“But it will not be a family party to the Duchess, and I am sure mamma
+is clever too: some people call her blue.”
+
+“Very true, my love; but the Duchess is clever and not blue, and she is
+a person who is very exclusive; she has retired habits, and does not
+like new acquaintances; and, in short, we must either get somebody whom
+she would decidedly like to meet, or we had better have nobody.”
+
+“But we are going to town in a fortnight, and mamma has not been here
+yet,” said Lucy with more pertinacity, and even humour, than she had
+ever yet shown.
+
+“We shall be here again at Easter, and in the summer certainly, and
+then you shall have them all, Emma and Mary, and your old friend Milly
+too, if you like it;” and Lord Montreville resolved he would do it once
+for all, well and thoroughly.
+
+Lucy acquiesced, though she did not exactly see why Ashdale Park should
+be open to so many slight acquaintances, and yet that a visit from
+her parents should be so difficult of accomplishment. She was also
+somewhat appalled at the idea of this clever, exclusive Duchess, whom
+she should have to entertain herself, for no one whom Lord Montreville
+thought worthy of meeting her could be found on such short notice.
+Lucy was sure she should dislike her; she was angry with her for, as
+she thought, keeping away her own family, and she determined to bear
+patiently the infliction of her presence for the few days she remained,
+and never to seek her any more. She was free from the vulgar awe which
+simple rank inspires to the _parvenu_, though she was not free from
+the _gêne_ which most people feel when in company with persons who are
+wedded to their own set, and who do not give themselves any trouble to
+please those who are not of it.
+
+The day arrived, and Lucy, who was not constitutionally shy, and had
+now become perfectly at her ease in the discharge of her every-day
+hostess duties, awaited with composure the entry of the disagreeable
+Duchess.
+
+She was rather surprised when a little, quiet, middle-aged woman, in
+a close bonnet, and a black cloak, slid into the room, followed by a
+large, gaunt, lordly-looking man. Lord Montreville was not present.
+Lucy rose to receive them; the Duchess introduced herself and the Duke,
+in a gentle, kind, frank manner.
+
+They sat down, and the Duchess being very cold drew her chair close to
+the fire, put her feet upon the fender, and dropped out little natural
+sentences, which half amused, half pleased Lucy, and before they went
+to dress for dinner she felt more intimate with the dreaded Duchess
+than with any of the other people who had yet been her inmates at
+Ashdale Park.
+
+At dinner Lord Montreville was in his most agreeable vein; the Duchess
+was charming, so unaffected, so straightforward, and, withal, there was
+something singular and original in her turn of thought, with a graceful
+_bonhommie_ which was peculiar to herself. The Duke was a sensible,
+hard-headed, high-minded man, silent in large society, but conversable
+enough in small ones. Lucy was interested and amused all the time, and
+would have talked more than she did, but that she liked to listen to
+the Duchess, and to watch the pleasing expression of her countenance,
+and the wonderful manner in which, without youth, features, or
+complexion, it lighted up into something more attractive than beauty.
+
+Upon further acquaintance she found her as good as she was
+fascinating. She spoke of her married daughters, of her grand-children,
+of her home, her garden, her son, and his wife and children, who lived
+at Altonworth, when in the country; of her school, of the poor people,
+and Lucy perceived that, in fact, her heart was so completely filled
+with the near and dear charities of life, that it was not strange she
+had no inclination to seek for other objects in the world.
+
+Lucy’s genuine feelings thawed to her immediately; and the Duchess was
+also pleased with the innocence and simplicity of her young hostess.
+Lucy was more delighted and flattered at the hope of being admitted
+into her intimacy, than she had been since the ball, at which she had
+first met Lord Montreville, when he had first made her feel herself a
+person altogether superior to the common run of girls.
+
+Lucy and the Duchess parted with a mutual wish to meet again; on the
+part of one, amounting to a passionate desire, on the part of the other
+to a kindly inclination.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ Kingdomes are bote cares,
+ State ys devoyd of staie,
+ Ryches are ready snares
+ And hasten to decaie.
+
+ HENRY VI. _King of England_.
+
+When in London, Lucy, although in perfect health, and peculiarly active
+and alert, was not permitted to go out. She was chained to the sofa,
+till she almost longed to be a little ill to give her some occupation.
+She did muster a little attack of nerves, and an occasional whim,
+which, unfortunately for her, served to justify Lord Montreville in the
+continuance of his precautions.
+
+Lord Montreville was often at the House of Lords, and as the season
+advanced he was more and more absent from home. Lucy thought the peers
+really worked very hard, and sacrificed a great deal of time to the
+good of their country. However, it was so right and praiseworthy to do
+so that she could not complain.
+
+Numberless persons left their cards with her, and she sent her’s in
+return; but, as she was not allowed to keep late hours, she did not go
+out of an evening, and her circle of acquaintance did not increase as
+rapidly as she expected. Lord Montreville did not allow her to admit
+gentlemen of a morning, and he did not encourage her seeing much of
+Mrs. Bentley and her “sweet children;” so that, except the visits of
+the Duchess of Altonworth and her daughters, with whom she soon became
+intimate, and the drives into the country, which she sometimes took
+with them, nothing could exceed the monotony of her life.
+
+She heartily wished the spring over, and her confinement over, and
+another spring come, that she might revel in the anticipated delights
+of a good London season.
+
+In the course of time the spring was over; they returned to the
+country, and Lucy reminded Lord Montreville that he had promised her
+parents should pay them a visit. The invitation was despatched, and
+they arrived, father, mother, sisters, and Milly.
+
+Lucy’s situation afforded an excuse for not seeing much company, which
+suited Lord Montreville very well; but not so well Mrs. Heckfield, who
+had passed four days in London, on her way to Ashdale Park, for the
+purpose of providing herself and daughters with apparel fit for the
+succession of distinguished company which she there expected to meet.
+
+Neither did it suit Emma and Mary, whose hearts palpitated at the
+prospect of wearing their new wardrobe, and at the effect it was
+to produce. Vague images of barons, viscounts, earls, marquesses,
+and even dukes, were floating in their minds, and Mademoiselle had
+certainly intimated she did not see why if one of her young people had
+married so brilliantly, the others should not do as well, especially
+as Mademoiselle Emma played with much more execution than Madame la
+Marquise, and Mademoiselle Marie had begun learning German.
+
+One and all were wofully disappointed when day after day elapsed, and
+the family party received no addition, unless it might be the clergyman
+of the parish, Lord Montreville’s solicitor from the county town, once
+his agent from Lancashire, and once the Delafields.
+
+Mrs. Heckfield appeared in perfect caps from Devi’s, in the last new
+Parisian hat from Carson’s; Emma and Mary in the crispest of white
+muslins, over the cleanest of white satins. In vain! Neither duke,
+marquess, earl, viscount, baron, or even baronet, made his appearance.
+A fortnight had already slipped away,—the time for departure was
+approaching, when Mrs. Heckfield one day said to her daughter,—
+
+“Well, my dear Lucy, I hope when your confinement is over, you will
+lead a gayer life. I fancied you had your house always full of company.
+Your letters constantly contained a list of visitors as long as my arm,
+and I am sure since we have been here, scarcely a soul has crossed your
+threshold. We have ten times as much society at Rose Hill Lodge.”
+
+“Lord Montreville takes too much care of me, and that is the reason we
+have been so dull. I was afraid Emma and Mary would be disappointed,
+but whenever I proposed asking people to come, Lord Montreville seemed
+so afraid of my being ill. I am sure I am well enough, if he would but
+think so.”
+
+“Well, my dear, it is quite right that husbands should be attentive,
+and I cannot but rejoice that your’s is so peculiarly so. Certainly
+your father never took half so much care of me. However, I hope the
+next time we pay you a visit we may find you well, and strong, and able
+to have your house full, and that I shall have the pleasure of seeing
+my Lucy the life of a brilliant society.”
+
+Lucy sighed, for she had begun to understand Lord Montreville’s dislike
+to introducing her friends to his friends, and she feared it would be
+long before she had them all around her again. It was not that their
+visit gave her all the pleasure she had anticipated from it: she felt
+that her husband was bored; she was aware that he avoided his own set;
+she was in an agony if any of her family did any of the things which
+he thought out of the question; and her sisters, who were not “come
+out,” although they “dined down,” as they termed it, often made her
+uncomfortable.
+
+One day her mother asked a gentleman opposite if he would “take”
+some of the dish before her, and Lucy looked timidly towards Lord
+Montreville to see if he had caught the sound of a word which was
+peculiarly obnoxious to his ears. Emma, on another occasion, exclaimed,
+what a “delicious” trifle, and she felt a chill run through her, for
+she knew he had a particular aversion to an epithet, which to him
+seemed expressive of gluttony.
+
+Mary (who had never dined down before) was so delighted with the
+variety of excellent dishes before her, that she was much inclined to
+go the round of the second course, and needed many admonitory nods and
+frowns from her mother. She also frequently tipped her chair on its two
+fore-legs while she was writing or working, and this Lucy knew was an
+unpardonable sin.
+
+Both girls were gay and wild, and had, as most sisters have, till
+they have been a little schooled in the world, the habit of talking
+over each other, and sometimes of interrupting the person speaking in
+their eagerness to rejoin. On such occasions Lord Montreville stopped
+short, and betook himself to a silence which was most painful to Lucy,
+although it was entirely unperceived by the culprits.
+
+Lucy occasionally attempted to give them gentle hints upon these
+subjects, but they only seemed to think she was grown quite fine,
+and very difficult to please, and they could not conceal their
+disappointment at the retirement in which she lived.
+
+The result was, that at the end of three weeks, when the large coach
+which contained them all drove from the door, a sensation of relief
+mingled itself with the sorrow she felt at parting from them.
+
+Milly remained at Ashdale Park, and Lucy looked forward with unmixed
+pleasure to the prospect of having always about her a person so
+thoroughly attached, and in whom she had such perfect confidence.
+
+In the autumn the long-expected event took place,—Lord Montreville was
+made happy by the birth of a son, and Lucy was delighted to think she
+should soon be a free agent again.
+
+They had removed to London for the occasion. Lord Montreville was a
+great deal from home, and, as there were very few people in town, the
+time hung heavy with Lucy; for she was so impatient to leave her sick
+room and her sofa, that she did not find every thought and feeling
+wholly absorbed in the new-born babe. She was very young in years, and
+still more so in character: she had by no means had enough of youth and
+gaiety, and was not yet ripe for the tender affections and dull details
+of maternity. She was charmed with her baby, and was very unhappy if
+it cried, but it did not suffice her for amusement to watch it all day
+long. She wished Lord Montreville would stay at home, and read to her,
+or would bring her home some news, or that somebody would come, or
+something happen.
+
+Milly was her comfort. She sometimes conversed with her for hours, and
+listened with sympathy to the details of her life in America, and with
+interest to her unsophisticated view of things in general. She thought
+that after all there was nothing half so good or so sensible as Milly,
+except the Duchess of Altonworth;—indeed, she fancied she perceived a
+considerable resemblance between their characters.
+
+They returned to the country. When the first excitement was over, of
+bells being rung and oxen being roasted—when the servants, the tenants,
+the neighbours, had all looked at the wonderful child, and pronounced
+it to be the very finest they had ever seen, Lucy relapsed into her
+former state of ennui. She began to think she must be ill.
+
+“Milly, I do not think I am well,” she one day promulgated to Milly, as
+she was sitting in the nursery.
+
+“La, my lady! I am sure you look the very picture of health! What ever
+is the matter?”
+
+“I do not know, exactly.”
+
+“You have not the headache, sure?”
+
+“No! my head never aches.”
+
+“Perhaps, my lady, you feel tired if you walk too far.”
+
+“No! I do not think I ever feel tired with walking, but I feel very
+tired if I do not walk.”
+
+“Sure, my lady!—that’s comical too!”
+
+“I never feel merry as I used to do; and I think it must be my state
+of health that prevents my being so. I have thought of consulting Dr.
+Bolusville, only I do not know what to say to him. I have no symptom
+that I know of—only I ought to be so very happy. I possess every
+thing that a person can sit down and wish for, and yet I feel low. I
+sometimes think, if I had more occupation, I should be better; but Lord
+Montreville is so kind, he will not let me take any trouble about any
+thing. Now, I dare say you did not feel low when you were in your log
+hut, on the banks of your swampy river—did you?”
+
+“No, my lady! I never did, certainly;—when poor John was middling well,
+that is.”
+
+“Ah, yes, for you had plenty to do! that must have been the reason.
+When I was a child, I always worked harder in my garden than my
+sisters; and the old bailiff once gave me a silver knife, because he
+said I had earned it haymaking. How I do wish Lord Montreville would
+let me help him to manage the house, and that he would consult me, and
+talk with me; but you see he never has any thing to say to me, except
+a kind word now and then, just as he has to the child. I should like
+to go hand-in-hand with my husband, as you and John did, and ride
+about his woods, and his park, and his farm with him, as the Duchess
+of Altonworth does with the Duke; and I should like to have a school,
+and to be useful. But he would not let me go to the school—especially
+now—he is so afraid of my bringing back the measles, or any complaint
+to the child.”
+
+“Well, my lady, the baby will soon be business enough for you. What a
+sweet fellow he grows! Look! he knows you already!” and Milly tried to
+turn her attention to the child; for she thought all the mischief lay
+in Lord Montreville’s being so very little like John Roberts; and as
+that evil was without a remedy, the less it was dwelt upon the better.
+
+The wished-for spring came, and Lucy was at once launched into the
+circle, which, to those who are not admitted, appears far to exceed in
+glory and delights Dante’s “_Paradiso_.”
+
+Lord Montreville did not approve of her going out quite every evening,
+nor did he like her being seen at four or five parties the same night;
+but he allowed her a fair proportion of dissipation. He generally
+accompanied her himself; and without appearing to watch her, he
+contrived to know exactly what she was doing: but he did not make
+a point of never letting her stir without him: he took care to do
+nothing that should make her feel herself doubted, or that should cause
+either her or himself to appear ridiculous in the eyes of others. His
+proceedings were, as usual, dictated by the head, rather than by the
+heart; and were, as usual, framed with reference to the effect to be
+produced on the world, rather than to any abstract notion of right and
+wrong. In this instance, however, morality and expediency pointed out
+the same line of conduct.
+
+Lucy was charmed with all she saw, and she was also delighted at
+finding herself considered charming; but her gaiety was as frank and
+natural as ever, although more subdued than in her girlish days. She
+ventured to talk more in society, and there was still enough left of
+the madcap Lucy to give a certain raciness and originality to what she
+uttered. Speeches, which in themselves were nothing, pleased from being
+so like herself.
+
+Lord Montreville had now sufficient confidence in her tact not to fear
+any outbreak which could offend the most fastidious; and he rendered
+justice to the perfect innocence of her manner, in which there was so
+complete an absence of prudery or of coquetry, that no one presumed to
+pay her any marked attention.
+
+This was the happiest period of her wedded life. The charms of London
+society had not yet palled on her, and, although her head was not
+turned with it, still she could not be insensible to the _éclat_ of
+her present position. She gradually became quite reconciled to seeing
+less of Mrs. Bentley and her children than she had at first wished, and
+she was not so much annoyed as she thought she should have been at not
+having Emma with her at Almack’s.
+
+The Duchess of Altonworth was most kind, and she passed many agreeable
+evenings with small parties at her house.
+
+Upon the whole, time no longer hung heavy. Lord Montreville now had
+seldom occasion to set her right on any point of etiquette; and
+when she saw him in private, he appeared pleased and satisfied with
+her. But, although she did not always see his name in the House of
+Lords, still he was frequently absent of an evening, except when they
+were engaged to some pleasant party, in which case he almost always
+accompanied her.
+
+The season drew to a close. They left London, and, to her great
+delight, removed to the Welsh castle, to pass some of the summer weeks
+among the wild beauties of nature.
+
+All she had heard or imagined of the awful glories of the castle were
+more than realised. It was as vast, as dark, as gloomy, as massive, as
+uncomfortable, and as ghostly as heart could wish; and when first she
+arrived with all the spirits which the London season had infused into
+her, she was enchanted with the small windows in the thick walls, and
+the delightful look-out into the square courtyard.
+
+There is no saying how long she would have found amusement in wandering
+about the oaken passages, and the winding stairs, and in finding
+likenesses for her boy among the grim warriors and furred judges whose
+portraits adorned the sides of the gallery; or how soon she would have
+longed for some of her friends to explore and to admire with her, for,
+soon after their arrival at Caërwhwyddwth Castle, an event occurred
+which gave a completely new current to her thoughts and feelings.
+
+Lord Montreville, who had been out on horseback with his agent to
+inspect some improvements that were making on the property, was one
+evening brought home senseless. In descending a narrow footpath to
+examine the foundations of a new bridge, the horse slipped. He was
+precipitated down a considerable declivity, and a blow on the head
+produced a concussion of the brain, from which the most serious
+consequences might be apprehended.
+
+Lucy’s horror and grief were such as might be expected. The doctor
+from the nearest town arrived as soon as possible. His report of
+the patient’s state was most alarming, although he gave hopes of
+ultimate recovery. All the usual remedies of bleeding, blistering,
+and extreme quiet were recommended; and Lucy sat night and day by his
+bed-side, watching with intense anxiety for the symptoms of returning
+consciousness.
+
+The doubt had sometimes crossed her mind whether she did love her
+husband as she had wished and intended to do, and as Milly had loved
+John. But now, in his present helpless and suffering state, she felt
+herself so capable of doing any thing for him, of enduring any thing
+for him,—she felt that on his recovery all her future happiness so
+completely depended, that she was quite reassured as to the extent of
+her affection. She reflected with gratitude on his having selected her
+from all the world; she forgot his little particularities, she thought
+only of his kindnesses, and she nursed him with all the devotion and
+forgetfulness of self with which Milly could have nursed her John.
+
+Weeks elapsed, and he did not recover his memory, nor did he seem to
+recognise those about him.
+
+In the mean time agents, servants, stewards,—all required orders and
+directions. There were law affairs pending. Lord Montreville’s letters
+had been carefully set aside in his study till he himself might be
+well enough to open them, when Lucy received a formal epistle from
+the agent, informing her that among these letters there were some
+containing papers which it was absolutely necessary should be returned
+for signature. Lucy made up her mind that she must open the letters.
+
+Before she went to Lord Montreville’s study to proceed with the
+necessary routine, she looked into the sick room, to see that all was
+quiet and comfortable.
+
+She was again closing the curtains, when she was almost overcome with
+joy at hearing him utter, in feeble accents, “Lucy, do not leave me!”
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ Se a ciascuno l’interno affanno
+ Si leggesse in fronte scritto,
+ Quanti mai che invidia fanno
+ Ci farebbero pietà.
+
+ METASTASIO.
+
+Lucy could scarcely command herself so as to answer her husband,
+without betraying a degree of emotion which might have been prejudicial
+to him in his present state of weakness. He thanked her for her
+attention to him; he told her he had often been aware of her presence,
+though he had not had the power to show it. She bathed his hand with
+tears of joy and gratitude; and at that moment, when he was endeared to
+her by long watching and by deep anxiety, she felt as if Milly’s love
+for John could not have exceeded her’s for her husband, her guide, her
+protector, the father of her child.
+
+The doctor came, and pronounced the patient convalescent; but
+prescribed the most perfect quiet, and the avoidance of every thing
+which might in any way arouse his feelings. Lucy told him of the letter
+she had received from the agent, and asked his opinion and advice upon
+the subject.
+
+He declared it out of the question that Lord Montreville should be
+allowed to attend to matters of business for weeks, nay, perhaps months.
+
+Under these circumstances, Lucy resumed her intention of opening
+Lord Montreville’s letters, and of acting according to the best
+of her judgment. Several were most uninteresting and unimportant
+communications, which required neither comment nor answer; some were
+letters of correspondence, which she laid aside as soon as she found
+they did not contain the papers of which she was in search. At length
+she came to one written in a delicate female hand, beginning, “Dearest
+Montreville,” and signed “Your Alicia Mowbray.”
+
+“Alicia Mowbray!” she thought; “I never heard of her,” and her eye
+glanced upon words which filled her with astonishment and horror:
+“cruel absence,” and “consuming grief,” “counting the moments,” and
+“happy meeting,” and “sad parting,” and “distress for money,” and
+“necessary expenses,” winding up with an urgent request for a fresh
+supply of a hundred pounds.
+
+Could this be intended for Lord Montreville! She looked again at the
+direction at the beginning of the letter. There could be no mistake:
+it was most assuredly addressed to her husband,—to the husband whom in
+health she had so dutifully studied to please,—whom in sickness she
+had nursed with such unwearied attention,—from whom, though exposed to
+all the fascinations and allurements of a London life, she had never
+for one moment allowed her thoughts to wander! That he, whom she had
+always looked upon as the appointed guardian of her honour and her
+morals, should have been habitually, deliberately breaking his nuptial
+vow, preferring to her pure and true affection the hired caresses of a
+mistress,—and, above all, exposing her to the eyes of the world as the
+neglected wife of an old profligate, old enough to be her father! The
+letter fell from her hand; her brain went round with the multitudinous
+thoughts that rushed almost simultaneously through it; but rage,
+indignation, and disgust superseded, for some moments, all more tender
+emotions.
+
+Then came pity for herself, who had thus wasted the bloom of her early
+feelings, and she wept bitter tears over her blighted youth, her
+worthless beauty; for at this moment she suddenly became aware that she
+was one of the most lovely and most admired of women,—admired by all
+around her, except her husband,—lovely in all eyes but his!
+
+Lucy had married almost from the school-room. Lord Montreville had
+drawn a veil over his own former career; he had studiously avoided
+initiating her into the frailties of fashionable life; he had
+wished to preserve the purity he found; so that she still retained
+that freshness of mind which refuses itself to the conviction of the
+existence of vice, but which, when once unwillingly convinced, sees it
+in all its natural deformity.
+
+From long acquaintance with the world, the imagination becomes
+familiarised with what at first inspired horror; or from experience of
+the weakness of human nature, the temptations to which it is exposed,
+and the gradations by which one error often leads on to guilt, the
+charitable learn to pity the sinner, while they condemn the sin. But
+Lucy’s perceptions of right and wrong were not blunted by habitual
+intercourse with the faulty, nor softened by the consideration of their
+temptations or their repentance. She saw but the broad distinction
+between virtue and vice, and she looked on the latter with the
+indignant horror of youth. Charity is not the characteristic virtue of
+the young.
+
+While she was absorbed in such new and painful reflections, there came
+a tap at the door, and her maid informed her that Lord Montreville
+was awake, and was incessantly asking for her. She started at the
+interruption, and, quickly dismissing the maid, stood for a few moments
+paralysed.
+
+She had looked with loathing at the letter, till her tears had all
+retreated to their cells. She roused herself, and hastily pushing the
+other papers into an escrutoire, she stopped to pick up the fatal
+epistle.
+
+At that moment the servant entered. She instinctively crammed it into
+her bosom, but as instantly pulled it forth again, as if its very touch
+was contamination.
+
+Lord Montreville was so impatient for her return, that a second
+messenger had been despatched to hasten her. She rushed to her own
+apartment, where she placed the letter under lock and key, and then was
+obliged, with what composure she could muster, to repair to the bedside
+of her husband.
+
+He greeted her with a pleased smile,—he extended his pale and emaciated
+hand to take her’s. “Dearest Lucy,” he said, “it seems an age since you
+left me; it does me good to know my kindest and best nurse is near me.
+I cannot bear to feel that what I love best is absent from me.”
+
+His hand lay passively in hers; her soul recoiled from him. She could
+not return the pressure of his hand, she could not meet his eyes.
+“Falsehood upon his lips,” she thought, “when scarcely snatched from
+the jaws of death, when still trembling on the verge of the grave.”
+
+She made an effort to speak, and, assuring him the doctor forbade all
+excitement or emotion, she begged him to compose himself to sleep.
+
+“You will not leave me, then?”
+
+She promised she would not, and she seated herself by the bedside. All
+was quiet; he gradually dozed off into a light slumber; and there she
+sat bewildered, confused, fancying all that had occurred must be a
+dream! Could he speak so kindly, so tenderly, and yet be false? Could
+he address her as the being he loved best, while he preferred to her
+this Alicia? Could he, with death staring him in the face, thus add a
+deliberate lie to all his other sins? Yet there existed the letter—the
+letter which expressed implicit reliance on his affections!
+
+She gazed on him as he slept, and looked back to the moment when he
+had first recognised her, and thought, was it possible one little hour
+could have worked such a wondrous revolution in her mind?
+
+The truth was, that Alicia had been a mistress of former days, on whom
+he had settled a handsome annuity at the very time when his absence
+from Lyneton had excited such surprise in the inhabitants of Rose Hill
+Lodge, and from whom he had then parted, as he intended for ever, but
+who had once more succeeded in getting him within her toils.
+
+For some time after his marriage he had neither heard nor seen any
+thing of her; but when he came to London in the spring, he received
+from her a letter, stating that she had been robbed of the money he
+allowed her—that she was deeply in debt, and was threatened with an
+execution in her house, and with the prospect of being sent to prison.
+He could not do otherwise than ascertain the truth of this history,
+and interfere to save her from such wretchedness. She was still very
+handsome, in deep grief, and in great agitation at again seeing him.
+He relieved her immediate wants, and occasionally visited her; for
+which visits she expressed the greatest gratitude, and from which she
+contrived to extract considerable additions to her allowance. He did
+not thoroughly believe in her passionate devotion to him, but he could
+not be cruel to a person who had acquired the sort of hold over him
+which is obtained by long habit.
+
+He did not consider that this renewal of his former acquaintance at all
+interfered with his making an excellent husband, for he treated his
+wife with all possible respect and attention; she had every thing that
+an unlimited command of money could procure her, and he imagined that
+the whole guilt of infidelity consisted in its coming to the knowledge,
+and consequently hurting the feelings, of the wife.
+
+If he had been obliged to make his election between them, he would
+not have hesitated for a moment; but there was nothing, to his mind,
+incompatible in the two connexions.
+
+In fact, his sentiments for Lucy had of late rather increased than
+diminished in warmth; for he could not but respect the singleness of
+heart with which she passed through the ordeal of a London season,
+so dangerous to a young and lovely married woman of high rank, and
+especially to one who was the fashion. As the mother of his son and
+heir, she had an additional claim on his affections that no other woman
+had ever possessed; and the attention with which she had nursed him had
+now awakened in his bosom stronger emotions of tenderness than he had
+thought himself capable of feeling.
+
+The expressions which fell from his lips came straight from his heart,
+although, at that moment, they appeared to Lucy to be an insulting
+refinement of deceit.
+
+During the hour which she passed watching his slumbers, she seemed
+to live a long life of bitter and confused thoughts, and she was
+unutterably relieved when the entrance of the physician enabled her to
+make her escape, and to lock herself into her room, there to meditate
+on the past, the present, and the future.
+
+On looking back she remembered a thousand circumstances which to her
+unsuspicious mind had seemed of no import at the time, but which
+now proved to her that this connexion was one of some standing. She
+remembered having heard persons allude to debates in the House of
+Lords, at which he had been obliged to confess he had not been present,
+although he had been absent from her all the evening. She remembered
+how little she had seen of him during her confinement; she looked at
+the fatal letter, and felt certain she had often seen notes in the same
+hand-writing, and she became more and more indignant to think she had
+long been a neglected, an injured, and a duped wife. She recollected
+the rigid notions of female propriety which he professed; she thought
+the care he had taken of her morals, the censorship which he exercised
+over the books she read, an insulting mockery. She could almost smile
+in bitterness at his having forbidden her reading Delphine, and made
+her return Adam Blair to the library,—and at the remark he made to some
+one who wondered she had never yet read _La Nouvelle Heloise_—that he
+was surprised at any woman who had read the first three lines of the
+introduction owning she had read any further.
+
+“And I was grateful to him,” she thought, “for thus watching over
+me. I fancied it argued affection for me, and a love of virtue in
+himself, while he was thus treating me like a fool, and laughing at his
+childish dupe! No wonder he wished to preserve the ignorance which was
+so convenient to him. This taste for purity in which I so rejoiced,
+was but the veil to conceal his own vice. And I am bound for life to
+this man. I must drag on a weary existence, forced, Heaven knows how
+unwillingly, to break my marriage vow; for how can I love, how can I
+honour, what I despise and condemn?”
+
+Floods of tears came to the relief of her bursting heart and bursting
+head. She wept, till she was once more calm, and could look with some
+degree of composure upon the actual position in which she was placed.
+
+In the first instance she resolved, although she could never again find
+pleasure in the performance of her duty, that she would rigidly adhere
+to it, that she would command all outward expression of her emotions,
+and that she would continue to nurse Lord Montreville, if possible,
+with the same devotion as before. She made up her mind that when she
+had succeeded in finding the papers for which the lawyer had written,
+she would lock up all the letters together, and when Lord Montreville
+was well enough to attend to his own affairs again, she would explain
+the circumstances under which she had been obliged to search for these
+papers, and give him the key of the escrutoire without any farther
+remark.
+
+When she had despatched the papers, and safely deposited the letters
+according to her intention, she felt somewhat relieved, and was enabled
+to return once more to the sick room, and take her station there as
+usual.
+
+Fortunately he spoke but little, and she was spared any fresh
+ebullitions of tenderness on his part. In the evening she repaired to
+the nursery, where Milly was rapturous in her congratulations upon his
+lordship’s wonderful improvement.
+
+“Well, my lady, your good nursing has its reward at last! La! when
+first he called you by your name, and spoke so kind and tender like,
+Mrs. Gauzelee told me she never saw such a moving sight. And to see
+you, my lady, take his hand and kiss it, and my lord calling you ‘his
+own Lucy.’ Well! it does my old heart good to think you have known such
+a blessed moment; for I remember, as I pushed open the bed-room door
+of our log-hut, when my poor John said, ‘Why, Milly, t’an’t you,’ I
+thought the joy of hearing my husband’s voice speak my name again would
+have quite got the better of me.”
+
+Few people like to be told they felt this or that, on such or such an
+occasion; still more disagreeable is it when, although they cannot
+disclaim the emotions attributed to them, they are conscious of
+experiencing those the most diametrically opposite.
+
+Lucy held her child in her arms. She contrived to bury her face in its
+little bosom, and to remain bending over it, till her voice and her
+countenance were sufficiently under control to venture an answer: “The
+doctor seems to think that, with perfect quiet, Lord Montreville may
+soon be quite himself again.”
+
+Milly was surprised at the cool and measured reply. Lucy’s devotion had
+been such, that she could not doubt the love she bore to her husband.
+Her lady looked ill. She thought, perhaps, she had harassed herself
+too much, and she entreated her to go to bed early. But no! she was
+resolved to watch as before.
+
+“My actions,” she said to herself, “shall be under command, though my
+feelings may not be so. I will do the same I did before,” and she took
+her station in his darkened room, where, by the glimmer of one shaded
+candle, she usually passed a great part of the night in reading.
+
+That night her eyes in vain glanced over the words, they conveyed no
+corresponding ideas to her mind. She imagined long conversations and
+explanations; she fancied reproaches, excuses, she pictured penitence
+and sorrow. She convinced herself that, when Lord Montreville examined
+his letters, and found this one opened, he would be overwhelmed with
+shame and self-reproach, and that he would throw himself on her mercy.
+She considered how it would then be her duty to act; she consulted
+her own heart whether she should then be able to restore him to the
+same place in her affections. She tried to lower her standard of manly
+excellence; she tried to frame to herself a less exalted scale of
+morals. Alas! is not this but too likely an error to fall into, as the
+frailties and follies of human nature open upon the young and gentle,
+to whom it is painful to condemn and despise their fellow-creatures?
+
+
+END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME THE SECOND.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Les gens vertueux sont rares, mais ceux qui estiment la vertu ne le
+ sont pas; d’autant moins qu’il y a mille occasions dans la vie, où
+ l’on a absolument besoin des personnes qui en ont.—_Marivaux._
+
+Lord Montreville recovered slowly, but satisfactorily. The doctor, the
+servants, Milly, all on different occasions, and in different manners,
+conveyed to his mind an impression of Lucy’s unceasing attention to
+him during his illness. Indeed, the old doctor had imbibed such an
+enthusiastic admiration for Lady Montreville’s unpresuming, frank, and
+affectionate character, that he could scarcely speak of her without
+tears in his eyes.
+
+Lord Montreville found his gratitude daily increase his affection; and
+when she brought him his child whose caresses and opening intelligence
+awoke in him emotions from as yet unexplored recesses of his heart, his
+love for his wife assumed a new character, and he felt for her as he
+had never yet felt for woman. He had hitherto seldom considered them
+in any light but as a mistress, a plaything, a necessary appendage to
+a large house and an establishment, or an object of conquest, either
+gained or to be gained. He had thought absence of harm, their highest
+recommendation. In Lucy he had first discovered that strong affections,
+strength of mind, patience, and perseverance could be perfectly
+compatible with almost childish candour, and singleness of heart.
+
+While this revolution had taken place in Lord Montreville’s feelings,
+what were Lucy’s? The increased tenderness of his manner perplexed and
+confounded her. At moments, especially when her husband was playing
+with her boy, and watching with delight his attempts to walk, marking
+his recognition of familiar objects, and listening to the first
+half-uttered lispings of infancy, she almost yielded to her longing
+desire to be happy and affectionate, when the thought of Alicia Mowbray
+shot through her heart, and chilled the kindly smile on her lip, the
+soft expression of her eye, the tender intonation of her voice.
+
+One day the child was playing on Lord Montreville’s sofa, when he
+beckoned her to sit there likewise. He passed his fingers through
+the curls of the boy’s fair hair, and looking at him with tenderness
+remarked, “I never knew before what engaging creatures children were!
+that clear white forehead, and those blue eyes, with such shady
+eyelashes, are just like yours, Lucy, and I do not love him the less
+for that.”
+
+She thought how delightful such expressions would have been to her,
+could she have trusted them, and yet she felt almost guilty at
+receiving them so coldly. He passed his arm round her waist as he
+spoke. She dared not repel the caress, but she burst into tears, and
+suddenly rising, she said, “I must not be so foolish and nervous. I
+believe I want a little fresh air, for I have not been out these two
+days. I will go and take a turn in the park this lovely evening.”
+
+She hastened to quit the room, leaving Lord Montreville surprised, and
+yet pleased, for he could not attribute this agitation to any cause
+except love for himself.
+
+She sought the most retired part of the park. The sun was getting low,
+and lighted up the grey rough boles of the old oaks, while the slant
+beams tipped every object in the landscape with gold, and increased
+the rich variety of foliage, of form, and of colouring. The distant
+mountains were purple, the nearer ones adorned with every hue and tint,
+which blended most softly into the other. The young fawns were skipping
+and sporting on the smooth glades, between the tufts of trees, while
+the belling of the deer among the fern mingled with the hum of bees,
+the chirp of birds, and the summer sounds of evening.
+
+She gazed around and thought, “How lovely, how beautiful is nature!
+How calm and cheerful every thing looks! It is more painful to feel
+unhappy while every thing seems so gay around one, than if all was as
+dreary and desolate as one’s own heart. Oh! how I do long to be happy!”
+and she began to think that perhaps she tormented herself foolishly;
+that there might be some excuse for her husband, of which she was not
+aware; that it was impossible any one could seem so affectionate as
+Lord Montreville, without feeling what he showed: she yielded to the
+genial influence of the scene around her, and vaguely hoped that all
+would yet come right.
+
+“He will soon be well enough to read his letters,” she thought, “and
+as I am sure he is very fond of me now, whatever he may have been
+hitherto, he will be miserable when he finds the letter from that
+shocking woman; and he will be humble and penitent, and tell me the
+whole truth, and then I will forgive him, and then he must love me a
+great deal better than ever, for being so very kind.”
+
+With the exception perhaps of a few singular persons who seem to
+enjoy being miserable, there is so strong a desire of happiness in
+the youthful mind, and something so painful in a continued state of
+depression, that the spirits will spring up, unless new causes of
+unhappiness arise; and Lucy returned from her walk with an elastic
+step, and a sensation as if a weight had been taken off her mind,
+although nothing had occurred which in the slightest degree altered her
+situation.
+
+Lord Montreville was now able to bear the full light, and to move into
+the next room. He became anxious to see his letters. He asked for the
+key of the escrutoire, in which they were locked up. The moment was
+come when she had to impart to him that she had ventured to break the
+seal of some of them. With a beating heart, and trembling hand, she
+showed him that she had received from the agent, and told him how she
+had in consequence been obliged to open some of his letters, to find
+the papers required.
+
+Lord Montreville’s colour changed. He repeated his request for the key,
+and without making any farther remark, he rang the bell for his own
+man, and taking his arm, walked into his morning-room. He dismissed the
+servant, and Lucy heard him lock the door, as if to preclude all chance
+of interruption.
+
+She sat with a palpitating heart, counting and calculating the time
+it would take him to read through the mass of papers which had
+accumulated, and wondering when he would rush to her feet to crave
+mercy and forgiveness. It was evident by the change in his countenance,
+by his silence, by his ringing for his servant, instead of asking for
+her supporting arm, that he expected letters from this woman. She
+remained hoping, doubting, fearing.
+
+Dinner-time arrived. Lord Montreville was not yet well enough to dine
+with her, so she ate, or rather could not eat, her solitary morsel.
+
+They generally drank tea together. She wondered whether she should find
+him in the drawing-room as usual. She wondered how he would receive
+her. She did find him there as usual, but with him the nurse and child.
+
+That evening their boy first toddled alone from the father’s sofa
+to the mother’s knee, and Lucy caught him up, and devoured him with
+kisses, in a transport of delight and pride, that mothers, and mothers
+only, can comprehend. “Oh!” she thought, “he will own all to me
+to-night, and I shall forgive him for the sake of that dear child.”
+
+The boy went to bed—the candles came—Lucy took her work, and sat down
+with her back rather turned towards Lord Montreville, wondering when
+the moment would arrive. “He is waiting till tea is over—the servants
+will be coming in and out.”
+
+Tea did come. It was generally with them a meal, as Lord Montreville
+dined at two o’clock. It was however a meal, to which neither of them,
+that evening, did justice. At length urn, toast, butter, bread, and
+cakes, were removed, and Lucy’s heart might almost have been heard to
+beat, when the last servant shut the door.
+
+“He must speak now,” she thought. But the silence continued unbroken,
+and she determined not to be the first to break it. She sat, imagining
+in what words he would open the subject, till the first sound of his
+voice made her almost start from her seat. He asked her to put the
+shade over the candles a little lower down. He had to repeat the
+request, before she could collect her thoughts so as to comply with
+it. “He is ashamed I should see his countenance, when he speaks of
+this disgraceful connexion,” she thought; and she remained again in
+expectation.
+
+Another silence succeeded. For very awkwardness Lucy wished to say
+something, but she could think of nothing that did not either lead away
+from the subject uppermost in both their minds, or else indirectly
+lead to it. Every sentence she planned, sounded either too formal, or
+too tender. At length she fell back upon the never-failing resource
+of the bankrupt in conversation; and after ten minutes’ reflection and
+consideration, she promulgated “It is very hot to-night!” He agreed,
+and begged her to look at Moore’s Almanack, to see what weather was
+there predicted. He continued to say a vast deal upon the subject, to
+which she replied in absent monosyllables.
+
+There was no more to be extracted from this topic. Lord Montreville had
+foretold drought, and rain, wind and heat, storm and sunshine, and Lucy
+had assented to the probability of each in succession, when another
+silence ensued. She began to feel angry at being treated with such
+coldness, and such contempt, that he did not even deem any apology or
+explanation due to her; as if he imagined her only fit to be a nurse,
+only capable of talking about the weather. Her heart, which had been
+yearning towards the father of her child, became suddenly chilled and
+shut up.
+
+Her wrongs rose before her eyes in fearful array against him; and if
+he had then entered upon the subject, he would have found her in a
+very different frame of mind from that in which she had been at the
+commencement of their tête-à-tête. She made a variety of the most
+insipid common-place remarks, in the most dry and indifferent tone
+of voice. Never was dialogue kept up between two strangers in a more
+constrained tone, than between this couple, who really entertained a
+great affection for each other, and on the evening of the day on which
+their first child had first walked alone.
+
+The fact is, that Lord Montreville was thunderstruck when he found his
+letters had been opened; though, under the circumstances, he confessed
+to himself there had been no other course for Lucy to pursue. He was
+still more horrified, when he found the fatal letter among the number
+of those of which the seal had been broken. Even according to his own
+idea of morality, such a proceeding became wrong when it reached the
+wife’s knowledge: and his attachment to that wife had latterly so much
+increased, that he found his opinions upon the duties of matrimony
+vastly more strict than before his illness. The liaison which had
+appeared to him a matter of such trifling importance while he believed
+her ignorant of it, suddenly assumed, even in his eyes, the character
+of a sin of the first magnitude when he felt it known to a being so
+innocent, so conscientious as the young wife whom he had now learned
+to respect, as well as to love. He half persuaded himself it was
+impossible she could have read, or at least have comprehended the
+purport of the letter, or she could never have nursed him with such
+unremitting attention, without ever speaking, implying, or looking a
+reproach.
+
+He also had awaited the evening meeting with dread and agitation, half
+expecting that he must go through a scene of tears and explanation. As
+she alluded not to the subject, he half hoped at first that she had not
+read the letter. He had instinctively availed himself of the weather to
+attempt a conversation on indifferent subjects; but, adept as he was at
+giving what turn he pleased to conversation in society, he was unequal
+to the task now. She did not assist him, and he became nearly convinced
+by her taciturnity that she knew all, and then his spirit felt abashed
+before her’s.
+
+He mentally resolved to break off entirely with Alicia, and for the
+future to be the most exemplary of husbands; but he had not the
+nobleness of character to be able willingly to own his fault, and to
+throw himself on her mercy for forgiveness. Indeed, though he could
+not choose but admire her conduct, supposing she was acquainted with
+his errors, still the admiration he felt did not attract him. On the
+contrary, the consciousness of inferiority, from which he could not
+defend himself, _vis-à-vis_ of a woman, and of one whom he had raised
+from comparative obscurity, chilled the love which had been gradually
+increasing in his heart, with the growth of his newly-awakened parental
+affection. This evening, and many succeeding evenings and mornings,
+passed off in _gêne_ and coldness.
+
+Lucy’s generous impulse of forgiveness had changed to a feeling
+of disgust for his unblushing immorality, contempt for what she
+thought was hypocrisy in his tender expressions towards herself, and
+indignation at the insult offered to her as a wife, a mother, and a
+young and lovely woman. She wrapt herself up in cool reserve.
+
+If at first Lord Montreville could not work himself up to a full
+confession in all contrition and humility, still less could he do so,
+when the soft, the mild, the timid Lucy, had assumed a certain calm,
+composed, and self-possessed manner, which repelled, rather than
+invited confidence.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ Mais ne savez-vous pas que notre âme est encore plus superbe que
+ vertueuse, plus glorieuse qu’honnête, et par conséquent plus
+ délicate sur les intérêts de sa vanité que sur ceux de son véritable
+ honneur.—_Marivaux._
+
+In the mean time, Lord Montreville had completely recovered his health.
+They left Caërwhwyddwth Castle, and established themselves at Ashdale
+Park for the winter. Their house was soon full, and Lucy tried to
+drown all sense of her cares in the succession of company, with which
+she was as desirous as Lord Montreville could be, to keep their house
+constantly replenished. They each equally dreaded finding themselves
+alone with the other.
+
+The breakfast hour was late; before luncheon the excursion for the
+day was organised; after luncheon the preconcerted ride or drive took
+place; the company was constantly changing, and Lady Montreville’s
+presence was frequently required in the drawing-room, to speed the
+parting, or to greet the coming guest. It was only in the nursery that
+the face which in society she had learned to dress in smiles, relaxed
+into an expression of languor and joylessness, which astonished and
+distressed the faithful Milly. When the child’s gambols and caresses
+called forth a smile, it was so melancholy a one, that Milly’s eyes
+would often fill with tears as she looked upon her lady.
+
+One day, when among the foolish questions with which poor little
+children are tormented, Lucy said to him, “Charlie loves mamma, does
+not he?” He answered, “Me love papa.” The boy meant nothing, but the
+words fell on Lucy’s heart, as if they doomed her to utter lonelessness
+and lovelessness! as if her own child cared not for her! and she burst
+into a passionate flood of tears, which alarmed and confounded Milly.
+
+“La, my lady! sure you are not crying for that? Why you would not but
+have the dear babe love his own papa?”
+
+“I do not believe any body or any thing loves me in this world—except
+you, Milly;” and Lucy’s sobs redoubled.
+
+“Oh, my lady! how can you speak so? And to think of my lord, how he
+used to be asking and calling for you when he was so ill, and that’s
+the time when people call for them as they really love best; and ’twas
+then my lord could not bear you out of his sight, though may be, now he
+is well, he takes pleasure in the other gentlefolks too.”
+
+Lucy had pride and dignity enough not to open the secrets of her
+domestic wrongs, even to Milly; and exerting all her self-control, she
+dried her tears, and tried to smile at her silly maternal jealousy.
+But Milly was not so deceived. Simple as she was, the warmth of her
+own feelings rendered her quick-sighted in all that regarded those
+of others. She was sure that her lady’s lowness of spirits had some
+deeper source than the child’s little speech, though she was quite at a
+loss to divine what the cause might be. She had been so well satisfied
+with Lord Montreville’s love for her, when first he recovered his
+recollection, that she did not suspect it could be occasioned by any
+unkindness on his part.
+
+At this period of our story, Sir Charles and Lady Selcourt arrived at
+Ashdale Park. Lucy was overjoyed to see a face that reminded her of
+the happy days of her childhood, a person who was bound to her by ties
+of blood, who distinctly belonged to herself. Although not perhaps the
+one whose character was most congenial to her own, still she was her
+sister; they had played the same plays, wandered about the same fields,
+studied in the same school-room, had shared the same parental cares,
+and in the present desolate state of her feelings, her heart went forth
+towards Sophy with warmth.
+
+Lady Selcourt was a worldly woman, and a coquette, but she was not
+a common-place coquette. She never made any advances towards men;
+she never apparently sought them; but she dressed herself quite
+beautifully, and sat still with an expression of conscious charms,
+combined with strict propriety, which seldom failed to bring all the
+men in the room hovering round the sofa on which she sat.
+
+She was not witty, or learned, or talkative, but she looked very soft,
+and occasionally very arch; and when she did speak, implied a great
+deal more than she said. All girls hated her, for she occupied the
+gentlemen, without being so openly a flirt, that they could console
+themselves by thinking “any body can gain the attention of men, who
+will go such lengths to obtain it,” for she went no lengths. Yet most
+men, and all women, knew it was not simply by superior charms that she
+did attract them.
+
+Pretty as Lucy was, pleasing as were her good-humour and her
+simplicity, much as all men admired her in speaking of her, it was
+round Lady Selcourt that they congregated; her dress was the subject of
+conversation; it was to give her their arm that they rushed when dinner
+was announced; it was upon her cards at _écarté_ that all were anxious
+to bet.
+
+As the sisters were sitting one day in her boudoir, Lady Montreville
+remarked to Sophy that she almost wondered Sir Charles should like to
+see so many men fluttering around his wife, while she appeared so much
+more occupied with others than with him. “For Sir Charles is very fond
+of you, Sophy,” she added, with a sigh.
+
+“To be sure he is, and he would not be half so fond of me, if others
+did not flutter around me, as you call it. Nothing keeps a man up to
+the mark so well, as seeing that his wife is valued by others. Do you
+not invariably see dawdling devoted wives, with careless indifferent
+husbands?”
+
+“Indeed I am not sure that devotion is the way to fix one’s husband,”
+rejoined Lucy, in a desponding tone.
+
+“It only spoils the men, Lucy. Husbands are things that ought to be
+kept in hot water, if one wishes to preserve one’s influence over them,
+which every woman of sense must perceive is one of her first duties.
+And I own I should not like to be considered as a domestic drudge, who
+have fulfilled the end of my existence when I have provided heirs to
+the estate, can keep my husband’s shirts mended, and know precisely
+when the kettle boils. Women have souls, and they have hearts” (so they
+have! thought Lucy), “and understandings—sometimes the best of the
+two; and it always makes my blood boil to see them treated as beings
+of an inferior order! People do not judge for themselves. If you are
+overlooked by others, your husband thinks nothing of you; if others
+admire and seek your society, he is proud that so _recherchée_ a person
+is his wife. Of course I would not have any woman commit herself by
+word or deed. As you know, I would not walk across the room for any man
+that breathes: no one ever saw me do any one thing derogatory to the
+dignity of our sex; but there is no reason why one should not dress
+well, and make one’s-self agreeable. _On vaut ce qu’on veut valoir_,
+especially in one’s husband’s eyes.”
+
+Lucy began to think it was as much the bounden duty of every married
+woman to flirt, as to love, honour, and obey.
+
+“I think,” added Lucy, “very submissive wives often have faithless
+husbands.”
+
+“It stands to reason they should. Men have had flirtations, and
+liaisons, and love affairs of all kinds, up to the time they marry.
+They have been accustomed to excitement, and they can never sit down
+contented with a humdrum wife, always hemming and stitching quietly at
+home. Unless a woman has something in her, the husband will seek for
+amusement abroad.”
+
+“This is rather hard upon some women though, who have never had all
+these flirtations, and who do not want to flirt, but would fain give
+their whole hearts to their husbands; at best they can only hope to be
+last of many loves.”
+
+“Why you could never have expected to be your husband’s first love, my
+dear! Really! Lucy, you are the oddest mixture of romance and worldly
+wisdom, that ever I met with. One would think you had married all for
+love, or the world well lost. Yours is the most sentimental mode of
+making a good _parti_ I ever knew.”
+
+“I was not alluding to myself,” Lucy hastily interrupted; for she
+dreaded to have her secret annoyances laid bare to the eyes of any one,
+especially to those of Sophy.
+
+“Why I suppose not; for if you had wished to be your husband’s first
+love, you would have chosen a youth certainly not past nineteen. But
+sometimes you have such a melancholy, sentimental expression in your
+face, I scarcely know what to make of you.”
+
+“You have such spirits, Sophy! I think you have ten times the spirits
+you had when you were a girl, which is so odd!” and she thought of the
+halcyon days of donkeys and puppy dogs.
+
+“Not at all odd! When one is a girl, one does not know what one’s fate
+is to be; and though one has some pleasant and agreeable hours, one has
+mortifications also; but when one’s fortune is made, when one has a
+husband who is proud of one, and (though it sounds vain to say so) when
+one feels that one is admired and courted by others, I do not see why
+one should not be in spirits.”
+
+Lady Selcourt had been gratified that morning by a noble dandy’s
+compliance with her request to prolong his stay at Ashdale Park, in
+order to join in some charades which were proposed for the evening’s
+amusement, when he had resisted the general solicitations of the
+rest of the party. If Lucy had seen her at Sir Charles’s seat in
+Oxfordshire, with her husband and her children around her, in the
+bosom of her family, she would not have thought her flow of spirits so
+enviable.
+
+Arguments, the unsoundness and sophistry of which would be apparent
+enough at other times, appear conclusive and convincing when they are
+in accordance with the feelings of the moment. Lucy was thoroughly
+discontented with her husband, and her own manner of life; her mind
+was unsettled—she was in a state of mortification, while at the same
+time she thought more highly of her own charms than she had ever done
+before. She saw Sophy with half her personal beauty, but with an
+adoring husband (for she had succeeded in making Sir Charles admire,
+as well as fear her; she had enthralled him, and he dared not even
+struggle in his shackles, but appeared to look on them as precious
+ornaments); and she also saw her receiving the incense of that
+conventional complimentary manner which all women can command, if they
+choose to require it.
+
+If she had been happy at home, she would have despised and condemned
+such unmeaning homage; but as it was, she did not like to be altogether
+eclipsed by Sophy, and her manner instinctively assumed a tone which
+encouraged men to talk to her. There was a characteristic simplicity
+in her view of subjects, and in her mode of expressing herself, which
+amused, as being peculiar to herself. She ventured to be droll. She
+was pleased at success, her spirits rose, and she began to think that,
+after all, one might make oneself very tolerably happy without the
+romantic affection which Milly’s story had taught her to sigh after.
+
+Another spring arrived, and Lady Montreville went to London with the
+full intention of shining as the most attractive of women, and of
+having a train of admirers—humble admirers, who should be kept at a
+most respectful distance, but who might show her husband what others
+thought of her.
+
+She had little difficulty in succeeding in her object. With rank and
+beauty, a lively manner, and a husband so much older than herself, the
+difficulty was to keep them off, not to attract them. Lionel Delville
+became a frequent visiter in St. James’s Square. He no longer found it
+impossible to pay her a compliment, although, as yet, he dared go no
+farther. Captain Lyon claimed acquaintance as an old friend. Although
+he had scarcely found out she was alive as the fourth daughter of
+Colonel Heckfield, he proclaimed her the most fascinating of her sex,
+as the Marchioness of Montreville. Indeed, he insinuated that he had
+been the first to discover these fascinations, and to point them out to
+Lord Montreville. He affected to patronise her to all his friends.
+
+Statesmen, warriors, poets, were to be found in her train. Among
+others, Lord Thorcaster, a deep politician, who was particularly strong
+on political economy, the bullion question, the poor laws, and free
+trade. She was quite pretty enough to be exceedingly agreeable to this
+man of deep reading and comprehensive mind. He did not make love—no:
+he talked politics; but her eyes were so blue, and her teeth so white,
+that he thought her political _aperçus_ astonishingly luminous;
+especially when one day that the question of free trade was discussed,
+she exclaimed in her simple manner,—
+
+“Why can they not let it all alone! and then every body, and every
+country, will naturally manufacture what they can do best, and what
+they are most fitted for; and everybody will buy where they can get the
+best things for the least money. That must be good for all parties,
+and there would be an end of all this fuss about duties on imports and
+exports.”
+
+“My dear Lady Montreville, you have in one sentence condensed all
+the arguments that it has taken the two houses of Parliament years
+to discuss. I have urged this very train of reasoning myself. If our
+legislators were but endowed with the clear and powerful understanding
+of a certain young and beautiful woman, it would be well for our poor
+country! But it is not every mind that can thus grapple with a subject,
+divest it of all the false colouring thrown over it by sophistry, and
+at once seize the real point at issue.”
+
+“Dear me! have I done all this? It seemed very natural to say what I
+said.”
+
+“Very natural to persons of decision, who can shake themselves free
+from the trammels of prejudice.”
+
+“But I never thought upon the subject before, so I had no prejudices to
+shake off; I merely said what struck me as plain and obvious.”
+
+“Indeed! astonishing you should at once seize all the bearings of the
+case.”
+
+Lucy felt a little like M. Jourdain, when he discovered that he had
+been speaking prose all his life; and was rather elated at finding she
+was so clever. She had heard she was pretty, and had perceived she was
+attractive, and had sometimes felt that she amused, but she had never
+before been told she was clever.
+
+Lord Thorcaster was a man who stood high with a certain set; his
+suffrage was decidedly worth having, for he was reckoned very
+fastidious; and Lucy was much exalted in her own estimation by his
+opinion of her talents. She now listened with attention to political
+discussions; fancied she greatly preferred such subjects to the
+frivolous conversation of women; she occasionally retailed the
+arguments she heard adduced by others, and sometimes hazarded an
+opinion of her own. Lord Thorcaster was charmed; but as he was neither
+young nor handsome, the degree in which he frequented St. James’s
+Square gave no umbrage to Lord Montreville, nor ground for scandal to
+the world.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ J’ai vu une jolie femme dont la conversation passoit pour un
+ enchantement, personne au monde ne s’exprimoit comme elle, c’étoit la
+ vivacité, c’étoit la finesse même qui parlait: les connoisseurs n’y
+ pouvaient tenir de plaisir. La petite vérole lui vint, elle en resta
+ extrèmement marquée, quand la pauvre femme reparut, ce n’étoit plus
+ qu’une babillarde incommode.—MARIVAUX.
+
+Although no consequences attended Lord Thorcaster’s admiration of Lady
+Montreville, as far as he himself was concerned, it had a visible
+effect upon her manners. People are always more vulnerable to flattery
+with regard to the merit for which they are least remarkable, than
+that on which they themselves are not in doubt. Lord Thorcaster’s
+compliments upon the strength of her understanding caused her to set up
+for a superior woman, _une tête forte_; and she sometimes astonished
+those who knew her best, by having a decided opinion upon some subject
+of which women are seldom supposed competent judges.
+
+These little fits of pretension, if they did not add to her
+attractions, tended very much to increase the number of persons
+attracted. It was evident there must be vanity, when a new character
+was assumed for the purpose of shining; and this conviction gave
+courage and audacity to the herd of aspirers to her favour, who had
+hitherto been kept at bay by the candour and openness of her manner.
+The back of Lady Montreville’s opera box was always thronged with men.
+The door was constantly opened, and quickly shut again, by persons who
+could not find standing-room; and woe to the neighbours on each side,
+if by any chance they loved music, and wished to listen to the sweet
+sounds they had paid their money to hear.
+
+Lionel Delville, who from the first had been exceedingly favourable
+to Lucy, now found his cousin’s house the most agreeable in London;
+and took advantage of the privileges of relationship to be always in
+attendance. It seemed to be a settled thing, that he was her most
+obsequious slave. Open conventional gallantry, and cousinly intimacy,
+were so skilfully blended, that it was difficult to ascertain when and
+where real gallantry commenced. She was proud of the admiration of the
+oracle of statesmen, and pleased with the devotion of the oracle of
+fashion. She was the life of society; she became a great talker, and
+her spirits rose with the exertion. Her voice was by nature so sweetly
+modulated, that no one could be tired of hearing it; her countenance
+was so soft, that although she occasionally sported the most decided
+opinions, they did not seem _tranchant_, when delivered by her.
+
+If success in the great world could constitute the whole happiness of
+any person with naturally good feelings, she might now have been happy.
+But was she so? No.
+
+She had not been brought up without some attention to religious
+subjects. She always went to church, and would have felt uneasy if she
+had omitted to do so; she had a general desire and resolution to do
+what was right, and a horror of doing what was wrong. Her own domestic
+discontents, Sophy’s arguments and example, the natural desire after
+happiness inherent in our nature, and the vanity which is lurking at
+the bottom of most hearts, had combined to lead her thus far on the
+road to wrong; but she could not be happy, unless she felt satisfied
+with herself.
+
+She often thought, “How cheerful the Duchess of Altonworth is! How
+placid she looks! Nothing ever worries her, and every thing worries me.
+It makes me unhappy and discontented with myself to see her;” and the
+result was, that she frequented her quiet and select _soirées_ less and
+less; for when not in a whirl of engagements, she invariably felt weary
+and listless. Though the constant tribute paid to her charms afforded
+her but little pleasure, she felt the want of it, if by any chance it
+was withheld. Then she became fastidious upon the subject. She despised
+the homage of common-place empty youngsters; she ridiculed the _doux
+yeux_ of old men; she was disgusted with fulsome compliments; but
+Lionel Delville knew how to flatter, without appearing to do so; he had
+learned in his cousin’s school, and Lord Montreville saw his own arts
+practised upon his wife.
+
+He had taken no notice of the tribe of general admirers, for, feeling
+himself not immaculate, he instinctively avoided what might lead to
+recrimination. He had not heeded Lord Thorcaster’s attentions, for
+he was nearly as old as himself, and much less good-looking;—but the
+increased devotion of Lionel Delville gave him serious uneasiness. From
+the beginning he had felt a dread of his particular friend, and had
+sought his company as little as possible, since he married. Until now,
+Lucy’s manner had been such, that she might safely have bid defiance
+to the most malicious; but the revolution which the last few weeks had
+effected in her rendered him serious and thoughtful. He was uncertain
+what line to take; and in the mean time he was not particularly
+good-humoured, and frequently spoke of the frivolity and the vanity
+of women, in a manner which sounded harshly in Lucy’s ears, when she
+thought of the immorality and the hypocrisy of men.
+
+Often would she lament having ever seen the fatal letter; often did
+she wish herself once more deceived; often did she look back, as to a
+happy time, to that when she sought only to please her husband. She
+almost wished to be again ruled, and thwarted in all her everyday
+pursuits; for she now thought these petty annoyances were more than
+compensated by the satisfactory sensation of fulfilling the duties of a
+good wife, and the hope of securing the affections of her husband. It
+was with sorrow and regret that she reverted to the days when she did
+so sincerely wish to secure them. Those days were gone—gone, never to
+return!
+
+The respect she had felt for him, as her wedded husband, as her guide,
+her superior in understanding, and in knowledge—was gone, and with it
+the halo she had willingly thrown around his age. She now looked upon
+him as a _passé_ profligate, to whom in a moment of infatuation she
+had linked her youth; one whom his own inconstancy had exonerated her
+from loving, and to whom she only owed the bare duties of obedience and
+fidelity, in compliance with her marriage vow.
+
+She no longer felt bound to sacrifice her own tastes to his; and she
+adopted an independent tone, which was by no means agreeable to Lord
+Montreville, although, by having slacked the reins when first he feared
+his own aberrations were discovered, he found it somewhat difficult to
+again tighten them.
+
+He had kept his resolution of breaking off all connexion with his
+former mistress; and he began to look upon himself as the most
+exemplary of husbands, to forget Lucy’s devotion and forbearance, and
+his own errors, and to feel that the blame lay all on her side.
+
+He was seldom absent from home; and he acquired the habit of constantly
+coming in and out of the drawing-room during the morning, Lucy felt
+watched and suspected—unjustly suspected by him. Her spirit rebelled
+at the unfairness of mankind. Though meek, while she was anxious to
+please the husband she looked up to, the sense of injury had aroused
+in her a spirit which had heretofore lain dormant; and strong in the
+consciousness that she did nothing wrong, she did not alter her mode
+of proceeding, but continued to admit morning visiters, and to allow
+Lionel Delville to lounge away many an hour in St. James’s Square,
+before she went out in the carriage.
+
+He had frequently of late presented her with bouquets of the most rare
+and beautiful flowers, which he professed to bring with him from his
+sister’s villa at Roehampton; and Lucy had no scruple in accepting the
+nosegay which her husband’s cousin brought from the country.
+
+It so happened that Lord Montreville one day accompanied some ladies to
+Colville’s nursery garden, and they there admired a row of beautiful
+nosegays, which were delicately tied up, and arranged in order. They
+wished to purchase one of them, when the nurseryman begged to cut
+some fresh flowers, as these were all bespoken by Lord so and so, for
+Mrs. so and so; and by Sir something somebody, for Lady such a thing;
+and by Mr. Delville, for Lady Montreville. The other names were all
+notoriously coupled together; and that his wife’s should be mixed up
+with such, was enough to irritate any husband. Lord Montreville changed
+colour, and bit his lips. No more passed. Fresh flowers were procured,
+and the party proceeded on their ride.
+
+Lord Montreville returned home at dressing time, and came up-stairs in
+no very placid frame of mind. He knew so much of the vice of the world,
+that if roused to suspect at all, he suspected a great deal. While
+Lucy was the simple unsophisticated creature she once was, he rendered
+justice to her purity; but with him there could be no medium. He could
+respect perfect innocence; but the first bloom of that innocence passed
+away, he made no allowances for the foibles of human nature, but
+fancied it either already plunged, or on the point of plunging, into
+reckless vice.
+
+When he entered the apartment, the first sight which greeted his eyes,
+was Lionel Delville assisting Lucy to put the identical nosegay in
+water, that it might be fresh for the evening’s ball.
+
+Lord Montreville could scarcely command himself. His blood boiled to
+his fingers’ ends. But, stronger than insulted pride, than love, than
+jealousy, was in the man of the world, the fear of appearing ridiculous
+in the eyes of another man of the world.
+
+To an indifferent observer, his greeting would have appeared perfectly
+calm; his manner to Lionel cordial; that to his wife kind; but they
+all three knew the world, and none was deceived. Lionel saw his
+cousin’s feelings, and was annoyed; for it would be vexatious to have
+his pleasant morning visits disturbed, and quite a pity that Lady
+Montreville’s home should be rendered uncomfortable. Lucy, who had
+learned more of the workings of the human mind in the last year than
+in all her previous life, also perceived Lord Montreville’s inward
+irritation; and, although she had nothing really to reproach herself
+with, her conscience led her to guess pretty accurately what caused the
+storm she saw impending.
+
+Lionel felt his situation as third distressing, and did not linger
+long after Lord Montreville’s entrance. He took a gay and sportive
+leave; Lucy bade him remember to get the new march from his military
+band; Lord Montreville added, “Mind, you dine with us to-morrow, my
+good fellow!”—the door closed.
+
+Lord Montreville patiently awaited while he heard the clank of his
+boots as he hurried down the stone stairs; he waited till he heard the
+porter close the street door upon him, and then, turning to Lucy, he
+said, in a tone of choking calmness:—
+
+“Lady Montreville, this will not do. I must put an immediate stop to
+your present mode of life.”
+
+Lucy could not help feeling frightened out of her wits; but she
+remembered Alicia Mowbray, and she remembered that Lionel Delville had
+never spoken a word of love to her, and she roused herself to the onset
+with a feeling of desperation, and of contempt for her monitor.
+
+“What will not do, Lord Montreville? What do you mean to put a stop to?”
+
+“I mean to say that it is not my intention that the house of
+Montreville should be disgraced while I am its head; and that I shall
+take every precaution in my power to prevent such being the case.”
+
+“Indeed, Lord Montreville! I approve of your resolution, and agree with
+you, that all who bear so noble a name should be _sans peur, et sans
+reproche_.”
+
+“Madam!” and for a moment he looked fiercely upon her: “Whatever you
+may mean by that insinuation, you may remember that bravery is the
+virtue indispensable in men, while in women it is—chastity; and I tell
+you fairly, that I shall not be the convenient husband of a wife who
+flirts with half London, and keeps her favoured lover tame about the
+house.”
+
+“Heavens! Lord Montreville, do you say such things to me? Do you dare
+say such things?” Her momentary pride was gone; she burst into a flood
+of tears, and clasping her hands, exclaimed: “Fool that I was, I
+mistook polished manners for real refinement, and fancied those coarse
+and vulgar, who would never have insulted as you have done!”
+
+“It is certainly a pity you did not choose some one more suited to your
+unambitious taste; but as you did marry me, and as I have the honour of
+being your husband, I may be allowed some control over your actions;
+and I therefore repeat it, I expect you will conduct yourself in such a
+manner, as is consistent with your reputation and my own.”
+
+Lord Montreville left the room with coolness and dignity in his air,
+but with rage and indignation in his heart. Indignant at having been
+reproached by the creature he had raised to her present brilliant
+situation, and whose conduct latterly had destroyed the _prestige_
+which her behaviour to him in his illness had thrown around her.
+
+Lucy remained in an agony of shame and anger, such as had never yet
+overpowered her. She rushed to her own room, and was found by Milly,
+who looked in to ask if she would like to have the child, rocking
+herself backwards and forwards in her chair, with her face buried in
+her hands, and sobbing audibly.
+
+Milly exclaimed in terror, “Oh, la! my lady, whatever is the matter? My
+dear young lady, my sweet Miss Lucy, what has happened? Do speak, my
+dear Miss Lucy! what has happened to any of the dear family?”
+
+“Milly, I am miserable! I am the most miserable wretch in the world!”
+
+“Oh! my lady, don’t say so! I can’t bear to hear you talk in that way!”
+
+“Did I not give him my first affections? Have I not been as truly
+devoted to him, as if he had loved me with the fervour of youth? Did I
+not yield to all his old bachelor fancies? I ask you, Milly, could I
+have nursed him with more tenderness, if he had been as dear to me as
+John was to you? And he was almost as dear; yes, it was with my whole
+heart that I gave myself up to my attendance upon him. And what do you
+think has been the return I have met with? That he should prefer to
+me a mistress! a horrible, wicked, abandoned woman, whose very vice
+constitutes her charm!”
+
+“Sure, sure, my lady, somebody has told you false tales. This can never
+be true.”
+
+“It is too true, Milly—I know it! Would I could have any doubt upon
+the subject! While I was shut up here, not allowed to enjoy myself in
+society, but passing long tiresome days of seclusion and dullness, and
+thinking he was attending to his duties, his parliamentary duties,
+the good of the nation, the welfare of his country, he was carrying
+on this shameful affair. During my confinement, when I was ill and
+suffering, he was amusing himself in the company of this woman. Oh! it
+makes me sick to think of! I have borne it all—I have done my duty—I
+have not complained—I have not reproached him—I have sat up with him
+night after night in his illness—I have not murmured? And now it is he
+who reproaches me, for at length trying to make myself happy without
+his affections, when he chooses to lavish them upon a shameless
+creature! He is angry with me, because everybody does not think me as
+little agreeable and as little charming as he does! He would wish me to
+be odious and ugly, to justify himself!”
+
+“I am sure, my lady, nobody that knows you can think you odious or
+ugly.”
+
+“It is not my fault, if people will think me otherwise.”
+
+“Certainly, my lady; one could not expect that gentlefolks should not
+think you a good, kind, pleasant lady, as you are; nor one would not
+wish them not to think so; but——”
+
+“But what, Milly?”
+
+“Why, my lady, though my lord may have done what he should not have
+done, still, my lady, you are a married woman.”
+
+“I know that, Milly; and I would rather die than ever be led to forget
+it. If I had allowed the dandies to make love to me—if I had given any
+one of them reason to imagine I had the least preference for him—if I
+had in any way deserved such treatment——”
+
+“And do you think, my lady, you would be any the happier if you felt
+you did deserve it?”
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ So as there is as much difference between the counsel that a friend
+ giveth, and that a man giveth himself, as there is between the counsel
+ of a friend and of a flatterer; for there is no such flatterer as a
+ man’s self, and there is no such remedy against flattery of a man’s
+ self, as the liberty of a friend.—LORD BACON’_s Essays_.
+
+Lucy stopped short. There was something in this simple answer of
+Milly’s that overthrew all the chain of argument with which she was
+going to bewilder herself. She looked back, and was obliged to
+confess to herself how little real enjoyment she had felt from all the
+dissipation of the last season.
+
+“Happiness, Milly! I have done with happiness for ever. All I can now
+look for is amusement.”
+
+“Oh, my lady, depend upon it, a good conscience is all in all. If any
+body has every blessing this world can afford, it is of no use, as long
+as their conscience tells them they have not done what is right; and if
+it so happens that they are in trouble, why a good conscience is the
+only happiness they have left. It is not balls, nor plays, nor such
+like, that can cure trouble. I beg your pardon, my lady, for talking so
+to you; but, indeed, I do believe that if God sees any of us poor frail
+creatures fighting against our sorrow with a pious heart, He will help
+us to bear up against it, and we shall feel something nearer happiness
+than we ever shall by amusing ourselves with the pleasures of the
+world. I am sure I ought to be ashamed to speak so to a lady like you;
+but I am an old woman, and I love you, Miss Lucy; I love you as if you
+were my own child!”
+
+“Dear Milly, you are my only comfort, and I do not know what would
+become of me if I had not you, to whom I could open my heart. You are
+quite right, and I am sure I would not do any thing wrong that I know
+of.”
+
+“I am sure you would not, my lady; but I have sometimes thought of
+what you once said to me before ever you was married, about gentlemen
+talking to ladies, and ladies being talked of. I did not rightly
+understand you at the time.”
+
+“What can you mean, Milly?”
+
+“Why, my lady, I scarce know how to tell you; but since you have let me
+make so bold as to speak to you, I did hear some of the servants——”
+
+“The servants, Milly! what on earth could the servants say?”
+
+“Why servants will talk, my lady, and there’s no use in thinking of
+hindering them; and the truth is, I heard John say to Thomas, ‘So my
+lady has taken up with a lover at last!’”
+
+“Impossible! Milly.”
+
+“Yes, my lady, it is true enough; and Thomas made answer, ‘I thought
+how ’twould be—many ladies makes a show of being better than their
+neighbours at first, but they all will run their rig.’”
+
+“Oh, horrid! horrid! But they did not mention any name?”
+
+“Why, yes, they did indeed; for John answered, ‘He supposed my lord
+would not mind it, as ’twas all in the family.’ ‘Not mind it?’ says
+Thomas; ‘It’s my belief my lord will kick Mr. Delville out of the house
+one of these fine days.’”
+
+“Stop! stop! Milly, I cannot bear to hear another word. Oh that I
+should live to be so spoken of by my own servants! I cannot bear it! I
+will turn them all away, the impertinent wretches!”
+
+“’Tis shocking, to be sure; but them London footmen, they stick at
+nothing. And servants will talk, my lady! there’s no help for it—they
+will talk, if there is any thing to talk about.”
+
+“But there is nothing to talk about. Oh! what shall I do? What shall I
+do? If I change suddenly, and break off with Lord Montreville’s cousin,
+it will seem so odd; it will justify these dreadful suspicions; and
+besides, he is the only person whose society is the least agreeable to
+me.”
+
+“Oh, la! my lady! Then I am sure it is time you should not have so much
+of his company.”
+
+“But, Milly, he never pays me half as many compliments as other people
+do; and he never said a word like being in love with me; and he never
+spoke a word against Lord Montreville; and he never told me I was too
+young or too pretty for him—he never said any of the things I have
+been put on my guard against, as being the first advances of a man who
+wishes to flirt with a married woman; for I have sometimes watched to
+see whether he did, for fear he should be making love before I was
+aware.”
+
+“You know best, my lady; but I should think you would not have been on
+the look-out for it, if he had no such thing in his head.”
+
+“Why, Milly, you are as bad as all the rest of the world! But what
+shall I do? My husband says I must not go on as I have done; and then
+he has asked Mr. Delville to dinner to-morrow—and what can I do? What
+can I say? How am I to behave to him?”
+
+“Sure, my lady, just be civil and pleasant.”
+
+“That is all I have ever been, Milly! O dear! O dear! If I had but
+married some good young man who had loved me truly, and whom I could
+have loved and respected, as I would fain love and respect my husband,
+how easy it would have been to do my duty, if he had been ever so poor
+and humble!”
+
+“Now don’t you be fretting in this way, my lady. Some has one trial,
+and some another; and people always think their own trial the hardest
+to bear. I thought mine were very hard to bear; but in all my troubles
+I had one comfort—my duty always lay straight before me—I always knew
+what I ought to do, though ’twas a hard matter sometimes to do it
+without murmuring.”
+
+“I will not go to the ball to-night! Yet perhaps Mr. Delville may guess
+why—I had better go. By the by, this is the Duchess of Altonworth’s
+evening for being at home. I will go there. It will not seem so odd as
+not going out at all, and Mr. Delville is very seldom at her parties.
+Besides, I shall have an opportunity of asking the Duchess if she will
+receive me early to-morrow. She is good, kind, and judicious, and she
+knows the world well, too. I will tell her what an uncomfortable state
+I am in, and she will advise me.”
+
+Lord Montreville dined out at a political dinner, and they met no more
+in the course of the evening.
+
+To the Duchess of Altonworth’s Lucy went, filled with a desire to do
+what was right, but at the same time with a strong conviction of her
+own wrongs, and in consequence a feeling of martyrdom.
+
+The first person she saw, as she entered the Duchess’s, was Lionel
+Delville. She was not prepared for this, and it annoyed her
+considerably. She was forced into his society before she had by any
+means decided on the line of conduct, or rather the tone of manner (for
+the whole question was an affair of manner), which she meant to adopt.
+He instantly greeted her with a serious air of tender interest and
+concern, and ventured to look in her eyes with an inquiring expression,
+as if he expected to ascertain how her tête-à-tête with Lord
+Montreville had gone off. His eyes disconcerted her. She was distressed
+at meeting them. She looked in every other direction; but although she
+might avoid seeing them upon her, she could not avoid feeling them
+upon her. She made careless, indifferent, insipid remarks, in rather a
+higher pitched voice than was common to her.
+
+Lionel saw that she had been lectured, perceived that she was no longer
+at her ease, and took courage from her evident _gêne_. He expressed
+his happiness at meeting her again “so soon;” said he had come to the
+Duchess’s because he had imagined it likely she might prefer a quiet
+party to a ball “that evening,” and enquired whether he might call “as
+usual.” His whole air had in it something confidential, as if there
+existed between them a mystery, which both understood, without any need
+of explanation. In vain Lucy tried to be easy, and to laugh—to be any
+thing but mysterious. She answered, “Oh, yes!” or “to be sure,” and “I
+suppose so,” in an affectedly loud and unconcerned tone, to all the
+half-whispered expressions of solicitude which he was pouring into her
+ear. Whatever subject she started, he contrived to throw a shade of
+sentiment over it. She thought herself safe in dashing into the last
+speech of Lord Thorcaster, and loudly declared her admiration of his
+eloquence; for she had passed the preceding night with her head through
+the ventilator of the House of Commons. This led to a discussion upon
+eloquence, and Lionel said “he could imagine circumstances in which
+there might be more eloquence in three short words, than in all the
+flowing sentences, the rounded periods, the flowers of rhetoric,
+employed by sages and senators since the world began.”
+
+“Eloquence in three words! What can they be?”
+
+He kept his face looking straight forward, but uttered, in a low,
+clear, musical voice, which reached her ear, and her’s alone, “What
+think you of the three words ‘I love you?’”
+
+Lucy felt hot all over; but she rejoined, with what calmness she could
+command, “I should say those three words conveyed an agreeable,—or,
+perhaps, a disagreeable fact, in the plainest and simplest manner, and
+had nothing to do with eloquence.”
+
+Lionel saw he had gone too far. “When your little boy first lisps,
+‘Mamma, I love you!’ I think you will agree with me, that there can be
+eloquence in the words.”
+
+Lucy felt it certainly would be delightful to hear them from his lips;
+and an air of tenderness succeeded to her confusion; she became
+conscious that to all lookers-on the appearance was that of a desperate
+flirtation. She felt her cheeks flush; she felt her eyes gleam with
+excited emotions of all kinds, and she was afraid to raise them from
+the ground. Lionel thought her eyelashes quite beautiful, as they
+almost swept her cheek, while they evidently only veiled the brightness
+beneath: he thought her confusion bewitching, and he was irresistibly
+attracted.
+
+The Duchess was surprised, and grieved, at the change which she feared
+had come over Lady Montreville during the last few weeks. Lucy caught
+her eyes upon her, and read in them an expression of pity, and of
+blame. She could not bear that look. Jumping up from her seat, she
+exclaimed, “I have something particular to say to the Duchess; I beg
+you ten thousand pardons;” and she left him in the middle of a tirade,
+upon the folly of those who, by groundless suspicions, justify what
+they dread.
+
+He remained _planté_, and bit his lips in pique and provocation. Lucy
+meantime passed her arm within the Duchess’s, and saying she must
+arrange with her some plan for seeing the Dulwich Gallery, she led her
+aside and sat down by her. “Do not look at me with that expression of
+countenance, my dear Duchess. I cannot bear it. I have enough to annoy
+me, and I cannot have you look so coldly and unkindly upon me.”
+
+“If my looks expressed coldness or unkindness, they belied me. I feel
+any thing but indifference, I can assure you.”
+
+“Let me come to you to-morrow morning, and promise to listen to a
+long history, in which, if I am to blame, I am more sinned against
+than sinning—indeed, till to-night, I thought myself a pattern of
+discretion; but I begin to think I may have been a little imprudent.”
+
+“Well, we cannot discuss that point just now,” answered the Duchess,
+smiling. “Come to-morrow morning, and I will not be at home to any one
+else.”
+
+Lucy kept close to the Duchess the rest of the evening, and did not
+give Mr. Delville any opportunity of speaking to her again. The next
+morning she breakfasted in her dressing-room, and at twelve o’clock she
+went to the Duchess, resolved to tell her her whole history, to ask her
+advice, and, if possible, to follow it. She did not feel as if there
+would be any great difficulty in giving up the attentions of others,
+but she felt she could not accomplish being the affectionate wife she
+once was, if that should be the thing required of her.
+
+When she found herself alone with the Duchess, she told her her tale
+of woe and injury. “Now what can I do? What shall I do? I am ready
+to confess that last night Mr. Delville did seem inclined to make
+love, though just when I thought it was really coming, he turned the
+conversation, and talked about my child. However, I am not at this
+moment so indignant as I was yesterday, when I thought the suspicion
+ridiculous and insulting. I am ready to do any thing that shall be
+calculated to prevent him, or any one else, flirting with me; but what
+have I done, or said, to encourage them?”
+
+“It is very odd that last year, though you were as pretty as you are
+now, you had no difficulty of this kind, had you?”
+
+“No, none at all. I went out a great deal, but no one paid me
+particular attention; and I did not feel afraid of any constructions
+put upon this thing and that thing; and yet I am sure I was not half so
+attentive to appearances, and did not think half as much about them.”
+
+“I should think, then, there must be some change in yourself.”
+
+“Yes; that there is! I thought my husband loved me then, and my study
+was to please him.”
+
+“That is the thing! Men have such tact in finding out when a woman is
+discontented at home.”
+
+“And how can I be contented? That does not depend upon me.”
+
+“Not exactly. But do you not think that from having been mortified at
+home, perhaps you have sought for gratification to your vanity abroad,
+that you have wished to be reassured concerning your own attractions?”
+
+“Why, perhaps I may. It is so mortifying, you know, to be married to a
+man old enough to be one’s father, and then that he should neglect and
+despise one. I just did want to ascertain that the fault was not in me,
+but that it was all owing to his bad taste. Oh dear! why was I dazzled
+with rank and fashion, polished manners, and good breeding. I was at
+the play the other night, and I was so struck with those lines of Anne
+Boleyn’s, that I came home and learned them by heart.
+
+ I swear ’tis better to be lowly born,
+ And range with humble livers in content,
+ Than to be perked up in a glistering grief
+ And wear a golden sorrow.
+
+If I had but married an honest, true-hearted man, with ardent
+affections—one to whom I had been all the world, as he would have been
+to me—I could have buffeted cheerily through the storms of life, hand
+in hand with him.”
+
+“And how many of your acquaintance are blessed with the fate (which I
+grant you is the happiest in the world) for which you so frequently
+sigh?”
+
+“You are.”
+
+“So I am! but do not fancy I have not had my share of sorrow, though I
+am cheerful,—more than cheerful,—and most grateful for my very large
+share of happiness. But remember I lost a son, my first-born, in the
+full vigour of youth and intellect; one who was all that a mother’s
+love or pride could wish or dream. God grant you may be spared that
+trial, my dearest Lady Montreville!”—her voice faltered as she spoke.
+“Depend upon it all others are light in comparison. Not that I murmur.
+Heaven knows that I bow in submission, and acknowledge myself still a
+person to be envied; but you need not envy me so very much,”—and a tear
+glistened in her eye.
+
+Lucy thought of her boy, and trembled. She confessed to herself she had
+not sufficiently prized the blessing vouchsafed to her. She thought
+also that what Milly had said to her was very true,—“Some have one
+trial, some another.”
+
+“You will not find many more so fortunate in their marriage as I am,”
+added the Duchess.
+
+“Lord and Lady John Ashton.”
+
+“They have been married four months and a half!”
+
+“Well then, Mr. and Mrs. Stanton.”
+
+“Yes, they are very happy now. He married her from pique, because my
+niece Jemima refused him. But it has turned out particularly well, and
+Mrs. Stanton suits him ten times better than Jemima would have done.”
+
+“Oh, I should not like to have been married out of pique! Well then!
+those dear old souls the Hartleys. It is a pleasure to see them
+toddling so cozily down the hill together. He is charming, and so fond
+of her!”
+
+“So he is! But the greater part of his youth was spent in devotion to
+other women. However, her gentleness and patience have their reward at
+last. He loves her now as she deserves.”
+
+“Oh! I cannot emulate her there. I cannot wish to win back the
+affections of a person I have left off respecting; but indeed I wish to
+do my duty. I have the most ardent desire to be a virtuous wife, if I
+cannot be a loving one.”
+
+“Well now! to begin, you must constantly and invariably repress vanity.
+Vanity is the stumbling-block of most women. Vanity has led more women
+astray, than feeling, or vice, or any thing else. You must give up
+showing your husband you can charm others.”
+
+“Sophy told me that was the way in the world to keep one’s husband! Not
+that I did it exactly with the view of keeping him, for I had given up
+that point; but I did wish to show him what he had lost.”
+
+“My dear Lady Montreville, you have been playing a dangerous game. By
+your own confession, then, vanity has been the true mainspring of your
+actions of late!”
+
+“Oh, not quite! only a little; but, after all, what can be done without
+a little bit of vanity? As Sophy says, every body would sit still, and
+do nothing; people would not try to be pleasing and clever; heroes
+would not fight; legislators would not legislate; there would be no
+arts, or sciences, or improvements in the world. Sophy says vanity is
+as necessary in the economy of the mind, as fire in the economy of the
+world. That without it all things would stagnate.”
+
+“Very true! But like fire, if once allowed to get beyond your control,
+it rages, destroys, and devours every thing. Like fire, it is the best
+of servants, the worst of masters.”
+
+“Oh, so it is! If I could but have thought of that when Sophy and
+I have been talking! but as I could not answer her, I thought her
+arguments were unanswerable. Well, then, I will not give way to vanity
+any more. I always was taught that it was wrong to do so, till Sophy
+persuaded me one ought to try to be agreeable, that it was a duty one
+owed to society. Still, how shall I get through our dinner to-day? My
+husband so angry! and Mr. Delville to be one of the party!”
+
+“Shall I tell you what to do? Go home to Lord Montreville, and ask him
+how he wishes you to behave to his cousin, and assure him you are ready
+to follow his directions in all respects.”
+
+“What! quite humble myself before him, as if I was an erring wife, and
+he an immaculate angel? Oh, my dear Duchess, I scarcely think I can do
+that! Think of Alicia!”
+
+“But your husband having failed in his duties, is no reason you should
+not perform yours. Your vow was not conditional. Your duties remain the
+same. Moreover, asking Lord Montreville how he wishes you to conduct
+yourself, is not expressing any approbation of his conduct. In short,
+it is the right thing to do; and you will find yourself happier, if you
+do what is right, simply because it is right, than you can be in any
+other way.”
+
+“That is just what Milly said!” exclaimed Lucy. “And if you and Milly
+both say so, it must be true. I will drive home as fast as I can, and
+catch him before he goes out.”
+
+Lucy rang for her carriage, and kissing the Duchess with heartfelt
+gratitude for her sympathy and good advice, she hurried away, and went
+straight into Lord Montreville’s morning-room, without giving her pride
+time to rise up again within her bosom.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ When all is done and said,
+ In the end, this shall you find,
+ He most of all doth bathe in bliss
+ That hath a quiet mind.
+
+ Our wealth leaves us at death,
+ Our kinsmen at the grave;
+ But virtues of the mind unto
+ The Heavens with us we have.
+
+ THOMAS LORD VAUX, 1521.
+
+ “Il n’y a rien qui rafraîchisse le sang comme avoir su éviter de faire
+ une sottise.”—LA BRUYERE.
+
+Lord Montreville was sitting before a table, covered with papers and
+books, with a novel open before him, of which he had not turned over a
+leaf for at least thirty-six minutes. He was thinking how innocent Lucy
+had been when first he had married her; he was lamenting the total
+change which he believed had taken place in her; he was wondering how
+far she had become acquainted with his connexion with Alicia Mowbray,
+and he confessed to himself that he could date the alteration which he
+had perceived in her, from the period when she had an opportunity of
+perceiving that fatal letter. That she had read it, was now evident,
+from her taunting allusion the preceding day. He was persuading himself
+that pique and jealousy might have driven her to flirtation, and he
+did not feel so chilled, so awed, so daunted, as when her measured,
+cold, though dutiful behaviour had made him painfully aware of his own
+errors, and of her merits. Neither was he so indignant, as when, in his
+anger, he attributed the whole change to mere indifference to himself,
+and love of the admiration of others.
+
+As Lucy approached him, her cheek was slightly flushed; her clear blue
+eyes looked full at him, with a gentle but determined expression which
+seemed to say, I have no thought which shuns the light, inquire, and my
+heart shall be laid open before you.
+
+“Lord Montreville,” she said, “you were angry with me yesterday for
+seeing so much of your cousin, Mr. Delville. You have asked him to dine
+here to-day, and I want to know how you would wish me to conduct myself
+towards him. I wish to be guided by you. I wish to see those whom you
+approve, and I wish to see no more of them than you approve. I value
+my own good name as much as you can do; and although I yesterday felt
+very angry at the manner in which you took me to task, my anger has
+subsided, and I only want to do what is right. You will find me willing
+and anxious to follow your directions, whatever they may be.”
+
+Lord Montreville was taken by surprise. He could not look in her face
+and refuse to believe in the perfect candour and sincerity of her
+address to him. Her manner was neither humble, as if she had any thing
+to be forgiven; nor was it bold, as if she meant to brave him. The
+train of his own thoughts had rather tended to soften than to inflame
+him, and simple truth generally carries conviction with it.
+
+“Lucy! I own I was angry yesterday, and can you assure me I had no
+cause for being so?”
+
+“None that I know of.”
+
+“Answer me honestly,—Has not Lionel Delville made love to you?”
+
+“I have no wish but to answer honestly. Yesterday morning I should have
+said, never; and even now I can scarcely say he has, though yesterday
+evening, when I met him at the Duchess’s, his manner was changed.
+I think that if I had given him any encouragement, he would have
+made love to me; and it is in consequence of finding you were so far
+justified in your suspicions, that I now come to you, and beg you will
+direct my conduct. My wish is to fulfil my duties. I am convinced that
+by so doing alone one can know happiness,—or rather contentment (for
+she felt at that moment that life presented but a blank and cheerless
+prospect to her)—happiness I have long ceased to look for.”
+
+“Lucy! this is not kind or flattering to me.”
+
+“I am very sorry for it, but it is the fact!” She sat down, half
+overcome by her feelings of determined duty and of self-commiseration.
+
+“Lucy, why should you not be happy?”
+
+“Can _you_ ask, Lord Montreville?” and she gave him a glance, in which
+the flash of indignation was tempered by a reproachful tear, which swam
+in her eye.
+
+“Oh, Lucy! do you allude to that—that letter—which you so
+unfortunately——?”
+
+“Yes, I do allude to that letter, which I so unfortunately saw; and to
+that woman, that shameless woman, whom you prefer to me. But I do not
+wish to reproach you—the time is gone by. I have made up my mind to
+being the neglected wife of a faithless husband. But I wish to do my
+duty, for my own sake, for the sake of my conscience. Tell me what to
+do, and I will do it!”
+
+“Lucy, I never preferred that woman to you. I have never seen her since
+we left Wales, and I never will see her again as long as I live.”
+
+“I am very glad for your own sake to hear you say so. For whatever
+you and other fashionable men may think, you may rest assured it is a
+great sin—though I have latterly been so bewildered about right and
+wrong, and I have tried so to find excuses for those around me, that I
+believe, if it had not been for the Duchess, and for Milly, I should
+scarcely have known which was which.”
+
+Lord Montreville, though not a strict moralist, could not help being
+struck with these few words, which so forcibly expressed the mode by
+which the most amiable become contaminated by bad examples. He felt
+he had been the cause of her thus trying to reconcile morality to
+practice, instead of practice to morality.
+
+A pause ensued. Had Lucy been in love with her husband, most likely
+her heart would have entirely softened towards him; and though she
+would have poured forth a much more vehement torrent of reproaches,
+she would have been more ready to restore him to his former place in
+her affections. As it was, she heard his assurance with satisfaction,
+but with calmness. It did not produce any instantaneous revulsion in
+her feelings. It did not now affect her as it would have done on the
+evening at Caërwhwyddwth Castle, when his silence had so seared her
+heart. Since then she had had leisure to look back upon her marriage,
+and to decipher what her feelings had then been, and to become
+convinced how little of real love there was in her preference of him.
+She now knew how easily we can deceive ourselves. The spell was broken!
+The halo her own imagination had thrown around him was dispersed.
+
+Although with a mind so naturally well disposed as hers, if his conduct
+had always been such as to ensure her respect, the spell would never
+have been broken, the halo never dispersed; still it was not at her
+option again to conjure up the one, or to invest him with the other.
+She saw him as he was; but he was the father of her child, and she
+rejoiced that the silence and reserve which had so long been maintained
+between them, was at length broken through. She did not wish it should
+ever be resumed, and she continued,—
+
+“I hope we now both wish to perform our duties, and I really need your
+instructions with respect to my behaviour to Mr. Delville.”
+
+At this moment Lord Montreville felt his own errors had been so much
+more serious than hers, that he was grateful to her for expressing
+herself as if they each had something to forget and to forgive; and
+his jealous feelings had vanished into thin air before her candour and
+sincerity, in a manner which surprised himself.
+
+“Lucy,” he said, “I trust to you; there can be no deceit under that
+open brow. I have known many women, but none so free from guile, so
+single-hearted as yourself. You are now aware that Lionel’s attentions
+to you have given me uneasiness, and I feel convinced you will conduct
+yourself as you ought to do. I only wish you felt the same confidence
+in me.”
+
+“Indeed, Lord Montreville, if you assure me you have broken off all
+connection with that woman, I implicitly believe what you say. But,
+to tell the honest truth, I cannot get over your having ever done any
+thing so wicked. I may be able to forgive the insult to myself, but how
+can I look up to you as I once did, when I know you have been led into
+such wickedness?”
+
+“Dear Lucy, you do not know with what free notions men are educated;
+you do not know how difficult it is for a man to shake off a woman who
+has once acquired power over him, and who tries to get him back into
+her toils, even although the inclination he has once felt for her has
+long, long passed away.”
+
+“Then it was not since your marriage that you first became acquainted
+with her?”
+
+“No. When I married, I meant never to see her again. It was her
+distress, and mere pity for her wants and miseries, that ever led
+me back to her. I did not then know what you really were. I thought
+you beautiful and gentle, but it was not till later that I learned
+to honour you as a being of a holier, higher nature than any I had
+yet met with. At the very time when you shut up your heart from me,
+mine was filled with admiration, respect, and affection for you. Half
+the jealousy I felt was, I believe, sorrow to see the first and only
+being in whose unsullied purity I had firmly believed, on the point of
+becoming contaminated by collision with the world.”
+
+Lucy was touched by this homage to the rectitude of her intentions,
+and she thought there would be something satisfactory in redeeming her
+whole sex in his estimation. She also thought if she could lead him to
+see the real guilt of those errors which he had hitherto looked upon
+as so venial, she should be promoting his welfare in this world and
+the next. With these feelings she answered smilingly, “I am glad you
+entertained such a good opinion of me, and I should be very, very
+sorry to forfeit it. You shall continue to respect me.”
+
+“And to love you, dearest Lucy. Though I could not have reached the age
+at which I married without having been in love before, still, to love
+you as I never loved any woman but you——”
+
+“Thank you,” answered Lucy, and she sighed to think that his
+tenderness awakened no corresponding emotion in her bosom; that it was
+forgiveness, satisfaction, kindness, that she felt, but no responsive
+love.
+
+On the contrary, the word rather chilled her; for she felt it
+impossible to return the sentiment expressed; and she hastily added,
+“Well, good by; I see your horses in the street, and I am going to take
+the child to play with the Duchess of Altonworth’s grandchildren.”
+
+They parted in kindness, and they met again before dinner in the same
+frame of mind.
+
+Lionel Delville, who had calculated upon finding Lucy alone, as Lord
+Montreville was apt to be late for dinner, entered the apartment before
+any of the rest of the company had arrived. At first he thought the old
+fellow must be very jealous to have made so unusual an exertion; but
+he soon perceived that a perfect understanding subsisted between them,
+and that Lord Montreville’s countenance no longer betrayed any sign of
+uneasiness at his approach.
+
+He sat, as usual, by Lady Montreville at dinner, and he again found
+the open, straightforward manner which, when first he met her, had
+so completely baffled him. The _gêne_ and shyness which were the
+consequence of feeling herself suspected, had completely vanished.
+She knew that her husband now had perfect confidence in her; she knew
+that he did justice to the purity of her intentions, and she mentally
+resolved he should never, never have cause to doubt them.
+
+Lord Montreville’s knowledge of the sex, which rendered him jealous
+and umbrageous when there was any, the remotest, cause for being so,
+also enabled him to understand and to appreciate her behaviour on the
+present occasion. Lionel saw the game was up, and had the tact to slip
+back into the open conventional gallantry, from which he had been
+gradually advancing into serious gallantry.
+
+Lucy that night retired to her room satisfied with herself, thoroughly
+convinced that every effort made in the cause of virtue produces its
+own reward, resolved to be thankful for the blessings she possessed,
+and strong in the determination to do her duty in that state of life
+in which she was placed; while at the same time she could not deny to
+herself that the duties of those who are united to a person suited to
+them in age, disposition, and pursuits, are the most easy to fulfil.
+
+Lord and Lady Montreville have lived many years in comfort and good
+fellowship. Lady Montreville is the best of mothers, and finds in
+the sportive tenderness of her children, happiness far beyond the
+contentment which at one time was all to which she dared aspire. Yet
+sometimes, as she watches the innocent gambols of her two lovely little
+girls, she sighs to think those halcyon days of youth, which to herself
+were days of such unalloyed joyousness, cannot last for ever, and that
+the time must assuredly come when they too will think of love and
+marriage.
+
+Such reflections were passing through her mind, when she one day
+exclaimed to Milly, “Nurse, how sorry I shall be when those children
+grow up, and one has to go through for them all the agitations
+attendant upon lovers, and going to be married. Marriage is such a
+lottery, you know!”
+
+“Ah, well! I shall be dead and buried before ever that time comes; but
+whatever you do, my lady, be sure they choose gentlemen that have the
+fear of God before their eyes. Ah, bless their little hearts!” she
+added, as she followed their light, graceful forms with eyes of pride
+and tenderness, “they may grow up ever so pretty—as pretty as yourself,
+my lady, and they can’t be much prettier, but it’s a poor hold a woman
+has over a man if it’s only the hold her own beautiful face, sweet
+manners, and gentle temper can have. It is to the man’s good principles
+a woman must look, to keep her husband constant and true to her.”
+
+
+
+
+WARENNE;
+
+OR,
+
+THE PIPING TIMES OF PEACE.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ So I, by vent’rous friendship led,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Wad fain thy dauntless valour sing,
+ Resistless as the tempest’s wing
+ That wave on wave does dashing fling
+ Upon the shore,
+ Yet mild thy soul as breath of spring
+ When war is o’er.
+
+ _Unpublished Poems._
+
+One evening in the winter of 182—, a large party of the officers of the
+—— dragoons were dining together in the best room of the Green Dragon,
+the principal inn of ——, on the southern coast of Ireland. The district
+around was under military law, but though occasional outrages marked
+the wild and turbulent spirit which reigned, since their arrival in
+their present quarters no disturbances had taken place of sufficient
+magnitude to cause them serious alarm; and it appeared probable that,
+notwithstanding the efforts of the agitators to excite tumult, men’s
+passions would subside, and affairs resume their wonted, if not happy,
+current. To men under such circumstances, without danger to animate, or
+occupations to interest them, dinner is a meal of much importance, and
+the young cornets or captains were busily employed in dispelling their
+_ennui_ according to the received rules of social indulgence.
+
+Some two or three of the neighbouring gentry had been invited to join
+the mess; and as the generous wine passed quickly round, many a loud
+laugh and many a light jest told the gay and unconstrained merriment
+of the festive meeting. There was, however, one individual at the
+table, who, though he apparently shared in their mirth, and though
+no trace of uneasiness on his brow betrayed the working of the mind
+within, looked upon the proceedings of his young friends and their
+guests with feelings of an anxious nature. Their commanding officer,
+Lieutenant-Colonel Warenne, feared that he could perceive, amid the
+joyousness of their good-humoured revelry, impending discord and
+confusion.
+
+Warenne, though young in years, was a gallant and very distinguished
+officer. He had entered the army a boy, at the commencement of the
+Peninsular war, and was entirely employed from that time till its
+close. Promotion came quickly to the survivors in those days of
+perilous glory, and he had successively risen step after step, until he
+found himself in the spring of 1814 first major of his old regiment,
+the —— dragoons. At Waterloo his lieutenant-colonel was killed, and
+Warenne obtained the high rank he held at the moment of which we
+are writing. Thus, after several years of peace, he was not quite
+thirty-four. Daring, cool, and firm, with quick perception, great
+knowledge of his profession, and much general information, he was
+looked upon by his seniors as one who, if opportunity should be given
+him, could not fail to raise himself to the highest honours of his
+profession; kind of heart, and gentle in manner, he was the idol of
+the soldiery. His form and his features coincided with the character
+of his mind. Tall and muscular, but spare and active, his broad chest
+and clean limbs showed at once strength, and capability of continued
+exertion. His dark and piercing eye bespoke quick comprehension;
+while his mouth, beautifully formed, and expressing, as its natural
+characteristics, benignity, and perhaps humour, when through agitation
+it became compressed, bore the stamp of decision.
+
+On the night in question, a bystander might have detected somewhat of
+Warenne’s anxiety to keep up a tone of conversation throughout the
+party rather higher than that which usually graces a mess-table, but
+otherwise no outward signs denoted his anticipations. He had learnt by
+accident, in the course of the day, that one of the gentlemen, whom he
+had invited to dinner, was closely connected with the agitating party;
+and he every instant expected to hear him break out into some abuse of
+existing powers, which might not be brooked at a table of his majesty’s
+officers. He watched therefore the increasing effects of the wine upon
+his guests with a melancholy foreboding, and was on the alert to put
+a stop to any discussion that seemed likely to terminate angrily. He
+turned his keen eye round on all his young subalterns in succession, to
+see if the colour was yet mounting to their cheeks, or if their knit
+brows showed symptoms of provocation. More especially did he observe
+the bearing of two at the table. For the first he was interested by
+the tie of blood; the second had been committed to his care, a few
+months previously, by one whom he was strongly disposed to think the
+handsomest and most charming of her sex.
+
+Frank Warenne was the lieutenant-colonel’s only brother, about six
+years the younger, a gay, dashing, intelligent puppy, very handsome,
+and a good deal spoilt, that is to say, as far as a disposition, by
+nature incorruptibly good, could be deteriorated by the admiration of
+women, and the good-nature of friends. The affectionate kindness of
+Colonel Warenne himself had perhaps contributed, as much as any other
+cause, to render Frank what he was.
+
+Their father, a younger son of the noble house of Warenne, had died
+when his eldest boy Gerald was only thirteen years old, having, shortly
+before his death, vested his small property in land. His widow had
+hoped to be able, with the income arising from this, to educate her two
+children well, and she had placed Gerald at Eton. Before a year had
+passed, she too was gathered to the tomb. Mr. Warenne had bequeathed
+the estate in fee to his wife, trusting to her to divide it between her
+two sons as she might deem best for their future interests.
+
+She died, however, without a will, and it devolved on Gerald as sole
+heir. From that moment, Gerald, with the decision and nobleness
+which formed so prominent a part of his after character, determined,
+not only to take charge of the instruction and support of Frank
+during his minority by making over for that purpose a portion of
+the allowance given him by Chancery, but, on his coming of age, to
+divide his inheritance equally with him; a resolution which he carried
+into practice, shortly after his return to England from the army of
+occupation, in the winter of 1815.
+
+He obtained for Frank a commission in the same regiment with himself,
+as soon as he was old enough to hold it; and the young cornet fought
+his first battle at Waterloo under his auspices.
+
+In this manner, under his brother’s fostering eye, Frank had grown
+up to his present age of manhood, in perfect freedom from care, in
+the enjoyment of as much money as he needed, with the advantages of
+birth, of friends (for his brother’s friends were his), and of personal
+beauty—a pleasant introduction into life; but not one to bring to
+maturity the seeds of good implanted by nature. The consequence of this
+was, that though Captain Warenne was an excellent officer, and a gay,
+agreeable companion, he wanted that vigour of mind and intellectual
+superiority which Colonel Warenne himself possessed.
+
+The other object of anxiety to Warenne, on this evening, Henry Marston,
+was a wild, thoughtless, impetuous boy, with high and generous
+feelings, undisciplined by education. When he joined the regiment, only
+a few months before, he first quitted the paternal roof beneath which
+he had been brought up under a private tutor, who had consulted his
+own ease more than his pupil’s advancement, and had never attempted
+to teach him the necessity of self-command, or even of concession
+to the prejudices and opinions of others. From him, therefore,
+Warenne momentarily expected some burst of temper, or some passionate
+interruption of his Irish guests, which must lead to a quarrel.
+His fears were not without reason;—by degrees the little softening
+remarks which he from time to time threw in were less attended to,
+while the agitator grew more violent and seditious in his language,
+louder in tone, and more offensive in his gesticulations. By degrees
+Henry passed from a state of good-humoured amusement to a feeling of
+intense provocation, which hardly permitted him to observe the usual
+courtesies of society; and the former at last venturing to declare in a
+threatening manner, that “England, if she chose still to continue her
+galling oppression of Ireland, should remember that Irishmen had hearts
+and hands, and that she did it at her peril,” he angrily demanded,—
+
+“Peril! of what?”
+
+“Do you ask of what?” rejoined the indignant orator. “Of war, war to
+the knife. Ireland cannot—will not—longer be the slave of England. We
+bid her, and her bloodthirsty myrmidons defiance.”
+
+In an instant more than one young officer started from his seat, and
+together with Henry, who was thoroughly exasperated, loudly took him to
+task for his ill-timed and ill-placed tirade against their country. At
+this moment the well-known voice of their lieutenant-colonel was heard.
+
+“Mr. Marston, Mr. Kennedy, Captain Warenne; I beg of you to remain
+quiet.”
+
+The clear stern tone in which these few simple words were uttered,
+permitted not any hesitation. The young soldiers reseated themselves,
+and a general silence ensued.
+
+“Gentlemen,” continued he, speaking slowly and calmly, “this for the
+present is my table, these gentlemen my guests.” Then addressing
+himself to the unlucky cause of the disturbance. “Mr. O’Neil, as the
+countenances of my young friends do not seem to promise much more
+agreeable conversation, perhaps we had better retire.”
+
+He rose from his chair as he concluded, and bowing, led the way to the
+door. The Irishman followed him, and they all left the room. Colonel
+Warenne quietly walked before them from the door to the court-yard
+of the inn, courteously showing the way; as soon, however, as he had
+reached a spot where he could not be overheard, he turned round and
+said,—
+
+“After what has passed, Mr. O’Neil, you must be aware that you and
+I cannot again meet as friends without some explanation; I must
+therefore wish you good night. To-morrow morning, perhaps, your present
+feelings of excitement will be past away, and you will be sorry for the
+intemperate language you have used. I shall be happy to find that such
+is the case, when I send my friend Major Stuart to wait on you.”
+
+O’Neil seemed struck by the collected and business-like tone of this
+address, but made no answer, and departed with his companions.
+
+As soon as they were gone, Warenne sought Major Stuart’s apartment,
+and placed the matter in his hands. He then retraced his steps to the
+mess-room, revolving in his mind many various schemes for preventing
+all inquiry, on the part of his young friends, into the measures he
+had taken, or was about to take, when, fortunately for him, an orderly
+rode into the yard with orders from General Unwin, who commanded the
+district, to move the regiment the next day to ——. With the despatch in
+his hand, he re-entered the dining-room, where, during his absence, his
+conduct had been canvassed. The younger officers were strongly disposed
+to think that he had treated the impertinent stranger with too much
+consideration; and, as he returned, Henry Marston was in the act of
+saying to Frank, that he was inclined to quarrel with his brother for
+not allowing him to kick the rascal out. He quickly, however, silenced
+their incipient questionings, by occupying their attention with the
+change of station to be effected on the morrow, with the line of route,
+&c.: and soon afterwards, breaking up the party, dismissed them to
+their rooms in utter forgetfulness of the mischance which had thrown
+them into such disagreeable confusion.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ “When honour is a support to virtuous principles, and runs parallel
+ with the laws of God and our country, it cannot be too much cherished
+ and encouraged; but when the dictates of honour are contrary to
+ those of religion and equity, they are the greatest depravations of
+ human nature, by giving wrong, ambitious, and false ideas of what is
+ good and laudable, and should therefore be exploded by every good
+ government, and driven out as the bane and plague of human society.”
+
+ ADDISON.
+
+Frank Warenne alone was not deceived, and could not doubt that his
+brother would resent the insult which he had received. He knew too
+well Warenne’s delicate sense of honour; and, recognising in the
+tranquillity of his demeanour the settled calmness of decision, he
+intuitively guessed the truth. Want of fraternal affection was not one
+of Frank’s failings, and he sought his chamber in a state of serious
+disquietude. He saw no means by which a rencontre could be prevented,
+nor any by which he might transfer to his own person the danger that
+threatened him he loved so dearly. He felt that honour, according
+to military custom, demanded from Warenne himself that he should
+require an apology from O’Neil; that in all probability O’Neil would
+not apologize; and they must therefore necessarily meet each other.
+He could not rest—he did not even attempt to lie down, but paced his
+room in restless anxiety hour after hour, forming a thousand different
+schemes to ensure his brother’s safety, yet unable to find one which
+should not compromise his fame. At last, about five o’clock, resolving
+to ascertain whether his fears were well founded, he stole across the
+passage to the door of Warenne’s room, and gently opened it. Warenne
+was writing, but started up at Frank’s entrance.
+
+“Is it you, Frank!” he exclaimed.
+
+“Forgive me, Gerald,” rejoined Frank, “but I am certain you are going
+to fight that scoundrel O’Neil, and I am wretched about it: I have
+passed the whole night in utter misery. Gerald! this may be our last
+meeting,” and as he spoke he flung himself upon his brother’s neck.
+
+“Do not unman me,” said Warenne; “just at this moment I have need of
+all my firmness, for I will not deny your conclusion with respect to
+O’Neil. Would that I could! for I abhor duelling from my soul. I cannot
+disguise from myself that it is a wicked and abominable practice,
+expressly contrary to the law of Him, in whom, notwithstanding the
+irregularities of my soldier’s life, I most sincerely trust,—if I may
+dare to say so in such an hour as this; neither can I forget that I
+am perhaps about to appear before him with the crime of murder, in
+intention at least, upon my soul. Still I have not the moral courage
+to break through custom, when the alternative is disgrace—but I must
+not think of these matters now. Let us talk of something else, Frank—I
+had just finished a letter to you as you came in, which I meant should
+be delivered to you in case I fell;—put it in your pocket, and return
+it to me, if all goes well—nay, do not read it. It contains only a
+few words of advice from your old Mentor, who would fain have you do
+justice to his instructions, and to yourself.”
+
+As he proceeded, Warenne regained his habitual self-command, and
+Frank, his mind unconsciously imbibing a portion of his brother’s
+calmness, became more tranquil. They talked on with composure, and
+even cheerfulness, of the future prospects of the latter. It was now
+six o’clock, and Warenne begged Frank to leave him to a few minutes
+repose. The sad conviction that this might be their last interview
+once more forced itself on the mind of the latter, and he would have
+relieved his bursting heart by tears, had he not feared to give pain
+to one he loved better than himself. He lingered for a while on his
+brother’s neck, pressed him yet closer to his heart, then invoking
+every blessing upon his head, and receiving from him a fond but solemn
+benediction in return, he rushed to his own chamber, where he threw
+himself on his bed, and, after a few minutes, fairly sobbed himself to
+sleep.
+
+About a quarter before seven Stuart knocked at Warenne’s door, with
+the intelligence that O’Neil would not apologise. Nothing remained
+therefore to be done but to proceed to the meeting, and in a few
+minutes the two friends were on the road to a sequestered spot a short
+distance from the town, which Stuart and O’Neil’s second had selected.
+It is not necessary to relate the particulars of a duel; suffice it to
+say, that the affair was properly conducted, and that O’Neil fell at
+the first fire, severely, but not dangerously, wounded; while Warenne
+received his antagonist’s ball in the fleshy part of his right arm,
+just above the elbow. As soon as the latter saw the effect of his fire
+he ran up to O’Neil, and endeavoured as well as he could to raise
+him up, with a feeling of anguish he alone can estimate who finds
+himself with blood upon his hand, shed, not under excitement, nor in
+a moment of passion, but coolly and unnecessarily, in compliance with
+the customs of the world. Nor was his distress alleviated, when as he
+waited with impatience the opinion of the surgeon on the nature and
+extent of the injury he had inflicted, the wounded man took his hand
+and said—
+
+“If I die, I forgive you; my own folly has been the cause of my death.”
+
+He could have cursed himself for his crime. His suspense, however,
+lasted not long. The surgeon, after an accurate examination into the
+direction of the ball, pronounced that no vital part was injured, and
+that “Mr. O’Neil would be as sound a man as ever in three months.”
+
+Never did sounds of sweetest melody fall so pleasantly on Warenne’s
+ear, as the oracular dictum of his old fellow campaigner, Mr. Morris,
+the regimental Æsculapius. There seemed to be a weight taken from his
+breast, which he felt it would have been impossible for him to sustain.
+
+“Thank Heaven!” murmured he to himself, “I am not a murderer!” Then
+turning to O’Neil, he said aloud, “We part friends, I hope, not the
+less that you are to live.”
+
+O’Neil smiled faintly, and once again held out his hand. Warenne shook
+it warmly, and immediately proceeded on his return to ——, that he might
+procure further assistance, and the means of conveyance for his former
+foe.
+
+As he turned to leave him, he laid his hand, as he supposed, on
+Stuart’s arm for support—it was Frank’s! Poor Frank had slept but for
+an instant, and on awakening, had sought his brother’s apartment.
+Finding that he was gone out, he had immediately ran down, through the
+court-yard of the inn, to a spot in the high road from whence he could
+command a view over the adjacent country, where catching a glimpse of
+two figures, about a mile from him, quitting the beaten track, he had
+rightly conjectured they were Stuart and his principal. He followed
+as fast as he was able, and arrived on the ground just in time to see
+O’Neil fall. He had then stolen up during the interval of confusion
+which ensued, and behind his brother had awaited the surgeon’s decision.
+
+Warenne recognised Frank, but simply pressed his arm with affection.
+His heart was too full for utterance, and the silence was not broken,
+until the latter exclaimed, “Thank God! Gerald, you are yet spared to
+us!”
+
+“Thank God, indeed!” replied the other. The deep but subdued tone of
+his voice expressing the sincerity with which he acknowledged the mercy
+of that Being, not only in preserving his life from destruction, but
+his conscience from a horrible crime.
+
+Stuart soon afterwards joined them. “Warenne,” said he, “I congratulate
+you on being so well out of this business; for the wound in your arm is
+a trifle. Of all life’s disagreeable accidents, in my opinion, there is
+nothing so unpleasant as a duel; nothing so unsatisfactory; nothing—I
+beg your pardon—so foolish.”
+
+“Do not beg my pardon,” replied Warenne; “all you say is true, and if
+the encounter ends in the death of either party, nothing so dreadful,
+both with regard to him who is hurried from the very act of sin, into
+the presence of his Maker, and to him who survives, to wear out a
+melancholy existence in unavailing remorse.”
+
+Such weak and unstable creatures are we! Knowing the better line of
+conduct, but preferring the worse; afraid of the breath of our own
+species, who can only hurt the body, yet scrupling not to incur the
+anger of Him who can destroy both body and soul.
+
+Warenne, a man of excellent principles, of commanding talents, and
+in the habit of controlling his passions, though he acknowledged the
+heinousness of the offence he was about to commit, and though he avowed
+his obligations to obey the commandment, “Thou shalt not kill!” could
+not subdue his worldly pride, but shrank from the danger of disgrace.
+
+A quarter of an hour’s walk brought the party to their quarters; and
+Warenne, having thanked his old friend Stuart for the kind fulfilment
+of the disagreeable office which had devolved upon him, retired with
+Frank to his apartment.
+
+When the two brothers were again alone in that room in which, not
+much more than two hours before, they had parted from each other
+with such painful emotions, Warenne, who could not reconcile to his
+conscience the steps which he had taken, though he had wilfully blinded
+himself to their inconsistency with his duty as a Christian, and was,
+moreover, much agitated with his narrow escape from more serious and
+irretrievable guilt, gave way to his feelings, and hastily saying,
+“Frank, you must pray for forgiveness for me!” threw himself on his
+knees by his bedside, and earnestly entreated pardon of his offended
+Creator.
+
+Frank silently placed himself beside him, and for a few minutes both
+were absorbed in their devotions; those of the latter, perhaps,
+assuming the tone of grateful thanksgiving, rather than of anxious
+supplication. Warenne then rose composed and calm, and looking
+affectionately on his brother, whose tearful countenance betrayed the
+sincerity of the feeling in which he had prayed, bade him hasten to
+prepare for their march. How lightly, how gladly did Frank now obey him!
+
+In an hour the bugles sounded, and the busy scene of departure
+commenced. The street was alive with men and horses, as the small
+parties came up from their different billets, and respectively fell
+into their places. Warenne had taken advantage of the interval to have
+his wound examined and dressed, and walked down the ranks to assume
+the command of his regiment with his cloak drawn over his bandaged
+arm, a little paler, perhaps, and graver than usual, but collected and
+self-possessed. A glance at his men showed him, that in the short time
+which had elapsed, the particulars of the duel had transpired. They
+were standing by their horses ready to mount; and as he passed along
+their front, one or two of the old veterans, who had fought through the
+peninsular campaigns with him, and considered him almost to belong to
+them, ventured to murmur reproachfully,—
+
+“Surely, sir, _you_ need not have gone to show your courage; if any
+thing had happened to you, what would have become of us? It’s a’most
+too bad of you.” And in a second more Henry Marston came up with a
+flushed face, and asked him how he could think of putting his life in
+danger to cover his foolish disputes with the Irish guests.
+
+“Why,” said he earnestly, “did you not let some one of us young ones
+fight O’Neil?”
+
+Warenne’s pale cheek received a slight tinge of colour, as he heard the
+affectionate remonstrances of his old soldiers; but he answered them
+only with a look of kind acknowledgment; to Henry, however, he replied
+smilingly, “Never mind now, Henry, I promise you that you shall shoot
+the next man who behaves ill at our mess; in the mean time I’ll try
+if I cannot occupy you more profitably.” Then hastening to mount his
+horse, he gave the signal for immediate departure.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ “I think thee all that e’er was tenanted
+ Of noblest worth in loveliest female form.”
+
+ JOANNA BAILLIE’S “_Constantine Palœologus._”
+
+ “His countenance was troubled, and his speech
+ Like that of one whose tongue to light discourse
+ At fits constrained, betrays a heart disturbed.”
+
+ SOUTHEY’S “_Roderick_.”
+
+During the whole of that winter, the —— dragoons were kept on constant
+duty in the district in which they were quartered; thanks, however, to
+the unceasing activity of their commanding officer, his easy and kind
+manners to the people; his ready perception of their humour; his strict
+observance of justice and open-handed generosity, which made them deem
+him a “raal” gentleman—it passed without bloodshed or disturbance. In
+the following spring the regiment was ordered to England, and several
+of the officers, of whom Henry Marston was one, obtained leave of
+absence.
+
+Warenne himself only waited till he should have placed his men in their
+new quarters at Calbury, to proceed to town for a few weeks, leaving
+Frank behind him, to amuse himself with the pleasures and occupations
+of a country town in the summer months. A few hours served to bring
+Henry to his paternal home in Charles Street, and to the arms of those
+he loved best in the world, his father and his sister.
+
+Lord Framlingham was a good-natured man, much attached to his children,
+devoted to politics, and almost wholly engrossed with the cares of an
+office of some importance, which he held under the ministry of the day.
+He had ever been a fond parent to Henry, and Henry repaid his love with
+true filial affection. His sister was his earliest friend, the sharer
+of his boyish hopes and fears; and now that he had grown to manhood,
+the object of his fraternal pride. In truth Adelaide Marston was a
+sister of whom any man might justly be proud. She was at the present
+time in her twenty-fourth year, the eldest of the three sisters and
+brothers who composed Lord Framlingham’s family. Tall and beautifully
+made, her head sprang from her neck, as that of a Grecian statue of
+old. Her brow was marble itself; her nose thin and sharp cut; her large
+dark lustrous eyes teemed with expression; and her mouth, perhaps,
+after all, the most remarkable feature in her countenance, gave a
+character of loveliness to the whole. Whether she stood before you in
+silent thought, with her raven hair quietly shading her brow, or shook
+back her locks in innocent mirth, her bright teeth positively flashing
+on you as she smiled, she was altogether as glorious an object as eye
+could look upon. The charms of her mind, though perhaps really as
+great, were not so evident as those of her person. Her manners were in
+public rather cold and reserved, and in the eyes of many who did not
+know her, bore the semblance of pride. Never, however, did there exist
+a breast in which pride was less an inmate. The truth was, she was shy
+from too great humility.
+
+She had never been a favourite with her mother, who was a foolish
+woman, and disappointed that her first-born was a daughter, and she had
+been from infancy subjected to all those checkings and thwartings which
+unwise mothers are apt to exercise injudiciously. She had found her
+sisters constantly preferred to her; and not the less, after they had
+grown up and made brilliant matches. These circumstances, which, with a
+disposition less innately good, would probably have produced a soreness
+of temper, and a disdainful disregard of the opinions of others, in her
+occasioned only a degree of reserve in general conversation.
+
+Thus, with greater personal attractions than her sisters, and more
+excellent qualities of mind, she yet remained Adelaide Marston,
+while they were ennobled matrons. Could the world have seen beneath
+the surface, how differently would it have judged her—it would have
+found there strong affections, and kind and gentle feelings, united
+to a nobleness of spirit, an enthusiastic generosity, and a love
+of truth, which, while they caused her to render scrupulously unto
+every one their due, made her scorn to receive credit to which she
+did not conceive herself justly entitled. Shrinking and retiring on
+common occasions almost beyond feminine timidity, when called upon for
+exertion, she was frank, straightforward, decided, and uncompromising.
+She was altogether a person whom an inferior mind could not estimate,
+but whom a superior one could never sufficiently admire.
+
+Her mother was now dead, and she lived with her father, his sole
+companion. To her, therefore, Henry’s return was a source of more than
+ordinary joy, and the sister and the brother met as if they had been
+separated for years instead of months.
+
+A day or two after his return, as Henry was relating to Adelaide the
+adventures of his _début_ as a soldier, he naturally came to the
+mention of Warenne’s name.
+
+“Adelaide,” said he, “what a man that is! it is worth something to know
+him, if only to have the benefit of his example, and he has been the
+kindest friend to me possible. You do not know how much I owe you for
+recommending me to his care.”
+
+Adelaide listened, unconsciously perhaps, with increased attention;
+and Henry, thus encouraged, gave the reins to the generous feelings of
+his warm heart, and did ample justice to Warenne’s merits. He detailed
+all he knew himself of the object of his praise, both with regard to
+his character and to his life; and all he had gleaned from his brother
+officers, and from the old soldiers, with whom some of Warenne’s early
+and more dashing exploits were a favourite topic of conversation;
+especially, dilating upon his conduct in the duel with O’Neil, which
+Henry was conscious he had himself principally provoked.
+
+“Your friend is a perfect _heros de roman_,” exclaimed Adelaide,
+smiling, as he concluded. “Is he so entirely without fault?”
+
+“Without fault!” replied Henry, half angrily; “of course he has faults:
+every one has. I do not wish to make him out ‘a faultless monster,
+which the world ne’er knew;’ but he has better qualities than any other
+man I ever saw. I shall not say person, because I think you as near
+perfection as he is, though your question is enough to provoke one; but
+you shall judge for yourself, and see whether I have said too much.
+He will be in town in a few days, and I hope my father will make him
+consider this house as a second home. He has been, I am sure, a brother
+and a father to me, since I have been with him. I do not believe that
+I should stand here alive now but for him. I was for ever getting
+into scrapes when I first joined, owing to my home education, which
+prevented my learning how to command my temper, and I should never have
+extricated myself from them without his assistance.”
+
+“Indeed, Henry, I did not mean to be provoking,” replied Adelaide.
+“I have every disposition to admire one you love so much; but why
+give yourself a bad character? Praise your friend, but do not abuse
+yourself.”
+
+“I do not think I deserve much commendation,” said Henry, smiling in
+his turn; “when I can fire up at an innocent expression from you, my
+actions would belie my words.”
+
+Had Henry been able to read Adelaide’s heart, he would not have
+suspected her of a wish to treat Warenne’s good qualities with
+lightness. She had been impressed with a very favourable idea of
+him during the three weeks she had passed in his society at Norton
+Chenies, and was sufficiently disposed to admire a character, in many
+respects congenial with her own. Not that she had, what is commonly
+called, fallen in love with him, but that she had been pleased with
+his spirit, his superior intelligence, and his high-minded chivalrous
+tone of sentiment. He had also appeared to appreciate her from the
+first moment of their acquaintance, and she was grateful to him for
+his discernment. When Henry left her, she could not help reflecting
+upon what had formed the principal topic of their conversation, and
+she certainly did not find her esteem for Warenne decreased by Henry’s
+commendation. She thought over, one by one, the little incidents which
+had been mentioned, with a secret feeling of satisfaction at his strict
+observance of her request to him; and though she did not yet think of
+love, Warenne, it may not be denied, would have been gratified, had he
+known how much his image occupied her mind: to him the three weeks at
+Norton Chenies had been the bright epoch of his life.
+
+In a few days Warenne came to town; and after notifying his arrival
+at the Horse Guards, &c. &c., was brought by Henry to his father’s.
+Lord Framlingham received the man who had been so true a friend to his
+son with marked consideration, and pressed him to come frequently to
+Charles Street—an invitation which Warenne was not the less disposed to
+accept, when Adelaide, with extended hand, and radiant looks, welcomed
+him, and thanked him for his kindness to her brother.
+
+From that time he was a constant visiter at Lord Framlingham’s. A club
+of military men possessed small attractions for one who sought in
+London a _délassement_ from military duty; and the cold civility of
+Lord Warenne, and of other connections of his family, did not lead him
+to desire a greater degree of intimacy with them. Thus he had leisure,
+as well as inclination, to profit by Lord Framlingham’s hospitality;
+and when the old lord himself appeared to like his society, and to
+derive pleasure from conversing with him on the interior policy of the
+country, its power, its laws, and its sources of wealth (subjects on
+which he had reflected much, and accumulated much information in his
+wanderings through the different garrison towns of England); when Henry
+seemed gratified by his coming; when, above all, Adelaide seemed to
+meet him with gladness; he, on some pretence or other, found himself
+almost daily in Charles Street.
+
+His admiration of Adelaide quickly ripened into love, pure and ardent
+love, and to hear her speak and see her smile, became his only wish. He
+could listen for hours to her sweet voice as she joined in conversation
+with her father and himself, or with Henry talked over the incidents
+of the day; and he knew no greater happiness than to trace the high
+character of her mind, as, in the intimacy of friendship, she gave
+scope to her generous feelings.
+
+Adelaide, too, had learned to love, and her heart, which had passed
+unscathed through the gay dawning of her career, throbbed with the
+tumultuous impulses of imperious passion. She loved, and life to her
+was now one dream of pleasurable emotion, for, with a woman’s intuitive
+tact, she could trace the workings of Warenne’s heart more plainly
+than those of her own, and she saw that she there reigned undisputed
+mistress of his affections. That commanding spirit, which was wont to
+assert its mastery over the feelings, and to control and discipline
+them within the bounds of wisdom, lived on her every look. If he spoke,
+he turned to discover if she approved; if he did aught, he was not
+satisfied till he knew she deemed it well done. Conscious thus of her
+power over him, she for a while drank of the cup of joy which hope
+presented to her lip, and permitted it not to be embittered by any fear
+for the future.
+
+Her father perceived what was going on, but gave no outward sign
+that he should oppose himself to the result to which circumstances
+were apparently leading. In fact, he had not come to any decision
+on the subject, for though he was a worldly-minded man, and wished
+his daughter to make what is termed a good match, he was aware that,
+with her small fortune, she could not command one; and he knew from
+experience, that she would never sacrifice her feelings to the prospect
+of a brilliant establishment. He was not, therefore, disinclined to
+her marrying a person of moderate means, for whom she had conceived an
+affection. Adelaide interpreted silence to mean consent, and feeling
+complete confidence in Warenne’s love for her, gave him, in return, the
+full affection of her maiden heart.
+
+What happy and blissful hours were these, when each, though they had
+not told their love, lived but for the other. They lasted not long.
+Warenne soon awakened to the real difficulties of his situation, and
+took himself severely to task for the headlong impetuosity with which
+he had set at hazard his own, and, perhaps, another’s happiness.
+Had he a right to ask one who had been from childhood surrounded by
+every luxury affluence could purchase, to descend, for his sake, to
+comparative indigence? Could he request her to quit the brilliant
+circle she adorned to become the inmate of a barrack yard? His soul
+revolted at the thought. What was he, that he should outweigh in her
+estimation privations such as these? She would, he doubted not, if she
+loved him, despise all worldly advantages, but should he subject her to
+them because she loved him?
+
+For the first time in his life his want of riches galled him; he felt
+as though he were guilty of presumption in loving Adelaide, and he
+hesitated to make the avowal which for ever hovered upon his lips.
+Adelaide perceived his disquietude, and from some expressions he
+inadvertently let fall, pretty accurately conjectured its cause. At
+first she was inclined to be angry with him, under the false impression
+that he conceived her capable of being influenced by a regard for
+wealth; but she could not retain her anger when she overheard him one
+day say to Henry, who had been blaming an acquaintance of theirs for
+not proposing to a lady to whom he was tenderly attached, “Henry, you
+forget that Compton is a poor man. How can he ask Miss Thornton to
+leave her comfortable home and share his poverty?”
+
+There was a bitterness in the tone with which he uttered these words,
+which betrayed the secret feeling that prompted the reply. Then she was
+aware that he considered a woman of any refinement to be singularly
+misplaced in the midst of the quarters of a regiment, for, in the
+earlier days of their intimacy, when laughing and talking with her and
+her brother, over the _agrémens_ and _desagrémens_ of a soldier’s life,
+he had often expressed an opinion to this effect.
+
+She reflected on the sentiments which he evidently entertained on
+these points, and her resentment vanished. She might, perhaps, deem
+his delicacy over-strained, but she knew, if he left the army, that
+he must forfeit, not only his fair hopes of fame and advancement, but
+also a large proportion of his income; and she could not blame him
+for being unwilling to subject her to the discomforts of a profession
+which he might not with any degree of prudence desert. But when she
+had arrived at this better understanding of Warenne’s motives, she was
+perplexed how to act. Her affections had been given; they could not be
+recalled; she could not retrace her steps; yet how proceed? She was
+ready to submit to whatever sacrifices might be necessary for the sake
+of him she loved, but till he afforded her an opportunity, by first
+openly declaring his own passion, she could not acquaint him with her
+determination. She longed to bid him throw aside his scruples, and give
+her liberty to decide in her own cause; but maidenly reserve prevented
+this virtual avowal of her preference for him—reserve which, in her
+shrinking and timid nature, might be with difficulty overcome, even
+under happier circumstances. There remained no alternative but to wait
+for Warenne’s proposals, though when he would make them, or whether
+he would make them at all, seemed a matter of uncertainty. He still
+lingered on in town, unable to tear himself from her presence, yet
+fearing to speak; living but for her society, yet far from satisfied in
+his own mind of the propriety of his continuing to seek it. At length,
+one morning that he called in Charles Street, to know if he might
+accompany Adelaide and her brother in their ride, he was so depressed
+in spirits that she could not avoid asking him, with some appearance of
+anxiety, if he was unwell.
+
+“I am, indeed, Miss Marston,” exclaimed he, forgetting for a moment his
+resolutions of prudence in the emotions which the kind manner of her
+inquiry had conjured up; “but not in body; I am ill in mind, displeased
+and angry with myself, for wanting the courage, when my duty and
+inclinations clash, to sacrifice the latter to the former; but I cannot
+do so, were my life the forfeit.”
+
+He spoke hastily and passionately; Adelaide made no reply, she did not
+even raise her eyes from the ground. Warenne looked at her earnestly
+for a moment, then feeling that as they were at present circumstanced,
+he had said either too much or too little, he resolved to proceed. He
+could not, however, utterly control the contradictory impulses which
+distracted his mind, and his words appeared to flow from despair, and
+scorn of his own presumption, rather than from love.
+
+“Tell me,” said he, “is not a man unjustifiable who would have another
+submit to sacrifices for his own welfare?”
+
+He paused for her answer. Adelaide pitied him from her soul; she felt
+how much mental agony he must have endured ere he could thus, on a
+point where his whole happiness was at stake, so frame his questions as
+if he wished her to decide against him. She therefore replied timidly
+and evasively,
+
+“Surely, Colonel Warenne, this must depend very much on the
+circumstances of the case, on the extent of injury to be inflicted, and
+the degree of advantage to be obtained.”
+
+“True,” rejoined he, his voice gradually losing its tone of bitterness,
+and becoming mournfully tender, “true,” said he, “and I cannot disguise
+from myself that though the benefit to myself would be inexpressibly
+great, greater far than I have any right to hope for, yet the injury
+which I should inflict would be certain and considerable. Would to
+Heaven I could come to a contrary conclusion, but I cannot.” He buried
+his face in his hands on the table which stood before him; a second
+afterwards, however, he looked up, with a deep flush crimsoning his
+very brow, and continued in a hurried manner, “I cannot, however,
+renounce my chance.”
+
+Henry’s voice at this instant was heard at the door, and Warenne ceased
+abruptly. Henry came to tell Adelaide that her aunt was waiting for her
+below in her carriage. Adelaide obeyed the summons, and with a lighter
+heart than she had borne for many days, ran down the stairs to her
+aunt. “He must speak out now,” thought she; “he must confess his love:”
+and in the certainty that an explanation would take place when next
+they met, she forgave Henry his interruption of their interview.
+
+Warenne departed under the influence of very different feelings. He
+was ashamed of his own irresolution, and afraid that he had acted
+dishonourably in betraying the state of his mind to Adelaide. Ere
+he reached his lodgings, however, the very consciousness of having
+committed himself relieved his breast of much anxiety. He had not
+again to weigh the value of the different arguments which love and
+honour suggested, for the adoption of one line of conduct or the
+other. Henceforth he had one only measure to embrace, viz. to lay his
+fortunes, such as they were, at Miss Marston’s feet. He resolved to try
+his fate on the following morning.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ “Est-il point vray, ou si je l’ay songé,
+ Qu’il m’est besoin m’éloigner ou distraire
+ De votre amour, et en prendre congé?
+ Las! je le veux, et ne le puis faire—
+ Que dis-je, veux! Non, c’est tout le contraire,
+ Faire le puis, et ne le puis vouloir.”
+
+ Attributed to FRANÇOIS I.
+
+The next day accordingly at an early hour, Warenne sought the residence
+of Lord Framlingham in Charles Street, when, on his knocking at the
+door, the servant who opened it presented him with a note from Henry,
+stating, that in the course of the preceding night an express had
+reached them from Epworth Castle, the seat of Mrs. Honoria Epworth, who
+was Adelaide’s godmother, desiring them to set off immediately if they
+wished to find her alive, and that his sister and himself were in the
+act of commencing their journey at the moment at which he wrote.
+
+Poor Warenne, who had hoped to ascertain his future destiny before
+he again quitted Charles Street, was sadly disappointed at this
+intelligence. The evil, however, was without remedy, and he was obliged
+to retrace his steps towards home, there to await the hour of their
+return in all the misery of suspense. During this period he received
+the following letter from Frank:—
+
+ “MY DEAR BROTHER,
+
+ “Who do you think has just called upon me? Henry Marston. I never was
+ so surprised in my life. He tells me that he came the night before
+ last to Epworth Castle with his sister, to attend the death-bed of
+ poor old Mrs. Honoria Epworth. She died a very few hours after their
+ arrival, and has left every thing she possessed to Miss Marston. Henry
+ says his sister will not have less than ten thousand a year, besides
+ the old castle, which is beautiful;—did you see it when you were
+ here?—it is not more than two miles from this town. What a charming
+ godmother! I wish nevertheless that she had given Henry a slice of her
+ property, for though he will eventually be Lord Framlingham, and rich,
+ yet he would do great credit to a few thousands a year in the interim.
+ He and his sister remain at the castle till after the funeral, when
+ they return to London. When are we to see you again? Stuart rides
+ in often from Oldham, and gives a good report of the two troops he
+ has there, and I can do the same of the officers and men at Calbury.
+ I command the four troops you left under my orders with a species
+ of sedate authority deserving, though I say it, of much admiration.
+ I have only one little _équippée_ to tell of, which is that I have
+ fallen desperately in love, and that my love is returned; do not be
+ frightened, Gerald, _l’objêt_ is a blind Irish-woman, who sells cakes
+ and bulls-eyes on the sort of boulevard there is to this town. She is
+ my delight, but our loves are too long, so God bless you!
+
+ “Oh! I have forgotten the most important portion of my letter, which
+ is, that I am making great preparations for the coming hunting season.
+ I have sold Croppie, and bought two clippers, and I want you to let me
+ be doing something in your stable. I should positively be a happier
+ man if I might rescue your two old horses’ tails from their degraded
+ state of switch, and square them a little. Once more, God bless you.
+
+ “Your affectionate brother,
+
+ F. W.”
+
+Warenne at first read over this letter from his brother with pleasure,
+and natural delight at the increased prosperity of his friends, but a
+second perusal of it filled him with anxiety and doubt. Was there not
+now an insuperable barrier raised against his pretensions to Adelaide?
+If indeed he had made known his passion, it were not impossible that
+a woman with her nobleness of spirit might only regard the addition
+to her fortune as a means of increasing their mutual happiness. But
+could he with honour ask her hand for the first time under these
+changed circumstances? Must he not appear to her, and to the world, a
+contemptible fortune hunter, who could live in her society for weeks,
+and find her only worthy of attention when she became an heiress?
+
+“O, Frank!” cried he aloud, as he paced his room despondingly, “your
+gay letter is a bitter one to me. I must learn to tread in the dust
+the bright visions fancy had formed; to crush my aspiring hopes, and
+with blighted prospects, and a broken heart, to banish myself from that
+sweet presence in which I would fain have passed my days—but better
+that, than dishonour. There is no spot as yet on my name, and I will
+not now sully it. Yes, the die is cast, I will rejoin my regiment.”
+
+Though Warenne thus briefly settled the part which it became him to act
+in this emergency, it cost him many an hour of bitter anguish before
+he could carry his resolution into effect. He had never really loved
+before, and he now loved with his whole soul; it seemed to him as if
+his love was an essential portion of his existence, and that to tear
+it from his breast was almost to destroy within him the principle of
+vitality. He wrote however to Frank, to say that he should join him in
+a few days; went to the Horse Guards to inquire if they projected any
+alteration in the quarters of his regiment (for Calbury was not a town
+in which troops were usually stationed), or had any orders for him with
+respect to their particular employment; and called on Lord Framlingham
+to inform him of his determination.
+
+The old Lord received him with much civility, but, as it appeared to
+Warenne, with less than his usual cordiality. There was also a degree
+of earnestness in the manner in which he encouraged him to quit town
+immediately, and assured him that government had received accounts of a
+very unpleasant spirit pervading the neighbourhood of Calbury.
+
+Warenne could not help perceiving that his absence was desired.
+In truth, Lord Framlingham, immediately upon Adelaide’s increase
+of fortune, had begun to renew the views of aggrandisement which
+he had reluctantly laid aside; and, conceiving that Warenne might
+very possibly prove an impediment to the success of his schemes, he
+sincerely wished him out of the way. It was not, perhaps, strictly
+consonant with the gratitude he professed towards Warenne for his
+kindness to Henry to repel attentions which he had hitherto tacitly
+encouraged; but, in his anxiety to accomplish his purposes with respect
+to Adelaide, he did not much regard her lover’s feelings, and certainly
+assumed not a delicacy which he did not possess.
+
+Warenne was intensely hurt by Lord Framlingham’s manner. Was he already
+deemed an intruder? It was indeed time for him to depart; he would only
+see Adelaide once again, and bid her farewell for ever.
+
+The travellers returned; and Henry, having heard from his father of
+Warenne’s determination to rejoin the regiment, proceeded immediately
+to his lodgings to propose their quitting London together, his own
+leave of absence being on the point of expiring.
+
+After their first greetings were over, and Henry had had time
+for closer observation, he was much struck with an appearance of
+ill-health, and with a degree of severity of manner in Warenne; he
+loved him, however, too sincerely, and respected him too highly, to
+venture a remark on the change that had occurred. He at once entered
+upon the object of his visit, and soon concluded an arrangement for
+their travelling together to Calbury; then, thinking it probable
+Warenne in his present state of mind would rather be alone, he begged
+him to call in Charles Street the following morning, to see him and
+Adelaide, who was not, he said, so afflicted by the loss of her
+godmother, with whom she had never lived, as to shut the door upon
+old friends; and with an affectionate pressure of the hand wished him
+good-b’ye.
+
+Warenne shook the offered hand, accepted the invitation, stood for a
+moment after his departure with a bewildered air, then hurried forth
+to occupy his attention with professional avocations,—for he durst not
+give way to the feelings that invitation had awakened, or to reflect in
+solitude on the impending wretchedness of the morrow.
+
+The morrow came, and about the hour Henry had mentioned as that at
+which his sister would probably receive him Warenne found himself in
+Charles Street. Henry was alone in the drawing-room when he entered;
+but in a few minutes Adelaide joined them. She had scarcely recovered
+from the anxiety occasioned by the melancholy scenes she had so lately
+witnessed, and was pale and languid, but the snowy whiteness of her
+brow accorded well with the serious expression of her countenance, and
+poor Warenne thought he had never seen her look so lovely. She received
+him kindly; for, satisfied that he loved her, she saw no reason for
+controlling the natural impulse of her heart; and for some little
+time the whole party conversed on the events which had taken place
+without hesitation, if not with cheerfulness. After a while, Henry,
+who shrewdly suspected the state of his sister’s and of his friend’s
+affections, found some excuse for quitting the room, and requesting
+Warenne to await his return left him with Adelaide. The conversation
+flagged—presently ceased altogether—Warenne, firm to his purpose
+(but, much as that purpose had already cost him, knowing not until
+this instant the utter misery he was about to entail upon himself)
+could not bring himself to speak. Adelaide’s spirits had not regained
+their usually cheerful flow, and their depression was increased by his
+manifest uneasiness. The awkwardness of their situation each moment
+became greater; at length Warenne, making an effort, in a hurried
+manner uttered some common-place remark on an indifferent subject.
+Adelaide gave the necessary assent, and again there was silence. He
+made a second and a third attempt, but with no better success. He now
+grew confused, and spoke at random upon every topic which presented
+itself to his over-excited mind, until Adelaide, who could not but
+recollect the very different manner in which their last interview had
+concluded, knew not what to think. As she looked, however, on his
+flushed cheek and unsteady eye that would not meet her’s, a suspicion
+of the truth flashed across her mind. Could it be that he had formed
+so unworthy an opinion of her as to conceive that her affections could
+be influenced by her accession of fortune?—a moment’s reflection
+assured her that his generous nature would spurn the thought; yet how,
+since she knew not that her father had almost turned him from his
+door, was she to interpret his behaviour? She was hurt, and angry with
+him, and even, as by degrees she obtained a clearer insight into his
+feelings, could not altogether divest herself of indignation, though
+she pitied his sufferings. He might, she thought, if he really loved
+her, sacrifice for her sake his fantastic notions of honour—for so they
+then seemed to her,—and let her decide for herself whether or not she
+thought his hand worth acceptance. She became colder and more formal,
+until at length Warenne, unable to endure any longer her altered looks
+and his own excessive wretchedness, hastily left the room in the full
+conviction that he had injured himself in her esteem, and caused her
+to think ill of him by the very course which, at the price of his own
+happiness, he had deemed it his duty to pursue.
+
+A few days afterwards, Henry and Warenne quitted London for Calbury.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ How fair thy vales, thy hills how beautiful!
+ The sun, who sheds on thee his parting smiles,
+ Sees not in all his wide career a scene
+ Lovelier, nor more exuberantly blessed
+ By bounteous earth and heaven.
+ The time has been when happy was their lot,
+ Who had their birthright here.
+
+ SOUTHEY’S _Roderick_.
+
+The state of the agricultural population around Calbury, at the time of
+the return of the two friends to their regiment, was by no means such,
+in outward appearance at least, as to justify the apprehensions which,
+according to Lord Framlingham, were entertained by the government.
+The greater demand for labour, and the consequent increase of wages,
+which the summer had occasioned, seemed to have extinguished the stormy
+passions kindled by cold, hunger, and compulsory idleness.
+
+The country itself looked bright and gay, and the fields with their
+rich crops of corn gave promise of plenty, comfort, and tranquillity.
+Warenne was tempted to hope that the fear of disturbance was
+ill-founded, and that the symptoms of insubordination, on which it was
+grounded, had arisen from a temporary pressure, which was past and
+would not recur. The first hours after their arrival were dedicated to
+the inspection of the troops, the order and discipline of which were
+highly commended, to Frank’s infinite delight.
+
+This necessary duty concluded, the two brothers and Henry retired to
+Warenne’s apartments, and Warenne called on Frank to give some account
+of his proceedings during the time he had held the command of the
+regiment.
+
+“Why, I have had but a dullish _séjour_ in this place, I must say,”
+replied Frank; “my chief occupation has been to preserve my dignity;
+and, if it were not that once or twice I have been seduced into a smile
+by the earnest admiration of sundry blue and black eyes which encounter
+me in my perambulations, I should say I had succeeded admirably. People
+assert that the labourers in the neighbourhood are discontented; but I
+cannot say that I perceive it. I see them on a Sunday as happy as beer
+and love can make them. They are not refined, perhaps, in their mode of
+carrying on the war; and the fastidious might think it unsentimental
+at least, if not indecorous, in the women, to wait round the doors
+of the public-houses, and take possession of the men as they come
+forth red with beer, and reeking with tobacco; but I am above such
+prejudices, and have no doubt that the rogues enjoy life extremely.”
+
+“Have you observed no signs of an evil spirit abroad in other
+quarters?” interrupted Warenne.
+
+“Faith, none,” rejoined Frank, “unless you deem such the curious
+specimens of division of labour which have been displayed here lately
+by the beggars and trampers. In former times, it was thought that one
+man might sell, if not make, many bundles of matches. Now, it is no
+uncommon thing for two men to be occupied in the sale of one bundle;
+in the same way, generally speaking, there are two to hawk one boot
+lace, and always two to buy a hare skin or a rabbit skin. Then, again,
+there are always two sailors, who have been ship-wrecked together, and
+saved together, and who have preserved from the wreck precisely the
+same things, viz. a very clean white shirt and white pair of trowsers,
+and for whom therefore one story serves when they ask your charity. I
+never in my life saw such a number of these vagabonds as now, and they
+beg in a tone which, in a bye-place, can hardly fail to alarm women, if
+not men. Seriously speaking, Gerald, though it may to you sound foolish
+to say so, I do not know what to make of these fellows; I cannot
+understand how they all exist, unless they have some secret mode of
+obtaining a livelihood, different from the ostensible one. I don’t half
+like them, and I do not think my better genius, Nanny Rudd, is more
+pleased with them than I am.”
+
+“Who the devil is Nanny Rudd, Frank?” said Henry.
+
+“Not to know Nanny,” continued Frank, “argues yourself unknown. She is
+the most important personage in the town, in the eyes at least of all
+the little boys and girls who play about its public walks. She is the
+queen of heart-cakes, and bulls-eyes, _et l’objet de mes plus tendres
+amours_. Do not be frightened, Gerald—she is a dear blind old Irish
+beggar-woman, the widow of a man of the name of Rudd, whose brother
+keeps that little ale-house, the Rose and Crown, as you enter the town
+by the London road.
+
+“Rudd was a private in the Guards, and went with them to Egypt under
+Abercromby, where he was wounded and died. She accompanied him thither,
+and nursed him till his death. She afterwards herself unfortunately
+caught the ophthalmia, and lost both her eyes. The officers and men,
+with whom she was a great favourite, brought her carefully to England,
+and by her own wish settled her in this place among her husband’s
+relations. She lives now on a small pension with her brother-in-law,
+who is very kind to her, and she ekes out her little modicum by the
+sale of her cakes.”
+
+“But what can a blind old woman know of the state of the country, or
+how does it happen that she is a friend of yours?” interrupted Henry.
+
+“You are so impatient, Henry,” replied Frank, “you would know every
+thing, and the reasons thereof at once; but I shall not spoil the story
+of my best adventure during your absence, to satisfy your impetuous
+curiosity. _Il faut toujours commencer au commencement._ You must hear
+the narrative of our first introduction, or you close my lips for ever
+on the subject of Nanny Rudd; for if there is an action in the course
+of my military career of which I am proud, it is the deed of ‘derring
+do,’ as Ivanhoe would have called it, which first won me her esteem.”
+
+“Come, be quick then,” said Henry, laughing; “when, how, and where did
+you meet with this wondrous lady?”
+
+“More questions! Henry? you are positively incorrigible! Our first
+acquaintance was on this wise: a parcel of young urchins were playing
+on the walk where she usually sits with her basket, and one of them
+attempted to obtain some of her tartlets without going through the
+necessary form of paying for them. Nanny, who hears like a mole, made
+a dash at the young rogue, just as he had his hand in the basket,
+and seizing him with a hand of iron began to thrash him well with
+her stick, reproving him at the same time for his misconduct with a
+considerable flow of military eloquence. The other boys came to the
+rescue. Nanny kept her hold, and brandished her stick. Their charge,
+however, was not to be resisted; they released their companion,
+gained possession of the basket, from which Nanny had wandered in the
+struggle, and were retiring triumphant, when I reached the field.
+
+“In an instant I flew to the succour of the discomfited fair, routed
+her insulting foes, and recovered for her her (empty) basket. Cæsar
+would have said, _Veni, vidi, vici!_ I then led her to her old seat,
+and having given her half-a-crown was taking my departure, in order to
+enjoy in solitude the satisfaction of having exhibited both valour and
+generosity, when she said to me in her own sweet accents,—
+
+“‘I’ll sit a bit, your honour, and catch my wind; them little
+blackguards blowed me;—and then I’ll go home. I’ll never draw a
+halfpenny the whole day, unless I bait my basket with a cake.’ I asked
+her if I could assist her on the road. ‘No, no; thank you all the
+same,’ continued she; ‘but if you’d just tell me who your own self
+is, that comed in the nick of time to presarve me from them childer,
+I’d be obliged to you. You are a soldier by your step—I can tell that
+as well as if I saw you; and an officer by the softness of your voice
+and the delicacy, not to say iligance, of your expressions.’ Mark you
+that, Henry. I told her my name, rank, &c. and we parted. The next day
+I came to inquire after her health, and we had a long gossip together
+about her own dear country, since which I have paid her a visit almost
+every day, and I flatter myself have entirely won her heart. ‘Captain
+Warenne,’ said she to me the other day, ‘I like you; you are always
+very kind to me, and can always find time to spake a word or two to me,
+which is more than many will do to the like of me. You are a soldier,
+too. I loves a soldier. I wish you had been _fut_, for _fut’s_ more
+natural to me; but all can’t be _fut_, and I’ll never forget you if I
+can do you a good turn.’”
+
+“Your Nanny is charming,” interrupted Henry; “and having heard her
+opinion of you, I am really anxious to know what she thinks of the
+beggars who have moved your spleen.”
+
+“She entertains little doubt,” answered Frank, “that they are the
+emissaries of some evil-disposed parties in the country, and the medium
+of communication between different districts and the metropolis; and
+her conclusions are drawn from the remarks which she has heard fall
+from the labourers and mechanics in this town, with whom her brother’s
+alehouse is a favourite place of resort.”
+
+“Indeed,” said Warenne; “and does she think that they are likely to
+produce a disturbance?”
+
+“She certainly does,” replied Frank; “for about three or four days
+ago, when I paid her a visit, she bade me be cautious not to be seen
+talking to her. ‘I sits,’ said she, ‘in my brother’s chimney-corner of
+an evening, with my bit duddeen; and because I’m blind, folks believe
+I can’t hear. There’ll be a row after harvest, or Nanny’s a liar; but
+your honour shall know in time. A’n’t I a soldier’s widow, and bound to
+keep the peace? I’ll just reconnoitre the ground for you cleverly; but
+you must not be seen spaking to me daily, or I’ll be suspected. You can
+drop past me as you go to see your men at the Boot of a morning; and,
+if the coast is clear, say ‘Good morrow, Nanny;’ you would go to your
+men natural like, and then I can asy tell you if I have larnt any news,
+without putting it into men’s heads that I’m thick at head-quarters.’”
+
+Warenne recommended Frank to keep up his acquaintance with Nanny Rudd,
+observing that it was only by employing every, even the humblest means
+in their power of obtaining an insight into the actual condition
+of the country that they could hope to preserve tranquillity. His
+long acquaintance with a disturbed district had taught him that very
+frequently a little circumstance would better indicate the real spirit
+of a population than their actions, as a feather or a straw thrown into
+the air will more readily point out the direction of a current of wind
+than any more ponderous body.
+
+Warenne now turned his attention to the magistracy in the town and
+neighbourhood, and sought every opportunity of mixing in their society;
+in which endeavour Henry and Frank were both of much use to him; the
+former from the position in which he stood as brother to the heiress of
+Epworth and the latter from his having, during the summer, by his gay
+off-hand manner, and happy disposition, made himself a welcome guest
+at many houses in the vicinity. To the different persons of influence
+he suggested the advantage of arranging a constabulary force, upon the
+system of a noble lord in a neighbouring county, and the propriety of
+their previously fixing on some definite plan of action, in case the
+apprehensions of the government for the repose of the country should be
+realized.
+
+It is a very difficult thing to give advice; and all people hate it,
+unless they have decided on their line of conduct; in which case they
+have, generally speaking, no objection to prove the superiority of
+their own views on the subject to those of their advisers. Warenne,
+however, was so mild, so gentle in manner, so entirely free from all
+appearance of dictation, so ready to listen, so well informed on
+all points, and so practical in his measures, that he succeeded in
+effecting the preparations he desired. By the time harvest was over his
+precautions were completed.
+
+At this period, Adelaide and her father were daily expected at Epworth,
+and Warenne’s heart sunk within him at the thought of being again
+thrown into her society, now that their relative position was so
+changed; but he was not permitted to dwell long upon this topic without
+interruption.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ As there are certain hollow blasts of winds and secret swellings of
+ seas before a tempest, so are there in states.
+
+ Ille etiam cæcos instare tumultus
+ Sæpe monet, fraudesque et operta tumescere bella.
+
+ LORD BACON.
+
+The head-quarters of the —— Dragoons were, as we have seen, at Calbury;
+two or three troops being stationed in the surrounding villages. An
+order now arrived from the Horse Guards, directing that one troop
+should be sent to Fisherton, a town about forty miles distant, near the
+sea-coast, and that a second should be placed in some situation, as
+nearly as possible midway between Fisherton and Calbury, in order to
+preserve a ready communication between these two extreme points.
+
+To delegate to another a duty incumbent on himself was not consistent
+with Warenne’s character. He immediately sent forward his servant with
+horses, and on the following morning himself started at an early hour,
+to ascertain the best mode of carrying into effect the instructions
+which he had received. His intentions were to examine the _locale_ of
+Fisherton, and, as far as he could, to discover the disposition and
+pursuits of the surrounding population, so that if any disturbance
+should arise there, he might be competent to act with decision.
+
+He found Fisherton a large straggling town, with some appearance of
+wealth, arising from its communication with the seaport of D——, by
+means of the river Swale, irregularly built, though nearly divided
+into four equal quarters by the London and coast roads, which crossed
+each other about its centre. As he entered by the former of these
+roads, the place presented on either side an imposing row of goodly
+houses; he could perceive, however, that this fair show was limited to
+the principal streets. On looking down the smaller streets, or rather
+passages (for they were passable only by pedestrians) which branched
+off from the highway, he could distinguish nothing beyond the ordinary
+cottages of labourers and mechanics. On the banks of the river might be
+seen warehouses and cranes, and other signs of trade, but nowhere else:
+the rest of the town bore an ambiguous character, and it was difficult
+to determine whether its prosperity depended on commerce or agriculture.
+
+Warenne rode into the yard of the principal inn, which occupied one of
+the angles caused by the junction of the roads, and had large gates
+opening into each of them, intending to establish himself there for the
+night. Having put up his horses, he quickly sought an opportunity of
+conversing with the landlord, in the hope of extracting from him some
+information relative to the state of society in the immediate environs
+of Fisherton.
+
+The communications of the worthy Boniface were any thing but
+satisfactory. He assured Warenne that the labourers in the
+neighbourhood, for ten miles round, were a bad set at the best of
+times; many of them professional smugglers—all of them occasionally
+engaged in running goods; and that, at the moment in which he was
+speaking, they were in a state of great discontent and irritation from
+the distress incidental to the existing depression of wages.
+
+“I’m sure, I hope,” said mine host, sufficiently animated by the theme
+to draw one hand out of his breeches-pocket, and extend it in an
+emphatic manner, “that they won’t break out, for if they do, it will be
+an awful business. The exciseman what lodges at my house, tells me that
+they are afraid of nothing, and care for nothing; and then they have
+such means of letting one another know when any thing is a-foot. Lord
+bless you, sir, if there’s a smuggling vessel makes a signal off the
+coast at dusk, by twelve at night there are a thousand people collected
+near the shore to run the goods, and they laugh at the Preventive
+Service.”
+
+Warenne was inclined to suspect, that the account given by his landlord
+of the numbers and desperation of the people engaged in these lawless
+pursuits might be exaggerated. There was, however, evidently enough
+of truth in the report to make him wish to send another troop to
+Fisherton. But his orders were positive; and the officer appointed to
+the chief command of the district was one from whom he could not expect
+to obtain an alteration of them. He was a man well known in the army
+for his wrong-headed obstinacy, and pertinacious regard to the minutiæ
+of military discipline. It was also said of him, that having been in
+India during the time of the Peninsular war, and therefore without
+opportunity of distinguishing himself in any European campaign, he had
+a mean jealousy of those who had served in Portugal and Spain, and was
+disposed to treat them with captiousness, when they had the misfortune
+to be employed under him. Warenne determined, nevertheless, to write to
+General Mapleton a respectful request to be permitted to increase the
+force at Fisherton.
+
+He had been walking round the town, and was entering the inn-yard by
+the London gateway, when almost at the same moment a gentleman, on a
+remarkably neat well-bred cob, rode in from the coast road. As they
+encountered each other, the new visiter, who was a fresh-coloured fair
+man, of about his own age, dressed in sporting costume, looked at
+him earnestly. The countenance was familiar to him, but he could not
+recollect where he had seen it. He was in the act of having recourse
+to the landlord, for the purpose of ascertaining its owner, when the
+gentleman himself, having more quickly obtained his master’s address
+from Warenne’s servant, came up to him, and claimed his acquaintance.
+
+“Warenne; how are you? You forget me, I dare say, for it is a long time
+since we last met; but I remembered you the moment I saw you, though I
+could not give you a name without the assistance of John there. Do you
+not recollect Jack Nicholas, at Dame Twyford’s, just over Barn’s Pool
+Bridge, at Eton?”
+
+Warenne immediately recalled to mind a heavy, good-natured boy of that
+name, who resisted every attempt made by his tutor to instil into his
+brain any classical lore, but who was an expert fisherman, and not a
+bad foot-ball player.
+
+Nicholas continued, “What are you doing in this place? You had much
+better come over and dine with us. My father lives little more than
+five miles from the town, and will give you a hearty welcome. Do come,
+we can give you a bed. Well, certainly, I never thought of meeting you
+to-day. How lucky it was I rode over to take a look at the fish-market!
+I have got the nicest brill, too.”
+
+Warenne replied that he really should have been happy to accept his
+invitation, but that his horses were tired with their day’s work, and
+that he was obliged to leave Fisherton at a very early hour on the
+following morning.
+
+“Oh! I can arrange all these matters,” said Nicholas. “You shall have
+the landlord’s own nag, and a very clever one it is, I can tell you—few
+better. And if you must be off so early to-morrow, you can return here
+to-night; though if you would stay all night with us we should like it
+better, and I would ride over with you in the morning. I shall most
+probably come here, for to-morrow is the day when our magistrates hold
+their weekly sessions; and if I have nothing else to do, I usually
+attend to hear the news. That’s a good fellow; you will come, I see.
+I’ll call for you in ten minutes, as soon as I have seen that our cart
+takes the brill.”
+
+Warenne, having obtained a loan of the landlord’s horse, was ready to
+join Nicholas on his return from the fish-market. They quitted the
+town by the coast road, which for rather more than a mile proceeded in
+a south-easterly direction. It then bent more to the southward, when
+they quitted it, and proceeded along a narrow lane, with high hedges
+on each side, keeping the same course as the portion of the road over
+which they had already travelled. There was not here much opportunity
+for observation; and Warenne, willingly diverting his thoughts from the
+disagreeable lucubrations to which his landlord’s discourse had given
+rise, entered unreservedly into conversation with his old schoolfellow.
+He answered Nicholas’s questions concerning his different campaigns,
+and in return sought to extract from him the history of his past and
+present life.
+
+“You went,” said he, “to Oxford, if I recollect rightly, after you left
+Eton?”
+
+“Yes, I did,” answered Nicholas, “and I liked it much; it just suited
+me. I hardly ever attended a lecture; and I kept three very clever
+hunters in full work—but it was too happy a state to last. The old Dean
+of Christchurch, when I had been there little more than a year, gave me
+a hint which I might not misinterpret, that I had better see the world;
+and my father made me travel through Scotland and Ireland, which was
+all the world Buonaparte would let a man see in those days, unless he
+turned soldier and went to Spain. This was dull work, though every
+now and then I got some good fishing, and once or twice some capital
+grouse-shooting; so I returned home as quickly as I could, and have
+been living with my father here at the Plashetts (for that’s the name
+of our place) ever since. I have four as nice hunters as you ever saw,
+and get plenty of shooting and trout-fishing, without going a yard off
+his manors; so I make it out pretty well. If it happens any day that
+I neither hunt, fish, nor shoot, I trot over to Fisherton to see what
+fish there is in the market.”
+
+Warenne smiled at the complacency with which Nicholas reviewed his
+useless life. “Are you not a magistrate?” inquired he.
+
+“No,” replied his friend, “they wished to make me one, but I have
+refused myself to every application on the subject. There is no fun in
+being interrupted at all hours of the day by a pack of greasy fellows,
+making complaints against each other for assaults in their drunken
+squabbles overnight; nor in being condemned to sit from eleven o’clock
+to six one day in every week, to hear the idle blackguards of the
+neighbouring parishes abuse their overseers. No, thank you, said I, I
+am not going to be one of your ‘glorious unpaid,’ with the press firing
+into me for every little mistake I might make, and never giving me
+credit for the sacrifice of my time and comfort; I know better.”
+
+By this time the character of the road had undergone some change. The
+hedges had disappeared, and instead of the narrow trough, if I may so
+term it, in which they had been travelling, wherein their view was
+limited to the hot sun and clear sky above them, they had now, on
+either side, a broad strip of waste land, beyond which to the north lay
+a large extent of wild low brushwood; while to the south there were
+some newly inclosed fields. Presently all signs of arable cultivation
+ceased, and they came out on a wide common. Just at this point the road
+bent rather more to the southward, and the line of brushwood going off
+from it nearly at right angles and then sweeping round to the east,
+till it joined some large trees, formed a sort of boundary to the
+waste.
+
+“Mark this corner of the brushwood,” said Nicholas, “that you may not
+miss your way as you return to-night; for we now leave the road, and
+cross the common to those trees where the brushwood closes in again.
+The Plashetts lie very nearly due east of Fisherton, and the carriage
+road is a mile round. From those trees there is an avenue leading
+directly to the house.”
+
+Warenne took due note of the bearings of the ground, and they
+proceeded. When they had passed over a considerable portion of the
+common, the turf, which hitherto had been soft and swampy, became firm;
+and Warenne, whose powers of observation had been called into play by
+Nicholas’s late caution, remarked that it bore signs of having been
+much trodden.
+
+“Have you had a fair here, or races?” asked he of Nicholas.
+
+“No,” was the reply; “the sheep, I believe, keep unmolested possession
+of the common from year’s end to year’s end. But why do you inquire?”
+
+Warenne simply answered that the grass appeared trampled, and turned
+the conversation. They soon reached the Plashetts; and Nicholas,
+the elder, greeted his son’s friend with a hearty welcome. He was
+a cheerful, light-hearted old gentleman, and the evening passed
+pleasantly, if not gaily.
+
+About ten o’clock Warenne remounted his horse, and at a gentle pace
+began to retrace his road to Fisherton. The moon was just rising, but
+it was a cloudy night, and a sharp south-wester blew directly in his
+face. As he entered the avenue he could not help recalling to mind the
+state of the grass on the firmer part of the common; his reflections
+upon it caused him some anxiety. He had never, he thought, seen ground
+so trodden, but on places where soldiers were drilled and exercised.
+Could it be that there was truth in the report which he had heard,
+that the labourers held nightly meetings for the purpose of training
+themselves to the use of arms? As the idea presented itself, he hugged
+the trees to the southward more closely, so as to envelope himself
+completely in their shade. Presently he fancied that he heard in the
+wind the sounds of steps and voices. He stopped, and listened with
+attention, and soon became certain of the fact; they seemed however to
+proceed from persons at some distance. He advanced slowly, trusting
+to the wind to drown the noise of his horse’s hoofs. Again he
+stopped,—the sounds reached him more plainly. Using now still greater
+caution, he pushed forward towards the edge of the common, and he there
+beheld the realisation of his worst fears.
+
+By the light of the moon, which fell fully and clearly on the open
+space, he saw a considerable body of men, marching backwards and
+forwards, dividing and subdividing themselves, then reuniting again;
+in a word, going through a regular system of drill, though not perhaps
+with military exactness. He watched them for some time, endeavouring to
+ascertain their number, &c. &c. till he conceived it likely that they
+would soon disperse.
+
+It then became a question with him, how he himself should proceed. He
+was unwilling to return to the Plashetts, and alarm its inmates by
+acquainting them with the true reason of his return. He could not cross
+the common, for in that case he should have to pass through the very
+centre of the persons collected; he dared not to await the breaking
+up of their assemblage, lest some of the men should come upon him in
+their way to their cottages, which of course lay scattered about in
+every direction. He did not hesitate long; he remembered that a few
+hundred yards back he had passed three or four large single trees,
+which stood out on the broad glade between the two lines of elms which
+formed the avenue, making, as it were, a gate to the pass. To that
+point he quickly retraced his steps, and seizing a moment when the
+moon was obscured, crossed to the opposite side of the avenue; then
+forcing his horse into the brushwood, he made his way through it in the
+direction of the lane he had travelled in the morning, and continued
+his course, carefully avoiding too near an approach to the exterior of
+the wood which was lighted up by the moon, until he reached the hedge
+which separated it from the road. There, thinking himself safe, or
+at all events at too great a distance from the men at exercise to be
+discovered, he dragged his horse through the fence, and, remounting
+him, galloped as quickly as he could to Fisherton.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Concerning the materials of sedition, it is a thing well to be
+ considered; for the surest way to prevent seditions (if the times do
+ bear it) is to take away the matter of them; for if there be fuel
+ prepared, it is hard to tell whence the spark shall come that shall
+ set it on fire.—LORD BACON.
+
+The insight which this adventure gave Colonel Warenne into the real
+state of the country induced him to alter his plans. Instead of setting
+off for Calbury at an early hour the following morning, he determined
+that it would be more advisable for him to remain at Fisherton for
+the greater part of the day, in order to see Nicholas, and put him
+on his guard, and also to obtain through him some acquaintance with
+the magistrates, who were about to meet there on that day, and who
+were those to whom he must look for co-operation, in the event of any
+commotion.
+
+About eleven o’clock the next day, Nicholas rode into Fisherton, and
+was surprised to find Warenne still at the inn.
+
+“What, not off yet?” said he, “you might as well have slept at the
+Plashetts; our beds are as well aired as those of mine host here.”
+
+Warenne requested him to come to his room, and recounted to him what he
+had seen on the preceding night. Nicholas was startled, if not alarmed,
+at hearing of such preparations for tumult in his own immediate
+vicinity.
+
+“What is to be done?” said he, “it is extremely disagreeable! My poor
+sisters will be frightened out of their wits. Cannot some means be
+found to put a stop to such proceedings?”
+
+Warenne doubted whether an attempt to prevent the meetings would not
+have the effect of setting the people on their guard, without deterring
+them from their purpose, and was rather inclined to watch them, so as
+in some measure to discover their intentions, when it might be easy to
+baffle them.
+
+“If, indeed,” said he, “we knew what grievances pressed most heavily
+upon the labourers, we might, by relieving them, be able to repress the
+disposition to riot, and escape the necessity of having recourse to
+coercion.”
+
+“One need not go far to find their grievances,” interrupted Nicholas;
+“the poor fellows are not half paid; the farmers only give them
+wages enough to keep body and soul together, and whatsoever else they
+require for the maintenance of their families, is made up to them by
+the parish, in proportion to the number of their children. Thus they
+are, every one of them, made paupers; and the consequence is they work
+as paupers. The farmers quarrel with them for their idleness, and the
+overseers devise schemes for making them earn, as they term it, the
+pittance they allow them. About a fortnight ago, as I passed through
+Oathampstead, I saw a man marching fifteen or twenty others up and down
+the village; and on my inquiring the reason of this proceeding, I was
+told that the men were out of regular employ, and that the overseer,
+resolving that they should do something for their money, had given one
+of them, who was a militia man, a pot of beer to act as corporal over
+the rest, and drill them. They will have enough of the drilling system
+now, I reckon.”
+
+“Could you put an end to such fatal mistakes as these,” Warenne
+resumed, “you would do more to quell the turbulent spirit, of which I
+fear we shall soon see some melancholy indications, than if you were
+to quarter a regiment of soldiers in each village. But now you must
+give me some information on another point. What magistrate had I better
+apply to in case of a disturbance in this neighbourhood? Who will be
+most disposed to act in concert with me, and assist me in repressing
+it?”
+
+“Oh, I know who is the best man for you,” answered Nicholas—“at least
+in my opinion; Charley Seaforth: but you shall judge for yourself,
+if you will wait a quarter of an hour. The magistrates meet in the
+old ball-room of the inn here at twelve; we will get our friend the
+landlord to admit us first into the gallery, where the musicians sit
+when there is a ball, and make our observations; after which we can
+descend, and I will introduce you to any or all of the bench, as you
+please.”
+
+Warenne gladly acceded to his friend’s proposal, and they were soon
+seated in the orchestra Nicholas had described, which, though at the
+opposite end of the room to that at which the magistrates sat, was yet
+sufficiently near to them to enable its inmates to hear all that was
+going on. The magistrates recognised Nicholas as one of the intruders
+upon their deliberations, and did not attempt to drive him from the
+position he had taken up. The business of the day speedily commenced,
+to which Warenne gave his most earnest attention. As occasions arose he
+whispered the result of his observations to Nicholas.
+
+“I like your chairman,” said he; “he is a clear-headed, sensible man;
+but I fear he is too old to take an active part in putting down a riot.”
+
+“There is not a better magistrate or man in England,” whispered
+Nicholas in return; “but, as you say, he is past fast work, to say
+nothing of the gout to which he is a martyr. Make him but fifty again,
+and he would be with you, I warrant, go where you will, or do what you
+will; he is out of the question now. You must choose between three I
+will point out to you: that fellow, the tall, athletic, handsome man
+with grey hair, a hook nose, and a sharpish eye, with his chin thrust
+out so as to give him what he considers to be a look of decision.”
+
+“I mark him,” interrupted Warenne, “but I do not much fancy him; for
+he always differs from the chairman in a pompous sort of way, and when
+asked, cannot assign any reasons for his differing, but shakes his head
+importantly, puts on an air of wisdom, and then coincides with him at
+last, though so as to make it appear that he is certain he himself is
+right, and that he yields only for the sake of peace.”
+
+“You have not judged your man amiss, Colonel,” replied Nicholas; “Mr.
+Fownall, for that is his name, is a mighty man in his own conceit. You
+should see him at a county meeting: he will begin his speech with such
+graces; he will raise himself up, and put on a solemn look of wisdom
+that would deceive any man who is not aware that he is no conjurer; and
+then, in very strong language, accuse the government of profligacy,
+extravagance, and corruption, taking care to select, when he comes to
+his proofs, the only parts of their conduct which are defensible. Oh!
+he is a bother-headed one.”
+
+Warenne thought his companion also a better judge of men and their
+capacities than he had imagined him to be; he had not done Nicholas
+justice, who, though uneducated, was by no means without natural
+shrewdness, especially on points on which he was excited, as on country
+politics, in which he was forced to mix, from the position held by his
+father in the country.
+
+“Mr. Fownall will not do for me,” said Warenne, “if I can get another
+magistrate. Now for your next man,—which is Mr. Seaforth?”
+
+“I shall show our Charley last,” replied Nicholas. “My second subject
+for your choice is that round fat little man to the right.”
+
+“He is a sharp fellow, is he not?” inquired Warenne; “I have seen the
+chairman refer to him several times.”
+
+“Sharp enough,” continued Nicholas; “he is a retired lawyer. He has the
+law at his fingers’ ends; but he will not suit you, I think.”
+
+“Why, is he not firm and resolute?”
+
+“Too firm, too resolute by half; the truth is, he has lived in town the
+greater part of his life, and he does not know how to manage the poor
+at all. Though an excellent, well-meaning man, he is hard in his words
+and in his ways, and the poor do not like him. He would not conciliate
+enough for you, though in other respects he would do admirably.”
+
+“Bar equitation!” said Warenne, smiling. “He can never ride with those
+round fat legs; and if any tumult does occur, we shall require a
+magistrate capable of quick locomotion.”
+
+“No, no, Mr. Raymond is no rider,” rejoined Nicholas; “but now for
+my friend Charley. Do you see that very quiet looking, middle-aged,
+rather pale man, with a remarkably intelligent eye, sitting behind the
+chairman?”
+
+“He is rather a silent one, is he not?” observed Warenne.
+
+“Silent or not silent,” said Nicholas, roused to eagerness in behalf
+of his favourite, “he is the best magistrate on the bench next to the
+chairman, and knows as much sessions law as Raymond. If he has not
+spoken lately, it is because he agrees in opinion with the chairman. He
+would speak fast enough if he differed from him.” Just at that moment
+the chairman leant back to ask Mr. Seaforth a question. “You see, he
+is ready enough with his answer, when it is wanted. Then he is beloved
+by all the poor; he is so kind-hearted, and so kindly spoken to them.
+The very men he sends to prison say they would rather be convicted and
+condemned by him, than only tried before another person. He always
+treats the labourers as _fellow men_ in a different station of life,
+and that is what they like. If you seem by your manner to consider them
+as an inferior race, they are annoyed and sore at it; but talk to them
+as man and man, and they will willingly pay you the deference due to
+your superior rank in life, and listen to you into the bargain. Again,
+if you want a fellow who can ride, I will match Seaforth against any
+man you can bring from Melton for the season through, for a hundred.”
+
+Warenne smiled at Nicholas’s animated description of his friend; but he
+saw so much natural shrewdness in him, that he was inclined to place
+confidence in his opinion.
+
+“Then as for firmness and nerves,” continued Nicholas, “you should see
+him _make_ a young horse, though, that, perhaps, has not much to do
+with the matter in question—it is beautiful to see him put a young,
+raw, five-years-old, at a fence; seriously speaking, he is the boldest
+and coolest fellow you ever saw, though you are a soldier. I may say
+this of him, for he has been tried. Last year there was a dreadful
+fight between the preventive service men and the smugglers, in which
+the former were driven off, and one or two of them killed. Seaforth,
+who was the nearest magistrate, took it up, and never rested till he
+had apprehended the murderers, though he had to go into places where
+half the men in England would not venture to set foot, and to fight his
+way through some desperate scuffles. He got Jem Emlett, who has been
+ringleader in every row, robbery, or smuggling transaction for the last
+twenty years, and his whole gang; and though Jem broke out of prison
+the night before the assizes, that was not his fault. Besides, Charley
+is bred to be a good one. There have been wild ones of his blood,
+perhaps, but never any that wanted game.”
+
+“Mr. Seaforth is the man for me,” said Warenne; “get your friend out of
+court, and introduce me to him.”
+
+Nicholas had not overrated Seaforth. Warenne found him a person of
+great intelligence, and peculiar animation of character, far more
+so, indeed, than he had anticipated. The unassuming demeanour of
+Seaforth amongst his brother magistrates had led Warenne to consider
+him a sensible, and Nicholas’s panegyric to believe him a brave,
+man; but neither the one nor the other had prepared him for meeting
+an eager, impetuous spirit, ready to devote his whole powers to what
+he conceived to be his duty, and in whom mind so far predominated
+over body as to cause alarm, lest by its restless activity it should
+undermine and exhaust the physical strength. But a few minutes had
+elapsed from the time of their introduction, before Warenne was
+perfectly satisfied with the choice he had made of a coadjutor.
+
+He recounted to Seaforth what he had seen; and they were soon in deep
+consultation. It seemed evident to them that the nightly meetings
+originated in an organised combination to resist the law,—a combination
+extending far beyond the immediate neighbourhood of Fisherton.
+
+The agricultural labourers were not persons likely, without some strong
+external excitement, to sacrifice a night’s rest to an employment they
+hated so sincerely as learning the manœuvres of soldiers; neither were
+the smugglers, though they were doubtless to a man engaged in the
+business; and the conclusion to which Warenne and Seaforth came was,
+that agents from London and Manchester must have lighted up this strong
+flame of disaffection.
+
+What, then, was to be done? Could they in any way suppress the
+meetings? Seaforth proposed to be present at one of them, and to try
+the effect of expostulation; but this course, though one in which _he_,
+if anybody, would have succeeded, from the affection borne him by his
+poorer neighbours, was too dangerous and imprudent to be listened to
+for an instant, at a time when the smugglers were peculiarly irritated
+against him for the apprehension, and consequent execution, of some of
+their comrades only a few months before.
+
+It appeared useless, on the other hand, to attempt to control the
+meetings by military or constabulary force; for there could be little
+doubt that the proceedings of both magistrates and soldiers would be
+watched, and information so conveyed to the parties assembling, that
+by the time either of them could reach the ground there would not be
+a soul to be seen. All that it seemed possible to do was to adopt
+an intermediate mode of action, viz. to collect a greater number of
+troops in the neighbourhood, to hold them in readiness, and to take
+advantage of any opportunity of acting which might be afforded by the
+indiscretion of the conspirators; while in order, if possible, to deter
+the misguided men from plunging hastily into violence, and to prevent
+unnecessary shedding of blood, Seaforth undertook to watch the conduct
+of some particular men whom he suspected, and with whom he imagined
+himself to have some influence. They would thus, it is true, set the
+rioters more on their guard, but then, even if they failed in their
+endeavours to put an end to the chance of disturbance by gentle means,
+they would escape the responsibility of having tacitly encouraged
+disaffection up to a certain point that they might more severely and
+effectually quell it afterwards.
+
+It was arranged, therefore, that Warenne should endeavour to obtain
+permission from General Mapleton to send another troop to Fisherton,
+and that Seaforth should try the effect of private conciliation, either
+party keeping up a constant communication with the other, and both with
+Nicholas, who readily promised to give them every assistance in his
+power. This settled, they separated, and Warenne retook the road to
+Calbury.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ Tristes pensamientos,
+ De alegres memorias.
+
+ _Spanish Romance._
+
+The prospect of a protracted stay at Calbury gave Colonel Warenne
+no promise of a return to tranquillity of mind. The apprehension of
+danger past, the routine of military duties usual in country quarters
+alone demanding his attention, his thoughts naturally recurred to his
+blighted hopes, and the distressing situation in which fortune had
+placed him.
+
+Adelaide was at Epworth—only two short miles separated them. Henry and
+Frank were living more at Epworth than at Calbury. It was necessary,
+unless he determined to set at defiance the common rules of civility,
+that he himself should visit those with whom he had so lately lived in
+intimacy. He must again undergo the torture of meeting her he loved
+with the degree of coldness consistent with his ideas of duty, and her
+father’s more than hinted opinion of his supposed pretensions. There
+was no alternative; in ordinary courtesy he was bound to make the
+attempt, even at the expense of increased wretchedness.
+
+After a delay of some days, during which Warenne persuaded himself that
+he was detained in Calbury by business, he rode over to Epworth, with a
+tolerably calm exterior, though with a beating heart. His visit seemed
+to have been foreseen by Lord Framlingham; for as the servant ushered
+Warenne into the drawing-room, he entered it by another door; and as
+his lordship appeared to have correctly calculated the precise moment
+of Warenne’s calling, so did he seem to have determined to ascertain
+the exact duration of his stay beneath his daughter’s roof, for he did
+not quit the drawing-room until Warenne had departed.
+
+This behaviour on the part of Lord Framlingham, though it rather
+irritated Warenne at the time, yet served to render his visit less
+painful than he had expected to find it. There was no temptation in
+the presence of a third person, directly opposed to his wishes, to lay
+aside the measured friendliness of manner which he had adopted.
+
+A second, and a third time, that Warenne called at Epworth, Lord
+Framlingham observed a similar system of precaution; but at last,
+either bored with playing the part of a Duenna, or becoming satisfied
+with Warenne’s conduct, he relaxed in his vigilance; and one day that
+the latter had ridden over to Epworth with Frank and Henry, who wished
+to arrange some shooting excursion with the gamekeepers, he found
+himself once again alone with Adelaide. He felt his hour of trial to
+be at last come. He was now to show his self-command, to keep down the
+tumultuous and passionate thoughts to which he burnt to give utterance.
+His love had not diminished through the obstacles which fortune had
+thrown in his path to happiness; on the contrary, it burnt with a
+stronger and a steadier flame than when he had, without interruption,
+enjoyed the pleasure of her society in London.
+
+Adelaide, though possessed of every requisite to grace the most refined
+circles, appeared yet more lovely in the calmer occupations of the
+country. In the easy intercourse of her immediate friends her shyness
+forsook her, and she did justice to the beauty of her character. All
+he had seen of her, all he had heard of her since she came to Epworth,
+tended to foster his luckless passion. The poor had already learnt to
+bless her name. With her wonted enthusiasm she had commenced plans for
+their improvement; and though her schemes might perhaps be a little
+visionary, Warenne was not inclined to quarrel with their want of
+practicability, while they developed the benevolent spirit of their
+author.
+
+Adelaide also had reasons for feeling distressed at the interview. She
+had perceived her father’s manner to Warenne, and became satisfied that
+Warenne could not honourably have pursued any other line than that he
+had chosen; but her conviction on this point, while it took from her
+the little anger she had conceived against him, made it difficult for
+her to preserve the coldness of manner which she had latterly assumed;
+thus both parties felt awkwardly situated. It is true, that one word
+might have produced a right understanding between them; but that word,
+Adelaide could not, and Warenne would not, speak. Still the visit could
+not be passed in silence;—at least so thought Warenne, and acting upon
+this supposition, in a shy and constrained manner, he asked,
+
+“Have you ridden much, Miss Marston, since your return to the country?
+I am informed there are beautiful rides in this neighbourhood.”
+
+“No! not much; my father is not able to ride far, and Henry is always
+out shooting. He has promised, however, to ride with me in a day or
+two.”
+
+“You must make him keep his promise quickly, or the leaves will be off
+the trees, and they will have lost their autumnal beauty.”
+
+“I fear so.”
+
+How gladly would Warenne have offered her his escort, had he dared!
+how gladly would Adelaide have accepted it! But this might not be; and
+to check the vivid workings of his imagination, he hastily changed the
+subject.
+
+“I hear we are to have a gay neighbourhood this winter; Frank, who,
+I believe, has an instinctive knowledge of a ball, as a vulture of
+a horse that drops in the desert, tells me that the Merivales and
+Dashworths each mean to have one in the course of the next month.”
+
+“I have not the pleasure of knowing them,” observed Adelaide, coldly.
+
+“Of course they will call upon you, as an act of civility towards a
+person newly come into the county.”
+
+“Perhaps so; but they have not visited me yet.”
+
+Adelaide’s manner did not contribute to restore poor Warenne to
+serenity of mind.
+
+I know, thought he, that I have chosen a very stupid subject for
+conversation, although perhaps a safe one; but what can I do? If
+I speak on more interesting topics I shall betray the state of my
+affections, and exactly do that which in honour I am bound not to do.
+He blundered on: “My brother tells me, that Miss Merivale is extremely
+pretty and dances beautifully.”
+
+“Does she?” was the reply; “I shall like to see her, if they ask me to
+their parties.”
+
+Warenne could proceed no further with the tiresome subject; he turned
+therefore to another upon which, though more attractive to both parties
+than the former, he thought he might yet converse without emotion. “You
+are devising, I believe, schemes for the improvement of the condition
+of your poor.”
+
+Adelaide’s eye brightened.
+
+“If it is not too great a liberty, I should like much to hear what you
+intend to do.”
+
+“Oh! I fear,” said Adelaide, smiling, “that my views are not quite so
+practical as they might be. I have not long had the power of playing
+the Lady Bountiful, but I will tell them to you, and you shall give me
+your opinion. You have, I know, turned your attention to such matters
+more than soldiers generally do.”
+
+Warenne thought there could be no harm in her explaining to him her
+plans, or in his assisting her with his advice upon them; and in a few
+moments they were busily discussing the merit of Penny Banks, Savings’
+Banks, &c.; but after a while he found his thoughts wandering from the
+charities to the founder of them, and that he was on dangerous ground.
+
+As Adelaide gave herself up, with the full warmth of her kind heart,
+to the development of her benevolent intentions, and spoke to him
+again with the freedom of former intimacy (perhaps glad in her inmost
+soul to have a legitimate reason for resuming it, and perhaps even
+not without a hope of leading him in turn to throw off restraint), he
+became conscious, that should he attempt to speak, his voice would
+falter, and that his eyes were but too ready to tell the forbidden tale
+of constant unvarying affection. He dared not trust himself further
+to temptation; making therefore a violent mental effort, and putting
+even more than his former coldness into his tone, he hastily concluded
+the conversation by remarking that her goodness in thus considering the
+welfare of her poor fellow-creatures was above all praise. Adelaide
+looked up, almost with astonishment, at this formal approbation of her
+virtue, but said nothing. He coloured, as he felt her eye glance upon
+him, yet firm to his purpose, would not recur to the subject of the
+charities again. He sat silent and confused; turned over the leaves
+of a book lying upon the table, hoping to extract from thence matter
+for the continuance of their conversation, but in vain; his eyes could
+neither follow the lines, nor his brain take in their purport. In
+despair he returned again to the beauty of the country and the weather,
+and once more there was a sound of voices. Badly, however, as they had
+succeeded in conversing before their hearts had in some measure opened
+to each other, now their attempt was ten times worse, and it was a
+positive relief to both parties when Lord Framlingham accidentally came
+in. Had he arrived a quarter of an hour sooner, he might not have been
+satisfied with the aspect of affairs, which was decidedly inauspicious
+to his schemes; as it was, they seemed to prosper, and he was pleased.
+He spoke to Warenne with more kindness than usual. This filled the cup
+of poor Warenne’s misery. He had looked to Lord Framlingham’s marked
+repulsiveness of manner towards him, as the one circumstance that could
+give Adelaide a favourable explanation of his own conduct towards her.
+Muttering, therefore, something about seeking his brother and Henry, he
+hurried away from Epworth, with the determination of never revisiting a
+spot where he had endured such utter wretchedness.
+
+Whether he would or could have executed this resolution it is
+impossible to say, for the position in which he was placed was doomed
+to undergo a change.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Libels and licentious discourses against the state, when they are
+ frequent and open; and in like sort false news often running up and
+ down to the disadvantage of the state, and hastily embraced, are among
+ the signs of troubles.
+
+ LORD BACON.
+
+It is now necessary to relate the march of events up to this period.
+General Mapleton, in reply to the letter which Warenne had addressed
+him on his return from Fisherton, requesting that he might be allowed
+to send an increased force to that place, returned a most dry and
+positive negative. His answer was to the effect,—that he was very sorry
+to receive from Colonel Warenne such a proof of the disaffected spirit
+which prevailed in the district to the command of which he had been
+appointed by his majesty, but that being responsible for the employment
+of the troops under his orders, he must be permitted to station them in
+such manner, and in such numbers, as in his own judgment he considered
+best for the interests of the country; and that he must desire Colonel
+Warenne would on no account detach from himself a larger force than
+that which he had authorised. It was his wish that Colonel Warenne
+should send one troop to Fisherton and another to Charnstead, or some
+place midway between Fisherton and Calbury, and that at the expiration
+of every month the Fisherton troop should return to head quarters
+of the regiment, and the Charnstead troop move on to Fisherton. “In
+conclusion,” wrote the general, “I must particularly request that
+Colonel Warenne will on no account alter these arrangements, nor absent
+himself from the quarters of his regiment without leave.”
+
+The soreness and readiness to take umbrage evident throughout this
+letter gave much disturbance to Warenne, who had written to the general
+in the fullness of his heart, and with the sincere wish of setting him
+on his guard against times of peril; but he was too sensible a man, and
+too zealous an officer, to suffer his uneasiness to be seen even by
+his most intimate associates. He resolved diligently to conform to the
+orders he had received, and was really anxious that they might prove
+effectual. In truth, the general, though the principal motive for his
+refusal had been a low jealousy of Warenne’s European honours, was not
+without reasons for the negative which he had sent. Much about this
+time reports came in almost daily from the surrounding villages that
+the labourers were using threatening language to the farmers, insisting
+upon an increase of wages, and upon the demolition of their threshing
+machines; that they threatened to pull down and burn the machines of
+those who would not comply with the demands; and that the farmers in
+consequence were in a state of great alarm. Some had yielded to the
+demands of the rioters, partly from fear, and partly also from an idea
+that they might make their sufferings a plea for a diminution of rent
+and tithes—others again had resisted them; but the cunning or cowardice
+of the former had added exasperation to the anger of the peasantry
+against the latter, so as to put an end to all feeling of security
+with regard to life and property. It was said, also, that there were
+assemblages every evening round the alehouse-doors, where orators in
+clouted shoes and smock frocks held forth upon the rights of men; while
+there were not wanting persons who came from “no one knew where,” to
+inculcate the same doctrines with more force and greater dexterity—men,
+who from their education were enabled to make the worse appear the
+better reason, and heighten the evil passions that were abroad. Thanks,
+however, to the vigilance of the magistrates, who were not afraid to
+employ the civil power, now that they were backed by a military force,
+all these evil signs ended without disturbance. There might be a
+drunken riot or so; but the mobs uniformly dispersed, as the effect of
+the intoxicating liquors by which they were excited wore off, or, as
+Nanny Rudd expressed herself to Frank, “as the beer died in them.”
+
+About this time also occurred an event, which, though not of immediate
+importance to the story, is interesting as characteristic of the
+period. The two brothers and Henry were engaged to dine at Epworth.
+Dinner was served, but Frank and Henry did not make their appearance.
+At last, but not before the party assembled had become exceedingly
+anxious for their arrival, they came in, heated and agitated.
+
+“What can make you so late?” asked Adelaide; “you must have finished
+shooting several hours ago.”
+
+Henry did not answer; but Frank said, “We must, I suppose, confess—we
+have had a row with some poachers.”
+
+“Good heavens! you are neither of you hurt, I hope,” asked Adelaide
+again, in alarm.
+
+“Oh no,” replied Frank, laughing, “not in person, at all events, though
+in honour.”
+
+“What has happened is this,” interrupted Henry. “We had been shooting
+in that large wood of yours which adjoins the road leading to
+Charnstead, and having given our guns to the keepers, were on our
+return home; that is to say, were walking back through the wood to the
+Dolphin to get our horses. We had left our game in one of the rides
+through which we had to pass; when we arrived at the spot we found a
+party of men quietly filling a light cart with it. For a moment we
+thought they might be some of our beaters, but finding our mistake, we
+called to them, and ran up to arrest their proceedings; in an instant
+we were surrounded, thrown to the ground, and kept there until they
+had finished packing the cart, when, politely thanking us for our
+good-nature in shooting for them, off they all went into the high road.”
+
+“In short,” said Frank, “never did two officers in his majesty’s
+service suffer a worse defeat or greater disgrace.”
+
+This incident alarmed not only Adelaide and Lord Framlingham, but
+also the surrounding neighbours. So gross and deliberate an outrage
+destroyed all feeling of security, and though every attempt was made to
+trace its perpetrators, they could not be discovered.
+
+Warenne argued that it had been committed by some of the people who
+were endeavouring but too successfully to excite disturbances in the
+country; for that their calmness in the execution of their scheme
+betrayed consciousness of power. “If they had thrashed you,” said he to
+Frank, “and left you half dead, I should have considered the whole as
+the action of common poachers, determined not to be taken nor detected.”
+
+Frank was thankful that “his friends,” as he termed them, were such a
+superior style of men, considering the disadvantage at which they had
+Henry and himself,—though doubtless it would have been better for the
+nation, had it been otherwise. By no party, however, was light ever
+thrown upon the transaction.
+
+These various signs of the prevailing disaffection among the peasantry
+occupied much of Warenne’s time and attention, and his anxiety was
+increased by his receiving from Seaforth a fearful account of the
+state of the neighbourhood of Fisherton. Seaforth had attempted, in
+conformity to the proposal previously made by him, to converse with
+those individuals whom he suspected to be implicated in the conspiracy
+which evidently existed; but they had refused to listen to him, and had
+even insulted him, giving him to understand that his every movement was
+closely watched.
+
+Under these circumstances Warenne again petitioned for an increase of
+force at Fisherton. Again General Mapleton returned him an answer in
+the negative—if possible, couched in yet more peremptory language than
+he had hitherto used. Still no actual riot took place either at the one
+place or the other, and Warenne began to hope that the winter would
+pass over without further disturbance. These fallacious expectations
+lasted but for a day or two. All at once, on every wall throughout
+Calbury, and the neighbouring villages, appeared chalked up—“Bread
+or blood,”—“Liberty or death,” and similar short expositions of the
+popular feelings.
+
+Nanny Rudd also warned Frank that some project was on foot, though she
+could not yet discover the particulars of it. Warenne patiently waited
+for further information, which at last he obtained through the means of
+his brother’s faithful ally.
+
+“Captain, dear,” said Nanny to Frank, as he passed her one morning on
+his way to the stables, “you may just bid your men stand at ease, if
+you mean to stay at Calbury; there will be no row here. It’s the coast
+you must look to! Last night some strangers came into my brother’s with
+two of the Rusbrook men, who fit agen the ’Stabulary t’other day, and
+they were talking how they had managed finely, and frightened you all
+so, that you dare not move a foot from home. Dare not! the blackguards!
+As if they knew the soul of a jintleman soldier. And then they cast
+up, that they should have it all their own way where they were going,
+for that the whole county was ready to join them,—let alone quite a
+raal army of smugglers. Them’s a bad set, my dear captain,—particular
+bad,—they wouldn’t drink none, but seemed to think only of killing and
+plundering; and when my brother came in, they was as hush! They’d talk
+afore me, a poor old blind body, as they thought couldn’t move off my
+settle without help, but they wouldn’t open their ’tato traps afore
+him. Publicans must look to their licence, says they! you’ll see that
+afore long there will be an outbreak towards the coast. One rascal said
+roundly, ‘We’ll give ’em some bonfires before the fifth of November
+this year.’”
+
+These indications of the popular feeling were further accompanied by
+acts of incendiarism. There were frequent alarms of fire at night,
+which increased in number as the end of the month approached. With
+regard to these, however, Warenne remarked, that though some had been
+caused by the private malice of individuals, yet that, generally
+speaking, it was an haulm stack, or a parcel of straw, or a rick, which
+lay far from any farm buildings that was set fire to; from whence he
+was the rather inclined to give credit to Nanny Rudd’s conjectures,
+that the demonstrations in the neighbourhood of Calbury were solely
+with the view of occupying the attention of the military, and diverting
+it from the real point of danger.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ Give good hearing to those that give the first information in
+ business, and rather direct them in the beginning, than interrupt them
+ in the continuance of their speeches; for he that is put out of his
+ own order will go forward and backward, and be more tedious while he
+ waits upon his memory, than he could have been if he had gone on his
+ own course—LORD BACON.
+
+Affairs remained in this unpleasant state until the evening of the
+30th of October, when between seven and eight o’clock a man on a jaded
+horse, and covered with mud, galloped up to the door of Warenne’s
+lodging. He hastily ascertained from the servant that his master
+was within; threw the rein to him, and dashed up the stairs. It was
+Nicholas.
+
+“Warenne,” cried he, as soon as he entered the room, “you must be
+off, and quickly, if you wish to save Fisherton. It will be attacked
+to-morrow night by a large body of men, and sacked and burnt, if you
+are not there to prevent it.”
+
+“When?” asked Warenne; “to-morrow night? for heaven’s sake tell me what
+you have heard.”
+
+“I will,” replied Nicholas, “all in order; but the upshot is this,—that
+Fisherton will be plundered to-morrow night, and that there are more
+smugglers engaged in the business than are sufficient to set your one
+troop at defiance.”
+
+He then proceeded to state that he had been shooting that very morning
+on some property of his father’s between the Plashetts and the coast,
+when a woman in great distress had run up to him, and begged him to
+come and speak with her husband, who was dying. “He wished,” she said,
+“to speak to some clergyman, or magistrate, or to Mr. Nicholas.”
+
+Nicholas accordingly accompanied her to her cottage, where he found
+a poor fellow, to whom his father had behaved with much kindness the
+previous winter, lying with both his legs broken, and his back severely
+injured, from a fall of ground in a chalk-pit. Clarke, for that was his
+name, was in great agony, and evidently could not live many hours. On
+seeing Nicholas, and receiving his condolences, he said, “My body is
+bad enough, to be sure, but it is nothing to my mind. I could not die
+easy till I had seen you, Mr. John. Tell the women to leave the room,
+sir. I must speak to you; if I die before I make a clean breast, I can
+never find no mercy. Why don’t the women leave the room?” repeated he
+fiercely. “Now, then, they are gone, and no one is here but ourselves.
+Come nearer to me, if you please, sir. You know, sir, about our nightly
+meetings. I have been one as has regularly attended them. God forgive
+me, I wish I had never heard of them. Last night, sir, last night,”
+as he repeated the word he raised himself in his bed, casting his
+eyes inquiringly about the room, as if he dreaded a witness to his
+disclosure, and sank his voice to a whisper, “it was agreed that we
+should make an attack on Fisherton as to-morrow night. The troops are
+changed to-morrow: the one as is at Fisherton goes to Calbury, and the
+Charnstead one comes into Fisherton; and we reckoned that the new men
+would not know the ground, and having just marched in, would be tired,
+and off their guard. So we settled to collect together at certain
+places after dusk, and then, in company with the smugglers, who were to
+join us there, to enter the town, and set fire to it in several parts,
+and plunder it in the confusion. That ever I should have agreed to such
+wickedness! I never should, Mr. John—I never should, if I had not been
+fool enough to listen to those villains, who persuaded us that we were
+all deprived of our rights by the rich, and that it was appointed that
+we should all share and share alike. I see it all quite different now.
+Do you think, sir, I shall ever be forgiven?”
+
+Nicholas, shocked and alarmed, tried to soothe the wretched man—“That
+is a question I can hardly answer, for I am no divine; but I should
+think you might be, if you are really sorry for what you were going
+to do. One thing I am sure of, the best way of making amends for your
+crime is to confess all you know.”
+
+“I know no more,” replied the poor fellow. “Our leaders never told
+us any more than I have just said, that we were to attack the place
+to-morrow between nine and ten o’clock, by which time we thought people
+would be beginning to go to bed.”
+
+Nicholas having thus ascertained all that could be extracted from the
+wounded man, considered that between the present hour and the morrow’s
+night there was but little time for communication with Warenne, on whom
+the safety of the town depended, and he became anxious to depart; but
+Clarke, seizing his hand, exclaimed—
+
+“Pray, sir, don’t leave! I am no ways prepared for death.”
+
+Nicholas observed to him, “Clarke, if I do not go, I cannot prevent the
+attack, and your confession will do no good.”
+
+“Oh no!” replied Clarke, withdrawing his grasp, “nor me no good
+neither. I had forgot that—go sir, go—but no—stay one moment. Oh, sir,
+when I am gone, don’t give me up—don’t let people know as I ever split;
+they would murder my wife and children. And do you, Martha—pray, sir,
+call my wife—Martha, I say, I charge you never, as you value your life,
+tell a soul as Mr. John has been here to-day.” The poor frightened
+woman promised acquiescence. “Now then go, sir,” said he; “God bless
+you! I will try and pray.”
+
+Nicholas immediately made the best of his way to the Plashetts, sent
+off an express to Seaforth, and himself started for Calbury on the best
+horse in his stable.
+
+Warenne listened patiently to Nicholas’s story, for he knew well that
+the quickest mode of obtaining the truth from any man is to let him
+speak what he has to say in his own manner. At its close he seemed for
+a moment to be lost in thought, then, turning to Nicholas, he asked
+him if he had seen a magistrate, or could say that he was sent by any
+magistrate to ask the assistance of the soldiery. Nicholas replied
+in the negative, and Warenne began to pace up and down the room in
+deep thought, and apparently under much anxiety. At last he stopped,
+and exclaimed, “Well, then, I must take the responsibility on myself.
+Communication with head-quarters is impossible. I must disobey orders,
+and abide the consequences: I cannot, for any hazard to myself, suffer
+a town to be burnt, and its inhabitants to be massacred.”
+
+He rang the bell; and bade his servant send Captain Harris to him, and
+also his brother; and he resumed his meditative walk, until it flashed
+across him that he was treating Nicholas with great inhospitality.
+
+“I beg your pardon, Nicholas,” said he, “I make you but an ill return
+for your kindness in bringing me this news yourself in person; but the
+truth is, I am so awkwardly placed, that I am forced to employ all my
+wits in considering what will be my best line of conduct.”
+
+“Oh never mind me,” answered the good-natured fellow; “I shall go and
+hunt out your cook, and take care of myself. You have plenty on your
+hands, without attending to the wants of a hungry man.”
+
+A few minutes brought Captain Harris to his colonel’s apartment.
+“Captain Harris,” said Warenne, “you will immediately call out your
+troop, and proceed with it in the direction of Charnstead, so as to
+reach that place to-morrow morning before eight o’clock. Rest there
+until Captain Paulet moves his troop to Fisherton, and do you then
+accompany him. You will meet the Fisherton troop between that place
+and Charnstead; take them back with you. As soon as you arrive at
+Fisherton, if I am not with you, notify your arrival to Major Stuart.
+He will probably have quarters ready for you; but whether you see him
+or not, do not unbridle, and keep your men standing by their horses.”
+
+Captain Harris, who had received many similar orders the previous
+winter in Ireland, merely bowed and left the room, and in twenty
+minutes was with his troop in march on the Charnstead road.
+
+Frank came in as Captain Harris left the room. Warenne briefly
+explained to him how matters stood. “And now, Frank,” said he, “I shall
+leave you with the remaining troops to take care of this neighbourhood.
+No (seeing Frank about to interrupt him), I cannot take you with me.
+On the contrary, I must leave you here. I must have some one on this
+ground who will value my honour as his own, and I look to you as the
+person I can best trust on earth. Should a disturbance take place here,
+and get to a head while I am absent, I am a ruined man. If you love me,
+you will stay here.”
+
+Frank _did_ dearly love his brother: he was flattered too by the
+unlimited confidence reposed in him. He therefore said not a word about
+going, but simply asked for his orders.
+
+“You are almost as good a soldier as I am,” said Warenne, “and must be
+guided by circumstances. I hardly think that you will be called on to
+take any very serious measures. It will be well, however, to keep a
+watchful eye on all that is going forward, and to make as much parade
+as you can with your soldiers. Never mind harassing them a little,
+for a day or two; but multiply their numbers as much as possible, by
+showing them in different parts of the town. Make your one hundred and
+fifty men appear five hundred if you can. Should you be required to
+act, be decisive.”
+
+The two brothers then proceeded to arrange some minor details, when a
+knock was heard at the door, and a voice saying, in rather a tone of
+authority, “Colonel, I must come in.”
+
+“By all that is sacred, it is Nanny Rudd!” exclaimed Frank, “what can
+she want here at this hour?” He ran to the door and opened it. “Come
+in, Nanny; what are your commands to-night?”
+
+“Captain Warenne,” answered Nanny, “ye’ll give that girl, as come
+with me, and brought me here, a crown. I promised her the same; and
+whiles you are taking it out of your purse, I’ll spake a word with your
+brother. I have business with him.”
+
+Warenne came forward, and laying hold of her hand, inquired what she
+had to say to him.
+
+“Is the captain,” asked Nanny, with emphasis, “giving the girl the
+crown?”
+
+Frank knew Nanny’s ways, and guessed that she wished him to get the
+girl out of the room. “Here, my good girl,” said Frank, stepping into
+an adjoining room, “here is not a crown, but a guinea for you. You
+are a kind-hearted lass to lead about a poor blind old woman, who is
+neither kith nor kin to you.”
+
+The girl was delighted both with the guinea and with Frank, and
+immediately began telling him how she came to accompany the old lady to
+Warenne’s lodgings.
+
+In the meanwhile Nanny bade Warenne close the door. “I don’t want,”
+said she, “that poor lass to hear what I am saying. She has nothing of
+the soldier about her, and don’t comprehend the necessity of keeping an
+asy tongue on all occasions, and she might tell tales, and get herself
+and others into trouble. Colonel,” continued she, when she ascertained
+that the door was shut, “I could not rest on my settle till I got to
+you to-night. How should I, when I receives the King’s money as I
+do? There’s going to be a row somewhere on the coast. I should guess
+to-morrow night, but I didn’t hear particulars.”
+
+“Indeed, Nanny,” said Warenne, “what have you heard?”
+
+“I’ll tell your honour,” answered Nanny. “There’s a man been staying
+at my brother’s house these last ten days; a pretty bad one, I reckon.
+I couldn’t make out why he kept staying on so. Well, to-night, just
+about six o’clock, he comes into the kitchen,—with Will Sharpe, whom
+you’ve heard speak of, I dare say, in this town, as a big thief and
+vagabond,—as I suppose ready-dressed for travelling; for Will says to
+him,—
+
+“‘Then you’re off now?’ ‘Yes,’ says he, ‘in less than five minutes;
+my job is done, and well done. We’ve flammed the beaks (that’s the
+magistrates, you know) finely. I was to stay here till the latest
+moment I could this evening, to ascertain that the bloody redcoats—them
+was his words, a nasty blackguard!—was quiet, and nothing suspected,
+and then to get down, you know where, in time to make the necessary
+arrangements for to-morrow.’ ‘You’ll be there,’ says Will, ‘early
+to-morrow morning?’ ‘I’ll be on the Plashetts Green by twelve
+to-night,’ answers t’other, ‘or I’ll know the rights on it.’ With that
+he jumped into his gig or light cart, and went away like a madman. Will
+Sharpe came back into the kitchen, and had some beer, and I did not
+dare to move till he was gone; but at last he went, and I stole out
+into the back-yard, and got my brother’s girl to lead me here.”
+
+“About six did the man set off?” asked Warenne.
+
+“Yes,” answered she, “and I would have been here an hour ago if that
+prying divil of his companion had gone away at first, as he ought. I
+hate a man to sit and drink by himself; it is not neighbourly.”
+
+He was off, then, thought Warenne, before the troops had started; so
+far, so good. Nicholas, too, came the cross-road, so he did not meet
+him.
+
+“But now, Colonel,” said Nanny, interrupting his calculations, “I must
+go, or the girl will get into a scrape at home.”
+
+Warenne asked her if she wanted anything for herself.
+
+“If you mean pay, for doing my duty as a soldier’s widow ought,” said
+Nanny, “I’m above it; but you didn’t mean that, I reckon; for I am told
+you’re quite the gentleman, thof I do think an officer in his Majesty’s
+infantry would have had more delicacy; but no, no, I want nothing;
+we’ll talk of that some other day. Where’s the wench? Betsy! Betsy!”
+
+Betsy returned with a radiant face at having had nonsense talked to her
+for a quarter of an hour by a very handsome captain of dragoons.
+
+“Betsy, where are you?” muttered the old woman; “I didn’t do right to
+send that captain out with you. I heard him give you a guinea, too.
+They are all alike, them captains. I hope he has not turned your head;
+that would be but a bad return for your coming along with me this
+night.”
+
+“Lawk, Nanny!” said Betsy, laughing, “do you think I don’t know the
+value of an officer’s talk, and they quartered here for three months?”
+
+“You are a giddy child, Betsy,” answered Nanny; “but I’ll hope for the
+best.”
+
+Warenne informed Frank of the confirmation given to Nicholas’s story
+by Nanny’s intelligence. “We shall be a match for them yet, I trust,”
+continued he; “but now I must to work. I must send off an express to
+head-quarters—tell the adjutant to have one ready for me. The general
+will not thank me for the step I am about to take; so I must e’en write
+him as conciliatory a letter as I can. Good night.”
+
+Warenne composed his letter with the greatest care; stated his extreme
+reluctance to disobey the orders which he had received; hoped that,
+under the circumstances of the case, he should merely anticipate his
+general’s wishes by the arrangements which he had made to prevent the
+loss of life and destruction of property, which could not fail to be
+consequent on the execution of a plot such as he developed; and added
+the informations of Nicholas and Nanny Rudd.
+
+This done, for the first time since Nicholas’s arrival, he ventured
+to turn his mind wholly to the difficulties of his situation. To the
+charge of disobedience, to the risk of disgrace, when so important an
+object was in view, he had reconciled himself without a struggle; but
+now that he had leisure to reflect, there was much to appal him in the
+enterprise which he had undertaken.
+
+He was about to stake his military character on a single cast;
+to disobey the strict orders of his general, to act upon his own
+responsibility; wherefore, if he failed, he must expect to be dismissed
+from the service. He doubted for a moment whether it would not have
+been wiser to adopt the safe line—obey orders, and avoid danger of
+every sort—but it was only for a moment; the next, his generous nature
+spurned the thought. His self-devotion, however, was tasked to the
+utmost when he contemplated the effect that might be produced on
+Adelaide’s mind by his being disgraced.
+
+Hope, spite of reason, had hitherto remained an inmate of his breast;
+and had whispered that a day might come when he could venture to
+declare to her his passion; but can this, he asked himself, ever take
+place if I am dishonoured? Can I, with a tarnished reputation, ever
+ask her to wed me? or can she ever believe my vows, when I now leave
+this spot, where danger is supposed to threaten, and trust her to the
+protection of any arm but my own?
+
+These ideas, in every variety of form, for a time pressed upon
+Warenne’s heated imagination; but wrestling with the rebellious
+feelings of his heart, he would not suffer his love to unman him.
+His only hope was in success—a poor hope, perhaps; for even success
+might not rescue him from censure for presumption and disregard of
+discipline. Still it was his only hope; he would not, therefore,
+willingly throw it away, by yielding to thoughts which, at the best,
+could but enervate him.
+
+He forced his mind from the reflections which he had allowed to
+bewilder him, and tried to compose himself for the night—how well, let
+those declare who have endured the torments of uncertainty. Certainty,
+even of the worst, may be borne; the condemned criminal sleeps, who is
+to rise to execution; but while hope has power to frame visions for the
+future, which fear shall the next moment dissipate, sleep is chased
+from the eyelids of the unfortunate, and forgetfulness is a boon which
+they are not permitted to enjoy.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ A voi parlo, in cui fanno
+ Si concorde armonia
+ Onesta, senno, onor, bellezza, e gloria;
+ A voi spiego il mio affanno
+ E della pena mia
+ Narro, e’n parte piangendo, acerba istoria.
+
+ TASSO.
+
+Before day-break on the following morning Warenne arose. In his
+midnight meditations he had persuaded himself that before he started
+for Fisherton, he should do well to communicate with Lord Framlingham,
+who possibly might be able to befriend him, should his character be
+aspersed; who, at all events, would thus have it in his power to inform
+Adelaide of the truth, and explain to her the difficulties of his
+position.
+
+Accordingly he bent his course to Epworth, and on being admitted to
+Lord Framlingham, he frankly laid before him the circumstances of his
+case.
+
+The old diplomatist heard Warenne with much attention, praised
+his zeal, approved his measures, and promised that they should be
+represented to ministers in their right light; but, the moment
+afterwards, proceeded to qualify his praise, and explain away his
+promises, with the true refinement of his profession.
+
+“Colonel Warenne must be aware, that he spoke only as an individual;
+that he must not be considered as authorising Colonel W—— in his
+undertaking, for that his official power was limited to its peculiar
+sphere; neither could he hope to influence in any way the opinion which
+the commander-in-chief might be pleased to form upon the subject.”
+
+Warenne smiled within himself at the wiliness of the politician, and
+at his own folly in believing that he could induce him to interest
+himself about one who, according to the rules of probability, might not
+hereafter be of use to him. Preserving, however, his external gravity
+of demeanour, he respectfully bade the noble lord good morning, and
+resolved for the future to depend solely on his own resources.
+
+He was passing through the hall, in order to leave the house, when he
+met Adelaide. The temptation of once again speaking to her, while yet
+he remained a _chevalier sans reproche_, was not to be resisted. He
+followed her into the drawing-room.
+
+She looked upon his care-worn countenance with surprise. “Has
+anything,” she asked hesitatingly, “occurred to harass you? You look
+fatigued and full of anxiety, as though you had been called out in the
+night to take measures against some rioters.”
+
+“You are not far wrong in your conjectures,” answered Warenne; “change
+but the time, and instead of supposing me to have been engaged with
+them the past night, think me about to meet them to-night, and you will
+be right?”
+
+“Are the thoughts, then, of a rural campaign,” demanded Adelaide, more
+gaily, “sufficient to cloud Colonel Warenne’s brow? I thought the
+spirit of so renowned a warrior would have risen at the approach of
+danger.”
+
+“You would scarcely jest, Miss Marston,” replied Warenne, gravely, “if
+you knew the extent of the danger which I apprehend. Houses burnt,
+lives lost, and a town sacked, are not matter of merriment.”
+
+“Heavens! no,” said Adelaide; “but how could I dream of such horrors as
+these? I thought but of some bloodless disturbance, of the same nature
+with those we have lately witnessed. Tell me, if I may know, what makes
+you anticipate such dreadful events?”
+
+Warenne thought that he violated no duty if he seized this chance of
+placing his character in its proper light before Adelaide; he therefore
+simply related to her the occurrences which had taken place, and the
+measures which he had determined to adopt.
+
+“I leave,” said he, as soon as he had finished his explanation, “three
+troops still behind me at Calbury, under the command of Frank, so that
+you will not be destitute of protection.”
+
+“Oh, I am not afraid for myself,” answered Adelaide; “but have you told
+me all? I beg your pardon, if I have asked an impertinent question; do
+not answer it if I have; but there is a tone of desperation in your
+manner which alarms me.”
+
+At this moment it flashed upon Adelaide’s mind that Warenne’s feelings
+might in some way have reference to herself; she therefore hastily
+added, “Forgive me. I am too inquisitive.”
+
+“I know not,” replied Warenne, “why I should withhold from you the
+causes of my uneasiness. You will perceive, that in my present
+position I am forced to act upon my own responsibility, in opposition
+to the express and repeated orders of my commanding officer. Whether
+I succeed in my undertaking, or whether I fail, I make myself liable
+to be brought to a court-martial for a breach of military discipline;
+and I confess that I have not that confidence in General Mapleton,
+which encourages me to hope that he will overlook an opportunity of
+establishing his authority over an officer whom he considers, though
+God knows without reason, as inclined to treat him with impertinence.
+I can hardly look forward to anything but disgrace in this affair,
+view it which way I will. This is not a pleasing reflection, nor one
+that reconciles me to the prospect of a bloody affray with some of
+my misguided fellow-countrymen. I have little enough to boast of;
+but if of any thing, it is my fair fame as a soldier—that lost, I
+am poor indeed;—but forgive me, Miss Marston, I have no right to
+talk thus of myself to you. There is no limit, it would seem, to my
+presumption,—yet, as I have said thus much, let me beg you not to
+condemn me hastily;—when the world points its finger of scorn at me,
+and when I am a dishonoured and ruined man, think of the difficulties
+in which I have been placed, and do not, I beseech you—do not cast me
+from your remembrance as utterly unworthy of all esteem. I can bear
+anything but _that_—_that_ (as he spoke he pressed his hands violently
+upon his eyes, as if to shut out some object of horror), I could not
+bear. You know not what value—but why do I speak thus to you? I am a
+fool, a madman! Pardon me—forget that I have dared to express the wild
+and presumptuous feelings of my heart. I have been wrong in giving
+utterance to them; but I can assure you, that I meant not to have
+spoken, that I did not seek this interview. I will not again betray my
+folly before you. Whatever I may feel, I will bury it in silence. God’s
+mercy protect you!”
+
+Having rapidly and passionately poured forth these broken sentences,
+Warenne rushed from the room, long before Adelaide, who, from the tone
+which had prevailed in their recent meetings, had been little prepared
+for such an avowal, had time to compose herself sufficiently to answer
+him. Ere she had regained her presence of mind, he had mounted his
+horse, and was on his road to Charnstead.
+
+At first Adelaide gave herself up to the happy consciousness of being
+beloved by him to whom she had surrendered the first affections of her
+heart. In spite of all his proud resolutions, he had avowed it; and
+though she knew not when her hopes might be realised, she pictured to
+herself future years of happiness. After a while these bright visions
+faded from her mind, and she was tempted to despond. Warenne would not
+have looked so gloomily upon the case, had he not had reason so to do.
+Even success, she had been told, could hardly justify disobedience
+in military matters; and she herself saw, that no general could be
+responsible for the operations of an army, if each subaltern under
+his command claimed the right to dispose of his own immediate force
+as he pleased. Then she dreaded the effect of disgrace upon Warenne’s
+mind—proud and gallant as he was, he was sensitive on the score of
+honour, to a degree which his military education alone could explain.
+
+By degrees she drew herself again from this train of thought; fixed
+her mind upon his unhesitating sacrifice of himself in the fulfilment
+of his duty; recollected his gallant actions in the Peninsula, which
+had won him his high name; thought of his calm courage in the hour of
+danger, and the almost instinctive sagacity with which he was wont to
+meet it; repeated to herself the many stories to his credit, which
+Henry and Frank had gleaned from the old soldiers of the regiment; and
+comforted herself in the hope of his happy return amid the blessings
+of his rescued fellow-countrymen. His military fault would be pardoned
+for the zeal he would show, and for the ability with which he would
+counteract the designs of the conspirators. She would see him return,
+crowned with fresh laurels, more beloved, more admired, more honoured
+than before.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ There may be joys
+ Which to the strange o’erwhelming of the soul
+ Visit the lover’s breast beyond all others;
+ E’en now, how dearly do I feel there may!
+ But what of them? they are not made for me,
+ The hasty flashes of contending steel
+ Must serve instead of glances of my love.
+
+ JOANNA BAILLIE’S _Basil_.
+
+While Adelaide thus soothed her perturbed spirit, Warenne’s rose as he
+approached the scene of danger. His dark eye sparkled, and his noble
+brow expanded, when he again looked upon his old comrades, with whom he
+had passed triumphantly through so many fields; he turned his mind from
+the busy reminiscences of love, and with that power of abstraction,
+which practical men possess, fixed it on the probable events of the
+coming evening. Adelaide’s form, perhaps, sometimes met his mental eye,
+when it should have fallen upon the serried ranks of armed warriors;
+but he did not suffer even her form to occupy him to the prejudice of
+his duty. Its only effect was to stimulate him to a desire of fresh
+honours, that, whether he stood or fell, he might be deserving of her
+good opinion. He arrived at Charnstead about three o’clock, and found
+there the troop he had sent forward, and the Charnstead troop, neither
+of them having yet started on their route to Fisherton. An express had
+arrived in the morning from Major Stuart, stating that in consequence
+of information he had received, he should only send the Fisherton troop
+as far as Swalesford, a place about five miles from Fisherton, and
+begging Captain Paulet to join them there, in time for them to enter
+Fisherton in a body shortly after dusk. Warenne immediately proceeded
+forward with the two troops, and picked up the Fisherton troop at
+Swalesford; when about a mile from the town, he galloped forward by
+himself, in order to communicate with Stuart about the disposition of
+the troops. He found that officer, and Mr. Seaforth, occupying his old
+quarters at the inn.
+
+“I thought,” said his friend Stuart, holding out his hand, “that yours
+would be the first soldier’s face we should see to-night.”
+
+“And you would rather have seen any other,” answered Warenne laughing.
+“A senior officer is a sad bore on occasions like this. But what shall
+we have to do?”
+
+Stuart laid before him the intelligence he had been able to collect
+since the alarm given by Nicholas, and Seaforth the result of his
+observations and inquiries, which he had unceasingly continued since
+their last interview. Both reports agreed in confirming the account
+of the intended attack upon the town, and stated the force of the
+insurgent peasantry at from seven to eight hundred, which was to be
+joined, shortly before entering the place, by a body of smugglers,
+mounted and well-armed, in number from one hundred and fifty, to two
+hundred. To assist in the defence of the town, Seaforth had sworn in
+as special constables all the most respectable inhabitants, and such
+of the working classes as could be trusted. Warenne, in turn, informed
+them of the troops he brought with him, and of the disposition of
+them which he contemplated. They soon completed their arrangements.
+The soldiers were to be concentrated in the yard of the Cross Keys
+inn, which, as has been said, commanded both the entrances into the
+town. The by-streets, which were not practicable for cavalry, were
+consigned to the care of the constables, of whom a party was ordered
+to remove the women and children from the houses most open to attack.
+Arrangements were made to receive these poor outcasts in the dwellings
+of the wealthier townspeople, and in the parish church. Some of the
+neighbouring gentry who had come in, volunteered to act as scouts,
+and to give notice of the approach of the enemy. These measures being
+taken, Warenne placed himself under Seaforth’s orders.
+
+“I will not, you may depend upon it, call upon you unnecessarily,”
+said Seaforth in return. “Till the work of devastation is commenced,
+or is so evidently on the point of commencement as not to be prevented
+by other means, I would not have you stir. I shall ride to meet the
+fellows, as soon as we hear of their approach, and try to deter them
+from their enterprise; if I fail, I must have recourse to you.”
+
+“You will fail,” said Warenne, “and you will incur great danger in
+meeting them.”
+
+“Very likely,” replied his spirited companion, “but it must be done.”
+
+During this time the three troops had arrived, and Warenne placed them
+for the present in some large farm stables and barns which were at the
+back of the inn. The horses remained bridled, and the men by them,
+ready to act on a moment’s notice. He and Stuart then walked all over
+the town, and carefully examined each street, in order to be certain
+that no barricades were erected in any part, nor preparations made to
+embarrass the soldiery.
+
+It was now past seven o’clock—the constables had brought in the
+inhabitants of the houses which they expected to be fired, and all was
+ready for the reception of the rioters. Eight o’clock struck—nine—ten,
+and Warenne and Seaforth were beginning to doubt whether the night for
+the attack had not been changed, when one of their most advanced scouts
+returned with the intelligence that all the labouring population,
+between Fisherton and the coast, seemed to be collecting on the coast
+road, about three miles from the town.
+
+Soon another and another scout came with similar reports; and lastly
+Nicholas, who had returned from Calbury to the Plashetts at an early
+hour, and had ridden in to be of service to his friends, brought an
+account that a large body of mounted men had come up, and that they
+were marching together on the town. Warenne immediately drew his men
+out in front of the inn. Seaforth rode gently forward to meet the
+insurgents. They had halted to drill their ranks, and their leaders
+were ordering their variously armed forces to their respective places,
+having brought forward to the front the mounted smugglers, who were all
+armed with pistols and a cutlass.
+
+Seaforth, with one or two of his friends, cantered up to them. He
+pulled up short, when within about two horse-lengths of the leading
+rank, and with a loud voice demanded the meaning of the present
+tumultuous assembly, and the cause of their entering Fisherton at such
+an hour of night.
+
+“I warn you,” said he, “that you are breaking the king’s peace, and
+acting contrary to the laws. I am a magistrate, and I charge you in the
+king’s name to disperse immediately.”
+
+“We know you well enough, Mr. Seaforth,” said a rough voice beside
+him, which he had heard before in his life, and which recalled
+unpleasant recollections; “I have reason to know you; take yourself
+off, or perhaps I shall give you reason to know me.”
+
+“Emlett?” exclaimed Seaforth. “Nay then, I fear I shall do little good,
+if you are at the head of this business; I know of old that you are
+not easily shaken from your purpose. Nevertheless, some of these poor
+misguided men may listen to me;” and raising his voice to the highest
+pitch, again he warned them to retire, repeating the words of the Riot
+Act.
+
+“Beware,” said Emlett, “we are not to be trifled with,” then adding a
+tremendous execration, he bade Seaforth “begone, or he would settle old
+scores with him there as he stood.”
+
+“You will do as you please,” answered the gallant magistrate.
+“Disperse, I pray you, my men; we are prepared to receive you—we have a
+strong body of dragoons just arrived.”
+
+“Take this, then, you prattling fool,” growled Emlett, exasperated at
+his undaunted defiance of his threats, and alarmed lest his address
+should shake his followers; and he fired his pistol at his head.
+Happily for all who knew, and what was the same thing, valued Seaforth,
+he missed his aim, and the voice of his intrepid antagonist was again
+heard—
+
+“Even now, deluded men—” but it was soon drowned in the savage
+exclamations of Emlett, who, with the most horrible curses at himself
+for his awkwardness, called out to his comrades—
+
+“Cut him down, kill him, stop his tongue any way you can,” at the same
+time spurring his horse at him, and raising his cutlass to strike him.
+Seaforth just wheeled his horse round upon his haunches in time to save
+himself, and galloped back at speed into the town. Emlett and his men
+pursued him a little way, and then returned to the main body. The first
+person he met was Warenne, who had advanced a short distance in front
+of his men.
+
+“Colonel Warenne,” said he, “I believe I must call on you,—yet wait one
+moment.” The rioters were now within the street.
+
+“Firemen,” cried Emlett, “to your work, and do you, my men,” speaking
+to the peasantry, “get possession of the by-streets; we’ll manage the
+soldiers.”
+
+It had been his plan, as was afterwards ascertained, to have entered
+the town before the inhabitants were aware of his approach; and having
+surrounded with his men the different public-houses at which the
+soldiers were billeted, to have disarmed them, or at least prevented
+their assembling; and then taking possession of the streets, to have
+systematically plundered the town from one end to the other. Finding
+the townspeople on their guard, and hearing from Seaforth that the
+troops were prepared to receive his attack, he gave up the former
+part of his design. But not believing that any increase of force had
+arrived, and calculating that the troop which in the common course of
+events would have replaced that previously quartered at Fisherton,
+would not know the ground, and therefore would be unable to act
+with decision;—being also himself an outlaw—being recognised by
+Seaforth—with all to gain, and nothing to lose, he now determined to
+fall vigorously on the soldiers with his band of smugglers, who he knew
+would stand by him to the last gasp.
+
+“Comrades!” shouted he, “it is not the first time we’ve had a brush
+with the red-coats—forward!” and spurring his horse, with the whole
+body of his associates at his heels, he galloped up the town. At the
+same moment a glare of light burst from three or four neighbouring
+houses, and discovered a party of constables retiring in confusion from
+the post they had been directed to occupy.
+
+“The police! down with them, cut them down!” was heard at once from an
+hundred voices; and in an instant the wretched special constables were
+knocked down, and ridden over by their fierce pursuers.
+
+“Now, Colonel Warenne,” said Seaforth—before he could finish his
+sentence, Warenne was at the head of his men.
+
+“Stuart, keep one troop in reserve, the other two come on with
+me—steady, my men—forwards, charge.” The two bodies of cavalry clashed
+together. The soldiers had not had time nor space to get to their full
+speed; their charge therefore lost the effect it would have had, if the
+order had been received a minute sooner. It was sufficient to check the
+advance of the rioters, and no more. They had still to conquer their
+antagonists, who in this sort of encounter, hand to hand, and man to
+man, were opponents not to be despised. For some minutes the conflict
+was savagely and equally maintained on both sides. The smugglers fought
+desperately, as men with halters around their necks. After a while the
+better horsemanship and swordsmanship of the dragoons began to prevail,
+rendered doubly effective by the consciousness of superiority, which
+habitual use gives a man in the practice of his profession. At first,
+by the light of the blazing houses, the soldiers, easily distinguished
+by their bright shakos from the smugglers, who had fur caps on their
+heads, seemed completely outnumbered. They clung, however, closely
+together, and amid all the flashing of swords, and firing of pistols,
+moved steadily on, a compact, well-disciplined body; by degrees they
+appeared more adequate to the other party in point of numbers, and
+to be pressing their adversaries back; still the conflict raged—the
+smugglers rallied—for a moment even turned the tide of war in their
+favour. It was their last effort. Presently one, and then another of
+them withdrew himself from the _mêlée_, and, with frocks stained with
+gore, galloped out of the town. Soon two or three small parties from
+the same side fled hastily in a similar direction.
+
+On this the soldiers, perceiving their advantage, redoubled their
+efforts, and fairly established their superiority, though some of the
+most desperate of the smugglers, Emlett among the number, with his
+head uncovered, and streaming with blood, fought on, without receding
+an inch. At last he, and his more immediate followers falling, the
+remainder seemed to give up all hope at once; and turning their horses’
+heads, endeavoured to save themselves by the rapidity of their flight.
+The dragoons pursued them without mercy to the end of the street, both
+parties dashing through the mob of peasantry, who were coming forward
+to the support of their friends. There, having received orders from
+Warenne on no account to venture into the open country, the dragoons
+wheeled round, and returned to clear the town of the foot people. But
+these last, as soon as they discovered the result of the fight, did not
+wait to be dispersed. Throwing away their weapons, and plunging into
+the by-streets, they made the best of their way to the fields, and to
+darkness.
+
+After the lapse of about an hour from the time that Emlett had fired at
+Seaforth, the town was restored to comparative quiet, except where the
+inhabitants were busily engaged in quenching the flames of the burning
+houses, and where the groans of the dying and wounded fell sadly upon
+the ear.
+
+Above thirty of the smugglers had been killed, and four or five
+soldiers. The wounded of the two parties were in an inverse proportion,
+there being several of the dragoons who had received severe injuries,
+and not above half-a-dozen of the smugglers, and these so dreadfully
+hurt, as to forbid all hope of their living beyond a few hours; all
+those who had sufficient strength to do so, had dragged themselves out
+of the town.
+
+Emlett was not quite dead when Warenne and Seaforth went over the field
+of battle. He survived to throw one look of stern defiance on the
+latter, and to strike out his arm against him with impotent fury; then
+with a half-uttered imprecation, he turned his face to the ground, and
+died. In a few hours more the flames were all suppressed; the wounded
+removed to a place where they might receive proper attendance; and the
+soldiery, with the exception of one troop retained on duty for the
+protection of the town, established in comfortable quarters.
+
+The night passed without disturbance. The following morning Warenne
+went round the town with Seaforth, took minutes of the devastation it
+had suffered, inspected the wounded men, gathered from the smugglers
+yet alive what information they were inclined to give, and forwarded an
+exact and detailed account of the whole transaction to head-quarters.
+After which, leaving the Charnstead and Fisherton troops under Stuart
+to guard the town, escort prisoners, &c., and directing the other
+to return as quickly as possible to its former station, he himself
+hastened back to Calbury, in order that he might be absent as short a
+time as possible from his command.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ A soldier’s reputation is too fine
+ To be exposed, e’en to the smallest cloud.
+
+ JOANNA BAILLIE’S _Basil_.
+
+It will be remembered that Warenne, before he left Calbury, had written
+to General Mapleton a detailed account of the reasons which induced
+him to break through the repeated orders he had received. Seaforth
+had also sent to him, as general of the district, a formal request
+for assistance, as soon as he had been apprised of the outrages in
+contemplation. Through some error of the messenger, this last letter
+did not reach General Mapleton till the day after the riot had taken
+place, or it is possible that he might have pursued a different line
+of conduct. As it was, the receipt of Warenne’s letter, unaccompanied
+by the explanation which that of Seaforth would have given to it,
+irritated him beyond all power of endurance.
+
+He was not only thoroughly exasperated at what he deemed Warenne’s
+presumption, but most unjustly imagined that he could trace throughout
+his proceedings an intention of putting a personal indignity upon him,
+and of accusing him indirectly of incapacity in his command.
+
+Under this impression, he wrote to the Horse Guards in the strongest
+possible terms, desiring that Warenne might be immediately brought to
+a court-martial; and requesting, in case of refusal, that he might be
+allowed to retire from his appointment. Colonel Warenne’s conduct, he
+observed, was the most inexcusable and wanton act of disobedience he
+had ever witnessed in the service. At the very moment when he had, in
+consequence of particular information received, commanded that officer
+to concentrate his forces in Calbury, he had chosen, without any
+requisition from a magistrate, on the evidence of a frightened country
+gentleman, and a foolish old woman, to leave his post, and set at
+hazard the safety of the important town which had been entrusted to his
+protection. He wrote, he said, before ill success could aggravate or
+good success justify the steps which Colonel Warenne had taken; looking
+merely to the necessity of enforcing obedience in inferior officers, if
+their superiors were to be made responsible for the execution of the
+duties they superintended. He added, that in anticipation of the orders
+of the commander-in-chief, he had directed that Colonel Warenne should
+be placed under arrest the moment he returned to Calbury. In fact, the
+orderly who had conveyed Warenne’s despatch to head-quarters brought
+back the order for his arrest; and Frank, in the exercise of the
+temporary command which had devolved on him, was constrained to execute
+that order upon his brother.
+
+Warenne arrived late at night. Frank was waiting to receive him. The
+first few minutes of their interview were occupied with the relation
+of the transactions at Fisherton; but the time soon arrived, when it
+was necessary that the latter should fulfil his melancholy task. His
+brother demanded the general’s answer. Frank held it out to him in
+mournful silence. Warenne read it.
+
+“Arrest!” said he; “does he put me under arrest? This is a strong
+measure, indeed; he might have heard me, surely, before he took so
+decided a step; it is, of course, preparatory to a court-martial. Well,
+Frank, there’s my sword; I would sooner yield it up to you than to any
+other living being:” poor Frank burst into tears. “Nay, do not weep, I
+would not for worlds have done otherwise than I have done; and though
+disgrace is hard to bear, it is much less so, when not deserved. I
+suppose they will hardly put me on my trial for desertion of my post,
+for that charge will affect life. General Mapleton will be satisfied
+with less than that. Come what come may, they will not make me out a
+coward; _au reste_, I must take a soldier’s chance.”
+
+The next morning Warenne’s arrest became generally known; and Henry,
+anxious that his sister should not be informed of it by an indifferent
+person, rode over to Epworth with the news. He found her pale and
+agitated (for since her last interview with Warenne, she had given
+fuller indulgence to her feelings, legitimatised, as it were, by his
+avowal of his love for her), eager to learn the success of the troops
+at Fisherton, and scarcely allowing herself to doubt of its being such
+as to call forth approbation upon him who had commanded them; yet
+dreading, she knew not why, some harsh measure from General Mapleton.
+Hope had predominated over fear, and she was bitterly disappointed
+by Henry’s intelligence. For a moment she gave way to grief; but
+recovering herself—
+
+“Henry,” said she, “thank you, thank you for coming to me at this
+moment. I need not now tell you how truly you have read my heart; but I
+must not be selfish. Think no more of me, but of him on whom the whole
+weight of the blow has fallen; it will crush him, I fear, he is so
+sensitive to even the semblance of dishonour.” Henry strove to comfort
+his sister. “His friends must support him,” added she; “they must not
+let that gallant spirit sink.”
+
+Her brother promised to do his best. He assured her that she viewed
+matters too despondingly; that a man was not disgraced by being put on
+his trial, but only by the condemnation of the court; that he would
+see Warenne on his return, and endeavour to speak comfort to him,
+though he must confess, that as yet his ideas on that head threatened
+to concentrate themselves in the simple Americanism, “G—d pretty
+particularly d—n” General Mapleton.
+
+Adelaide smiled amid her tears at Henry’s projected mode of
+consolation; and he, glad to find that his nonsense had succeeded
+in calling forth a smile, went off with a lightened heart to fulfil
+his commission; a commission, as he then thought, easy of execution,
+but which appeared to him in a very different light, when he became
+aware of the irritated state of Warenne’s mind, and his almost morbid
+apprehensiveness of disgrace.
+
+The interval which elapsed between the arrest and the sitting of the
+court-martial was not long. The commander-in-chief, from a recollection
+of Warenne’s services and character, had acceded to General Mapleton’s
+request with much reluctance, which was increased when he received the
+despatches from Fisherton, most punctiliously forwarded to the Horse
+Guards by the general, who though a weak was an honourable man. To
+mitigate the severity of the proceeding, he expedited the necessary
+arrangements as much as possible. He forthwith sent officers to form a
+court, and desired General Mapleton to deliver in his charges. It is
+unnecessary to record the forms, &c. of the court; suffice it to say
+that General Mapleton made his accusation, limiting it to the act of
+disobedience, without cause; and that Warenne in his defence, admitting
+the act of disobedience, rested his claim to an acquittal upon the
+impossibility, under the circumstances of the case, of his acting
+otherwise, with a due regard to his majesty’s service. He produced at
+the same time a letter of thanks from the inhabitants of Fisherton,
+and the testimony of Seaforth and Nicholas, as to the necessity of the
+line of conduct which he had adopted. The question lay within a small
+compass, and the court soon finished its sittings. The result, however,
+of its inquiries was not declared. Warenne was doomed to undergo a
+period of agonising uncertainty.
+
+It is not for a civilian to impugn the policy of military
+arrangements, but one may perhaps be allowed to say, that unless
+some strong reason can be adduced for the suspense, which an officer
+awaiting the sentence of a court-martial is forced to suffer, the
+infliction of it is a needless piece of cruelty. Why should not the
+sentence of a court-martial be confirmed, or annulled, and in either
+case declared, as soon as time had been given for its consideration
+at the Horse Guards? In the present case, weeks intervened before
+Warenne’s fate was decided, during which his feelings were outraged
+and lacerated in a manner totally inconsistent with real justice. Not
+only had he to combat with his own over-excited susceptibility on the
+score of dishonour, and his dread of appearing disgraced in the eyes
+of Adelaide, but with the abuse and calumnies of the public press, or
+rather that part of the public press which is ever ready to support
+the cause of the rebellious and licentious against the control of the
+powers that be.
+
+The radical papers failed not to paint the affair at Fisherton in
+such colours as to make it seem an infringement of the liberty of the
+subject, and a massacre which called aloud for vengeance. In vain did
+the juster newspapers point out that night was not a proper time for
+people to meet in great numbers, nor arms the proper accompaniment of
+such assemblages. In vain did they tell of the attempt on the life of
+Seaforth, and of houses in flames before a sword had been drawn. In
+vain did they argue that the poor inhabitants of Fisherton had rights—a
+right to dwell in security; a right to enjoy their little property
+without molestation; a right to protection from the government of their
+country. These truths would not help the editors of the * * and * * *
+to sell their papers; they therefore refused to listen to them; and,
+on the contrary, filled their columns with reports of what they called
+the profligate waste of human life by the soldiery, and vehemently
+expressed hopes, that Colonel Warenne might meet with immediate and
+condign punishment. This was a species of torment to which Warenne
+had not looked forward. It had been pain to him to hear his actions
+arraigned in a court of justice; but his defence followed close upon
+the accusation, and he had been enabled to bear it with fortitude. To
+be represented to the people of England as a monster thirsting for the
+blood of his fellow-countrymen, and deserving of universal execration,
+was almost more than he could endure.
+
+Henry and Frank were unremitting in their endeavours to comfort him;
+yet no words, or arguments they could use, availed to remove from him
+a sensation of despair. He acquiesced in all they said, but as one who
+heard them not,—except indeed when they pressed him to go with them to
+Epworth; then he spoke readily and positively. “I will not show myself
+to Miss Marston a dishonoured man.” In vain did they urge that he was
+not, could not be disgraced, until condemned by the sentence of the
+court, which had sat in judgment on his conduct. He would answer,—“I
+will admit that I am not disgraced by the word of authority, but do you
+think it nothing to have one’s name called in question? to be made the
+sport of the papers—no, not their sport, but their execration? Venal
+they may be—wicked they may be; still they are read by many—believed
+by many.” If they argued, that no one who knew him would credit any
+report injurious to his character upon the assumptions of a newspaper,
+he would thank them for their kind opinions, but refused to be
+persuaded that he could ever resume the place he had formerly held in
+public estimation, or that his character could ever be restored to its
+primitive purity.
+
+One only circumstance seemed to alleviate the anguish of his wounded
+feelings, and this was the conduct of the soldiers of his regiment.
+On the return of the troop which had been engaged at Fisherton, the
+men had naturally expatiated on their colonel’s activity and gallantry
+before their comrades; consequently, when his arrest was made known,
+and the recompense he received was seen in immediate and strong
+contrast with the services he had rendered, one feeling of indignation
+and resentment pervaded the whole regiment; threatening for a moment to
+manifest itself in some mode inconsistent with military discipline.
+
+Luckily for their reputation and for his, Frank’s bawman, an old
+campaigner, gave his master some intimation of their intentions, and
+Frank desired him to tell his friends that they would best show their
+regard for his brother, and most effectually gratify him, if they
+proved the high state of discipline to which they had been brought
+under his command, by performing their several duties, with, if
+possible, increased zeal and patience, during his temporary suspension
+from authority. The soldiers listened readily to advice emanating from
+such a source, and the consequence was, that never, from Warenne’s
+first joining the regiment, had there existed so little room for
+censure, or such cheerful and exact compliance with every order, as
+from the time of his arrest to the promulgation of the sentence of
+the court-martial. This proof of the affection of his soldiers was to
+Warenne a real comfort and support.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ There’s a thanklessness
+ In our fallen nature that too lightly holds
+ The good too lightly won. Fortune’s minion,
+ Whose pamper’d sense the luscious banquet courts,
+ Ere he can say, “I hunger,” coldly thanks
+ The bounteous Giver for his daily bread;
+ And hearts that have not unrequited, loved,
+ Feel not the bliss of loving, loved again.
+ ’Tis Cupid’s wanton fashion still to vex
+ His dearest vot’ries, that they may exalt
+ His tyrant godhead by a truer worship,
+ More pure, more holy, sober, strong, and lasting.
+
+ _Unedited Poem._
+
+About a month after the termination of the court-martial, Henry,
+finding that all endeavours were fruitless to restore Warenne to
+cheerfulness, and that his unceasing anxiety was wearing out at once
+his body and mind, determined again to communicate with Adelaide. He
+rode over to Epworth, and told her his firm conviction, that unless
+some means were discovered of diverting Warenne’s thoughts from the
+channel in which they were running, his life or his reason would be
+endangered. He had besought him to come to Epworth, but he would not
+hear of it.
+
+Adelaide was not wholly unprepared for this intelligence; she so
+thoroughly understood Warenne’s character, that in some measure
+she expected it, and she felt that the time was come when she must
+herself make an effort, or permit the happiness of both parties to be
+sacrificed. She asked Henry if he thought Warenne would come to Epworth
+at _her_ request. Her brother said, that with her permission he would
+make the trial. She authorised him to do so.
+
+Henry departed. Not a word fell from her lips to stay him, for she
+wished not to unsay that which she had spoken. Yet when he was gone,
+she remained transfixed to the spot where he had left her, alarmed
+at her own boldness; confounded at the change one short moment had
+made in her fortunes. The tramp of Henry’s horse galloping down the
+avenue recalled her to self-possession, and she soon taught herself
+to rejoice in the step she had taken. The world, thought the generous
+girl, might blame me, if it knew of my request; but he will not,—for he
+loves me. Love will plead my cause, if I have been too forward,—love,
+which I should ill deserve, did I permit a fear of the world, or my own
+false pride to close my lips, when, as I believe, and trust, and hope,
+one word from them can cheer his gallant spirit, and win him back to
+happiness.
+
+Henry found Warenne brooding over his misfortunes, sad and dispirited
+as usual; but his dark eye lighted up, and the blood crimsoned his
+cheek, as he listened to Adelaide’s message.
+
+“Your sister wish me to go to Epworth? Impossible!” said he.
+
+Henry assured him of the fact. A request from her was not to be
+refused, and though Warenne had determined not to quit his apartment
+while yet a cloud should remain upon his reputation, he at once made
+ready to depart.
+
+A few minutes before, and he would instinctively have shrunk from the
+broad glare of day; but now he passed unheeding beneath the sun’s
+meridian splendour, for his heart was full of feelings he could not
+utterly suppress, and his head busied with surmises as to Adelaide’s
+motives in urging her request. Could it be that she was interested in
+his fate? he dared not cherish the hope. Yet why should she wish to
+see him? Alas, Henry had informed her of his wretchedness, and in the
+kindness of her nature, and because she felt that her kindness would
+not now be misinterpreted, she sought to amuse him, and divert him from
+his sorrows. This latter idea predominated when he reached Epworth.
+
+He found Adelaide alone. She was prepared for the task she had imposed
+upon herself, and though her heart beat quickly as she heard his well
+known step, she advanced to welcome him with an unfaltering voice and
+apparent composure.
+
+“Will you pardon me, Colonel Warenne,” said she, “for the liberty I
+have taken in requesting you to come and see me?”
+
+“Miss Marston need not ask Colonel Warenne’s pardon for her kindness to
+him,” was his formal and measured reply; for he feared to be thought
+capable of presuming upon the kindness which he thus acknowledged.
+
+Adelaide hesitated before she spoke again; the melancholy tone of his
+voice unnerved her; forcing herself however to proceed, after a pause
+she resumed,—
+
+“My brother tells me that you will not listen to reason, but torment
+yourself with visions of disgrace impending over you from this
+court-martial. Will you let me chide you for your folly?”
+
+“Folly!” ejaculated Warenne, keeping his eyes on the ground.
+
+“Yes,” repeated Adelaide, “folly; you cannot think it wisdom to imagine
+disaster, and suffer under its pressure, when in all probability the
+evil you anticipate will never reach you, and even if it should arrive,
+cannot injure you in the manner you apprehend. Whatever may be the
+sentence of the court, every fair, every humane person must approve of
+your conduct.”
+
+“Heaven bless you for these words of kindness!” replied Warenne,
+despondingly; “but you say what you wish me to believe, rather than
+what you believe yourself.”
+
+“No,” said Adelaide, with much animation, “I speak as I think—as I
+feel.”
+
+Warenne raised his eyes from the ground, and looking sadly on her,
+continued, “I once told you, in a moment of forgetfulness, which I
+trust you have pardoned, that there is no person whose good opinion I
+so much ambition. I am deeply sensible of your goodness.”
+
+“When you first spoke the words you have just repeated,” said Adelaide,
+reproachfully, “you did not speak with the cold formality you now do.”
+
+The colour rushed to Warenne’s face, but he restrained his feelings.
+“I spoke in passion then,” said he, “and I speak coldly now, because
+I dare not trust myself to use the language my heart would dictate;
+besides I am not what I was. I had then an unsullied character.”
+
+“Must I repeat,” rejoined Adelaide, “that in my estimation your
+character stands as high as ever?—but”—she paused for an instant,
+and then continued, “you must pardon my boldness,—but I cannot help
+doubting, whether your grief is solely caused by your apprehension of
+disgrace.”
+
+Warenne would not deny the truth, and he could not acknowledge it,
+without in some measure trespassing, as he conceived, upon the kindness
+of one who, to soothe his sorrows, had perhaps overstepped the strict
+bounds of prudence; he preserved therefore silence, and she proceeded:—
+
+“Your hesitation confirms me in my opinion, and now I recall to mind
+(as she spoke, her heart beat almost audibly, and the eloquent blood
+mantled her very brows, at the outrage she forced herself to inflict
+upon her maiden modesty), that some weeks ago, long before this present
+business occupied your thoughts, when I asked you if you were ill, you
+replied, that you were ‘ill in mind, and harassed, because you could
+not determine to pursue a certain line of conduct you were anxious to
+adopt, lest in the attempt to acquire your own individual happiness,
+which you confessed to be at stake, you should injure another
+person;’—perhaps you are still undecided?”
+
+Again she paused, but not as before, overpowered by the struggle within
+her breast. The Rubicon was passed, and—she sat before Warenne, calm
+and pale, with her head proudly thrown back, and her dark eye glancing
+with the consciousness of single-minded innocence, as though she dared
+the world to look into her heart, or question its purity.
+
+He turned a wondering and admiring gaze upon the beautiful being who
+thus questioned him, as it were with authority, and answered slowly,
+“No, I have no indecision now to torture me; my path is clear before
+me, and a joyless one it is.”
+
+“I had guessed as much,” resumed Adelaide, “from your compressed lips,
+and sterner manner, even had you not acknowledged it. Am I equally
+right in my further surmise that you have decided against yourself,
+and that, not because you are convinced of its being your duty so to
+do under the circumstances of the case, but because the circumstances
+themselves have changed—because, though the benefit to yourself, in the
+world’s opinion at least, may be greater, you consider that you have
+less right to ask it of the person?”
+
+Warenne interposed. “Miss Marston, you cannot know—you cannot
+understand—yet you assuredly speak the truth.”
+
+Adelaide continued. “Have you forgotten your conversation with me
+the last time we met? Might not that help me to read the riddle of
+your thoughts? and now (a deep blush again resuming the empire of her
+cheek, as she in a clear low tone, but with rapid utterance, made the
+demand)—that person, is it not myself?—that purpose, was it not to ask
+my hand?”
+
+Warenne flung himself at her feet. “Pardon, pardon my presumption,”
+said he, “I had, indeed, such aspiring hopes, before fortune raised
+you far above me, and before your father by his manner implied his
+disapprobation of my pretensions; but I have endeavoured to check and
+conceal them, as in honour I felt bound to do, and since this late
+unhappy affair, more than ever. You now force me to speak. You must,
+therefore, hear me, though the next moment you drive me from your
+presence. I have loved you almost from the first hour that we met. I
+love you now, fervently, fondly, passionately. I honour you as one
+of the noblest of living beings. I would peril every earthly thing I
+possess, to know that I hold a place in your affections. As I hope
+for mercy, the bitterness of my present sorrows arises, I will not
+say, solely, for honour is ever the soldier’s idol, but, principally,
+from the consciousness that henceforth I may not dare to think of you;
+pardon my presumptuous words, you have wrung them from me.”
+
+“I will pardon you, now that you have spoken,” replied Adelaide, with
+a faltering voice, and relapsing into her wonted timidity of manner,
+“though, perhaps, had you remained silent (a sweet smile of reproach
+strove with the tears which trembled in her dark eyelashes), I should
+not have forgiven you. You do not deserve forgiveness, for you would
+have sacrificed”—she hesitated—“your happiness to your vanity.”
+
+Warenne seized the hand she tremblingly held out to him.
+
+“Will you then listen to me?” asked he impetuously; “but no, I dream—it
+cannot be!”
+
+“Must all the assurances come from me?” rejoined Adelaide, fixing her
+tearful eyes upon the ground.
+
+“Oh, pardon me, the transition from despair to hope is so sudden that
+I can scarce believe it—but,” said he inquiringly, “you said you would
+listen to me. Will you—can you?”
+
+“I have not actually said so,” replied Adelaide timidly, “but I can—I
+will.”
+
+Warenne doubted no longer, but gave himself up to the full certainty of
+his happiness, while again and again he told Adelaide the tale she knew
+full well, but was nothing loth to hear.
+
+From that moment fortune seemed to smile on Warenne. He had hardly
+reached his quarters when a letter arrived from the secretary to
+the commander-in-chief, informing him, that the king’s decision was
+forwarded to the commanding officer of the regiment; and that he hoped
+Colonel Warenne would be gratified with its purport. It was to the
+effect, that, though the act of disobedience was proved, (as, indeed,
+it had been admitted by Colonel Warenne himself,) yet, in consideration
+of the peculiar circumstances of the case, and the great zeal and
+ability manifested by Colonel Warenne, his majesty deemed it right
+(carefully guarding against such a construction of his sentence as
+might tend to the commission of similar breaches of discipline for the
+future,) to omit the penalty by course of law devolving upon him for
+the act of disobedience; and further ordered, that his thanks might be
+publicly expressed to him, by the officer in present command of the
+regiment, in proof of his approbation of Colonel Warenne’s endeavours
+to preserve the peace of his subjects.
+
+Warenne’s heart bounded lightly as he read the welcome note:—“Thank
+Heaven!” he exclaimed, “I can now honourably ask Adelaide to be mine;”
+and hastily inclosing it to her, with a few lines expressive of his own
+happy feelings, he despatched it without delay to Epworth.
+
+The night was passed in a state of bewildered excitement, amid the
+congratulations of friends and delightful anticipations of the future.
+On the morrow the regiment was formed in square in the market-place.
+Thousands of people soon collected around the soldiery, and every
+window and house-roof that overlooked the scene became thronged; for
+Warenne’s activity in the protection of the people of Fisherton, and
+mild conduct in command of his regiment at Calbury, had interested all
+hearts in his favour.
+
+Frank, as the officer in command, came forward with his brother into
+the centre of the square. Instantly the hum of the voices around was
+hushed, and a silence pervaded the whole assembly,—so still, and
+perfect, that every syllable of the despatches, which Frank immediately
+proceeded to read, in a clear though occasionally faltering voice,
+was distinctly heard by the surrounding multitudes. At the former
+part of them, wherein it was recited that Colonel Warenne was proved
+guilty of an act of disobedience, there appeared a look of anxiety
+upon the countenances of some of the bystanders, who feared lest they
+had been misinformed as to the true purport of the sentence; but by
+degrees all brows cleared. Frank declared his Majesty’s approval of his
+brother’s conduct, and restored to him his sword. Then (but not till
+then) was the attention of the assembly interrupted. The blacksmith of
+the regiment, who was the father of the corps, and its pride for his
+various exploits, was seen to raise his hand, and in an instant there
+arose one loud, heart-given cheer from every soldier in the regiment.
+This was too much for Warenne—he burst into tears; he soon, however,
+recovered his self-possession, and thanked his brother officers, and
+brother soldiers, for the kind interest they had taken in his fate;
+then resuming his command of the regiment, he hastened to dismiss it,
+that he might fly on the wings of love to Epworth. At his door he found
+Lord Framlingham’s carriage; in his lodgings Lord Framlingham and
+Adelaide. Her fond and faithful eye had witnessed his restoration to
+honour.
+
+It need hardly be said, that Lord Framlingham’s consent was not
+withheld, when he found that Adelaide’s affections were fixed on
+Warenne, nor that their marriage took place in the proper course
+of time. No accident occurred to prevent their happiness, and they
+are now continuing to enjoy it in as great, or perhaps greater,
+perfection than when they were first united. Warenne has resigned
+the lieutenant-colonelcy of his regiment, though he is ready to
+take the field, should war again break out. Stuart has succeeded to
+the lieutenant-colonelcy; Frank to the majority vacant by Stuart’s
+promotion. Henry is in parliament,—a liberal politician, but abstaining
+from the full expression of his sentiments from regard to his father,
+who is opposed to every sort of change. Seaforth and Warenne are become
+intimate friends, and Nicholas not unfrequently drops in at Epworth,
+when the best preserves are shot, or favourite fox-coverts drawn in
+the neighbourhood, or when a severe south-wester prevents the usual
+supply of fish at Fisherton market; while last, but we trust not least
+in the affection of our reader, Nanny Rudd is—not united to Frank, as
+might be presumed from the long flirtation which existed between them,
+but quietly established in the lodge at Epworth, with Betsy to wait on
+her—her greatest pleasure to talk a little soldiering with Warenne,
+Frank, or Henry, whenever they can listen to her, and to explain to
+them the superiority of (Ruddicè) “the _fut_ over the _os_;” (Anglicè)
+of the infantry over the cavalry.
+
+
+
+
+AN OLD TALE,
+
+AND OFTEN TOLD.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ Amor che a null’ amato, amar perdona
+ Mi prese del costui piacer si forte,
+ Che, come vedi, ancor non m’abandona.
+
+ DANTE.
+
+Of late years education has become a subject of general care and
+attention. But there may be excess even in so amiable a feeling as the
+devotion of a parent to a child; that very devotion may be productive
+of mischief to its object. No pains are spared in cultivating talents,
+in giving grace, accomplishments, useful information, deep learning;
+but it may be a question whether the wholesome training of the feelings
+is as judiciously attended to as that of the understanding. May not
+the very importance attached to all concerning the young, lead them to
+think too much of themselves? Unless they are early taught to consider
+the feelings of others, is not one strong motive for controlling their
+own (that most difficult and most necessary of all lessons) utterly
+neglected? May not the excessive care taken to preserve the purity of
+the weaker sex sometimes lead to consequences the most opposite?
+
+When the follies, the frailties, the weaknesses, of their nature are
+so carefully concealed from them, how can they acquire the habit of
+regulating feelings, the very existence of which they have never
+learned, and against the errors of which, therefore, they can never
+have been cautioned?
+
+“’Tis an old tale, and often told;” yet, perhaps, the frequent
+occurrence of such events as are related in the following story may
+induce one to look back to the possible causes of their frequency.
+
+Colonel Fitz-Eustace was a person peculiarly calculated to inspire
+an enthusiastic passion to a warm-hearted and devoted girl. He was a
+soldier, and had but lately returned from the seat of war. The fame
+of his exploits had preceded his arrival, and in the social circle
+to which the young Eleanor Morton was admitted, as she emerged from
+girlhood to womanhood, he was received as one of the brave defenders of
+his native land, to whom England owed her eminent position in the scale
+of nations.
+
+Although military glory is in itself almost a passport to the female
+heart, its effect is certainly enhanced when the outward appearance is
+correspondingly heroic—and Colonel Fitz-Eustace looked like a hero. The
+commanding step, the lofty brow, the dark flashing eye, which might
+almost gaze on the sun without being dazzled; the deep, clear, sonorous
+voice, the rapid yet distinct utterance, which seemed as if it could
+make its commands heard and obeyed, through the roar of cannon and the
+din of battle, combined to form the _beau ideal_ of a warrior. And if
+that flashing eye should invariably beam with every softer expression,
+when it dwelt on one favoured object,—if that clear deep voice should
+suddenly become modulated to the low thrilling tone of tenderness when
+it addressed one person, what marvel if the bewildered girl yielded up
+her whole soul to the new and engrossing feeling which stole upon her,
+under the mask of admiration and gratitude!
+
+If ever love, fervent, pure, intense, found its shrine in the heart
+of woman, it did in that of Eleanor Moreton. But Colonel Fitz-Eustace
+was poor, and it was not till after many years of constancy on both
+sides that her parents consented to their union. She had passed long
+months of absence, long days of sickening hope, long nights of watching
+when, by the death of a distant relation, Colonel Fitz-Eustace became
+heir presumptive to the earldom of Sotheron, and in the mean time the
+possession of a competency which enabled their marriage to take place.
+
+Alas! it was not for Eleanor to know unmixed happiness. Climate and
+severe service had undermined her husband’s constitution; and although
+they both fancied that the life of untroubled serenity they had before
+them would restore him to health, she had the mortification to see him
+daily become weaker, paler, thinner. She could not blind herself to
+his illness; but she fancied in the autumn that the clear fresh air of
+winter would brace his feeble frame; in the winter, that the mildness
+of spring would give him renewed vigour; in the spring, that more
+settled weather would confirm his health; in summer, that autumn would
+bring the desired change.
+
+When, however, that autumn came, she had really to sit by his sick
+bed, to smooth his pillow, to watch his waning strength, and at length
+to hear him, in distinct audible words, speak of their approaching
+separation. She had never, even in her imagination, admitted such an
+idea, far less ever embodied it in actual language. When first he spoke
+she tried to smile,—a faint incredulous smile. But no! She looked
+on his haggard cheek, and the appalling truth was there too visibly
+written. She sat motionless, speechless. Nor did tears come to her
+relief till he alluded to the prospect of her becoming a mother—then
+the floodgates were opened—she sobbed convulsively, she covered his
+emaciated hand with kisses—she hid her head.
+
+From that moment she never left his room; she scarcely ever took her
+eyes off him. She would not allow any of her family to be summoned; for
+she seemed to dread the participation of another in her attendance;
+she would have been jealous of his receiving attention or service from
+any hand but her own. She wished to catch every sound of his voice, to
+hoard up each word, each look, in her memory, as a treasure for after
+years. The moment came,—he died, and she survived.
+
+Three months afterwards she became the widowed mother of a boy. That
+moment of rapture, when a mother’s eyes are blessed with a sight of her
+first-born, was to her a moment of agony. Then her loss seemed to burst
+upon her with redoubled force. She thought of the happiness she had
+anticipated, of the tenderness with which her husband would have hailed
+the intelligence of her safety, of the pride with which he would have
+looked upon his boy; and she almost turned away in anguish.
+
+This was but a passing feeling. The next instant she clasped the infant
+to her bosom; she felt as if the beloved of her soul was not wholly
+torn from her: she had something still to live for, something to which
+her existence was necessary; and the whole affections of that loving
+and blighted heart were poured forth upon the unconscious infant. She
+recovered slowly, but she did recover.
+
+Time wore away. She was still young, and might have hoped for
+happiness in a second marriage—but her’s was no common love. It had
+taken root in early life,—it had been nurtured in sorrow, almost in
+hopelessness,—it had for many long years been her thought by day, her
+dream by night,—it was so interwoven with her existence, that it could
+not be destroyed but with herself. Devotion to her child, to _his_
+child, alone afforded relief to her sorrow and her love. She remembered
+all the treasured words of him who was gone; she thought over all the
+plans they had together formed for her little Walter’s education,
+and she considered no sacrifice too great that might by possibility
+be conducive to his health or to his advantage. Alas! by so doing,
+perhaps, she only fostered feelings which, in after life, led to most
+unfortunate results.
+
+In the common acceptation of the word, she did not spoil her boy. She
+never gave him the plaything he cried for; she never yielded to his
+entreaties in allowing him what she imagined could be hurtful either
+to his body or his mind; but every action of her own, and of every one
+belonging to her, had reference to him alone.
+
+The best room in the house was his sleeping-apartment, as being the
+most airy and wholesome; the largest sitting-room was appointed for his
+playing nursery; if he looked pale, an air of consternation pervaded
+the whole household; if he was naughty, the wretchedness of his mother
+was reflected in the serious faces of his attendants; if he was good,
+every one appeared revived; and rewards and pleasures were provided,
+however inconvenient it might be to gratify his fancy of the moment.
+
+Those who were interested for his mother, and wished to gratify her
+feelings, knew that she was only accessible to pleasurable emotions
+through her boy, and they vied with each other in attentions and
+kindness to him.
+
+Nothing could be more natural, more amiable, than the widowed mother’s
+devotion to her only child; and she fancied that she was training his
+mind to all that was right and virtuous; for these indulgences were
+rewards for good behaviour. Alas! in her anxious tenderness one great
+lesson was neglected. She forgot to impress upon his mind that he was
+only one of many creatures, all equal in the sight of their Creator.
+Walter necessarily felt that the universe was formed for him alone, and
+that every thing ought to be subservient to his welfare.
+
+He was a beautiful and an intelligent boy, with all his mother’s
+depth and tenderness of feeling; with all his father’s energy in
+accomplishing his purpose; but being accustomed to find those vehement
+feelings, those energies, the ruling principle of the little world
+around him, he early learned to rule over that little world with the
+most despotic sway. He loved his mother; but he loved her as tyrants
+love that which ministers to their pleasure. She did not dive so deeply
+into his little heart, satisfied with feeling herself necessary to
+his happiness. Her gentle and habitually melancholy countenance could
+be lighted up with joy at any proof of affection on his part; and she
+looked round with proud exultation when he cried, and wept aloud, at
+the prospect of her leaving him to pass a few days with a friend. She
+did not leave him. She yielded to this passionate expression of his
+ungoverned feelings, and by so doing confirmed him in the habitual
+indulgence of them.
+
+The period came when it was deemed proper that he should go to school.
+This was a severe trial; but here her duty was plain before her.
+She knew that it would be sacrificing her boy’s welfare to her own
+gratification if she persisted in keeping him at home.
+
+At ten years old he went to Eton; and here his natural talents, and
+his animated disposition, soon made him a favourite with his master
+and with his companions. Now, for almost the first time, Eleanor
+tasted unalloyed happiness. She was proud of her son; she heard him
+praised by his superiors; she knew he was loved by his comrades; and
+when he returned for the holidays, she looked on him with a thrill
+of rapture, such as she had never expected to feel again. Of course
+no indulgence could be too great for her good, her clever boy. Every
+wish was gratified, every request forestalled. For some years she was
+comparatively a happy woman.
+
+Walter increased in health and strength, and beauty and talents. He
+was impetuous, but that was natural in youth; he could not bear to be
+thwarted, but then his wishes were generally the offspring of some
+amiable feeling. If he saw distress, his was the open hand to relieve
+it. Though he might perhaps give a guinea to a ragged impostor, and
+have not a sixpence left to bestow on a starving and industrious
+family, this was only the excess of a generous impulse. How could he
+be blamed for yielding to it?
+
+He left Eton with the character of an excellent scholar, and of a
+fine fellow. He passed through his career at Oxford with more than
+common credit, and his friends augured that he might one day make
+a figure in public life. His future prospects were brilliant, and
+he was in possession of a fortune which rendered him independent of
+any profession, but which was not sufficient to stand in lieu of
+a profession. A large landed property, well attended to, and well
+administered, is occupation in itself, and affords scope for great
+utility; but there is a certain medium which prevents exertion, and
+enables a person to pass a life of most complete idleness.
+
+Such was Walter Fitz-Eustace’s situation, when at twenty-one he plunged
+into the vortex of London dissipation, with an ardent imagination,
+impetuous temper, amiable, but ill-regulated feelings, and a strong
+determined will, which had never been controlled, and would never
+brook control. These were faults which might lead to much mischief,
+but which could not make him less beloved by a doting mother. This was
+a disposition to make him fearfully the slave of love, should it once
+gain dominion over him. However, he returned to his adoring mother in
+the summer with heart as light, and eyes as gay and careless, as when
+he left her. She was overjoyed to have him once more by her side; once
+more to lean on his arm when she took her evening stroll, and to look
+up in his beaming face, and trace in those noble features, the forms,
+the expression of his father’s; to listen to his animated accounts of
+debates in Parliament; to see his cheek glow, and his eye flash fire as
+he talked of liberty, of justice; and to anticipate the moment when the
+talents, of which there seemed to be so rich a promise, might excite
+admiration in the senate.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Nous, qui sommes bornées en tout, comment le sommes nous si peu quand
+ il s’agit de souffrir?—MARIVAUX.
+
+The following spring Fitz-Eustace again passed the season in London. He
+had been disappointed in his hopes of being returned for a borough;
+the scenes of dissipation which had completely occupied him the first
+year had lost their power to interest; and his animated nature was
+beginning to feel the want of some fresh excitement, when he became
+acquainted with Lady Ellersville.
+
+She had been married about three years to a dull, proud, cold, handsome
+man, whom she neither liked nor disliked. Let it not be imagined that
+her character was therefore necessarily cold and heartless. She had
+been brought up in the seclusion of her school-room. She had not been
+allowed to associate with other girls, for fear of contamination; she
+had read no books, that had not been previously perused with care by
+her mother or her governess. Her time had been divided between her
+masters and the proper exercise for her health; but in these walks she
+had never visited the cottages of the poor, lest she might be exposed
+to infection, or hear tales of woe that might be injurious to the
+innocence of her pure unsullied mind.
+
+The school-room was apart from the rest of the house, and she had never
+been permitted to leave it except at stated and appointed times. Nor
+were any visitors admitted within the sacred precincts to interrupt
+the course of her studies. When with her parents, she was treated with
+all kindness and affection, but she had nothing in common with them.
+She knew not their objects of interest; their friends were almost
+unknown to her except by sight; she could not enter into the subjects
+of their conversation; and when she came forth into the world, she
+had learned as many languages, read as much history, acquired as many
+accomplishments as any young lady of her age, and had reflected as
+little upon any subject that has to do with real life. She imagined, as
+many girls do, that marriage was as much the object of being brought
+out, as dancing is the object of going to a ball, and looking well, the
+object of dressing for that ball.
+
+When, therefore, Lord Ellersville proposed to her, and was considered
+by her parents as an unexceptionable _parti_, young, handsome, rich,
+she accepted him calmly, dutifully, and without hesitation. She
+meant to love him, knowing it was right so to do, and she persuaded
+herself that she really did like him very much. In high life, romance
+is not the besetting sin of very young ladies. Their characters do
+not unfold, like Ondine; they do not find out they have a soul until
+it is sometimes too late. Matches, apparently the most worldly and
+heartless, are occasionally formed by those, in the recesses of whose
+hearts the warmest affections, the most disinterested feelings, are
+lying dormant. Often, very often, their minds are well regulated, their
+principles strong, and these affections, if they cannot find vent in
+love for their husbands, concentrate themselves on their children. But
+alas! too often also they lead to the most lamentable results.
+
+Lord Ellersville unfortunately was not formed to attach such a woman
+as Maria. He was devoted to field sports. In August he repaired to the
+moors to shoot grouse, from whence he only returned when partridge
+shooting commenced, and later in the season he went to Melton with a
+perfect stud of horses. This was not flattering to a young and lovely
+woman. Her vanity was mortified. In the spring he attended the House of
+Lords regularly, although he never spoke, and his vote merely served to
+strengthen the government majorities. Women are alive to fame of all
+kinds, and if her husband had distinguished himself, Lady Ellersville
+was one of those who would have lived upon his glories; for there was
+a fund of loftiness in her nature which would have enabled her to make
+pride in her husband supply the place of love for him. When with her,
+he was careless and indifferent; for having married at the instigation
+of his mother, in order that the honours of Ellersville might not
+become extinct, her principal claim upon his affection, or rather his
+consideration, ceased, when the young heir was snatched by death from
+its doting mother.
+
+There is something in maternity that opens the heart to all kindly
+emotions of every sort, and it was not till she lost her child, that
+Lady Ellersville first felt what a blank and cheerless existence was
+that of the unloved wife of an unloved husband. She then first owned to
+herself that she did not, could not, love the man to whom her fate was
+united, but that there did exist within her warm and ardent feelings
+which now must never be called forth.
+
+A fearful barrier is broken down when such a confession is made in
+the secret soul. Pride, however, was one ruling principle in her
+nature, and she resolved that no one should perceive that she imagined
+herself neglected, or that she felt mortified. She mixed in the world.
+She wished to show her husband that she had charms for others, and
+she gloried in the train of admirers that the fascination of her
+person and manners attracted around her. She thought pride must ever
+secure her against any weakness. Alas! pride is a poor substitute for
+principle. Walter had heard of her as the admired Lady Ellersville,
+who piqued herself upon her indifference, and upon her powers of
+attracting, without courting, the homage of the other sex.
+
+He soon became one of her train, and almost as soon, tired of being
+only one among many, on whom she lavished the varied charms of her
+conversation. He could not endure to be thus confounded among the
+crowd. He wished to ascertain that she considered him as superior to
+the common herd of empty young men, and to do so he naturally put forth
+all his powers of pleasing. His eye was more animated, his jest more
+pointed, his political opinions expressed with more eloquence, when she
+was present.
+
+Had any one said to him, you are leading a virtuous woman from the path
+of duty, he would have denied the imputation with horror. Yet such
+was indeed the fact. Scarcely a day elapsed in which they did not see
+each other, though without any preconcerted plan on either side; and
+the ball, the assembly, seemed dull and insipid at which he did not
+meet the lively, the agreeable, the lovely Lady Ellersville. He began
+to feel indignant that the man who was united to such a woman should
+appear so little aware of the treasure he possessed. He then wondered
+whether she had ever loved him, whether she had ever preferred anybody;
+whether, if circumstances had not prevented her indulging such a
+feeling, she could ever have liked him.
+
+His thoughts became wholly engrossed by her; when she was present he
+had no eyes, no ears for any one else; and although he never breathed
+a word which could alarm the most rigid virtue, the tact with which
+all human beings are endowed upon that subject, gave her heart the
+delightful consciousness of being loved, though nothing was said which
+forced such a conviction upon her understanding.
+
+The refinements of polished life threw a halo round the first
+approaches of vice—of vice, which if it appeared in its own form would
+be recognised as such, and avoided with loathing; but it assumes the
+mask of all that is harmless and engaging—innocent conversation, gay
+sociability—and does not throw off the disguise, till it has already
+made deep inroads on the peace and on the morals.
+
+To the fallen and degraded, whom distress, misfortune, friendlessness
+may have driven to a life from which their conscience and their
+feelings often revolt, how wilfully, how wantonly criminal must the
+pampered minion of luxury appear, who errs in the midst of plenty,
+pleasure, honour! Alas! it is that very profusion which gives leisure
+for the heart and the imagination to go astray. The lowly know not
+the dangers to which the great are exposed. Still less can the great
+estimate the temptations to which the poor and friendless are liable.
+Let each be lenient to their erring sisters! Nor let those who,
+united to the object of their choice, are happy in the interchange of
+mutual affection, exult too proudly in their irreproachable character
+and untarnished reputation. Rather let them thankfully and humbly
+acknowledge the mercy that has cast their lot where their inclination
+and their duty coincide; which has spared them the misery of warm
+feelings sent back upon the ardent heart which gave them birth, and
+the temptation of meeting with kindness, where it would be sinful to
+indulge the emotions such kindness is calculated to excite.
+
+Why should I trace the progress of events unfortunately of too common
+occurrence? Walter was the first whose eyes were opened to the nature
+of his own feelings; but Lady Ellersville, whose heart, under her
+guarded exterior, was teeming with all the affections which are doomed
+to form the joy and respectability, or the misery and degradation of
+woman, at length made the fatal confession to herself. She would have
+avoided him, and sought safety in flight; but Walter was too little in
+the habit of self-denial quietly to relinquish the society he found
+necessary to his happiness. Had Mrs. Fitz-Eustace been aware what were
+the dangers to which her son’s morals and his welfare were exposed,
+how little would she have rejoiced in his accession to the earldom of
+Sotheron, an event which occurred about this period, and which promised
+to afford scope for those talents which were his mother’s pride. She
+had scarcely allowed her heart to dilate with the pleasurable emotions
+from which even her chastened spirit could not defend itself, when she
+was doomed to a new and unlooked-for sorrow.
+
+The assumed coldness of Lady Ellersville only excited and increased
+the ardour of Walter’s passion; for he loved her with the uncontrolled
+vehemence which characterised all his feelings.
+
+The sequel may easily be guessed. The moment came when the confession
+locked in the secret bosom of each, was made to the other. Lord
+Ellersville at length became jealous and umbrageous. Her proud spirit
+could not endure to quail under the glance of a man she despised. To
+avoid suspicion she plunged into actual guilt.
+
+Oh! if those who headlong follow their own impulses could pause to
+contemplate the misery they inflict! What were the past sorrows of
+Eleanor Fitz-Eustace to the agony she now endured, when her son, the
+consolation of her widowhood, the pride of heart, to whose future
+career she looked forward with high aspirations after fame and honour,
+whose name, when it was mentioned, made her faded countenance light up
+with a gleam of exultation, became a degraded and sinful man; that name
+avoided by her acquaintance, and only mentioned by her friends in a
+low, subdued, mysterious voice!
+
+Those only who have felt the delightful, trembling hopes of a parent,
+who have witnessed the gradual unfolding of the infant mind, watched
+the ripening intellect, revelled in the anticipation of future
+excellence, can estimate the full measure of wretchedness which now
+overwhelmed the unfortunate Eleanor.
+
+Meanwhile were the erring pair happy? No; after the first wild tumult
+of mingled emotions had subsided, Lord Sotheron attempted to write to
+his mother. But many days elapsed before he could bring himself to
+finish a letter which he felt it possible to send to his virtuous,
+his devoted, his broken-hearted parent. From that moment began the
+punishment of their misconduct. He was not accustomed to conceal his
+feelings in order to spare those of another. Restless and agitated
+himself, he tore the unfinished scrawls to pieces; he paced the
+apartment with hasty strides, not remembering that every sign of
+uneasiness in him was a severe pang through Maria’s heart.
+
+Fearful of being recognised, shrinking from the eye of her very
+menials, Lady Ellersville experienced all the tortures that persons
+naturally proud and susceptible, yes, and naturally virtuous, must
+endure, when conscious that every one has a right to look down upon
+them.
+
+Under a feigned name they resided at an obscure watering-place,
+anxiously expecting the moment when the divorce should pass, and hoping
+that she might at least become the wife of Lord Sotheron before the
+birth of a child, whose illegitimacy would be a lasting reproach to
+them. Unfortunately, by some unlooked-for circumstances, the divorce
+did not pass till the following session, and a boy was born, in whose
+unconscious face its mother could not look without a feeling of guilt
+towards the innocent child.
+
+Lord Sotheron meanwhile was listless and unoccupied. He was never
+unkind; but his mode of life was little suited to an animated young
+man in the very flower of manhood, and he could not, indeed he did not
+often attempt, to veil his ennui. She was bowed down with humiliation;
+she could not exert herself. Where were all her brilliancy, her wit,
+the variety, the grace of her conversation, which had so enchanted
+all around? She felt she was dull, and that he on whom her every hope
+depended would be driven to other society for amusement. She strove to
+be entertaining; but how different was that forced pleasantry from the
+gaiety of a mind at ease, inspired by the consciousness of success and
+admiration. He guessed her motive, and for a moment exerted himself to
+appear amused. But how different also was that forced laugh from the
+admiring glance which once beamed applause at her every word, which
+unconsciously followed her every movement!
+
+In wedded life there are a thousand common subjects of interest, little
+domestic concerns to be discussed; preparation for the reception of
+friends to be arranged; there are a thousand pleasing recollections
+of past scenes of enjoyment, and anticipations of the prospects of
+their children, which prevent the _tête-à-tête_ from wearying those
+whose characters and tempers are really in unison. But Walter and Lady
+Ellersville had no friends to prepare for, none to talk of, in all the
+unrestrained confidence of intimacy; they could not revert to past
+scenes without recalling those from whom she was for ever divided; they
+could not retrace the first dawnings of their mutual affection without
+reviving the recollection of errors over which they would gladly draw a
+veil; and then—they dared not allude to the future lot of their child,
+for that was a subject of unmingled pain to both.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ And is this eye, with tears o’erfraught,
+ To thine no longer known?
+ This eye that read the tender thought
+ Erewhile soft trembling in thine own;
+ By thee, alas! to weep since taught,
+ And all its lustre flown?
+
+ _Unpublished Poems._
+
+At length the divorce passed, and Maria became the wife of him whom she
+loved with increasing tenderness; for all she had given up for his sake
+only endeared him the more to her. Man, on the contrary, though he may
+feel kindness, pity, gratitude, to woman, for the sacrifices she has
+made to him, considers her as in some measure responsible for those he
+has made to her.
+
+Maria was now for the first time to see Lord Sotheron’s mother. Mrs.
+Fitz-Eustace, though bowed down by this last heavy affliction, was too
+gentle to be soured by it. She promised to receive her, when once she
+was really her daughter-in-law. She only wished to contribute, as far
+as in her lay, to the welfare or the comfort of the beloved son, who,
+though no longer the pride and joy of her heart, was still to her the
+most precious thing on earth.
+
+What were Maria’s feelings as she drew near the abode of that devoted
+mother, whose fate, already sad, she had so utterly blasted? When she
+thought of presenting to her a grandchild who might not bear the name
+to which the eldest son of Lord Sotheron ought to have been entitled?
+No village bells were ringing to greet their arrival, no old and
+faithful servants crowding the door to welcome their master’s bride.
+She thought of her reception at Ellersville Castle. The approach was
+thronged with villagers, the air resounded with the chimes of the
+neighbouring parishes, the castle terrace was surrounded with the
+tenantry, the great steps were lined with servants, all eager to
+show attention to their new lady. She was then happy, thoughtless,
+innocent; she could then look back into herself without remorse or
+shame, and she felt, as the carriage drew up at Mrs. Fitz-Eustace’s
+door, and as they waited till the servant answered the bell, that not
+all the fervour and depth of her devotion to Walter could compensate,
+even in this world, for the loss of self-esteem, and of respectability
+in the eyes of others.
+
+They were ushered into the drawing-room by a grey-headed man, who
+greeted Walter with respectful but serious affection. He said he would
+let his mistress know. They heard doors open and shut rapidly, hurried
+steps in the passage, the whispering of subdued female voices, still
+Mrs. Fitz-Eustace did not appear; and they felt that his mother had
+need to summon all her courage for the dreaded interview. At length she
+entered, and her subdued, mild, broken-hearted countenance, went more
+to Maria’s heart than all she had hitherto experienced.
+
+Mrs. Fitz-Eustace embraced her son with the tenderest affection; she
+kissed Maria, she took her grandchild in her arms, she did every thing
+that kindness could prompt; but they saw the quivering lip, they heard
+the unsteady voice, and Maria’s shame and remorse nearly overpowered
+her. Mrs. Fitz-Eustace asked some indifferent questions about the
+weather and the journey, and Maria answered it was hot or cold, the
+journey long or short, without knowing what she uttered. Lord Sotheron,
+anxious to escape from a position that was so unpleasant to him, left
+the room, and they remained alone. A few more attempts were made to
+keep up a languishing conversation; Maria longed to throw herself at
+the feet of Walter’s mother, and there to breathe forth all her agony
+of self-accusation, and to implore her pardon for the sorrow she had
+brought upon her grey hairs, but there was a gentle reserve about
+the grief of Eleanor that awed, while it touched, that repressed all
+outpourings of the heart, while it deeply interested; and Maria took
+refuge in busying herself over the baby till Mrs. Fitz-Eustace proposed
+to show her her room.
+
+When Maria at length found herself alone, she gave way to tears that
+were perhaps more bitter than any she had hitherto shed. She had wept
+for herself, she had wept her fault, she had wept her degradation, but
+never did she feel that degradation so acutely as at this moment. Her
+sorrows appeared to her such guilty ones, that they revolted her; while
+Eleanor’s, on the contrary, wore a character of holiness, of sanctity.
+And that she should have filled the measure of her bitter cup,—that she
+should have crushed the broken spirit! oh! it was almost too much for
+endurance.
+
+The dressing-bell rang. It is wonderful how much those who have lived
+in the world, and whose feelings may be least under the salutary
+control of principle, mechanically submit to that of _les convenances_
+of society. She repressed her tears, she calmed her sobs, dressed
+herself, and went down to dinner with a composed voice and tranquil
+manner. The dinner was as uncomfortable as one might expect it to be,
+under the existing circumstances. The succeeding days were passed in
+the same restraint. The moment never came in which they alluded to past
+events, and although they all felt kindly towards each other, there
+was not the free interchange of thought which alone renders a domestic
+circle truly happy.
+
+It was not till they had resided for some months under the same roof
+that the barrier of reserve between them was broken down.
+
+Soon after the birth of a second boy, Maria was lying on her sofa,
+while the young Edward was playing on the floor. Eleanor caught the
+expression of anguish with which Maria gazed on the eldest; their eyes
+met, and that glance revealed to each all that was passing in the mind
+of the other. At that moment all coldness, all reserve, was broken
+through. Throwing herself at the feet of her mother-in-law, and hiding
+her face in her hands, Maria sobbed out, “Forgive me! oh, forgive me!
+pardon the ruin I have brought on your son, the disgrace I have brought
+on your grandchild! No—no! it is impossible! kind and gentle as you
+are, you must—you must hate me, as well as despise me.”
+
+Touched and alarmed at this agony, Mrs. Fitz-Eustace raised her,
+soothed her, bade her be composed. But having once opened upon the
+subject, she poured forth all the pent-up feelings of remorse and shame
+that had so long been consuming her. They mingled their tears, and
+Eleanor’s gentle words of compassion and forgiveness restored her to
+something like composure.
+
+From this time there was no thought of her soul hidden from her
+mother-in-law, and Mrs. Fitz-Eustace’s maternal partiality saw, in the
+irresistible attractions of her son, an excuse for Maria’s fault, which
+made pity almost usurp the place of blame. It became the mother’s task
+to console her who had blighted all the prospects of that beloved son;
+for Maria saw and felt too well that the life of aimless, listless
+idleness that Lord Sotheron led, was affecting his spirits, his temper,
+and his character; she knew and felt to her heart’s core that her
+eldest boy would always have to struggle against the flaw in his birth.
+
+By Eleanor’s advice they resolved to pass some time on the continent,
+till the painful notoriety at present attached to their name had in
+some measure subsided, and it was not till after the lapse of two or
+three years that they took possession of their magnificent mansion of
+Stonebury.
+
+Many were the family discussions to which the arrival of Lord and Lady
+Sotheron gave rise. The gay wished to participate in the society which
+they thought would probably be assembled at Stonebury; the easy and
+good-natured understood that Lady Sotheron had conducted herself with
+the greatest propriety since her present marriage, and were inclined
+to forget any past misconduct; the vulgar enjoyed the opportunity of
+protecting a person of rank and fortune. On the other hand, the rigid
+urged the unanswerable argument, that unless a decided line be drawn
+between virtue and vice, there must be an utter end of all morality in
+the land. They naturally were shocked that the woman who had abandoned
+all her duties should be at the head of society, enjoying rank,
+fortune, and even respectability.
+
+Alas! if they could have read the heart of her whose worldly prosperity
+thus excited their virtuous indignation, they would have found her as
+much an object of pity as those who have erred should ever be, to those
+who need not shrink from the reproaches of conscience or the judgment
+of their fellow creatures. Not one of these visits passed without some
+occurrence, which to a sensitive mind gave exquisite pain.
+
+Children are usually a great resource during the formal quarter of
+an hour which precedes a dinner in the country, and on one of these
+occasions a young lady, in talking to the eldest boy, called him Lord
+Stonebury. This touched Maria where she was most vulnerable, when the
+young lady’s mother immediately addressing the younger boy by the
+title of Lord Stonebury, covered her with tenfold confusion. It proved
+that her story was all known, and all remembered; and she, who was
+once the high-bred, the self-possessed Lady Ellersville, whose manner
+of receiving her company had been the admiration of the most polished
+society, was awkward, hurried; she addressed people by wrong names,
+did not hear when she was spoken to; there was a restlessness in her
+eye, and a rapidity in her utterance, very unlike the careless grace
+with which, without appearing to do anything, she once contrived to
+put every one at their ease. She feared she was not civil enough,
+and a sensation of humility prompted her to change her seat for the
+purpose of addressing some one to whom she had not already spoken,—then
+a movement of pride made her spirit rebel at so courting vulgar
+people, who would once have thought themselves honoured by a passing
+acknowledgment from her. This gave her manner an air of constraint.
+There was something out of keeping, and many wondered where was the
+charm of address which had been reckoned so bewitching.
+
+On another occasion the conversation happened to turn on the
+comparative beauty of the Lady D——s. One person remarked, that she “had
+always thought poor Lady Anne’s countenance the most attractive of
+all.” “I never saw her,” observed another, who had lately taken a place
+in the neighbourhood. “Oh, no! She married unfortunately, poor thing!
+and ran away with Captain B——. It was a sad business.”
+
+Maria’s burning face betrayed her confusion. The lady had scarcely
+uttered the unfortunate words, when she recollected before whom she
+was speaking. She stopped short, and a dead silence prevailed. She
+tried hastily to speak on some other subject, but every one felt
+awkward, and her unassisted efforts again subsided into silence. Lady
+Sotheron, distressed at the allusion, was confounded at its being
+seized by others, and the whole evening was to her one of painful
+endurance. At other times she suffered almost equally from the studious
+avoidance of topics that might in any way be applicable to herself.
+In solitude her reflections were all bitter, and in society something
+constantly occurred which brought her situation more painfully to her
+recollection.
+
+Walter meantime found his home disagreeable. He was beset by people
+not of his own selection, and who were not in any way suited to him.
+He determined to repair to London, to attend the House of Lords, and
+to seek interest and excitement in the line which he had often been
+told he was formed to pursue with success. Maria was delighted at this
+resolution. She felt that if he could fulfil an honourable political
+career, she should not be so guilty of having blasted his fate; his
+mother might once more be proud of her only child, instead of mourning
+in secret over his blighted prospects.
+
+They went to London, and Lord Sotheron again mixed in the society he
+at once liked and adorned. His spirits revived, his eager temper was
+on fire, and he gave himself up to politics with an ardour the more
+vehement from the state of indolent vacuity in which he had latterly
+passed his time. She was rejoiced to see those eyes again beam with
+animation, to perceive energy in every movement, instead of the
+listless languor she had so often deplored. She scarcely remarked that
+she passed hours, days, alone, so engrossed was she in his interests;
+and when he made a brilliant and successful maiden speech, she felt
+proud, nay, almost happy, and wrote to his mother with more confidence
+than she had ever done before.
+
+Lord Sotheron soon became a person of some importance, and he was
+invited to all the political dinners of the party to which he had
+attached himself. He thought it necessary to give dinners in return—and
+now arose discussions which made Maria’s situation more galling to
+her than ever. The wives of these great personages did not visit her,
+and how awkward to preside at one of these grand entertainments with
+no ladies to support her, except the two or three, who from family
+connections associated with her, but who were in no wise connected
+with the persons whom Walter wished to cultivate! Her sensitive mind
+recoiled from the whole discussion.
+
+She entreated him to give only men dinners, not to struggle after
+that which they could not accomplish; and she assured him she had
+rather remain in her own room, than go through the mortifications
+and difficulties that must attend her making one of the party. He
+but faintly opposed her resolution, for in fact, ambition had taken
+possession of his soul, and he blindly followed its impulses. His time
+was completely occupied with debates, committees, dinners, which became
+more and more frequent, and Maria sat in her boudoir, eating her
+solitary morsel, and hearing the bustle of the servants waiting upon
+the party feasting below. Still she would not let herself repine at his
+having at length found scope for his talents. She would not wish it
+otherwise, but she could not help feeling miserable.
+
+She attended still more to her children. They were always with her,
+and in their infantine prattle she often found pleasure; but even from
+that source she occasionally drank the bitter draught of shame. One day
+they had just returned from a walk in the square, where they had been
+playing with some young companions, when Edward said to her, “Mamma,
+why don’t they call me lord? That little boy in blue says, he is called
+lord, because he is the eldest. Now, I am the eldest, and yet Charles
+and Emily are called lord and lady, and I am not.”
+
+This was more than she could endure. She tried to murmur something,
+but her lips refused to move, her tongue to utter. She blushed, she
+quailed under the innocent enquiring eye of her child. She hid her face
+in his curly locks, she drew him closer to her, she smothered him with
+kisses, she wept over him, she sobbed, till the child, frightened at
+the violent emotions he had so unconsciously excited, felt there was a
+mystery, and ever after avoided the subject with that precocious tact
+which children so often evince.
+
+Another time he was reading a childish History of England, and when
+he came to a passage that treated of hereditary succession, he said,
+“Yes—the kingdom descends to the king’s eldest son, as papa’s land will
+descend to me;” anxious, as children always are, to illustrate by some
+familiar example. She thrilled through every nerve; but she thought
+it would be too cruel to bring him up in this error, from which he
+must one day be painfully undeceived. She summoned up all her courage,
+and without daring to reflect on what might be his next question, she
+forced herself to utter. “My dear! you will not inherit your father’s
+lands.” There was a constrained solemnity in the tone which awed the
+boy. He felt he was on forbidden ground, and he said no more.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ For I have drunk the cup of bitterness,
+ And having drunk therein of heavenly grace,
+ I must not put away the cup of shame.
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+Years rolled on. Lord Sotheron was more and more engrossed in public
+affairs, and the time at length arrived when Maria regretted those days
+when he was unknown, and unnoticed, but when she at least enjoyed the
+society of him for whom she had sacrificed every thing.
+
+Her boys went to a public school. It was not till they had been there
+for some time, that Maria remarked there was a great change in Edward.
+His spirits, which had been constantly and exuberantly gay, were
+now only occasionally elevated. His temper, formerly mild and even,
+was now sometimes stern and morose; if his brother thwarted him, he
+yielded immediately, but it was with a sort of proud humility. Instead
+of asking the servants to mend any of the implements of his boyish
+amusements, and applying to them for all the various little services
+so often asked, and so willingly performed, he would pass whole days
+mending his own tools; he would walk off to the village to get his
+knife sharpened, and scrupulously pay for it; in short, there seemed to
+pervade every action, a desire not to be beholden to any one. He was
+tender to his mother, fond of his sister, kind to his brother; still
+there was something unsatisfactory in his manner.
+
+His pursuits were solitary; he did not want the companionship of his
+brother; and Charles, in his turn, would say, “Oh! Edward goes his own
+way, so I shall go mine.” It sometimes occurred that both could not
+ride, or that both could not shoot, or that there was only one place in
+the carriage on some excursion of pleasure. On such occasions, Edward
+invariably said he preferred staying at home. At length the feeling
+that was rankling in the bosom of the elder boy was inadvertently
+betrayed.
+
+Edward had seated himself next to his mother at dinner, when Charles
+said, laughingly, “This is too bad, Edward; you sat by mamma yesterday;
+it is not fair play. Come, turn out!”
+
+With a flushed cheek, and an angry eye, the colour mounting to his very
+temples, he exclaimed in a tone but little justified by the occasion:—
+
+“I won’t! I have as good a right as you to sit by my mother at least.
+From _this_ place you shall not turn me out.”
+
+Charles answered, “Why, Edward, you are grown so crabbed, I don’t know
+what is come to you; however, I shall have merrier playfellows than
+you, when I get back to school.”
+
+Maria more than suspected that Edward had learned the history of his
+own birth; and she also perceived that the indignant sense of honour,
+and the independent spirit, which if properly directed, might lead to
+all that is most brilliant and admirable, were likely, in Edward’s
+unfortunate circumstances, to spoil a disposition naturally amiable and
+noble.
+
+Oh! how painfully did it then strike her, that her fault was thus
+visited upon her children! She saw the probability of disunion between
+the brothers, and it was only by true and cordial affection that their
+relative situations could be sweetened to either of them. She reflected
+deeply and bitterly upon the subject. Profiting perhaps by the errors
+in her own education, she had long come to the conclusion that the
+best mode of fitting human creatures for the world in which they are
+to live, and the station they are to fill in that world, is to tell
+them the truth upon all subjects, and to make them acquainted with the
+feelings and interests of their parents.
+
+On all other topics she had done so, as much as possible; but in this
+instance, could she herself be the person to lay bare her own and
+their father’s errors? And yet, if Edward already knew the fact of
+his illegitimacy, it were better he should learn to view his mother
+with pity, than with contempt; better he should know how truly she
+repented her fault, than imagine she was hardened in guilt; better that
+Charles should learn his own superior prospects in a manner that should
+open and soften his heart towards his brother. And then her daughter
+Emily! Would it not be cruel to leave her in ignorance of her mother’s
+situation till she came out into the world, when the painful truth
+must be forced upon her in the most humiliating manner, by a thousand
+inevitable circumstances?
+
+She confided her mental struggles to Mrs. Fitz-Eustace, who almost
+constantly resided at Stonebury, and from whom she had now no hidden
+thought.
+
+Eleanor kindly offered to spare her the painful task; but she recalled
+to her the restraint that had chilled their intercourse, while the one
+subject of strong and mutual interest had been avoided; and she also
+reminded her, how, from the moment they had poured out their hearts to
+each other, all coldness, all reserve, had vanished for ever.
+
+“How necessary is it, then, that I, and my children, should understand
+each other’s hearts! Yes, whatever it may cost me, I will tell them
+all; and if by suffering, guilt may be atoned, I shall thus, in some
+degree, expiate my offence, for Heaven alone can judge how keenly I
+shall suffer?”
+
+Lord Sotheron had been for some time absent, nor was he likely to
+return. His party had lately come into power, and he was eagerly
+desirous of a public situation of trust, for which his talents
+particularly fitted him. His absences were become so frequent, and of
+such long duration, that Maria had lost the habit of referring her
+every action to him.
+
+Emily was thirteen, and Edward fifteen; when Maria one morning
+summoned them all three to her dressing-room. Her cheek was pale, her
+eye, though sad, was resolved. She called each to her side, and she
+imprinted upon each smooth open brow, a fervent kiss. Then clasping her
+hands, she uttered:—
+
+“May God bless you, my children, and strengthen you and preserve you in
+that innocence which is the only thing to be truly and earnestly prayed
+for! May He in his mercy bless you! My children, the blessing of a
+mother is good for the souls of her children, let that mother’s errors
+be what they may. Come nearer, dears. Let me hold your hands; and you
+must promise you will still love me. I am going to confess to you, my
+children, the error;—yes, I will utter the word—the crime of my youth.
+I was a married woman when I first knew your father. But he to whom I
+was married did not care for me; perhaps it was my fault he did not—I
+will not throw any blame on him. My heart was desolate! Your father saw
+me unhappy, and he pitied me—he loved me. I forgot my duties, forgot
+the vow I had breathed at the altar, in the sight of God; I left the
+husband I had sworn to love, and gave the love which was his due to
+another. This is a dreadful, a heinous sin, my children, and this sin
+did your mother commit! But you have been early taught to read your
+Bible, and you have there learned that there is more joy in Heaven over
+one repentant sinner, than over ninety and nine just men who need no
+repentance. Oh, blessed words! How many thousand thousand times have I
+read, and re-read ye! Ye alone have preserved me from sinking under the
+load of my guilt. Yes, my children, I have repented; deeply, earnestly,
+bitterly, unceasingly. I may truly say, my sin is ever before me. Oh!
+if repentance can find mercy at the throne of Heaven, let it find mercy
+at your hands, my children! Pardon, pardon your erring mother!” and
+worked up beyond her powers of endurance, she threw herself on her
+knees at their feet.
+
+They rushed to her, they kissed her, they raised her to the sofa,
+they soothed her, they wept over her, they lavished on her every most
+touching expression of affection, they assured her of their love, their
+respect, their veneration.
+
+“Stop! stop! beloved ones. Do not let your tenderness to me blind you
+to the reality of my sin. Love me! Yes, love me still, but I must not
+let that love confound in your young minds the distinctions between
+virtue and vice. I am not yet come to the end. I have to tell you how
+the errors of the fathers are visited upon the children.
+
+“Even you, my Emily, know that unless parents are solemnly married
+according to the law of the land, the children do not inherit their
+name or their property, and alas! alas! you, Edward, came into this
+weary world, before my former marriage was cancelled. Upon your head
+are my sins visited. Yes: and upon yours Charles, and yours Emily, for
+you have a mother, whom you must not honour, for whom you must blush
+before the world.”
+
+“Oh, mamma, mamma,” they cried at once, “we love you, we honour you!
+Oh! that we could prove how much we love you,—better than ever!”
+
+“Thanks, thanks! my own dear, innocent, good children! And would you
+really do all you can to sooth my anguish, to lessen the keenness of my
+remorse?”
+
+Edward exclaimed, “Oh, mother, don’t talk so—any thing—every thing!”
+
+“Then listen, Edward! I have remarked your altered manner. I felt
+certain that at school you had heard some of the circumstances of your
+birth, and I resolved that from my lips you should all learn the truth,
+the whole truth. It was, if possible, more painful to imagine you
+hearing your mother scornfully spoken of, than to be my own accuser.
+Oh! my boy! if you knew the agony of self-accusation that racked me,
+when I saw you thus reserved and melancholy, you would have thrown off
+your gloom. I know you would! Oh! Edward, in pity to your penitent
+parent, be once more your gay, ingenuous self. You know how dear you
+are to every one in this house. You need not wrap yourself up in
+solitary pride. If my children should not love each other, then am I
+punished indeed!” And she pressed her hands tight over her eyes, as if
+to shut out the horrid picture.
+
+Edward burst into tears, threw his arms round Charles, and gave him a
+warm, and heart-felt fraternal kiss.
+
+“And you, Charles, who have bright prospects before you, as far as
+worldly prosperity tends to happiness, think whose fault deprives your
+brother of these advantages, and for my sake love him, Charles, more
+dearly than brother ever loved brother.”
+
+“That I will indeed, mamma,” cried Charles.
+
+“My Emily! If you would honour your mother, prove to the world that she
+could guide your mind to the strictest virtue. Let your conduct be such
+as in some measure to redeem my fame!”
+
+The effect of this scene upon her children was such as to repay Maria
+for all it had cost her. The brothers were inseparable. Edward became
+cheerful, and he willingly accepted all the little kindnesses that
+Charles omitted no opportunity of offering him. In Charles, there was
+a tone of deference to his elder brother, which was very winning, and
+which went straight to the generous heart of Edward.
+
+One fine winter’s morning Mrs. Fitz-Eustace and Maria were watching
+the two noble boys, as with keepers, dogs, and guns, they were before
+the windows preparing for a shooting expedition. They were talking
+and laughing joyously with each other, and Maria turning to Mrs.
+Fitz-Eustace with tearful, but beaming eyes, exclaimed, “I was right,
+dearest mother, was I not, to tell them every thing? Painful as it
+was, it has had the desired effect. Oh! how can parents who have
+nothing to blush for, maintain a causeless and mysterious reserve
+towards their children! Perhaps many a prodigal might have been prudent
+and thoughtful, if he had known how, for his sake, his parents were
+struggling to keep up a decent appearance in the world. Confidence
+produces confidence, and children would have the habit of communicating
+each feeling as it arose, and while it was yet capable of being
+checked, or guided aright.” And as she spoke, she thought if she had
+felt that tender, fearless, confidence in her parents, perhaps her
+mother might have read the guilty secret of her heart, and have guarded
+her against its fatal consequences.
+
+The office which Lord Sotheron had so eagerly sought was given to
+another, and there appeared in the papers a paragraph alluding to
+the disappointed hopes of a certain noble earl, and the necessity
+that morality should be upheld by the private, as well as the public,
+character of those in high official situations.
+
+This paragraph met the eye of the two persons to whom it could give the
+most acute pain. It crushed, it humbled Maria to the very dust. She
+felt she was, in truth, a blight upon her husband’s prospects, and she
+sunk under the painful conviction.
+
+Lord Sotheron returned to his home, humbled also, but soured and
+embittered. He was angry with himself for having condescended to
+solicit, indignant with ministers for having refused, and estranged
+from Maria, whom he looked upon as the clog which must ever prevent
+his rising in the career for which he felt himself formed. Hitherto,
+although neglectful, he had never been unkind; indeed, on any occasion
+of illness or distress, he had been attentive and devoted; she had
+flattered herself that, although often dormant, his affection for her
+was still all there. But ambition, like the love of gambling, when once
+it possesses the mind, gradually swallows up all other feelings, and he
+was now captious, sullen, he spoke sharply to her, seemed bored with
+what she said, and occasionally implied that she could know nothing of
+what was going on in the world. She suffered in silence. This was not
+a case in which open communication would be of any avail. When did a
+discussion ever call back to life extinct affection? Affection once
+extinct, what material had she to work upon? There were moments when
+she thought it hard _he_ should be the person, in manner, if not in
+words, to reproach her for her error. At least that error was mutual,
+and she remembered the arguments, the entreaties, the vows, the oaths
+he had employed to lead her to the very step for which he now despised
+her. But oftener, far oftener, she found excuses for him in that heart
+where he was so dearly cherished; she reflected how galling it must be
+to a proud and eager temper to have sued in vain; she looked back with
+tenderness and gratitude to the many proofs of affection he had given
+her in former times, and she pitied rather than resented his present
+irritation.
+
+Mrs. Fitz-Eustace remarked with sorrow the altered temper of her son,
+but her health, which had been of late declining, had in some measure
+communicated its languor to her mind. She was gradually fading away,
+but so gradually, that it was not till she was very near her end, that
+her son began to take alarm.
+
+Extreme in every thing, he was angry with her for not having warned him
+of the state of her health. He reproached her for having allowed her
+sickness to creep on without calling their attention to the alarming
+symptoms of which she was herself aware. She gently smiled, and told
+him death had no terrors for one, for whom life had no charms.
+
+“If I had seen you happy—” she added, “but as it is, I look forward
+almost with impatience to the moment of re-union with him from whom my
+heart has never for one moment been severed.”
+
+As Walter and Maria knelt by their mother’s death-bed, as she blessed
+them both with her faint sweet voice, their hearts once more opened to
+each other, and they mingled tears of sorrow which to Maria were not
+wholly devoid of sweetness.
+
+As she gazed on the marble brow and the closed lids of that placid
+countenance, she envied the spirit that was at rest, the heart that
+was not torn by a thousand conflicting feelings, and she longed to be
+laid in the quiet grave beside her. Alas! she had not yet exhausted the
+varied sufferings awaiting one
+
+ “Who, loving virtue, but by passion driven
+ To worst extremes, must never, never more
+ Honour herself——”
+
+Yet Maria had been more fortunate than many under the same
+circumstances. She had not been deserted by him for whom she had
+sacrificed every thing; on the contrary, he had made every reparation
+in his power. She had been kindly received by his family, she enjoyed
+rank and riches, her children were dutiful and affectionate, no
+adventitious circumstances aggravated her wretchedness.
+
+The miseries described in the preceding narrative are simply those to
+which every erring woman is liable.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ “But guilt,
+ And all our sufferings?” said the Count.
+ The Goth replied, “Repentance taketh sin away,
+ Death remedies the rest.”
+
+ SOUTHEY.
+
+Emily was nearly eighteen, and she was to appear in the world as became
+the daughter of Lord Sotheron. They went to London. Maria made up her
+mind never to accompany her daughter, even to the few places where
+she might be kindly received. She thought there was more dignity in
+voluntarily retiring than in appearing occasionally at some houses, and
+consequently proving that she was not seen elsewhere because she would
+not be admitted.
+
+Invitations for Lord Sotheron and Lady Emily Fitz-Eustace flocked to
+the house, and Maria received the cards from the porter’s hand with a
+tightness of heart, a difficulty of breathing, at which she was herself
+surprised. “Can I,” she thought, “who have endured such real sorrow,
+be so moved by a contemptible invitation to a foolish ball?” But she
+blushed crimson, as she felt her daughter’s eye glance over the card on
+which her mother’s name was omitted.
+
+However, she rejoiced that Emily knew the truth; that she had not now
+to learn it. The evening came, when the lovely Lady Emily Fitz-Eustace
+was to make her _début_ in the great world. Her mother presided at her
+toilet. She smoothed every curl, she arranged every fold. Her hands
+trembled, her eye was haggard, her voice was unsteady, but she fought
+hard not to allow her emotion to be visible. She would not cloud the
+innocent young creature’s anticipated joys.
+
+Lord Sotheron was waiting below, and before they entered the carriage
+Maria wished to know if he approved of his daughter’s dress and
+appearance. As she held a candle that he might examine some ornaments
+he had just given her, he was forcibly struck by the contrast between
+the glowing cheek; the sparkling eye, the fresh _parure_ of the
+blooming young girl, and the neglected dress, the homely morning cap,
+and, above all, the fearful expression of countenance of the mother. A
+pang of remorse shot through him, and he inquired if she felt ill, in a
+tone of unusual tenderness.
+
+“I am quite well,” she answered, hurriedly, and they went down stairs.
+She remained suspended till she heard their carriage drive away, when
+her over-strung nerves gave way, and she flung herself on the sofa,
+in an agony of tears. She could not go to bed. She felt it impossible
+to try to sleep while thus constrained to desert the natural duty of
+a mother. Sick at heart, she sat expecting her daughter’s return, and
+listening to the eternal carriages rolling in endless succession to
+scenes where she could not be admitted to watch over her child.
+
+At length she heard the growing sound of approaching wheels, and the
+clatter of the horses’ feet stopping at the door. Emily was surprised
+to find her still up, but was hastening to describe all the brilliant
+scene she had witnessed, when her attention was arrested by the
+woe-worn countenance, and swollen eyes of her mother.
+
+“Mamma,” she said, “I will never go out again. I see it makes you
+unhappy. These foolish flowers, these fine necklaces—how you must have
+suffered while you were decking me out in them! And I! giddy thing,
+only thought of the unknown wonders I was going to see. Oh, mamma! how
+cruel, how unfeeling of me!”
+
+“My child, my child,” interrupted Maria; “it is true I have acutely
+felt seeing you launched on the dangerous and stormy sea of life
+without my watchful eye to guard you. I should deceive you if I
+attempted to disguise my pangs of mortified affection, of mortified
+pride; but believe me, I should suffer far, far more, if I thought my
+fault condemned my innocent child to a life of seclusion; if I thought
+she was to be cut out from all society, because I have forfeited my own
+place in it. I am not so selfish! Mix with the world, dearest Emily,
+and trust me, that to see you and your brothers good and happy, can now
+alone give this aching heart one throb of pleasure;” and she pressed
+her hand to her left side, where she had of late felt considerable pain
+and uneasiness; “and now, good night, my love, I do not feel quite
+well.”
+
+Habit did not deaden the keenness of her mortification. Every night
+when Emily returned home, Maria underwent the same ever new sufferings.
+To her sensitive feelings which were morbidly alive to every the most
+indifferent circumstance, scarcely a day or an hour passed in which
+something did not occur which wounded them.
+
+If in ordering a dress for Emily, the milliner made use of those
+expressions so common in the mouth of every _marchande de modes_. “On
+ne le porte plus.”—“C’est la mode passée;” she shrunk into herself, and
+thought “Even the milliner is aware I am excluded from society, and
+thinks I can know nothing that is going forward in the world.”
+
+One morning a young friend of Emily’s called on her at the moment when
+Lord Sotheron was leaving London to pass a few days in the country, and
+she thoughtlessly exclaimed,
+
+“Oh! what will you do, Lady Emily? You must go to the Spanish
+ambassador’s ball to-morrow night, and who can you get to chaperon you?”
+
+Maria could scarcely command sufficient composure to remain in the
+room, and to appear engrossed with the book which she had been reading.
+
+It often happened that in some morning excursion, Emily was joined by
+one or two of the young men with whom she had become acquainted. On
+such occasions the duty of introducing them to her mother devolved on
+Emily, and she performed the necessary little ceremony with grace and
+modesty, but with a certain air of shyness and distress. Maria felt
+that in her case the usual order of things was reversed. She felt that
+Emily’s acquaintance would look her over with curiosity; she felt that
+if any one was a serious admirer, his intentions towards the daughter
+might be influenced, by the disgrace of the mother being thus forced
+upon his recollection; she felt that Emily was shy, and she fancied she
+must feel ashamed of her.
+
+In this manner all the mortifications of the first years after her
+divorce were renewed with tenfold bitterness. Perhaps the constant
+state of painful excitement in which she lived, combined with late
+hours (for she invariably sat up till Emily’s return), might have
+aggravated a disorder that soon after assumed a more serious character.
+Before the London season was over, she became so ill that Emily could
+no longer be induced to mix in society, but devoted herself to
+soothing her mother’s hours of sickness. She had a constant difficulty
+of respiration, a gasping for breath, a palpitation at the heart, for
+which the physicians recommended quiet of mind and body. When they had
+left her one day after a long consultation, she smiled, and looking up
+at Emily, said,
+
+“They cannot minister to a mind diseased. It is here, my child, here!”
+pressing her hand to her heart. “The canker has long been consuming
+me, and now it will soon have done its work. I wish your brothers were
+in London, for my end may perhaps be sudden, and I would not pass away
+without giving them my blessing.” Poor Emily communicated her mother’s
+wish to Lord Sotheron, and Charles and Edward were summoned from
+college.
+
+Lord Sotheron was constant in his attentions, and spared no pains to
+soften and alleviate Maria’s sufferings. He had once truly loved her;
+and when he felt assured he was about to lose this devoted being, she
+rose before his imagination, beautiful, and brilliant, the cynosure of
+all hearts and eyes, as when he had first known her, and his conscience
+told him he had himself blasted all he had so passionately admired.
+
+One day Maria was much exhausted by a more than usually severe attack
+of palpitation, and they had moved her towards an open window. They
+were all anxiously attending upon her, and she gazed round upon the
+group with tenderness and thankfulness.
+
+“I am better now,” she said, “so do not look so much frightened,
+dear children. It is going off for this time. Still there is no use
+in our deceiving ourselves and each other. I have long felt pain and
+oppression, which I thought would one day prove fatal. But I bless a
+merciful Providence who has granted me time for repentance and for
+preparation, and now I bless that Providence who will soon release me
+from my life of penance.
+
+“I trust that the time allowed me has not been allowed me in vain.
+Each bitter pang that I have endured, I have considered as part of my
+atonement, and I have offered it up to offended Heaven. There is one
+pain I have been spared! one joy I have tasted! you have been all a
+mother’s heart could wish—continue as you are. Be good, my blessed
+children—be good, and trust to Providence for the rest. Walter, in
+virtue alone there is true happiness! Is it not so! Dearly as I have
+loved you, and how dearly even you yourself can scarcely know,—Heaven
+alone, who knows how I have wrestled with my love, can know—dearly,
+devotedly as I have loved you, not for one moment, even when you
+seemed to love me with affection equal to my own, have I known
+happiness—happiness—that is only for the guiltless.”
+
+“_Seemed_ to love you, Maria!” whispered Lord Sotheron in a half
+reproachful tone.
+
+“I did not mean to say that, dearest Walter. Thank you for your past
+affection, thank you for your present tenderness. Oh! it is all here,
+Walter! that love of many years, is all here, in this breaking, this
+bursting heart, but I hope sanctified by our long union. If it is
+sinful to feel it on the threshold of the grave, Heaven be merciful to
+me!” and she clasped her hands. “Pray for me, my children, now, and
+pray for me when I am gone. Your innocent prayers will win me mercy!
+Pray for me! pray for me!” and she sank back exhausted. The state of
+excitement into which her feelings had been worked, brought on a fresh
+attack of palpitation more severe than the former, which was followed
+by a fainting fit. From this time she spoke but little, and before
+the close of the following day, her spirit, we will hope her purified
+spirit, passed from its earthly tenement.
+
+
+END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME THE THIRD.
+
+
+
+
+ELLEN WAREHAM.
+
+ _Calantha._—Away, away, call not such passion love!
+ A man so loves his horse, his hound, his hawk,
+ For that these things to’s pleasure minister;
+ He’s proud to boast such peerless beauty his—
+ Does gloat upon it—would have others gaze,
+ And pine with envy. What’s this but self-love?
+ Now mark, Antenor! He who loves indeed,
+ With his whole soul! His study but to honour
+ His lady’s name an hundred thousand ways!
+ His sole joy, her contentment; and sole sorrow,
+ Her disquiet. He with true devotion
+ Approaches her, as something pure and holy,
+ His bright incentive to high deeds. The beacon
+ To light his path to virtue and to fame!
+
+ _Old Manuscript Play._
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ Ten amor el arco quedo.
+ Que soy niña y tengo miedo.—_Spanish Romance._
+
+In a small but neat drawing-room, in the principal town of ——shire,
+Captain Wareham and his family were assembled at breakfast. Captain
+Wareham himself was sitting with the newspaper in his hand, his back
+half turned to the breakfast-table, and his feet resting on the fender;
+Caroline, his eldest daughter, was presiding over the tea-pot; Ellen,
+the second, was patiently waiting till the tea _had brewed_; the two
+elder boys were kicking at each other’s legs under the table; the
+youngest daughter was strumming away at a most unmusical piano-forte;
+and the youngest boy was amusing himself by adorning the slate, on
+which he was supposed to be doing a sum, with specimens of the graphic
+art, in the shape of helmeted knights and galloping war-horses.
+
+“Caroline,” said Captain Wareham, “do not give me water bewitched, by
+way of tea, this morning, I entreat!”
+
+“I hope it will be good, papa: the water does boil to-day.”
+
+Captain Wareham took his tea, and having added the cream and sugar,
+tasted it.
+
+“Caroline, you have let the tea stand too long! You know I hate it when
+it gets that rough disagreeable taste.”
+
+“Shall I put in a little water, papa? It is very easy to make it
+weaker.”
+
+“No! there is no use in doing that. If the tea is once too strong, you
+cannot make it right by adding water. Give me the toast.”
+
+Ellen handed him the toast.
+
+“It is all cold and tough. I cannot eat it!”
+
+“It has been here so long, dear papa; but you were so busy with the
+newspaper, I did not like to interrupt you.”
+
+“You know I hate cold toast!”
+
+“Shall I ring, and ask for some more?”
+
+“Ask for more! I never can teach any of my children that people who are
+poor must conform to their means. One would think I was made of gold,
+to hear the wasteful manner in which you talk!”
+
+“Shall I toast it afresh, papa?” interrupted Ellen; “that will make it
+almost as good as ever again.”
+
+“No, no! be quiet, child. How you pester me! Do you not see I am
+reading the newspaper? There is no possibility of understanding a word
+one reads, you all keep up such a clatter!”
+
+George, who all this time had continued his attempts to reach Henry’s
+feet, as they sat at opposite ends of the table, at length gave it a
+tremendous shake.
+
+“Do be quiet, boys!” exclaimed Captain Wareham, in a voice of thunder;
+“and do stop that eternal strumming at the piano-forte—give one some
+peace, Matilda!”
+
+Matilda, delighted to be released, jumped up from her half-finished
+tune, and ran to assist James in his labours at the slate.
+
+“Caroline, why do you set Matilda to practise just at breakfast-time?”
+
+“Why, papa, you said Miss Patterson was to come at ten o’clock for the
+future; and you said Matilda should practise an hour before she came;
+so I did not very well know how to help it.”
+
+“Nonsense! You always contrive to do the disagreeable thing.”
+
+He turned round, and was again absorbed in the important intelligence
+contained in the newspaper; for at that time Buonaparte had just
+returned from Egypt, and the proceedings in France were watched by
+all Europe with intense anxiety and interest. The second dish of tea
+remained by his side untasted.
+
+After about a quarter of an hour he turned angrily to Caroline, saying—
+
+“Why on earth do you not send away the breakfast things? Nothing
+shortens the day so much as letting the breakfast remain late upon the
+table—this is another thing I can never teach you!”
+
+“I thought you might wish to drink your tea, papa,” answered Caroline,
+timidly.
+
+“I do not want any more; it is so horribly bad!” he replied. “And now,
+I suppose, we must have the weekly bills, and I must give you some
+money!”
+
+Caroline’s spirit sank within her. The first Monday in every month was
+to her a weary day; and she anticipated that this would indeed be black
+Monday, as papa did not seem to be quite well.
+
+The apparatus for the morning repast was removed. Caroline brought the
+household book and the bills, and presented them one by one to her
+father, who was horrified at the amount of each.
+
+“Why, here is beef again!—there is no occasion to feed the whole family
+on beef! If the servants have their beef on Sunday, surely that is
+enough. You know, Caroline, I can scarcely afford to live as I do, and
+yet it seems you become every day more expensive in your housekeeping.”
+
+“I am very sorry, papa, but you told me to have some luncheon in case
+the Jenkinsons called last Wednesday; and you have often said you hated
+cold mutton, and that it was painful to you that any one should imagine
+you were inhospitable; and I thought it did not make much difference,
+and there would be the cold beef, which always looks handsome.”
+
+“So, I suppose you mean to imply it is my fault that the bills are
+high. I am sure no man can spend less upon himself than I do! I wish
+you would tell me where to get the money, that is all!”
+
+The entrance of Miss Patterson, a prim, middle-aged lady, who came for
+a few hours every day to superintend Matilda’s education, put an end to
+the discussion. Captain Wareham paid the money without another word,
+took his hat and stick, and sallied forth to avoid the infliction of
+Miss Patterson, the music, &c.
+
+Captain Wareham was a half-pay officer, with a broken constitution,
+and a very limited income. He had taken up his abode in the county
+town, that his eldest daughter might have the advantage of going to the
+winter balls; his second, that of receiving some finishing lessons in
+singing from the organist of the cathedral; his third, that of having
+a day-governess; and his youngest boy that of attending an excellent
+school, as a day scholar.
+
+He was a dignified-looking man, very tall and thin, with a high pale
+forehead, light eyes and hair, and there was altogether something
+melancholy and gentlemanly in his appearance. His connections were
+good, his conduct irreproachable, and he maintained an uncomplaining
+reserve upon the subject of his pecuniary embarrassments, which gained
+him the respect and consideration of the surrounding squirearchy.
+Whether his difficulties on the score of money might not be the true
+cause of the captious temper which rendered his home any thing but a
+happy one, either to himself or to his family, is another question.
+In society he was courteous and polished, his daughters were gentle
+and dutiful, and although among the gossip of a country town an
+unauthenticated rumour now and then prevailed that Captain Wareham was
+a tyrant at home, he upon the whole bore the character of an exemplary
+man.
+
+Mrs. Wareham had died just as her eldest daughter had attained
+the age of womanhood, and upon her death the care of the younger
+children devolved upon Caroline. Caroline was by nature indolent and
+sweet-tempered. It was to her a most wearisome duty to inspect the
+bills, and to see that the lessons were prepared by the time the day
+governess arrived. She was pretty, and her very indolence gave her
+something fashionable in manner,—at least, it prevented any thing
+approaching a bustling fussiness, which is in itself essentially
+vulgar. She was much admired by the beaux of the neighbourhood, though
+there is a vast difference between admiring and proposing to a pretty
+pennyless girl.
+
+As she considered marriage the one and only means of escaping from
+a home and mode of life exceedingly distasteful to her, she did not
+discourage the admiration of those who paid her any attention. Several
+had appeared to be deeply smitten, but still the magic words upon
+which her future fate rested had never passed their lips, and she was
+gradually becoming hopeless and distrustful. Her second sister, Ellen,
+was now seventeen, and was to make her appearance at the next county
+ball.
+
+On the morning after our opening scene, Captain Wareham was returning
+from his usual stroll, when, as he mounted the steps, a neat little
+damsel, with a milliner’s wicker basket on her arm, tripped lightly
+down them, dropping a graceful, coquettish curtsey as she passed.
+Captain Wareham wore a discontented aspect as he entered the
+drawing-room. “Caroline, was not that Miss Simperkin’s girl whom I met
+at the door?”
+
+“Yes, papa, she has been trying on Ellen’s ball-dress for to-morrow
+night.”
+
+“And so you run me up bills at the milliner’s, do you?”
+
+“This is Ellen’s first ball, papa,” answered Caroline in a deprecating
+tone, “and you know you are always annoyed if I do not look as nice as
+other girls, and so I thought you would wish Ellen to make a favourable
+impression at first. I have the beautiful gauze my aunt gave me, and I
+felt sure you would not like to see Ellen less well-dressed than me.”
+
+“Ah, well, I suppose it cannot be helped. I do not wish people to pity
+you for being shabbily dressed. I hate to be pitied.”
+
+At this moment a carriage and four drove up to the door. Ellen ran to
+the window.
+
+“Oh, Caroline! it is Lady Besville and her daughters; run and take off
+that black apron. Dear me! the room is all in confusion with Matilda’s
+lesson-books. There, put away the slate and the backboard.”
+
+Ellen inherited something of her father’s sensitiveness to the _qu’en
+dira-t-on_ of the world.
+
+“I wish it was summer,” whispered Caroline, “or that papa could afford
+us two fires.”
+
+The room was rendered tolerably tidy for the reception of Lady
+Besville, who always paid an annual visit to the Wareham family,
+although she was not in the habit of visiting the other country town
+gentry. It was a sort of tribute to the respectability of their conduct
+and of their connexions.
+
+Lady Besville was duly astonished at Matilda’s growth, she admired
+the stoutness of James, asked Ellen if she enjoyed the thoughts of
+her first ball, and said all the sweet little nothings, which are
+civilities and attentions, from the great to the little.
+
+Captain Wareham pressed some luncheon upon her ladyship; she owned she
+was very hungry, having had a long drive. Captain Wareham rang the bell
+with a vigorous pull, as if he felt assured a sumptuous repast only
+waited to be sent for, and in an easy and confident tone desired the
+one footman (who, if it had not been for his plush breeches and white
+stockings, would have been a footboy) to bring the luncheon.
+
+Caroline knew the servants had just devoured the last morsel of cold
+meat; she saw the look of blank dismay with which her father’s order
+was received by John, and she sat uneasily in her chair, wondering what
+would happen. She could not leave the room, it would look so odd; and
+she scarcely knew whether to rejoice, or to grieve, when she saw her
+father depart, ostensibly in search of a pamphlet on the times, which
+he particularly recommended to Lord Besville’s perusal, but in fact,
+as Caroline believed, to take some energetic measures upon the subject
+of luncheon. She dreaded his coming to the knowledge of the unprovided
+state of the larder, and, on the other hand, she equally dreaded
+having her housekeeping brought to utter shame before strangers. Poor
+Caroline! she was not by nature a manager. She was meek and gentle,
+and, perhaps, if she had not been frightened, might have succeeded as
+well as her neighbours, but she always felt she should do wrong, and
+never ventured to do right. There is a certain portion of decision
+necessary even in the ordering of dinner, and choosing between a leg of
+mutton and a shoulder.
+
+Captain Wareham, after a small delay, returned with the pamphlet, and
+he conversed with fluency and eagerness upon its contents. Ellen,
+meanwhile, had become tolerably intimate with Lady Harriet, who was
+also to make her first appearance at the approaching ball; and Caroline
+listened with a face expressive of much interest to the discussion
+upon the fates of nations, while she secretly revolved in her mind
+what would be the cook’s resource in this unforeseen exigency. The
+half-hour which thus elapsed seemed to her interminable; she thought
+Lady Besville would be quite tired of waiting, and she saw her begin to
+fidget on her chair, and to look towards the window.
+
+At this critical juncture Caroline heard the jingle of one glass
+against another, as John mounted the stairs. This delightful promise
+of a forthcoming repast of some sort or another, was to her ears as
+the horn of a German post-boy, when he approaches the town, to the
+benighted traveller, or as the tinkling of the camel-bells of a caravan
+to a solitary pilgrim in the desert.
+
+The door opened—the tray entered—Caroline cast a trembling, furtive
+glance: to her delight and astonishment, she beheld a tongue, a fowl,
+a dish of puffs, some cakes, some fruit, and wine. She breathed more
+freely, and performed her part of hostess with ease and quietness. The
+Besvilles did ample justice to the meal, and departed impressed with
+the comfortable and respectable manner in which Captain Wareham lived,
+the good-breeding of Caroline, and the good-humour and liveliness of
+her father.
+
+But Caroline’s troubles were to come. Captain Wareham reproached her
+for having no cold meat, and told her how he had been obliged to send,
+in one direction to the eating-house to buy a cold fowl at twice its
+value—to the pastry-cook for some puffs—to the fruiterers for some
+fruit, to conceal her bad housekeeping. “You would not have people go
+away from one’s house hungry, would you? Though I am poor, I cannot
+submit to that.”
+
+Caroline knew that to remind him of what he had said the day before
+would only increase his wrath, and she bore it in unreplying meekness,
+while she secretly wondered whether Mr. Weston was likely to be more
+serious in his attentions than Major Barton had proved.
+
+The momentous evening arrived: Captain Wareham looked with paternal
+pride at his two daughters, as he led them into the ball-room—the
+fair and delicate Caroline, with her small but beautifully rounded
+form, her regular features, and her alabaster skin, and the tall and
+sylph-like Ellen, whose beauty was of a loftier character. Her straight
+and clearly-defined eyebrows, her broad white forehead, and her noble
+cast of countenance, were softened and subdued by a pensive grace which
+rendered her appearance as interesting as it was striking. The full
+white eyelids were fringed with long and black eyelashes which almost
+swept her cheeks; and when she raised those eyes, there was a liquid
+lustre in the depth of their dark blue, which might have found its way
+to the coldest heart.
+
+Mr. Cresford, a young and wealthy London merchant, was not one whose
+coldness rendered him proof against these same eyes. On the contrary,
+he was an impassioned and impetuous youth, who fell in love with Ellen
+at first sight, danced with her all night, sat by her at supper, and
+never left her side till he had handed her to her carriage.
+
+The next morning the sisters were preparing to take their accustomed
+exercise, and Ellen had put on her common straw bonnet, when Caroline
+remonstrated.
+
+“It is quite fine, you may just as well wear your Sunday bonnet to-day.”
+
+“This will do very well for the garden. I promised Will Pollard to help
+him to pot the geraniums for the winter.”
+
+“Surely, Ellen, you are not going to poke about in our little confined
+garden. Do let us walk into the town. There are all the people we met
+at the ball last night; we shall be sure to see some of them.”
+
+“But I promised the gardener to help him. You know papa cannot afford
+to have him more than three days in the week, and if we do not assist
+him a little, the garden can never look nice.”
+
+“Any other day will do just as well for your gardening. Now do, dear
+Ellen, let us take a good long walk, it will refresh us after the ball.
+I never knew you unwilling to oblige anybody before. Besides, I must
+go to the shop to buy some things for George, before he returns to
+school; and I want you to help me. It is so difficult to give poor papa
+satisfaction. I am sure I do my very best, but I do get so wearied,
+and so worried at home, what with the housekeeping, and the lessons,
+and having to keep the boys’ things in order, and never being able to
+do any thing right, that I want a little relaxation.”
+
+Ellen yielded, for she often pitied Caroline, who was decidedly not
+made for the lot which had befallen her. She put on her best bonnet,
+and the three sisters sallied forth. From the shop they walked along
+the river-side, under the shade of some spreading elms, which made this
+terrace the favourite resort of the inhabitants of ——. They had not
+long been there before Mr. Cresford joined them.
+
+He walked by Ellen’s side, and any acute observer might have perceived,
+by the obsequious air, the flushed cheek, and the agitation of his
+whole demeanour, that his was not a common-place flirtation to kill
+an idle morning, but that his feelings were deeply interested. Ellen
+was shy and reserved, but her reserve only increased the ardour of the
+passion which had so suddenly been awakened in his breast.
+
+The next day Ellen could not be persuaded to extend their walk beyond
+their own garden.
+
+“When Mr. Cresford is gone away, Caroline, we will walk wherever you
+please, but I do not like appearing to seek him.”
+
+“Why do you dislike him? He is evidently smitten with you.”
+
+“I do not dislike him particularly, but I think I am more comfortable
+and happy gardening with Will Pollard; and if I liked to meet him ever
+so much, I had rather die than appear to seek him, or any body else.”
+
+“So would I, Ellen!” cried little Matilda; “when I grow up, I will be
+so proud! it shall never be said that I care for anybody.”
+
+“I am sure I should be sorry to do any thing forward,” answered
+Caroline, “only one must take the air sometimes. Perhaps, however, you
+are both right, and I am sure I would not have any girl care for any
+man, till she is quite sure of him, and it is very difficult to know
+when they are in earnest.”
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ _Cleanthes._—She’ll be a castaway—my life upon ’t.
+ _Hermione._—Man argues from his fiercer will, nor knows
+ True virtue’s quality in woman’s breast.
+ My daughter, sir, is virtuous, and virtue
+ Will to herself subdue e’en rebel Nature.
+ Had she been linked in love with one her choice,
+ She had been all soul, following her wedded lord
+ Through life’s worst perils, frankly, fearlessly;
+ But matched, ere yet her young heart spoke, with one
+ She cannot love, she’ll give her love to duty,
+ And cheerful, although passionless, perform it
+ Calmly, contentedly, nor ever dream
+ Of joys she must not know, and so pass on
+ Into the quiet grave.
+
+ _Old Manuscript Play._
+
+Mr. Cresford soon found some excuse for calling upon Captain Wareham,
+and in the course of his visit contrived to give himself a commission
+to execute, which justified another visit, another and another.
+
+Captain Wareham thought the symptoms were auspicious, and entertained
+some hope of honourably disposing of one daughter in marriage, but
+Caroline, profiting by her own experience, warned Ellen not to place
+any reliance on these signs of preference.
+
+“You do not know the world yet, Ellen,” she said; “you do not know how
+often the same sort of thing has happened to me. Remember Major Barton
+last winter, and poor Mr. Astell—however, I do think he would have
+proposed if he had lived. Talk to Mr. Cresford as much as you please,
+for, as my aunt says, ‘nothing can come of nothing,’ but do not let
+yourself like him, till he has actually proposed. Remember what I have
+already told you, a woman cannot guess whether a man is in earnest or
+not, till he does propose.”
+
+Ellen thought her sister was very prudent and sensible, and she
+resolved to follow her advice. Nor did she find the task a difficult
+one.
+
+Mr. Cresford, although handsome, was not pleasing, and the very
+vehemence of his love rather alarmed and confused the young Ellen. This
+was the season of gaity at ——, and there were frequent dinners and
+parties among the canons and prebends. Caroline regularly asked Ellen
+every night, whether Mr. Cresford had proposed, and for ten days Ellen
+answered, “No, not quite.” Caroline continued her warnings, and Ellen
+her watch over her heart.
+
+At length Mr. Cresford waited one morning upon Captain Wareham, and
+in good set terms asked him for his daughter’s hand. Captain Wareham
+accepted his proposal, and informed Ellen of the event.
+
+There did not seem to exist a doubt in any of their minds as to what
+her answer would be. The whole question had been from the beginning,
+whether or not he would come to the point, and the lady’s privilege of
+saying no, seemed in that family to be utterly forgotten. Ellen was too
+young and too timid to discover it for herself, and she found herself
+the affianced wife of a man, whom a fortnight before she had never
+seen, and whom, during that fortnight, she had been taking care not to
+prefer.
+
+The affair was decided. The lover was all rapture—Captain Wareham
+all satisfaction—Caroline all surprise that Mr. Cresford should have
+behaved in so gentlemanlike a manner, not keeping her sister in
+any uncertainty, but setting her mind at ease at once. She was too
+good-natured and too affectionate, to feel any thing like envy, but she
+wished Captain Barton had behaved in the same noble manner to her.
+
+Ellen was surprised not to find herself happier on so quickly arriving
+at that result, which had been the object of her sister’s wishes for
+six years and a half. But she was afraid of Mr. Cresford. He was
+easily hurt, easily offended; he was expecting, and jealous; he would
+not allow her to go to any more of the balls; he scarcely liked to
+see her acknowledge, much less shake hands with, any of her former
+acquaintance. Ellen was subdued, rather than elated, by her approaching
+nuptials. Caroline one day remarked upon her unusual seriousness, and
+asked her if she and Mr. Cresford had not had a lovers’ quarrel.
+
+“Oh, no,” replied Ellen; “but it is difficult, you know, sister, to
+love a person all at once, particularly when one has been trying not
+to like him at all. However, I dare say I shall soon, when I am more
+accustomed to him. It is not easy to do just right; for a girl is not
+to like a man till he proposes, and then she ought to love him very
+much as soon as ever she is going to be married to him.”
+
+Mr. Cresford was the only son of wealthy parents, and was accustomed
+to find his wishes laws to those around him. His father had died when
+he was barely twenty-one, and had left him at the head of a thriving
+mercantile house.
+
+He fell in love with Ellen at first sight,—he proposed at once, had
+been accepted, and, following the course of his own impetuous passions,
+was now eager that the wedding-day should be fixed. Captain Wareham had
+no wish to postpone it, and in three weeks more Ellen left the paternal
+roof as the wife of Mr. Cresford.
+
+She was astounded and confused at the whole thing; she had not been
+allowed time to become attached to him, even if he had been all a
+maiden’s imagination could picture in its happiest day-dream. But there
+was a want of refinement in the headlong course of his love, a want of
+consideration; in fact, there was a selfishness, which did not win its
+way to the heart of a very modest, very young, and very sensitive girl.
+
+In London she found herself surrounded by all the luxuries of life.
+She had an excellent house, a handsome equipage. He showered presents
+upon her—jewels and trinkets without number,—each new ornament daily
+invented to satisfy the caprice of the idle and the wealthy. His
+delight was to see his lovely bride’s beauty set off to the utmost
+advantage. But she must be decked out for him alone; he was annoyed if
+any other eyes seemed to dwell with gratification upon the loveliness
+which he had taken such pleasure in adorning.
+
+Cresford had a large circle of acquaintance, not, perhaps, in the
+first style of fashion, but among gentlemanlike and agreeable people;
+persons with intellects as well cultivated, minds as refined, manners
+as essentially well-bred, as can be found in the highest coteries,
+though perhaps one of the initiated might perceive the want of that
+nameless grace which more than compensates for a certain coldness
+frequently pervading the most select _réunions_. The very fashionable
+are exceedingly afraid of each other. They may sometimes have been
+accused of insolence towards those whom they consider in a grade below
+themselves, but their worst enemies cannot say they do not stand
+in awe of each other. There was in Ellen a gentle dignity, which,
+combined with her extraordinary beauty, would have caused her to be
+distinguished in any society: of course, therefore, in this she could
+not but excite notice and admiration. Yet proud as Cresford was of her,
+anxious as he was to show to the world how lovely was the bride he
+had chosen for himself, he never returned from a party or an assembly
+without a cloud on his brow, and something restless and suspicious in
+his manner.
+
+She began to fear he was constitutionally jealous. Others came to the
+same conclusion. Young men in all ranks of life find peculiar pleasure
+in tormenting a jealous husband; and not all the shrinking modesty of
+Ellen’s manners could prevent their openly showing the admiration they
+felt. She hoped, by the extreme quietness of her behaviour, to give him
+no cause for disquiet; but though she might avoid affording him any
+opportunity of blaming her, she could not prevent his being irritable
+and violent whenever they had mixed in any society.
+
+She would gladly have led a very retired life, she would fain have
+dressed herself in a homely and unpretending style,—her whole object
+was to escape notice; but such was the nature of his love for her,
+that he was not satisfied unless her charms were set off by every
+ornament; and his fear of being laughed at was such, that he would
+not give occasion for saying he shut up his beautiful wife. Ellen was
+consequently obliged to mix in the world, and she learned to set a
+strict watch over her very looks, and to be tremblingly alive to the
+_on dits_ of society. She, as well as her sister Caroline, was timid
+in her nature; she was, moreover, shy and reserved upon all subjects
+connected with the feelings, and she dreaded lest his jealous fancies
+should ever openly burst forth, and bring blame or ridicule on either
+of them. She had at times stood in awe of her father, but the fear she
+felt of her husband was more constant and unceasing.
+
+Still she had been accustomed to humour and to yield to a captious
+temper, and she considered that it was the lot of women to bear with
+the caprices of men. She frequently reminded herself of the gratitude
+she was bound to feel towards him, for having taken her portionless
+from her father, and for the unbounded command of money which he
+allowed her. She excused his jealousy on account of the passionate love
+he evinced for her, and she concluded the two feelings were necessarily
+inseparable.
+
+His generosity on the subject of money afforded her one great pleasure,
+that of making various presents to her sisters, and of assisting
+her family in divers manners. He took her eldest brother into his
+mercantile establishment, and she rejoiced in having thus been the
+means of relieving her father from one care which pressed most heavily
+upon his mind.
+
+They had been married about four years, and Ellen was the mother of two
+lovely children, when the peace concluded between France and England,
+at the period when Buonaparte was First Consul, enabled the English to
+flock abroad. To Mr. Cresford it was a matter of great importance to
+conclude some arrangement with foreign merchants. For this purpose he
+made up his mind to leave his wife for a month or two.
+
+It was, however, most unwillingly that he tore himself away: it
+seemed as if some presentiment warned him not to depart. He postponed
+his journey from day to day, from week to week. At length his
+correspondents became impatient, and the day was fixed. He took Ellen
+and his children to reside with Captain Wareham during his absence,
+and she willingly promised to live in the strictest seclusion till his
+return; but it was with a melancholy foreboding that he bade her adieu,
+and he returned again and again to take one more last lingering look at
+her beautiful face, as though he felt he might never again thus gaze on
+it.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ ——Love’s sooner felt than seen:
+ Oft in a voice he creeps down through the ear;
+ Oft from a blushing cheek he lights his fire;
+ Oft shrouds his golden flame in likest hair;
+ Oft in a soft, smooth cheek doth close retire;
+ Oft in a smile, oft in a silent tear;
+ And if all fail, yet virtue’s self will lure!
+
+ PHINEAS FLETCHER.
+
+Caroline was now seven-and-twenty, and she had many histories to pour
+into Ellen’s ear of the deceitful conduct of sundry naval or military
+heroes, and briefless barristers. One old nabob had laid his fortune
+at her feet, but he was too disagreeable, and she preferred even the
+eternal household bills, and the last finish of Matilda’s education,
+and the increased peevishness of her father’s temper to being the wife
+of Mr. Pierson.
+
+But there was a person—a most amiable man—a clergyman, who had long
+appeared to prefer her—who did not pay her compliments, but who often
+visited them in their quiet home, and who admired her for qualities
+which had never attracted the notice of the captains nor the majors—her
+patience, her sweet temper, and her absence of selfishness. She owned
+to Ellen that, if circumstances ever enabled him to come forward, she
+should rejoice in the chances which had prevented her marrying earlier.
+
+In the course of a short time Ellen had an opportunity of becoming
+personally acquainted with Mr. Allenham, and she thought her sister
+would indeed be a fortunate woman if she should ever become his wife.
+
+To Ellen his intentions seemed manifest; but Caroline, who had so often
+been deceived, scarcely ventured to believe what she so much wished:
+all pleasure in the society of others was, however, completely gone,
+and she sighed to fix the affections which had so long been without a
+resting-place upon a person for whom she could feel entire respect, and
+in whom she could place complete reliance. Caroline was now as little
+inclined to mix in the world as Ellen, and Mr. Cresford would have been
+satisfied, if he could have witnessed the retirement in which they
+lived.
+
+He had not been gone more than a month, when the sudden renewal of
+hostilities gave rise to the greatest alarm among those who had friends
+upon the Continent. Still, no one was prepared for that gross violation
+of all the usual courtesies between civilised nations, of all the
+charities of human life, which astounded the European world, when
+Buonaparte detained the harmless traveller, the peaceable merchant,
+and doomed them to drag out the best years of their lives in weary,
+unprofitable imprisonment at Verdun, or in the fortress of La Bitche.
+
+At first no one could believe that this would last; they all looked to
+a speedy termination of their captivity. Ellen received letters from
+her husband, who was among the _detenus_ at Verdun, which filled her
+with pity and alarm. His jealousy, which could not be completely lulled
+when his virtuous and modest wife was constantly under his own eye, now
+raged like a devouring flame. He threatened to commit some crime which
+could only be atoned by his life, rather than endure the living death
+which consumed him. He braved the authorities—he would not accept his
+parole—he would not preclude himself from attempting every means in his
+power to again see the wife whom he adored. His letters were written in
+a state of mind bordering on distraction. In vain Ellen described to
+him her quiet mode of existence, entreated him to wait with patience
+till he could return in health and safety to his family, and promised
+faithfully to continue in the seclusion which he had prescribed. She
+communicated to him her intention of taking a cottage near her father
+and sisters, where the children might have the benefit of country air,
+and where she might be in some measure under the protection of her
+father without joining in the society of the town.
+
+The other partners in Mr. Cresford’s house were now obliged to transact
+the business. All that could be done was to await the events which
+time might bring forth, and meanwhile to take every opportunity of
+transmitting to him funds which might enable him to exist in such
+comfort as might be found within the walls of a prison.
+
+Ellen never deviated from the line of conduct which she had marked out
+for herself. She felt perfectly confident that her husband would soon
+return, and she so dreaded what might be his anger if he heard of her
+having joined in any the most innocent amusement, that she never left
+her home except to visit her father, and she never received any one
+except her own immediate relations. She shrank from the appearance,
+or the suspicion, of the slightest impropriety with as much sensitive
+horror as many would from any actual breach of decorum.
+
+The even tenor of Ellen’s monotonous life was one day most agreeably
+broken in upon by the entrance of Caroline, who, with a face of joyous
+mystery, made her appearance at her sister’s cottage immediately after
+breakfast.
+
+“I have such news for you, Ellen. You have been right all along, and
+Mr. Allenham has proposed. He came to dinner yesterday, and told papa
+that his uncle’s friend, Lord Coverdale, had presented him to the
+living of Longbury, and that he might now look forward to possessing a
+competency, and that he had long been attached to me; and then he says
+that the house is a very nice one, and that he is to remove to it from
+his curacy in about six months.”
+
+“But you do not tell me what answer you have given him,” replied Ellen,
+smiling.
+
+“Oh, Ellen, do not laugh at me; it would be affectation in me to
+pretend I am not very, very happy at the prospect before me. You know
+well enough that I have long preferred him to any one, but you cannot
+guess how ardently I wish I had never before fancied myself in love.
+All that has gone before seems to me now like a dream. My former
+likings have been nothing compared to this. Still I would give the
+world that my heart was quite, quite fresh and pure; that I could have
+given it to him wholly and solely. I envy you, Ellen, having married
+so early that your feelings had never been tampered with, as mine have
+been.”
+
+Ellen was surprised at the warmth with which Caroline spoke, and
+thought in her heart that she had never felt all this for Mr. Cresford.
+Caroline resumed—
+
+“I wonder how a being so good, so superior, so excellent as Mr.
+Allenham can have ever found any thing to please him, in such a poor,
+weak, frivolous creature as I am! I do feel so grateful to him! And I
+am sure if the devotion of my life can render me worthy of him, I may
+deserve him in that manner, though I can in no other.”
+
+Ellen was astonished at this burst of feeling in her sister. She had
+seen her, as she believed, in love before, that is to say, she had
+seen her pleased and flattered by the attentions of men; she had seen
+her ardently desiring to get away from her home, and she had seen her
+unhappy when a flirtation ended in nothing; but she had never before
+seen her love with all the devotion of which an affectionate heart is
+capable. A real true attachment exalts and refines the mind, and Mr.
+Allenham was a person with whom no one could associate without becoming
+better.
+
+The meekness and forbearance with which Caroline bore the eternal
+worry of her father’s temper, the asperity of which had increased with
+years, first attracted him; he admired her beauty (for a woman of
+seven-and-twenty, provided she enjoys good health, is as pretty as ever
+she was), and her evident pleasure in his preference, which, when it is
+accompanied with modesty, proves an almost irresistible charm to most
+men, combined to fix his affections. Her kind manner to all inferiors,
+and her gentle attention to any of the poor with whom she was brought
+in contact, satisfied his reason that she would make the best of wives
+for a clergyman. Nor was he mistaken in this expectation.
+
+But Captain Wareham, whose disposition inclined him to look on the
+dark side of every picture, now felt somewhat unhappy at the thoughts
+of losing the daughter who had been so long accustomed to his ways;
+although he had often been bitterly disappointed at Caroline’s failing
+to make a good establishment; a disappointment which he had been at no
+pains to conceal, and which did not contribute to make her own fall
+more lightly upon the poor girl.
+
+“I suppose you must marry Mr. Allenham, Caroline; but what is to become
+of me?” he one day said, in a desponding tone. “How can a man see to
+all the details of a household, and the boys, and everything?”
+
+“Why, papa, you always said I was but a bad housekeeper,” replied
+Caroline, who, in her new-born happiness and brightened prospects, had
+found a certain degree of courage, and sometimes ventured to reply half
+playfully to her father’s lamentations; “you will do all the better
+without me, I dare say.”
+
+“No, no! I shan’t! You have been a good girl, Caroline, and I shall not
+be able to do at all well without you. You will all marry, and I shall
+be left alone in my old age.”
+
+“Why, papa,” interrupted Matilda, “I have heard you regret a hundred
+times that Caroline did not marry, and say that it preyed upon your
+mind to think that we were unprovided for; and that if we were but
+married, you should be quite happy.”
+
+“In the meantime, my dear papa,” said Caroline, “Matilda can take my
+place. She is seventeen now, and I was not older when my poor mother
+died.”
+
+“Ah! but she is not so steady as you were. I cannot manage you,
+Matilda, as I can Caroline,” answered Captain Wareham, in whose
+estimation Caroline had risen wonderfully, now he was going to lose her.
+
+“Well, then, I will manage you, papa, and that will be much best,”
+replied the blunt and light-hearted Matilda, who was not easily either
+daunted or vexed. “I am so glad Caroline is going to marry that dear,
+good Mr. Allenham, that I shall not mind casting up those abominable
+bills. But I will tell you what, papa, you must not scold me as you do
+Caroline; I shall never bear it as she has done.”
+
+Caroline looked at Matilda, and tried to silence her, but without
+effect. And, strange to say, Captain Wareham would bear from Matilda
+jokes, and even lectures, which he would never have endured from her
+elder sisters. The fact was, that Matilda had a high spirit. She meant
+no harm; she did not mind a sharp word; and she gradually obtained a
+sort of mastery over her father.
+
+The marriage was not to take place till Mr. Allenham was settled at
+Longbury, but all things proceeded placidly and cheerfully with the
+Wareham family, except that the letters which Ellen received from Mr.
+Cresford were more and more distressing. They were written in a state
+of dreadfully low spirits. He complained of mental and bodily miseries.
+Still she was little prepared for the shock which awaited her, when one
+morning she read in the papers an official return from the depôt at
+Verdun, and among the deaths she saw the name of Charles Cresford, Esq.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ And such the colouring fancy gave
+ To a young, warm, and dauntless chief,—
+ And as a lover hails the dawn
+ Of a first smile, so welcomed he
+ The sparkle of the first sword drawn
+ For vengeance and for liberty.
+
+ _Lalla Rookh._
+
+ Buscas en Roma a Roma o peregrino
+ Y en Roma misma a Roma no la hallas,
+ Cadaver son las que ostentò murallas
+ Y tumba de sì propio el Aventino.
+
+ _Sonata de Quevedo._
+
+The shriek which Ellen involuntarily uttered brought her maid to her
+assistance. Her father and sister were sent for, and soon arrived to
+support and to console her.
+
+Though she had never been able to return the passionate love which her
+husband had evinced for her, though she had never loved him as she was
+capable of loving, still she was dutifully attached to him, and she
+mourned for him with sincerity and truth. She expected to receive some
+parting word, some last injunctions, from one who had been so fervently
+devoted to her. But nothing of the kind ever reached her. She had
+no friends among the _detenus_ to whom she could write, and she was
+obliged to rest contented with no farther details of the melancholy
+event than the report of Colonel Eversham, who had been one of those
+who followed his remains to the grave, and who had, soon afterwards,
+effected his own return to England. He told her that Cresford had made
+various and desperate attempts to escape, which had all failed, and
+that his friends attributed his illness to mental agitation, as he did
+not seem to labour under any particular or positive complaint.
+
+She heard with some satisfaction that his remains had been decently
+deposited in the Protestant burying-ground without the town, and that a
+considerable number of the most respectable of his fellow prisoners had
+attended his funeral. She grieved sincerely for his untimely fate, and
+she felt it the more from the belief that his passion for her, and the
+jealous feelings which he could not master, had, in all probability,
+hastened his end.
+
+By her marriage settlements she was entitled to a handsome jointure,
+for poor Cresford was noble and generous with regard to money, and did
+not dole out the jointure of the wife according to the fortune she
+brought, but proportioned it to his capabilities of providing for her.
+The partners preserved a share in the business for her son, and her
+daughter was also amply portioned.
+
+Ellen continued to live in the pretty cottage in which she had for some
+time resided. After a short delay the marriage of Caroline and Mr.
+Allenham took place, and all things resumed the even tenor of their
+course. Ellen found pleasure in the society of her children, whose
+opening intelligence rendered them each day more capable of becoming
+her companions, and she devoted herself to the pleasing task of leading
+their young hearts and minds in the right way.
+
+At the end of the first six months of her widowhood she paid a visit
+to Mr. and Mrs. Allenham, and it was a cordial to her heart to see
+poor Caroline, who had always been frightened and subdued at home,
+the joyous creature she now was. Her adoration of her husband knew no
+bounds; she thought him the best, the cleverest, the wisest of human
+beings. Her loving heart had at length found its proper resting-place,
+and her humble service and devotion would have made any man, except
+Mr. Allenham, appear in the light of a tyrant. But he was so gentle and
+so kind, he smiled so gratefully at the little attentions which she
+incessantly paid him, he so habitually preserved towards her the sort
+of polished deference with which a man should always treat a woman (in
+manner, at least, though he need not the more yield to her in deeds and
+actions), that Ellen began to think it was possible for matrimony to be
+a much happier state than she had found it.
+
+It was not long after her arrival at Longbury, that she was one day
+walking with her sister and her children in a retired green lane, which
+was nearly bowered over by the trees on each side, when a gentleman on
+horseback approached. A widow in her weeds is always an object of some
+interest, and the horseman was wondering who that graceful creature
+could be,—he was watching the sportive boundings of her children,
+without attending to his own path, when a bough knocked off his hat
+just as he was about to pass, and was trying to ascertain whether the
+face corresponded with the form he admired. The little boy ran to
+pick it up, and advanced fearlessly towards the horse. Ellen turned
+round, half alarmed for her child. The stranger leaped to the ground to
+receive the hat, saying at the same time, “Thank you, my fine fellow;
+you are a brave boy.”
+
+Ellen looked up with a pleased smile at the commendation of her darling
+George, and the stranger thought he had never in his life seen so
+beautiful a vision as that of the young widow with her close cap, her
+marble forehead, her straight-marked eyebrows, and those lustrous eyes,
+which gleamed so softly from beneath the hanging crape of her widow’s
+bonnet. He bowed with profound respect, remounted his horse, and rode
+on.
+
+He longed to look back, but there was something so serenely pure and
+holy in the expression of her countenance, that he felt it would be
+almost sacrilege to betray even common admiration.
+
+Caroline, whose career as a country town beauty had made her somewhat
+alive to the glances of passers by, could not help saying to Ellen,
+“That gentleman seemed quite struck when you turned round; I saw him
+give a start of surprise, and the colour came into his face.”
+
+“Oh, Caroline, how can you talk in that manner? there is something
+horrid in the notion of a widow exciting any feeling but pity.” Ellen’s
+delicacy shrank from such an idea, and they proceeded on their way in
+silence.
+
+The stranger was a visitor at Lord Coverdale’s, and at dinner he
+mentioned having seen this lovely widow in the green lane. “Oh, it must
+have been Mrs. Cresford,” said Lady Coverdale; “she is our clergyman’s
+sister-in-law, and they say she is very handsome. I am dying to see
+her, but she never appears when I call on Mrs. Allenham. Her husband
+was one of the _detenus_, and the poor man died six or seven months ago
+in France.”
+
+Mr. Hamilton left Coverdale Park the next day, but
+
+ “Those eyes of deep and most expressive blue,”
+
+came between him and his midnight dreams
+
+ “Oftener than any other eyes he ever knew.”
+
+Ellen returned to her cottage, where she still continued to reside,
+devoting great part of her liberal jointure to the assistance of
+her father, and to the advancement of her brothers in their various
+professions. The eldest was active and industrious, and was, through
+her means, enabled to become a partner, though but to a small amount,
+in the concern.
+
+The first year of Ellen’s widowhood had more than expired, and she
+again visited her sister and Mr. Allenham. She had changed her
+mourning, and etiquette no longer required that she should persevere in
+her seclusion.
+
+She now accompanied the Allenhams when they dined at Coverdale Park,
+and all who met her were struck by her beauty and attracted by her
+manners. Though her countenance still retained its habitually pensive
+expression, a smile would now occasionally light up her features, and
+he must have been a cold critic who could perceive any fault in the
+perfection of her loveliness.
+
+One day when they arrived at Coverdale Park, Ellen found herself
+greeted with a bow of profound respect, and a smile of recognition,
+by a tall, distinguished looking man, of whom she had not the
+slightest recollection. She acknowledged his salutation in the polite,
+half-doubting manner which is usual on such an occasion. Lady Coverdale
+immediately introduced him as Mr. Hamilton, and added that he had
+returned from a solitary ride last year, quite enchanted with her noble
+boy, who had so fearlessly brought him his hat, under the very feet of
+his horse.
+
+Ellen remembered the circumstance, and the name of Hamilton fell on her
+ear as being connected with a romantic history, not common in these
+unchivalrous days.
+
+Mr. Hamilton, when scarcely twenty, had taken his only sister to
+Naples for the recovery of her health. After having watched her
+gradual decline with tender and almost feminine attention, he had
+committed to the grave the remains of his only near relation, and found
+himself, without any tie, alone in a foreign land, at the moment when
+Buonaparte’s invasion of Italy had awakened the love of liberty, which
+though slumbering, was not totally extinguished in the souls of a few
+of her sons. With the true English spirit which considers as brethren
+those engaged in the struggle for freedom, he felt warmly for that
+lovely land—
+
+ Italia a cui feo la sorte
+ Dono infelice di beltà!
+
+On several occasions he fought as a volunteer among the Italians,
+whom, in the enthusiasm of youth, he venerated as the descendants of
+the ancient Romans, passing over in his imagination the many centuries
+during which the national character had been degraded by submission to
+foreign powers. He forgot that the natives of the soil had for ages
+past allowed themselves to be mastered and controlled by hireling
+troops of strangers, and hoped that if once restored to independence,
+they would rise regenerate from their ashes.
+
+He had formed an ardent friendship with a young Italian, Count Adolfo
+Melandrini, who was in command of a small squadron of troops. He
+acted as a sort of aide-de-camp to his friend, and fought by his
+side with all the generous impetuosity of his character. The star of
+Buonaparte, however, was in the ascendant: neither Melandrini’s nor
+young Hamilton’s heroism could do more than rouse the spirit of those
+immediately around them.
+
+Many of the states had been compelled to purchase an armistice by the
+sacrifice of their treasures of art. Melandrini’s indignation knew no
+bounds. His national pride was touched in the tenderest point, and in a
+skirmish which occurred shortly afterwards between his squadron and the
+advanced-guard of the French, in which his dispirited men were on the
+point of yielding, he dashed with headlong desperation into the midst
+of the enemy’s troops.
+
+Hamilton, who loved his friend with passionate devotion, and regarded
+him as the one being in whom the spirit of the olden time still
+survived, watched over his safety with almost religious veneration.
+
+They both performed prodigies of valour; but at length Melandrini sank
+covered with wounds, and faint from the loss of blood. Hamilton stood
+over the body of his friend, defending it with the energy of despair,
+and firmly resolved that while he retained life, it should never
+fall into the hands of the foe. The troops in the mean time rallied,
+and, returning to the charge, drove back the enemy. Hamilton was
+found still protecting the almost lifeless form of the Italian chief,
+which he never quitted for a moment, but bore in his own arms back
+to the entrenchments. His efforts to save his friend were, however,
+unavailing: Melandrini had found the death he sought, and only survived
+long enough to express his gratitude to Hamilton, whose gallant feat
+was soon noised abroad, and reached the ears of many who were not
+personally acquainted with him.
+
+The surrender of Mantua put an end to all idea of further resistance.
+Italy allowed herself quietly to be plundered of all her most precious
+and holy ornaments, even including the famous image of our Lady of
+Loretto, and Hamilton, in disgust abandoning the wretched land,
+returned to his own free and happy country. His paternal estates were
+considerable, and he resolved to devote himself in private to the
+welfare of those who were dependant upon him, and in public to the
+preservation of that liberty which he believed to be the basis of all
+that ennobles man. He distinguished himself in parliament, at first,
+perhaps, by too great vehemence, on the liberal side; but his own
+clear head and maturer judgment soon tempered what might have been
+extravagant in his enthusiasm, and at the age of nine-and-twenty he was
+as practically useful a member of society, as he had originally been a
+romantic advocate of liberty.
+
+Ellen, who long ago had accidentally heard the history of his
+achievements, looked on him with a certain degree of respect, as
+the hero who, to her girlish imagination, had realised the stories
+of Paladins of old. It was with pleasure, therefore, that she found
+herself seated by him at dinner.
+
+His appearance and his address did not disappoint her. His flashing eye
+seemed formed “to threaten and command;” his athletic form might well,
+single-handed, have kept at bay a host of common men; while she could
+imagine that from those expressive lips might flow streams of eloquence
+to sway the listening senate. Still he was peculiarly simple and
+straight-forward: with all his fame about him he had a frank manner, as
+though what was said by him, carried with it no more weight than if it
+had been uttered by the most undistinguished individual in the room.
+Yet every thing he said was well said; all showed reflection, reading,
+sound judgment, and refined taste. He was, in all respects, so superior
+to any one with whom Ellen had ever yet been thrown, that he appeared
+to her a being of another order.
+
+The enthusiasm which we have described as being a leading feature of
+his character, although tempered by judgment in political matters,
+was still all there; and the impression produced by the first sight
+of Ellen in her weeds, was not weakened by further acquaintance. The
+lightning of her smile, when usurping the place of her usually pensive
+expression, reminded him of the days of youthful romance, when he and
+his friend Melandrini used to study Petrarch together, and reading of
+the “lampeggiar del angelico riso,” would picture to themselves what
+must have been that Laura, who could render the poet,
+
+ Si da se stesso diviso
+ E fatto singolar da l’altra gente.
+
+He now thought, if she had resembled Ellen, there was nothing to marvel
+at in the poets’s long and hopeless devotion.
+
+During the two years which she had passed in retirement, she had read
+a great deal; and the education which she had thus given herself had
+tended more to cultivate her mind than all the accomplishments with
+which governesses cram the common run of young ladies. The more he saw
+of her, the more he became convinced that the qualities of her head and
+heart fully corresponded with the loveliness of her person.
+
+Lord and Lady Coverdale found their most agreeable friend, Mr.
+Hamilton, vastly more willing to prolong his visit than usual. He
+seemed much struck with the excellence of Mr. Allenham’s opinions
+upon the subject of the poor laws, and he frequently walked to the
+parsonage, to discuss the subject with him.
+
+The eagerness with which Mr. Hamilton accepted their invitation to
+repeat his visit made them begin to suspect that the youthful widow
+had more to say to the attractions of the parsonage than Mr. Allenham
+and the poor laws. Still, though he evidently admired Mrs. Cresford,
+there was nothing which could justify any reports. He was so afraid
+of alarming her by any indiscreet avowal of his preference, that he
+continued merely to seek the society of the family in general.
+
+Caroline, however, who was not so very delicate upon such subjects as
+her sister, could refrain no longer.
+
+“Well, Ellen! I suppose, now you have been seven months out of your
+weeds, I may venture to say that Mr. Hamilton admires you? and it is my
+belief, though I am not apt to place much reliance on men in general,
+it is my belief he intends to propose to you.”
+
+“Oh no, Caroline! he has never said any thing like it.” But Ellen’s
+heart beat quicker, and the colour mounted in her cheeks.
+
+“Yes, yes! you think so too! You are blushing ten times more than when
+poor Mr. Cresford proposed.” (Caroline always disliked Mr. Cresford,
+for she was exceedingly afraid of him.)
+
+“Hush, Caroline! Do not speak so of my poor husband! He was very fond
+of me; and nothing in the world should ever induce me to do any thing
+that was the least disrespectful towards his memory.”
+
+“Well, but you are not bound to remain a widow, from the age of
+three-and-twenty, for evermore!”
+
+“I am not out of mourning yet, Caroline.”
+
+No more passed; but this conversation made Ellen appear more conscious,
+and less at her ease in Mr. Hamilton’s presence, than she had
+previously done. From this sign he gathered hope.
+
+The remarks of friends, the quizzing of acquaintances, the reports
+of the world, greatly accelerate matters when there already exists a
+real preference, though they often completely nip a slight one in its
+bud. There is a particular moment at which they fan the flame, and a
+previous one at which they blow it out.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ What voice is this, thou evening gale,
+ That mingles with thy rising wail,
+ And as it passes sadly seems
+ The faint return of youthful dreams.
+
+ JOANNA BAILLIE.
+
+Mr. Hamilton’s manner became more and more marked, and before the
+expiration of his second visit to Lord Coverdale’s, be one day took
+courage and spoke his sentiments to Ellen.
+
+She received his avowal with all the confusion of a girl who, for the
+first time, hears expressions of love addressed to her. It was that
+now, for the first time, she felt the passion herself. She could not
+deny her preference, and he was made happy by hearing from her own lips
+that she esteemed him, that she believed she could be happy as his wife.
+
+But she persisted in a resolution to see him no more till the two years
+of her widowhood had expired, and till then not even to correspond with
+him. He thought her delicacy rather over-strained—he thought her almost
+prudish—but a man does not love or value a woman the less for erring on
+the side of decorum, especially when he is confident he has undivided
+possession of her heart; and the speaking eyes, the trembling hand, the
+faltering voice, all assured him that such was the case.
+
+She made him promise to confide to no one their engagement, and he
+tore himself away, to get through the four months which intervened as
+best he might. He almost repented having spoken to her at all, and at
+moments doubted whether the delightful certainty of being loved quite
+compensated for the loss of her society.
+
+She, on her part, half repented of her decision in banishing him, and
+quite repented of her prohibition to correspond. Her affection for him
+increased rapidly in absence. This is frequently the case with women.
+When in the presence of the person they love, reserve and modesty
+prevent their freely giving way to what they feel, but in absence they
+dwell without fear on every word and look, and the imagination supplies
+food to the feelings.
+
+Ellen consulted with herself whether she should impart what had
+occurred to her sister, and, upon the whole, she thought it best to
+do so. It seemed unkind to conceal such an important circumstance from
+one who took so tender an interest in all that concerned her, and,
+moreover, she should have some one to whom she could expatiate upon the
+perfections of Mr. Hamilton.
+
+Caroline was half angry at not having been at once let into the secret,
+but she was so pleased at the prospect of her sister’s enjoying such
+happiness as she now knew, that she soon got over her little vexation.
+
+As Ellen expected, she proved an invaluable confidante in one respect;
+she listened with delight to any tale of love; but in another respect
+she rendered the task she had imposed upon herself more difficult,
+as she was constantly arguing with Ellen upon the over-strained
+delicacy of sending Mr. Hamilton away for the next few months. But
+the more Ellen longed to break it, the more firmly she adhered to her
+determination. She accused herself of ingratitude towards him who was
+the father of her children, in feeling so very happy as she did, and
+she resolved to pay this tribute of respect to his memory.
+
+The four months elapsed. Ellen had remained all this time with her
+sister, and it was to Longbury that Mr. Hamilton returned when the time
+of his probation was over.
+
+If Ellen’s passion had increased in absence, Mr. Hamilton’s had not
+cooled, and never were two people more thoroughly attached, more
+romantically in love, and what, in the long run, conduces still more to
+lasting happiness, more entirely suited in disposition, than Ellen and
+her future husband.
+
+Their approaching marriage was now declared, and Lady Coverdale rallied
+Mr. Hamilton upon his thirst for information concerning the poor laws.
+
+Captain Wareham, who was an affectionate father, although an irritable
+man, rejoiced in the bright prospects of his daughter, and he was
+much gratified by the connection. Mr. Hamilton’s situation in life
+was such as to render his alliance eligible to any one, in however
+high a station; and to a man who had been reduced by poverty below
+his original position in the scale of society, it was peculiarly
+satisfactory.
+
+The marriage was to take place at Longbury, and after the delays
+necessary for settlements, &c. the day was fixed. Mr. Allenham
+performed the ceremony. Her father gave her away. There was no pomp;
+Ellen wished to have the whole quiet and unostentatious. Deeply as
+she was attached to Mr. Hamilton—confident as she was in his love for
+her—much as her reason, as well as her heart, approved of the step she
+was about to take,—a vague dread came over her as the day approached.
+Sounds as of other days were ringing in her ears. At times she almost
+fancied she heard the cathedral bells of her native place, the chime of
+the Minster clock striking the quarters.
+
+Who has not, without any concatenation of ideas which he can trace,
+when dropping asleep perhaps, or when plunged in a dreamy reverie, felt
+as it were the vibration of well-known sounds, and with effort roused
+himself to the recollection that he was far away from the home which
+was thus brought to his mind?
+
+On the eventful morning, the full deep swell of the cathedral bells,
+which rang out so sonorously on the morning of her first marriage,
+seemed to make themselves heard through the merry peal of the three or
+four tinkling bells which were all the boast of Longbury church.
+
+As Mr. Allenham pronounced the words, “Those whom God hath joined
+together, let no man put asunder,” that sound again rang in her ears—a
+mist came over her eyes—she fancied it was Mr. Cresford’s hand in which
+her’s was placed, and she fainted in her husband’s arms.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ For contemplation he, and valour formed;
+ For softness she, and sweet attractive grace;
+ He for God only, she for God in him.
+
+ MILTON.
+
+The last few words of the ceremony were quickly hurried over. Ellen
+was supported into the vestry, where she quickly recovered; and the
+circumstance of a bride’s fainting was not an event of such rare
+occurrence as to excite much surprise.
+
+Mr. Hamilton’s place was situated in a lovely country on the borders
+of Sussex and Surrey. Hanging woods, extensive oak copses mixed with
+birch, sandy lanes, hedges which are enlivened by large hollies with
+their glossy leaves and their red berries—wild patches of heath,
+studded with juniper bushes—fern and innumerable wild flowers in
+the shaws and dingles—banks blue with violets, and dells yellow with
+primroses, are the characteristics of that most enjoyable part of
+England.
+
+Belhanger, which was the name of his place, was in the Elizabethan
+style. A spacious hall, in which was an immense fire-place, surmounted
+by the antlers of some patriarchal stag, communicated with a large,
+low, oak dining-room, and through some smaller apartments to a
+drawing-room, which was hung with tapestry, and adorned with beautiful
+oak carving; the crossings of the beams in the ceiling were ornamented
+with wooden rosettes, in the most antique taste, while the rest of
+the room was provided with all the essentials requisite for modern
+comfort. A broad and massive staircase of black oak led, as is usual
+with buildings of that period, to a gallery on the upper floor, which
+extended the whole length of the south front, and which, with its two
+fire-places, and its innumerable windows of all shapes and sizes,
+admitting every ray of sun, was one of the most delightful winter
+apartments imaginable.
+
+The exterior of the mansion was as irregular as the most ardent lover
+of the picturesque could desire. It was built of grey-stone, and
+composed of gable-ends of every possible angle. As its name indicated,
+it was built upon the side of a hill, which had originally been covered
+with hanging woods. The woods had been partially cleared away near the
+house, and a sloping lawn led down to the small but romantic deer-park
+in the valley.
+
+Ellen thought Belhanger the very _beau ideal_ of an English manorial
+house, and, if she had not been too much in love, and too happy in the
+affections of such a man as Mr. Hamilton, to find room in her heart for
+emotions that were not connected with him, she would have thought the
+possession of such a place as Belhanger an additional pleasure.
+
+The poor people, too, were a more primæval race than those who have
+not lived in that part of the world would expect to find at so short a
+distance from the metropolis. The bright blue smock-frocks which are
+there the common dress of the men, and the red cloaks which the women
+still wear, gave a picturesque appearance to the peasant congregation
+as they trooped out of church, and wound down the steep road, by the
+beech-crowned knoll.
+
+Ellen was charmed with all she saw, but, perhaps, she would have been
+equally charmed had her home been less perfect in itself, for she had
+that within which would have made a cottage appear to her a palace—a
+desert a paradise.
+
+The judicious kindness of Mr. Hamilton to her children, the eldest
+of whom was now six years old, gave him still another claim on her
+affections and her gratitude. He counselled with her on the best
+course of education, the proper method of training a boy’s mind, and
+entered into the subject with all a father’s eagerness and anxiety.
+Ellen rejoiced that she had given her son such a protector, and looked
+forward to his making, under such guidance, a useful and an exemplary
+member of society.
+
+Mr. Hamilton found in Ellen new charms, new virtues, each succeeding
+day. She was one of those shrinking and sensitive creatures who cannot
+put forth half their powers of pleasing except in the intimacy of
+domestic life, and under the fostering hand of kindness. Before her
+first marriage she had been but a child, a timid frightened child—while
+the wife of Mr. Cresford, although adored by himself, he had been so
+fearful of her appearing too attractive in the eyes of others, that
+she had acquired the habit of trying to glide through life unobserved,
+in order to avoid any ebullitions of jealousy on his part, rather than
+of attempting to shine as an agreeable person. She was astonished and
+delighted when she saw her husband’s expressive eyes follow her as she
+spoke, and gleam on her with kindly pride when others seemed to admire
+her.
+
+Life was to her a new state of existence: not that she had hitherto
+been an unhappy person; she had always repeated to herself how much
+cause she had for gratitude: but the inward dancing of the heart she
+had never before experienced, and she often said to her husband,
+“Algernon, you make me too happy. This cannot last; something must
+happen: I do not deserve to be so blessed above the rest of womankind.”
+
+He would reply with a smile, “Do you fancy, Ellen, you are the only
+woman whose husband loves her?”
+
+“No, but I am the only woman in the world who am loved by you. Am I
+not?” she added, with a playful glance of entire confidence in his
+devotion.
+
+When parliament met, they repaired to London, and she then moved in a
+sphere vastly more elevated than that to which she had been introduced
+as Mrs. Cresford. But she had so much native grace and dignity, that
+she did not appear to be transplanted into a new soil, but rather to be
+now restored to that which was natural and congenial to her.
+
+She had the rapture of hearing her husband spoken of with respect, and
+of seeing him treated with deference, by every one. By his own party
+he was looked up to as one of its most influential members, more from
+the weight of his personal character than from that of his property and
+situation, although they also were of considerable importance. By his
+opponents he was considered as the one fair man, who, though decided
+in his own opinions, was ready to render justice to the uprightness of
+those who differed from him. There can be no condition of life happier
+than that of Ellen at this moment, none more respectable in the scale
+of human beings, than that of the wife of an Englishman of unblemished
+reputation, who holds a distinguished position in the senate of that
+nation whose laws and constitution have been the admiration, and the
+model, of nearly every civilised country in both hemispheres.
+
+Ellen again became a mother, and the birth of a little girl, if
+possible, cemented more strongly the bond of union between herself, her
+husband, and her children.
+
+Nearly two years had now elapsed since she had become the happy wife of
+Mr. Hamilton; and he had for nearly two years enjoyed the society of
+the lovely and devoted woman for whom his affection daily increased, as
+her valuable qualities continually opened upon him. She was adored by
+all around. The poor showered blessings upon her name whenever it was
+mentioned,—their richer neighbours had nothing but acts and words of
+kindness to record of her. Her eldest brother took every opportunity
+that his avocations allowed him, to run down to Belhanger. Her father,
+when with Mr. Hamilton, seemed to lose his captiousness; for there is
+a magic in very high breeding which renders any ebullition of temper
+almost impracticable. Matilda, who was become a fine showy girl, often
+passed some time with her sister Ellen, and had profited much by her
+example and advice.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Allenham were at this moment in the house; Lord and
+Lady Coverdale, and their daughter, had just arrived, and some other
+persons, political friends of Mr. Hamilton’s.
+
+Lady Coverdale had been telling Ellen she thought her the most
+fortunate woman in the world; she had been speaking of Mr. Hamilton,
+whom she had known from his infancy, in terms which even Ellen
+thought worthy of the theme, and had been saying how happy she should
+esteem herself if she could ever see her daughter blessed with such
+a husband, and possessed of such a home; Algernon’s friends had been
+gaily complimenting him upon his good taste, and his good fortune,
+and declaring they had sufficient discrimination to appreciate such a
+woman, if they could only have the good fortune to meet with any one
+at all resembling Mrs. Hamilton, when one morning at breakfast Ellen
+received a letter from her brother, enclosing one directed to her as
+Mrs. Cresford, and addressed to the house in London which she had
+formerly inhabited.
+
+The post-mark was foreign, and there was something in a letter
+addressed to her by that name, which struck her as being so strange
+that she did not open it, but folding it again in her brother’s
+envelope, she waited till she could retire to peruse its contents. She
+continued to perform her part of hostess at the breakfast-table, and
+told herself it must be a begging letter, from some one, perhaps, who
+had known Mr. Cresford at Verdun.
+
+Still the letter haunted her, and she could scarcely smile at the gay
+jests which passed round the breakfast-table, or listen to the news
+and gossip contained in the correspondence of the other members of
+the society. The outside was so covered with post-marks, and various
+directions, that she had not remarked in what sort of hand the name
+was written, and she quietly took it out of the envelope, just to see
+if it did look like a begging letter. Her former name always made her
+shudder, she could not tell why, and she had often reproached herself
+for the feeling, as an unkind and ungrateful one towards the memory
+of him who was gone. It was that strange instinct which had made her
+so quickly put this letter aside, and it was with an unaccountable
+trepidation that she again drew it forth to examine the hand-writing.
+She looked and looked again, till her eyes swam. It was very like the
+writing which was only too familiar to her. It was,—it must be his
+writing,—she could not be mistaken; only it was impossible.—quite
+impossible. Yet it might contain his last behests, which had, from
+some cause, never been delivered before. She could not open it. She
+hastily concealed it, and turning deadly pale, she sat, scarcely
+conscious of what passed around her, till the last person had been
+helped to his last cup of tea.
+
+She longed to know the contents, but there came a sickness over her
+heart, which made her postpone the dreaded moment. At length the
+company rose one by one, and straggled towards the windows. She
+summoned all her might, and walked steadily to the door—she sought her
+own boudoir, and seating herself upon the sofa, she again unfolded the
+envelope, she again gazed on the outside—she had not yet courage to
+break the seal.
+
+There was something dreadful in thus receiving the dying injunctions of
+one husband, one who had loved her, too, so passionately, in reading
+the ebullitions of his vehement affection, when she was the adoring
+wife of another. She felt as though he were about to speak to her from
+the grave.
+
+She looked at the post-marks. There were upon it, in various coloured
+inks, Gratz, Vienna, Dresden, Magdeburg, Hamburgh. No Verdun post-mark!
+How strange! Wonder, terror, conquered all other feelings—she tore open
+the seal—it was indeed his own hand-writing!—the date, Gratz, June
+1808—What could it mean? She looked at the end—it was his own, very
+own name!—it was addressed to her! It began, “My beloved wife, my own
+Ellen!” She could read no more; the letter dropped from her hand, and
+she fainted on the floor.
+
+She was in this state, when Mr. Hamilton, alarmed by her paleness at
+breakfast, sought her in her boudoir. He raised her from the ground,
+and calling her maid, soon succeeded in restoring her to herself—To
+herself? No! She could never again be what she had been!
+
+She gazed around with wild and haggard eyes; then motioning the maid to
+leave the room, and watching with agonized fear till the double doors
+were both closed, she screamed rather than said,—
+
+“He is alive! he is alive! I am not your wife, Algernon! I am not
+yours!” and she threw herself into his arms, she clung to him, she
+clasped her arms around his neck, with desperate energy, as if she
+thought thus to rivet the tie she felt was severed.
+
+“Ellen! dearest Ellen! my own gentle Ellen, are you raving? You must be
+ill! What is the matter? You really frighten me!” he added, attempting
+to smile.
+
+“Look there, Algernon! there it lies! I have only read the first line,
+and would to heaven I had died! Oh! if I could but die now, with my
+head on your bosom,—your arms around me,—my eyes fixed on yours!
+Dearest, dearest Algernon! I love you better than any thing else in the
+whole world—better, ten thousand times better than myself! Words cannot
+express the thousandth part of the agonizing love I feel for you! and
+it is all a crime! Look there! read that!” and she pressed her hands
+against her eyeballs, as if to exclude light and consciousness.
+
+This burst of passion was so unlike his retiring Ellen, whose
+affection, though evinced by every action of her life, implied by
+all she said, had still seemed frightened back into her heart, if in
+any moment of tenderness she was called upon to couch it into actual
+language, that Mr. Hamilton was lost in astonishment! In dread and
+wonder he took the letter in his hand—he saw the beginning—he looked at
+the date—he staggered to a chair, and exclaiming, “Merciful Heaven!” he
+too remained stupified, unable to utter, and scarcely to think, or to
+comprehend the extent of the misfortune which had befallen them.
+
+At length reason in some measure resumed its sway, and he suggested,
+“May it not be a forgery? Are you sure it is his hand?” A momentary
+light flashed athwart her mind; she seized the paper, and they sat
+down together to the perusal of that letter, on which their fates so
+completely hung!
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Son ilusion mis dichas
+ Son realidad mis penas.
+
+It was with difficulty that Algernon and Ellen could fix their eyes
+upon the paper; every thing swam before them. They read in silence
+the following letter—with what feelings may be better imagined than
+described.
+
+ “My beloved Wife, my own Ellen,
+
+ “You must have been astonished at not hearing from me the result of
+ the desperate attempt to escape from Verdun, of which I informed you.
+ It succeeded! so far, at least, as getting safe out of that horrible
+ dungeon, disguised as one of the mourners at my own funeral, according
+ to the plan I hinted at in my letter by Maitland, and which he
+ promised to describe to you more fully when he reached England. I made
+ my way across the Rhine into Germany; but I found the examinations
+ so very strict, and the officers at the custom-houses so exceedingly
+ suspicious, that I fancied I should be safer if I advanced farther
+ into Germany, and tried to work my way to Hamburgh.
+
+ “I was, however, almost immediately seized as a spy. My ignorance of
+ the language was supposed to be a feint, and I was passed on, from
+ authority to authority, from governor to governor, till I believe they
+ began to think me a person of great importance.
+
+ “I was at length cast into a prison at this place; and here I have now
+ languished more than four years.
+
+ “I did not venture to write to you while wandering in France. All
+ letters being opened, they might have led to my being traced and
+ identified; and from the moment I was in the power of the Germans, I
+ was not allowed the use of pen and paper, lest there might be some
+ hidden meaning in any thing I might despatch to England.
+
+ “I have now endured four years of mental anguish, such as man has
+ seldom survived. There hangs a mist over some of the horrible
+ years spent in this abode of misery. The wretches who drove me to
+ desperation, treated me as a madman for resenting their cruelty, and I
+ found myself at one time pinioned in a straight waistcoat!
+
+ “Was it not enough to madden a cooler head than mine, to gall a calmer
+ heart than mine, to be thus severed from the creature one adores, to
+ know one’s lovely wife, left lonely and unprotected, in the bloom of
+ youth, amid all the temptations of this corrupt world? Oh, Ellen! I
+ shall go mad if I think of that! But you are virtuous, Ellen!—Yes,
+ yes—if there is virtue in woman it is in you. And yet—five long years
+ of absence! Oh! you will have forgotten me. You cannot have loved me,
+ and me alone, in all these years! Oh God! if you should have loved
+ another! My brain goes round! Be faithful to me, Ellen, as you value
+ my reason, and your own welfare, here and hereafter.
+
+ “But I am altered, fearfully altered. I am grown grey; I am twenty
+ years older than when we parted. But I love you, Ellen—I love you with
+ more ardour, more burning, maddening fervour, than when I first bore
+ you in your maiden bloom from the home of your childhood.
+
+ “Write to me, my love, my wife, my own, own blessed wife! Your letter
+ will reach me in safety if you inclose it to the new governor, who is
+ a kind-hearted man, and has given me permission to bid you do so. He
+ pities me. He will stand my friend. He promises to forward a petition
+ which I am now drawing up, direct to the Emperor, and a ray of hope
+ has dawned upon me. I may yet return to you, my Ellen, and to my
+ children—
+
+ “In life and in death,
+
+ “Your adoring husband,
+
+ “CHARLES CRESFORD.”
+
+Ellen and Algernon spoke not—moved not. They sat transfixed—they did
+not venture to raise their eyes to each other. Neither could entertain
+any doubt of the authenticity of the letter. It would be folly, worse
+than folly, to utter what neither could believe. They who had been all
+the world to each other—they whose love had been so pure that angels
+might have looked down from heaven and smiled upon it—what were they
+now? They dared not think.
+
+At length Ellen murmured in a low and almost choked voice—
+
+“Is he my husband, Algernon? Does the law say he is my husband?”
+
+“Ellen, do not make me speak my own doom.”
+
+“It is enough,” she said, “and my child is—” she paused for a moment,
+and after a short struggle, continued,—“is illegitimate!”
+
+He was silent.
+
+“Oh, merciful Heaven!” she screamed, “it cannot be true,” and she
+started from her seat with a wild look of hope. “It is a dream! Tell me
+so, Algernon, my own Algernon, my husband, tell me so. Speak to me!”
+and she threw herself on her knees at his feet, with clasped hands,
+and beseeching eyes, looking up in his face.
+
+He lifted her from the ground, and whispered,—“We can fly, Ellen. There
+are other lands than this. There are countries where we may be beyond
+the reach of British laws, where we may have the clear blue sky of
+heaven above us, where Nature pours forth her treasures to man with a
+bounteous hand; where we may live in freedom from the trammels of human
+institutions, but bound by the most sacred ties—our own vows of eternal
+constancy, which surely have been registered above.”
+
+“Live with you, as your mistress! No, never, Algernon!” and she drew up
+her slender form to its full height, and stood the very personification
+of female purity and dignity. “Never, Algernon! Any thing would be more
+tolerable than to have you cease to respect me.”
+
+She seemed to have regained her self-command. An almost supernatural
+strength for a moment inspired her.
+
+“Now what is to be done? What is it our duty to do? But oh! the shame,
+the dreadful shame, of being exposed to the world as having lived for
+two years in sin.”
+
+At this moment the voices of the children were heard in the passage;
+they flung open the door, and came bounding joyously into the room with
+the wild flowers they had gathered in their walk. The sight of them
+softened and overcame the mother,—she burst into a flood of tears.
+
+“They are his children,” she exclaimed, “and he will take them from me.
+I know he will—whichever way I turn fresh horrors surround me!”
+
+The poor little things, astonished at their reception, stood aghast.
+Mr. Hamilton hastily bade them leave their mother, told them she was
+not well, and hurried them out of the room.
+
+“Ellen, dearest Ellen,” he said, and approached her. He took her hand,
+when she started away.
+
+“You must not touch me, Algernon! It is a crime. You say yourself I am
+his wife, and he is coming home. Algernon,” she said, in a clear, low,
+sepulchral voice, speaking very slowly, “I cannot be forced to live
+with him again. No law can compel me to do that. Tell me the law,—let
+me know the truth.”
+
+“I cannot say exactly; we will inquire. Compose yourself; let us do
+nothing rashly. Perhaps he may never return,—perhaps he may not live to
+return; we do not know.”
+
+“But I am not your wife?”
+
+“This letter may still be a forgery.”
+
+“No, no, it is too true! and I am not your wife,” she repeated, with
+the accent of utter hopelessness.
+
+He stood in silence; he could not say she was. He endured agony equal
+to her’s, except that he did not feel the guilt and the remorse which
+were added to all her other sufferings. They remained silent till she
+could endure it no longer. “Algernon, no law can be so cruel as to
+separate us: it is impossible. After all, we were lawfully married in a
+church: no one forbade the banns,—no one answered the awful adjuration,
+‘Let him now speak, or ever after hold his peace.’ Yes, we must be
+lawfully married. We are, are we not? Say so, my own Algernon, my
+husband?” and she wound herself round him, and looked up in his face
+with all the winning tenderness she could put into those melting eyes.
+“I am your wife, your wedded wife, am I not, dearest?” and she tried to
+smile, a sweet, sad, heart-rending smile.
+
+This was too much for poor Hamilton. He took her in his arms, he
+pressed her to his bosom. “You are my own Ellen, my life, my love, the
+joy of my heart; without you life would be intolerable.”
+
+“I am your wife, dearest; say so,—in pity say so!”
+
+“Yes, yes, you are! In spite of ordinances, human and divine, you are;
+you shall be my wife!”
+
+“No,” she said, slowly shaking her head—“no! if you speak so, then I am
+not your wife.”
+
+She gradually relaxed her hold, her arms dropped by her side, and she
+sank into a chair.
+
+He looked on her for a few moments with a fixed gaze of despair, then
+striking his forehead he rushed out of the room, darted down the
+stairs, out of the house, and plunged into the most retired part of the
+park, where he wildly paced the ground, beating his bosom, and almost
+dashing his head against the trees.
+
+When Ellen saw him hurry from her presence she gave one shriek.
+
+“He is gone!” she cried; “gone—I have lost him for ever!”
+
+In the mean time, the maid, who had heard her master quit the
+apartment, came to inquire how her mistress felt after her attack of
+faintness. She was terrified when she saw her countenance. However,
+her entrance had in some measure the effect of forcing Ellen to rouse
+herself. She begged her maid to leave her, assuring her she was quite
+recovered. She rose, and staggered to the window to prevent meeting the
+eyes of the faithful Stanmore, who had lived with her from the time she
+first married.
+
+Stanmore respectfully retired, but she was so much alarmed at the state
+in which she found her mistress, that she went to Mrs. Allenham’s room,
+to tell her that she feared Mrs. Hamilton was seriously indisposed.
+
+Caroline hastened to her sister, and found her dissolved in tears,
+which at length flowed copiously. To all Caroline’s questions she
+answered only by continued weeping, and sobs which succeeded each other
+so quickly that she could not have uttered, if she had wished to do so.
+
+The fresh air had in some measure restored Mr. Hamilton. He had
+recovered the powers of his mind. He had reflected that many unforeseen
+accidents might still prevent the return of Mr. Cresford; that the
+idea of his being alive, if once noised abroad, would throw a shade
+over their future lives, even should it eventually prove an unfounded
+notion. He persuaded himself once more it might be a trick for the
+purpose of extorting money upon the supposition that he would attempt
+to bribe the first husband to silence. He was not acquainted with Mr.
+Cresford’s hand-writing, and his hopes revived. At all events, the
+report once circulated could not be crushed, and he hastened back to
+the house, if possible, to calm Ellen, and to bind her to secrecy.
+
+He entered her boudoir just as Mrs. Allenham was trying to extract from
+her the cause of her distress, when Ellen, springing from her seat,
+rushed into Algernon’s arms, exclaiming,
+
+“You are not gone for ever. Thank God, I see you again!”
+
+Mrs. Allenham looked on in surprise. Could it be that Ellen and her
+husband had quarrelled? They whose conjugal felicity had become
+almost proverbial? Such scenes never occurred between herself and
+Mr. Allenham! Ellen was as good-tempered as she was; and though
+Mr. Hamilton was a more high-flown romantic sort of man than Mr.
+Allenham—not so religious perhaps—not so much in the habit of
+regulating his feelings by the exact measure of duty, still he was an
+excellent man, and a good-tempered man. What could it all mean?
+
+However, she felt she could be of little service, and that as Ellen had
+some one with her who would take care of her, should she again feel
+unwell, she left them together.
+
+“Compose yourself, dearest Ellen,” Mr. Hamilton said, in a soothing
+tone; “I have much to say, and you must listen attentively to my
+arguments.”
+
+“Any thing to hear your voice—to still look upon you,” and she seated
+herself opposite to him, and fixed her eyes upon him, as if she would
+drink in every word which fell from his lips, and indelibly fix in her
+mind every lineament of that face which she was soon no more to see.
+
+“Listen to me. There is a possibility that this letter may not be
+authentic.”
+
+She shook her head sorrowfully. He continued,
+
+“All things are possible. Then there is more than a possibility, that,
+if alive, he whose name I cannot bring myself to speak, may never
+reach England. His health seems to be impaired,—he may sink under his
+sufferings. If he should never return, why should we have wilfully
+proclaimed to the world our disgrace?—for disgrace it will be in the
+eyes of the world, though no guilt is ours.”
+
+“But we should be guilty now, knowing what we do know.”
+
+“We are not quite sure: let us wait for confirmation before we breathe
+one word concerning this letter to any living being. Remember, that
+if we were to learn the next day that the poor prisoner had fallen
+a victim to his miseries, that he was at rest, though we might then
+be lawfully united, our child, our innocent child, would, by our own
+imprudence, be proved illegitimate.”
+
+Ellen’s countenance changed: she listened with a persuaded air. Mr.
+Hamilton resumed,
+
+“We must, for her sake, hide for the present all we feel; we must,
+if possible, assume a calm exterior, and trust to Providence for the
+issue.”
+
+“I wish I knew what was right. And yet what you tell me must be so.
+But I cannot,—I cannot show my face to-day; I am sure if I did, I
+should betray all.” After a pause, she added, “I will tell you what you
+must do, Algernon, though it breaks my heart to say so:—you must either
+allow me to pay my father a visit, or you must yourself go away for a
+time,—make a tour,—visit the lakes,—go to Scotland. We must not live
+together, till this dreadful mystery is cleared up, till our fate is
+ascertained one way or another.”
+
+“What! leave the company we have staying in the house? Impossible,
+without exciting such observations.”
+
+“They will be gone in three days, and then—then—Yes, it is better to be
+miserable only, than to be miserable and guilty also!”
+
+“If it is your wish, Ellen, I will leave you. It is best I should be
+the one to go: if you were to quit this roof it would feel more like a
+real and final separation.”
+
+“My fainting fit will be an excuse for my not appearing to-day. Indeed
+I do feel so ill. I could not bear my part in society. To-morrow I will
+try to do as you wish. I will strive, for the sake of my poor little
+Agnes.”
+
+The whole of that day was spent by the wretched Ellen in a state of
+stupefaction. The misfortune which had befallen her was too great and
+too overwhelming to be completely comprehended. Her overstrained nerves
+could bear no more, and she sat in a state of comparative calmness. She
+expressed no wish to see her children, no desire for any thing, and
+Mrs. Allenham bade the maid remain in the adjoining apartment.
+
+She returned to the company herself, and informed them of her sister’s
+sudden indisposition. She tried, with all the tact of which she was
+mistress, to extract from Lady Coverdale whether Mr. Hamilton had ever
+been subject to starts of temper, but she elicited nothing from her,
+but a recapitulation of his virtues.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ We that did nothing study but the way
+ To love each other, with which thoughts the day
+ Rose with delight to us, and with them set,
+ Must learn the cruel art how to forget.
+ ——Like turtle doves
+ Dislodged from their haunts, we must in tears
+ Unwind a love knit up in many years.
+ Now turn we each from each—so fare our hearts,
+ As the divorced soul from its body parts.
+
+ _The Surrender._
+
+Mr. Hamilton had half succeeded in persuading himself the whole
+thing was a cunning forgery. The story seemed so improbable. No
+letter had ever arrived from Cresford—no Maitland had ever brought
+any intelligence of this attempt to escape. Colonel Eversham had
+seen him carried to the grave—the funeral had taken place at night,
+by Mr. Cresford’s dying request, he said. How unlikely, whatever
+might subsequently have been the difficulties of his situation,
+that if alive, he should really have allowed so much time to elapse
+without writing to the wife with whom he was so madly in love! These
+reflections all presented themselves to his mind, and by dinner-time
+he was able to take his accustomed seat, and to do the honours of his
+table with tolerable self-possession.
+
+Towards evening Mrs. Allenham was alarmed by a recurrence of Ellen’s
+faintness: it was immediately after her children had been brought in to
+wish her good night.
+
+Mrs. Allenham was urgent that a physician should be sent for. Ellen
+appeared to revive, to express her vehement desire that no one should
+be summoned. She only wished that her maid should sleep on a sofa in
+her room, in case she should be worse in the night. Mrs. Allenham
+thought Mr. Hamilton rather remiss in not sending for medical advice.
+
+“Mr. Allenham,” she thought, “though he does not make such a fuss about
+his love for me, would never let me be as ill as Ellen is, without
+sending for all the doctors in the neighbourhood; but different men
+have different ways, and one must take people as one finds them.”
+
+One thing, however, she resolved upon, that if Ellen was not better
+the next morning, she would speak her mind openly to Mr. Hamilton, and
+insist on his having the very best advice.
+
+Ellen was no sooner in her bed than she dropped into a profound
+slumber, from which she awoke early the next morning, refreshed in
+body, and with only a vague recollection of the tremendous change which
+had taken place in her fate. By degrees her actual situation opened
+upon her.
+
+How dreadful is the waking from a real sound sleep of forgetfulness,
+after any severe misfortune has befallen us! The temporary oblivion of
+our sorrows scarcely compensates for the agony of recollection.
+
+She was, however, aware of the necessity of concealing what she felt,
+if she wished to preserve the illegitimacy of her child from becoming
+public, while there was yet a hope of its remaining unknown. She passed
+some time in humble prayer, imploring guidance from above, judgment to
+know what was right, and strength to execute it.
+
+She rose from prayer in a calmer frame of mind—she felt herself
+fortified for the task before her— she thought that if Algernon left
+her at Belhanger alone, there could be no crime in delaying the
+promulgation of the dreadful secret, for the chance of saving herself
+and her child from unmerited disgrace.
+
+She went down to breakfast, and she made an attempt to smile in return
+to the salutations and inquiries of her friends. She was in the act
+of assuring them she was quite well, when Mr. Hamilton entered the
+apartment. She started as she heard his well-known turn of the lock,
+she faltered in her speech as he entered, her paleness was replaced by
+a vivid glow, which overspread her face, but she turned not her eyes
+upon him; she studiously avoided meeting his; the first sound of his
+voice thrilled through her very being.
+
+She took her station at the breakfast-table, upon the same spot where
+yesterday she had received that fatal intelligence which had so
+completely broken up her happiness. She took her station as mistress of
+the mansion to which she had no longer any right. She felt she was an
+impostor.
+
+Mr. Hamilton, who had the preceding day buoyed himself up with
+something more of hope than she had done, had passed a night of anxious
+restlessness. Sleep had not for one moment weighed down his eyelids;
+and when at length Ellen ventured almost by stealth to take one look at
+that beloved countenance, her heart was pierced to see it so wan, so
+haggard.
+
+Their object was to avoid exciting remark. A plan was proposed, and
+acceded to, of driving to see a fine castle in the neighbourhood, in
+which was a collection of pictures. Ellen accompanied the ladies in an
+open carriage, and Mr. Hamilton took the gentlemen across the country
+on horseback.
+
+While others were engaged in admiring some of the masterpieces of art,
+Ellen found herself near Mr. Hamilton.
+
+“Algernon, you look very ill,” she said: “it breaks my heart to see
+you!”
+
+“Can it be otherwise, Ellen? Even you can scarcely know the tortures I
+endure.”
+
+“We must not speak to each other. I shall lose the self-command I have
+so struggled to obtain. But I have behaved well, Algernon. I have
+conducted myself according to your wishes?”
+
+“Yes! yes! May God bless you, dearest and best! I cannot trust myself
+to say another word.”
+
+He hastened away, and went to the stables, as though to see for the
+horses and the barouche. Ellen busied herself in examining a picture,
+of which she did not see one form, and drove back her bursting tears,
+and stilled the tumult of her soul.
+
+On their way home, Lady Coverdale was eloquent on the beauties of this
+part of the world, on the charms of Belhanger, and discussed with much
+interest the plan for the flower-garden which Ellen was making along
+the terrace in front of the house.
+
+“When your shrubs have grown, and the creepers cover that bowered
+walk to the left, it will be quite beautiful. Are you not always
+very impatient at the slow growth of plants? One has to wait so long
+before one sees any result produced. I think it is a great objection
+to gardening. However, you are very young, and you may look forward to
+many years of enjoying your improvements.”
+
+These simple words shot like daggers through Ellen’s heart. She could
+not reply, and notwithstanding all her efforts to appear at her ease,
+the conversation flagged. Caroline had seen Ellen speak in a low voice
+to Mr. Hamilton, while others were engaged with the paintings; she had
+seen him suddenly leave the room, and perceiving how oppressed Ellen’s
+spirits were, became thoroughly convinced some serious disagreement had
+occurred.
+
+“Well,” she thought, “I suppose it will all come right again. Everybody
+cannot go on so smoothly as dear Mr. Allenham and I do!”
+
+When they returned from their excursion, Ellen retired to her room.
+She had not the heart, as usual, to repair to the nursery or the
+school-room. The sight of her two elder children harrowed her soul,
+from the fear that she possessed them only for a time, that they would
+be torn from her just when their opening intelligence, their amiable
+dispositions, had superadded to the instinctive love of a mother, the
+affection produced by their own good qualities. The sight of her little
+girl was scarcely less agonising, from the conviction that she must
+soon be a nameless outcast!
+
+She had again recourse to prayer, and she again rose from her devotions
+strengthened and resigned.
+
+At that moment a gentle tap at the door was heard, and Algernon entered.
+
+“I must see you, I must speak to you, Ellen! Human nature cannot endure
+this continued state of effort. Let us unbend for a few short moments.
+Tell me you love me, and that, let our fate be what it may, your heart,
+your whole heart, is mine.”
+
+“Oh, Algernon! I have just been praying for strength and resignation,
+and I thought I had obtained my prayer. Do not speak to me in those
+tender tones. They melt away my whole soul, and I will, I will be firm.
+I must no longer allow myself to use such expressions; but I cannot
+even try not to feel all and more than I ever felt before. Spare my
+weakness, Algernon, and remember that dearly as I prize your love,
+I prize your good opinion still more. That is the one thought which
+enables me to exist, I believe.”
+
+He looked on her with admiration, almost amounting to awe.
+
+“My good opinion! You are as much superior to me, or to any other
+living being, as the angels of heaven are to the common run of mortals.
+I adore you, I venerate you, as one of them.” He knelt at her feet.
+“Speak, and I will obey you. I place myself under your guidance. I will
+regulate my actions by what you deem calculated to ensure your own
+peace of mind. I will prove to you that I can equal you at least in
+self-devotion; though my heart may break, I will not yield to you in
+that!”
+
+“Get up, Algernon. Do not kneel at my feet. I cannot bear to hear you
+speak in such a manner. These scenes must not recur. We only agonize
+each other, and render ourselves unfit for our task. Leave me, dearest;
+leave me to compose myself!”
+
+“You bid me leave you, and I will do so. But will you not give me your
+hand?—that dear hand which, after all, was pledged to me at the altar!”
+He took her unresisting hand. “It was I who placed that ring upon your
+finger, Ellen; you then swore to me eternal fidelity, you swore to love
+me ‘till death us did part.’ Can any thing cancel that vow?” And he
+drew her gently towards him.
+
+“O God! nothing, nothing!” She dashed his hand from her, and rushed to
+the opposite corner of the room. She glared wildly upon him. “Nothing,
+nothing can cancel that first dreadful vow! Oh! do not remind me of
+those words. It was then the vision came over me! He, whom you tell
+me is my husband, seemed to rise up between us, Algernon! It was a
+forewarning of what was to happen! I ought to have obeyed the warning—I
+should have stopped before”—her voice faltered, but she continued in a
+tone of unutterable sweetness—“before those words made me the happiest
+woman in the whole world!” She hid her face with her hands, and burst
+into tears.
+
+“Bless you for what you have just said, my own Ellen!”
+
+“Do not call me your own Ellen; I am not—can never be! In mercy leave
+me—this agony is not to be endured!”
+
+Slowly and reluctantly he withdrew: he stood for a few moments at the
+door, and then he closed it, and she remained alone.
+
+She had prayed for strength, and she found it. She did not weep, but
+meekly sat, patient and uncomplaining. The hour for dressing arrived,
+and she mechanically proceeded with her toilet. Her maid had prepared
+the dress, the ornaments she thought she would wear. Mechanically she
+sate before the looking-glass, mechanically she arranged her ringlets
+round her face; she placed in her hair the ornamental comb her maid
+presented to her, fastened her ear-rings, held out her arm to have her
+bracelets clasped, and, when she was dressed, wondered at herself for
+having tricked herself out in all these gewgaws.
+
+“How strange,” she thought, “that I should have been able thus to deck
+this wretched form!” But such is the force of habit: it does not come
+into any body’s head to leave off the feathers, the diamonds, the
+flowers with which they are in the habit of adorning themselves, though
+the heart beneath may be breaking—and yet it seems a mockery!
+
+Before dinner Lady Coverdale begged that the children might be sent
+for, and little Agnes appeared in a beautiful cap which Miss Coverdale
+had embroidered for her. The beauty of the child’s eyes was discussed.
+
+“If Agnes grows up according to this promise, Mrs. Hamilton”—(Ellen
+started at the name)—“you will have a pleasant task in acting as her
+chaperon.”
+
+Ellen almost sank at the prospect which was thus brought before her.
+She could not answer, but, hastily turning away, stirred the fire with
+great energy, at the same time exclaiming, “How hot it is!”
+
+They went to dinner; she was seated at the head of the table, opposite
+to Mr. Hamilton. She felt a sort of melancholy pleasure in being, as
+it were, forced to appear as his wife; but never did two such bursting
+hearts pass calmly through an evening of society.
+
+Another day succeeded, and it was spent in the same struggle. On the
+third the Coverdales departed, thinking that, for so happy a couple,
+they were the most fashionably cool they had ever seen; the Allenhams,
+fearing that Mr. Hamilton, charming as he was, must have an odd corner
+of temper, for, as to Ellen, they knew her too well to imagine for a
+moment that she could be in fault.
+
+They all drove from the door, and the wretched couple were left alone
+with their love and their misery.
+
+“And now _you_ must leave me, Algernon; we must not remain here alone,
+and I even doubt whether I ought to remain under your roof.”
+
+“Oh, Ellen! one would think you wished to believe we were severed, for
+ever severed! There is still hope.”
+
+“None for me! I know that hand-writing too well.”
+
+“Must I go to-day?”
+
+“To-day, if you value my peace, and the little remnant of honour I may
+yet hope to preserve.”
+
+“This is hard, this is cruel; but you shall have an approving
+conscience, my own Ellen; and if your conscience will be easier when
+I am gone, I will not linger: I will order every thing for my journey,
+and I will go at dusk to-night. Till then, you will let me be with you;
+till then, I may look on your face—I may listen to your voice—I may
+breathe the same air with you!”
+
+He flew to order his departure, and in another instant was by her side.
+
+There was a melancholy satisfaction in being together, and yet, when
+they were so, they could not speak: what could they say that was not
+fraught with wretchedness?
+
+“I must see our children, Ellen.”
+
+He had been in the habit of calling all the children “our;” but the
+little word, which from the force of habit escaped him, struck daggers
+to the hearts of both. The two elder were his children who might soon
+be at home to claim them.
+
+They all three came, and poor Hamilton devoured them with kisses. The
+little Agnes was just old enough to know him, and to hold out her arms
+to him with a smile of joy. They could neither of them endure this
+long; they could not talk to the children—they could not play with
+them—they could not listen to their prattle, and they were soon sent
+away.
+
+Strange to say, these last few hours, whose flight they so much
+dreaded, hung heavy. They wished to arrest the course of time, and yet
+they knew not how to pass it. They strolled into the garden: every
+thing there spoke of hope and promise; every thing within their own
+bosoms boded unheard-of wretchedness.
+
+They had several times paced in silence round the sheltered parterre,
+when Ellen turned deadly pale, and stopped for a few moments.
+
+“You must lean on me, Ellen! You must take my arm.”
+
+Her feebleness compelled her to do so, and once more he had the
+happiness of feeling that lovely form rest on him for support.
+
+Neither spoke again. Both hearts were too full for utterance. In
+silence they bent their course homeward. They again returned to the
+drawing-room. They once more sat down there together. They could not
+bring themselves to quit each other for a moment,—to lose one instant
+of these few precious hours; and yet to each, the presence of the other
+was oppressive. This state of misery and _gêne_ was worse than that
+occasioned by the presence of others.
+
+They could not, at such a moment, speak on indifferent subjects; and if
+they alluded to their own situation, it must lead to passionate bursts
+of feeling, which she considered as criminal, and which he also dreaded
+for her sake.
+
+At length the hour of departure came. The carriage was announced—and
+he went up-stairs alone once more to give his parting blessing to the
+children. He returned to her.
+
+“I think we may correspond,” she said, “there can be nothing wrong in
+that, till our fate is quite decided.”
+
+“Oh yes, yes; you must write every day,” he replied. “I shall find out
+some retired spot in Wales, and I shall remain there in utter seclusion
+till your mind is made easy by hearing no more. In three months you
+will conclude it was only a forgery?”
+
+She shook her head. “I know the writing.”
+
+“In six months? In a year, you will—name some time—set some term to my
+banishment!”
+
+“We will write—I am not capable of knowing or understanding what is
+right in your presence. You must leave me, Algernon, or I think I shall
+die, now, at your feet!”
+
+“And are we to part thus?”
+
+She stood like a marble statue, as cold, as pale, as motionless.
+
+“Are we to part thus? Impossible!” and he snatched her to his bosom,
+and imprinted on her lips one kiss of deep, fervent, unalterable love.
+
+He tore himself away, and plunging into the carriage, in a few moments
+was borne far from the scene of all his happiness.
+
+When she heard the sound of the wheels, she made a desperate rush to
+the window, and remained fixed there to listen for their sound, and to
+fancy she still heard it, long after it was possible to do so.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ From our own paths, our love’s attesting bowers,
+ I am not gone,
+ In the deep hush of midnight’s whispering hours
+ Thou art not lone!
+ Not lone when by the haunted stream thou weepest,
+ That stream whose tone
+ Murmurs of thoughts the holiest and the deepest
+ We two have known.
+
+ MRS. HEMANS.
+
+He was gone—quite gone—and slowly and wearily she dragged herself back
+to the sofa, and gave free vent to all the agony which had been eating
+away her very being.
+
+She was thus drowned in tears, when the footman entered the room,
+upon some pretence of closing the shutters, or of making up the fire.
+The servants could not but perceive that something unusual was going
+on, and their curiosity was excited by the mysterious looks of their
+master and mistress, and by the sudden departure of the former. Ellen,
+to avoid the inquiring gaze of the footman, hastily retired to her
+boudoir, whither she had no sooner retreated than her anxious maid
+peeped in to see if she might want any thing.
+
+Pleading a violent head-ache, she bade her say she should not require
+any dinner, and assured her that nothing but entire quiet could relieve
+the pain under which she was suffering. The faithful creature would
+prescribe all the nostrums that ever were invented for head-aches,
+and poor Ellen thought she never should be allowed to weep in peace.
+At length she was relieved from the troublesome attentions both of
+the inquisitive and of the kind-hearted, and was left to her own sad
+thoughts.
+
+She accused herself of not having sufficiently valued the one last
+morning she had passed with him. She remembered a thousand things she
+meant to say—a thousand things she ought to have said. She thought she
+had been cold, she thought she had been unkind, and yet she reproached
+herself for having allowed him to take that one farewell kiss; for she
+felt and knew she was not his wife. She could not deceive herself into
+a momentary belief that the letter was an imposture. She knew that
+her lawful husband was alive, and that every feeling of her soul was
+therefore criminal. Still, though she scarcely indulged a hope of ever
+being re-united to Algernon, she had not the courage to declare the
+truth. She wished, if possible, to preserve her reputation, and her
+child’s position in the world.
+
+She now had leisure to reflect upon the line of conduct it behoved her
+to adopt, and she came to the conclusion, that, provided she received
+no further communication from Mr. Cresford, and that there seemed no
+fear of open exposure, the only mode of preserving her fair name, and
+her virtue at the same time, was to induce Mr. Hamilton to consent to
+an amicable separation on the score of incompatibility of temper.
+
+This was her best hope! How dreadful the other alternative! to be
+claimed by the indignant Cresford, to be held up to the eyes of the
+world as a base culprit, guilty of the crime of bigamy! It was almost
+too degrading to contemplate.
+
+Some days had now elapsed; she had every morning received the letters
+with a sickening dread which almost paralysed her. With fear and horror
+she had hastily turned over the exterior of every letter, and, with
+inexpressible relief, she had found none that bore the dreaded foreign
+post-mark. Each morning brought a long epistle from Algernon, written
+in the spirit of the highest, purest, most devoted affection.
+
+These were some balm to her heart. These were treasured up and perused
+over and over again. But she was an altered creature—all around
+wondered at the change. The children found that mamma could only kiss
+them, and weep over them, and they became thoughtful and subdued in
+her presence. The poor people wondered their bounteous lady no longer
+came among them. She could not do so. She dreaded the eyes of her
+fellow-creatures—their very blessings were painful to her—she felt as
+if she had obtained them under false pretences. All that had given her
+pleasure in this lovely place, this delightful country, now only filled
+her with regret, when she thought that the next day might find her an
+exile from this Paradise. Every walk, every tree, every view, every
+spot she visited, reminded her of him whom she no longer ventured to
+call husband, and with whom she had no hope of ever seeing them again.
+
+Two or three weeks had now slowly dragged their weary length away,
+and no fresh intelligence had arrived. It was nearly a month since
+she had received the first, and she almost began to think he found it
+impossible to make his escape. The friendly governor might be removed.
+The mental aberration might, from over-excitement, have returned. She
+felt wicked in, for a moment, anticipating such a circumstance with any
+thing approaching to satisfaction; and yet the horror of another, and
+still more appalling, solution of the difficulty, that he had succeeded
+in his petition, and that he was on his way home, filled her with
+dismay, which almost bewildered her senses.
+
+One morning when she, as usual, received with trembling hands the
+packet of letters, she perceived one from her brother with an
+enclosure. With dizzy eyes she tore open the cover, and within found
+another, with the same dreaded post-mark of Gratz. Despair gave her
+courage to open it. It was indeed from Cresford, and be there told
+her the governor had proved his kindest friend; that the Emperor had
+listened favourably to his petition, and that he had every prospect of
+being able to commence his journey to England in a few days,—that as
+the time approached he felt ten thousand fears pass through his bosom.
+How much might have happened since he left his home. His Ellen, to
+whom he was now writing in the fulness of his heart, might possibly
+be gathered to the dead. His children! were they still in existence?
+“Oh, my dearest wife,” he continued, “you can form no conception of
+the distracted and confused state of my mind when I think of the
+changes that may have taken place among you. Of one thing I believe
+I may rest assured, though my own wayward disposition has sometimes
+been prone to unreasonable bursts of—jealousy, shall I say?—no, rather
+sensitiveness,—for you will do me the justice to confess I never was
+jealous of any individual,—of one thing I may rest assured, that I
+shall find you pure, true, and virtuous as I left you. The knowledge
+of your virtue has been my only consolation,—that conviction alone has
+supported me through all my misfortunes. In one short month I shall be
+at home, my Ellen, never, never again to part from you.”
+
+This confirmation of what she most dreaded came upon her with almost
+as great a shock as the first announcement of her misery. Yet she felt
+ungrateful at making such a return for all the affection expressed by
+Cresford, affection which had stood the test of time, which had been
+his guiding principle in absence, imprisonment, even in madness.
+
+The next moment she fancied that by such emotions she wronged Algernon,
+her own adored Algernon, who was for ever torn from her, and doomed to
+sufferings equal to her own.
+
+In another month Cresford said he should be at home. The time had
+nearly elapsed: he might arrive any day. There was not a moment to be
+lost!
+
+In her distraction she almost forgot to open the daily letter of Mr.
+Hamilton. It breathed of hope! He had always been more sanguine than
+herself, and in this he pleaded strongly to be allowed to return. He
+argued that the protracted silence almost proved, beyond a doubt, that
+the whole had been a false alarm.
+
+She placed the dear letter next her heart, and, hastily gathering
+together the rest of her correspondence which had been cast aside, was
+preparing to arrange all things for her instant departure, when her
+attention was arrested by a second epistle from her brother Henry. She
+knew the worst; she had no more to fear, and she perused it with a
+desperate calmness.
+
+Henry began by saying that he, and all the other partners, had been
+much distressed by a communication they had received of so strange a
+character that he scarcely liked to disturb her mind by reporting it;
+that yet, as he had forwarded to her by the same post a letter which
+appeared to come from the same quarter as the one they had received,
+and as, if he mistook not, he had some time ago sent her another with a
+similar direction and post-mark, perhaps she might be prepared for what
+he was going to tell her.
+
+The fact was they had received a letter purporting to come from Mr.
+Cresford, and full of incomprehensible allusions to an escape from
+Verdun, and to a mock funeral; that they scarcely knew whether to
+consider it a forgery or not; that he grieved to say those who were
+most conversant with his hand-writing seemed most persuaded of its
+authenticity; that they were all in the greatest perplexity, but, upon
+the whole, agreed it was best to keep the circumstance secret for the
+present.
+
+He dreaded to think what her feelings must be; that for himself, he
+was firmly convinced it was an imposture from first to last,—that he
+remembered how circumstantial had been Colonel Eversham’s account
+of the funeral of poor Cresford, performed by torch-light, according
+to his own particular request, and attended by Colonel Eversham
+himself, by Captain Morton, and several more of the _détenus_ who
+were on parole. “And do you not remember his dwelling upon the awful
+circumstance, that in one short week from the time Captain Morton
+had acted as chief mourner at Cresford’s interment, he was himself
+committed to the grave? Do not worry yourself, therefore, my dearest
+sister. Depend upon it, it is a trick, with the view of extorting
+money; but I thought it would not be right to leave you in ignorance of
+the unpleasant doubt.
+
+“I should have been myself the bearer of this strange despatch, but I
+am unavoidably detained in town to-day by business. I will be with you
+soon after you receive this.”
+
+“It is all true,” she thought to herself, “and it is all known. It must
+now be published abroad; there is no escape!” and she looked wildly
+around her. This was no moment for deliberation or indecision.
+
+She commanded post horses to be instantly sent for; she summoned her
+maid; she desired the nurses, the children, the _bonne_, to prepare
+instantly for a sudden journey, and she sat down to write the appalling
+news to Algernon, to dash all the hopes which he had fostered, to doom
+him also to a future as blank and cheerless as her own.
+
+She began, “I have scarcely the power to write what I am now compelled
+to impart to you. In a few more hours I shall have left this beloved
+home; in a few more hours I shall be an outcast from this blessed
+place, where I have lived as your most happy, and your honoured wife.
+Thank you, Algernon, for the unutterable happiness I have for two years
+enjoyed: thank you for all your love, all your tenderness.
+
+“I am going to my father. Poor man! he little knows the shame and
+misery which await the decline of his life; he who so valued the
+opinion of the world! Oh, Algernon, I am doomed to bring a curse on all
+who are connected with me! I shall bring his grey hairs with sorrow
+to the grave; I have cast a blight over the dignified and prosperous
+career which awaited you; I have been the bane of that unhappy man
+whose ungoverned, ill-fated love for me led him to practise the deceit
+which has worked us all so much woe. My name will be a lasting
+disgrace to my children,—all of them!
+
+“Algernon! when I think of you, my heart is near breaking; when I think
+of your return to your desolate home, when I know how you will miss
+me,—for I judge too well from my own, what your feelings will be,—when
+I think how you will miss the children, too! Heavens, I have just
+ordered the nurse to prepare herself and Agnes for our sad journey!—But
+what right have I to do so? She is your child, Algernon, and shall
+I deprive you of that one consolation? Shall I deprive her of an
+honourable station to drag her with me into shame and degradation? No!
+my wretchedness can scarcely know increase, and you shall be greeted on
+your return by her smiles, her out-stretched arms, her lovely attempts
+to prattle. I leave you that precious legacy. She will remind you of
+her who loves you still with tenfold fervour, though it is now a crime
+to do so.
+
+“There is a sort of pleasure in sacrificing something to you: you shall
+keep her and cherish her. I expect my brother every moment: he and the
+other members of the house have likewise received communications from
+Gratz. I cannot add another word—I cannot sign myself,—for, oh! what
+name do I now bear?”
+
+She hastily sealed her letter, and, without giving herself time to
+retract, she flew up-stairs, and told the nurse that she and Agnes were
+to remain at Belhanger—that only George and Caroline were to accompany
+her. The nurse was astonished at the sudden change; but her mistress
+looked so ghastly and so wild, she did not venture any question or
+any remark. Ellen snatched her child to her heart—kissed it with such
+vehemence that the terrified creature screamed—then, almost thrusting
+it again into the nurse’s arms, she rushed out of the room, not daring
+to trust herself another moment in its sight.
+
+She now hastened into her own apartments, and, without allowing herself
+time for tender emotions or reminiscences, she began to pack up her
+papers, her letters, a few favourite books of devotion, some of the
+many tokens of affection she had received from Algernon, and above all,
+his picture—that picture which she gazed upon every day, ten times
+every day, during his absence.
+
+While thus employed, she saw her maid arranging her diamonds, and other
+jewels, for the journey.
+
+“Do not put up those,” she said in a clear, calm voice; “they must be
+left here.”
+
+“Dear ma’am, we always take them with us wherever we go; I always think
+they are safest when they are under my own eye.”
+
+“They must remain, Stanmore,” answered Ellen almost sternly.
+
+“Just as you please, ma’am, certainly,” replied the abigail, whose
+feelings on the subject of the diamonds were so acute that she could
+not look with indifference upon any thing that concerned them, although
+she saw something had certainly happened which greatly discomposed her
+mistress, and was really tenderly attached to her.
+
+“Would you please to leave all the trinkets, ma’am?” she added with
+rather a mortified, injured accent.
+
+“No, Stanmore; I must take these rings, these bracelets, all these
+things—they were all given to me by dear friends.”
+
+“I am sure, ma’am, I should have thought you might have wished what Mr.
+Hamilton had given you to go along with us.”
+
+“Say no more, Stanmore; I cannot bear it.—Only make haste,—all possible
+haste!—I must go to my father to-day.”
+
+“Dear me! I beg your pardon, ma’am; but is Captain Wareham ill?”
+
+“No—Yes—I am not sure—I believe he is pretty well.”
+
+Ellen left the room, having secured the few articles she much valued;
+and having told Stanmore to carry the diamonds to the housekeeper, and
+bid her give them to Mr. Hamilton when he returned.
+
+“How strange!” said Mrs. Stanmore to herself. “Master and mistress
+must have quarrelled desperately, somehow or another. And to think
+how loving they did seem to be till just at last! Well, they say such
+violent love is too hot to hold. I shall think of that when next Mr.
+Perkins says a civil word to me, and give him a civil word in return,
+for all he is not the man of my heart; for it’s my belief all the love
+should be on the man’s side. How well my poor mistress and Mr. Cresford
+went on, though he was so queer; and now she has got a husband she
+loves, this is the end of it all! Ah! it does not do to make too much
+of the men. If one has a man one does not care for, one has one’s wits
+about one, to know how to manage him.”
+
+While Mrs. Stanmore was making these sage reflections (in which there
+is much deserving attention from the young and inexperienced), Ellen,
+who could not sit still, and who was afraid to trust herself with her
+child, wandered like an unquiet spirit about the house, longing to
+visit every well-known room, and to bid each a sad adieu; but she met
+servants in every direction carrying trunks and imperials in all the
+bustle of departure.
+
+She took refuge in her boudoir, from which the few things she meant to
+carry with her were already removed. She looked round in silence and
+in calmness. There was not an object which did not remind her of some
+act of kindness of Algernon’s. A tap at the door startled her from the
+abstraction in which she stood.
+
+Mrs. Topham, the stately housekeeper, made her appearance.
+
+“If you please, ma’am, I come for orders during your absence. If you
+thought, ma’am, you should be away some little time, the furniture in
+the chintz-room wants washing sadly, and perhaps, ma’am, it would be a
+good opportunity to get it calendered.”
+
+“Do just as you please, Mrs. Topham. I cannot attend to those things at
+this moment.”
+
+“Certainly, ma’am, I would not trouble you for the world; but Miss
+Mason wished to know whether you would have them go on with master’s
+neckcloths, or whether you wished the table-linen to be put in hand
+immediately at the school.”
+
+“Oh yes, Mrs. Topham.”
+
+“What, the table-linen? or the neckcloths, did you mean, ma’am?”
+
+“Either: it matters little! Mr. Hamilton will be at home in a few days,
+and he will tell you. I am very ill, Mrs. Topham. I cannot—I cannot
+answer you.” And tears for the first time that morning flowed from her
+eyes.
+
+There is nothing so strange as the causes which open the flood-gates of
+woe. The vexation of being troubled with these trifles, and the feeling
+that she had no longer a right to regulate them, that it would no
+longer be her care to see to all these little household details, melted
+her to tears, when all the deep and overwhelming bearings of the case
+had not produced an inclination to weep.
+
+Mrs. Topham departed, surprised, grieved, and a little offended.
+
+“She never knew her mistress in such a way before. She had always
+behaved so considerate to her, and spoken in such a kind and feeling
+way, she was sure there was something wrong, and that her mistress had
+something upon her mind.”
+
+Ellen now thought she would once more see his study. She should there
+be safe from intrusion, and she would look at every thing, and fix it
+so firmly in her memory, that it should serve as a sort of picture
+to which her mind’s eye might at any time recur. She marked every
+chair and table, the very pattern of the cornice, the mouldings on
+the book-cases, the carving of the chimney-piece. She touched all the
+papers, the parliamentary reports which crowded the table, and which
+might have been touched by him.
+
+At this moment a chaise drove up to the door, and her brother Henry
+leaped out of it. In another moment Ellen was in his arms, and clinging
+to him in the full abandonment of long pent-up sorrow, which at length
+is allowed free vent. There was a degree of relief in the presence of
+one to whom she might unburthen her whole soul, from whom she need have
+no secrets, and with whom she need be under no restraint.
+
+This weakness, however, was not of long duration. She quickly shook
+it off, and rousing herself, she uttered in a firm, though hurrying,
+manner:—
+
+“We must be gone directly, Henry. You will take me to my father’s; you
+will go with me, dear brother, will you not?”
+
+“Where is Hamilton?” he answered.
+
+“He has not been here since I received the first packet you enclosed
+me. We parted then!” She pressed her hand for a moment tightly upon her
+eye-balls.
+
+“Do you then consider the case so hopeless, my poor dear sister?”
+
+“Alas! I have from the very first, although he would scarcely believe
+me.”
+
+“Oh, dreadful! dreadful! What is to be done?”
+
+“I must go to my father, and I must leave the rest to Providence. I
+have not wittingly done wrong, so I hope God will assist me to bear
+that with which it is pleasure to visit me!”
+
+“My poor, poor Ellen!”
+
+“Do not pity me, Henry! I have prayed for strength, and hitherto I have
+been mercifully supported. Do not pity me, or I shall not be able to go
+through what must be done this day.”
+
+“Ellen! By Heavens you are the most high-minded, courageous, and noble,
+as well as the gentlest and loveliest creature I ever saw! Whatever the
+result may be, you are certainly doing what is right. I am ready to
+accompany you.”
+
+“Every thing is prepared, Henry. I have only one task left, that of
+bidding adieu to my baby—my little Agnes!”
+
+“Do you leave her behind you?”
+
+“I cannot rob Algernon of that which will remind him of me, and yet
+give him pleasure, instead of pain. Neither will I heap more shame and
+disgrace on my child’s head than is unavoidable.”
+
+Ellen left him, and with a slow and heavy step she for the last time
+mounted the oak staircase. She went to the nursery, and solemnly taking
+the child away, she carried it into the room which was her own. Bolting
+all the doors, she knelt as she held the infant in her arms, and
+offered up for it prayers as fervent and as pure as ever ascended to
+the throne of grace. Then kissing its eyes, its forehead, its lips,
+
+“May the God of mercy bless thee, my babe! may He bless thee with
+virtue, principle, rectitude! whatever may be thy fate in this world,
+may He bring thee to that place where the wicked cease from troubling,
+where the weary are at rest!”
+
+She rose from her knees, and carried the child back to the nurse. In a
+calm and steady voice, she bade her, as she valued her peace of mind
+here and hereafter, to do her duty by the infant; and begging God to
+bless them both, she steadily went down the stairs, and without looking
+to the right or to the left, passed through the hall. When she reached
+the door, she paused, and turning round, she saw the servants who, half
+wonder, half sympathy, had collected at the different doors, and were
+pressing forward. She tried to speak—her voice failed her; she made
+another effort, and at length uttered,—
+
+“You have all done your duties by me, and may God reward you for it!”
+
+A burst of tears and sobs, they scarcely themselves knew wherefore, was
+all the answer they could make.
+
+Henry supported her into the carriage. Her elder children and their
+attendants entered the other, and she was rapidly conveyed from a spot
+where she had endured the two extremes, of mortal bliss and mortal woe.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ En songe, souhaid, et pensée,
+ Vous voye chacun jour de sepmaine
+ Combien qu’estes de moi loingtaine
+ Belle très loyaument amée.
+
+ Du tout vous ay m’amour donnée;
+ Vous en povez être certaine,
+ Ma seule dame souveraine,
+ De mon las cœur moult desirée
+ En songe, souhaid, et pensée.
+
+ CHARLES DUC D’ORLEANS, A.D. 1446.
+
+How did poor Hamilton meanwhile pass the time of his weary exile? It
+would have been wretchedness to him to have been recognised, to have
+been obliged to answer the usual inquiries after his wife and children,
+with which a married man is invariably greeted; to endure all the
+common courtesies of life. Yet his acquaintance was so general, his
+name so well known, from having on many occasions borne a prominent
+part in politics, and from having lived much in the world, that he
+could scarcely find a spot where he would not be exposed to them.
+
+He therefore, under an assumed name, retired to the most desolate
+fishing village he could find in the neighbourhood of M——, and passed
+his days wandering upon the shore, and mixing with none but the
+fishers, who plied their dangerous trade upon the wild Welsh coast.
+
+Every morning he walked into the town, and claimed his letters at the
+post-office, then hurried to the shore, there to feast upon the lines
+traced by his beloved Ellen’s hand. The enthusiastic turn of mind,
+which we at first described him as possessing, enabled him, better
+perhaps than another man, to endure the life of abnegation of self,
+which he here led. His passion was of so pure, so refined a character,
+that in sober truth, he had rather sit alone on a sea-girt rock, and
+think of her whom he worshipped with so holy a love, than be in the
+society of any other living being, however lovely, however fascinating.
+
+Weeks however elapsed, and even his highly wrought nature was beginning
+to tire of this protracted uncertainty. He formed a thousand desperate
+plans; he nearly convinced himself that they were both sacrificing
+their happiness to a frivolous punctilio; that Mr. Cresford never would
+return—that if he did, still in the eye of Heaven she was his, not
+Cresford’s wife, and that there would be no guilt in their flying to
+the uttermost parts of the earth, and there existing for each other
+alone.
+
+But although he might think such thoughts, he never ventured to commit
+them to paper when writing to her. He never again proposed their
+living together, if their union was not sanctioned by the laws. There
+was a spotless lofty purity about her that he dared not outrage by
+word, or look. He knew also, that even supposing he should succeed in
+persuading her to fly with him, still, that with her disposition, her
+religious principles, she could never find happiness in his devotion,
+if remorse was an inmate of her bosom. He had courage to endure all
+ills, rather than to meet her reproachful eye;—to feel he had caused
+that innocent heart to know the pangs of a wounded conscience;—to feel
+that her religion, which was now her only source of consolation, had,
+through his means, been converted into a source of terror. The romantic
+adventures and feelings of his own early life did not lead to his
+experiencing the same orthodox scruples himself, but the enthusiastic
+devotedness of his disposition made him respect them, even while he
+thought them over-strained.
+
+His despair, therefore, when he received Ellen’s last communication,
+knew no bounds. It destroyed his only hope. He paced the shore. It was
+a stormy morning, as if in accordance with his feelings: the sea-gull,
+with its wide-spread wings, gleaming white against the lead-coloured
+clouds, screamed as it passed over his head. The surf was wildly
+beating against the beach. The fisher vessels which had been out all
+night were striving to regain the land, before the threatening storm
+burst upon them. He looked upon the little boats as they neared the
+shore with an emotion of envy.—“Perhaps,” he thought, “perhaps the next
+few waves may swallow up the brave fellows, who are there exerting
+themselves to preserve life. They know not for what a miserable
+possession they are struggling. They know not what may await them if
+they escape the present danger! Blighted affections, ruined hopes,
+the torture of losing those they love, or of seeing them exist in
+wretchedness, may bring them to regret they had not now sunk, secure
+from experiencing any more of the sufferings human nature is heir to.
+Would I were in one of those boats! It would be no sin of mine if the
+waves were to close over it.”
+
+The wives and mothers of the fishermen, who were inured to the
+venturous life of their relatives, proceeded with their ordinary toil.
+They had so often seen them weather a storm in safety, that they felt
+little alarm at what would have struck others as awful. One young
+woman, however, stole forth alone; her loose cloak shivered in the
+wind; the wild gust brought with it the spray and dashed it in her
+face, but still her eyes were strained to catch a glimpse of one frail
+bark. She knew not that her bonnet was blown back, that her dishevelled
+hair streamed upon the blast. She gradually drew nearer to the spot
+where Algernon stood in his desperate musing.
+
+She was a stranger: a girl from the midland counties, who had married
+one of the hardy young fishermen of this secluded village, and she was
+not yet accustomed to let the blast howl unheeded round her dwelling,
+while he she loved was on the wide salt sea.
+
+She approached Algernon. In her loneliness she felt safer when near a
+fellow-creature.
+
+“Do you think there is any danger, sir?” she said in a hesitating voice.
+
+“The storm seems to be gathering,” he answered; “but most likely you
+have more experience than I have.”
+
+“I have not been here long,” she said, “and those great waves, with
+foamy tops, always terrify me sadly.”
+
+“Are you anxious for any one at sea, my good girl?”
+
+“My husband, sir, is in one of those boats.”
+
+“And does he love you? Do you love him, and are you lawfully married?”
+
+“Oh, sir! to be sure we are!” and she drew back abashed, and half
+angry.
+
+“Then—then you are not to be pitied. In life or in death you are his.
+You are bound together by the ties of love and of duty, of religion
+and of law! He will return to you, my girl. See, the boats are getting
+nearer every moment: they will beat the storm—you will be reunited. You
+need not weep.”
+
+He darted away among the rocks, and sought the little room in the
+single ale-house, which had been his home for the last month.
+
+His first impulse was to return to Belhanger—to revisit the spot which
+breathed of her, and having once more beheld the precious child which
+she had left there as a pledge of her affection for him, to send
+her with the nurse to rejoin her mother at Captain Wareham’s. His
+resolution was no sooner taken than it was executed.
+
+Ellen and her brother had ere this arrived at the end of their journey.
+They reached Captain Wareham’s just as he, Matilda, and the Allenhams,
+who were at this moment paying him their annual visit, were seated at
+their dessert. They were surprised at hearing an unusual bustle in the
+house, and still more so when Ellen, leaning on her brother, entered
+the apartment. They all pressed round to greet her. Matilda, with
+youthful delight at this agreeable surprise, Caroline and her husband
+with kindness, Captain Wareham with some kindness but more annoyance,
+which annoyance was, however, in some degree tempered by the respect he
+had felt for Ellen, ever since she had made so good a marriage as he
+considered that to Mr. Hamilton.
+
+“Well, my dear Ellen, this is really very good of you to take us so
+by surprise, but you certainly do take us by surprise. I do not know
+how in the world we are to lodge you, and the dinner is just gone.
+And you too, Henry?” (annoyance was rapidly preponderating) “I do not
+know what we can do with you. And I suppose Hamilton is of the party;
+you might have given one a line. I should have thought, Ellen, you
+must have remembered how inconvenient this kind of thing is in a small
+establishment.”
+
+By this time Ellen had sunk in a chair, and Caroline began to be
+alarmed at her paleness, and at the altered expression of her
+countenance. The children had just landed from their vehicle, and their
+voices were heard in the passage.
+
+“Mercy on us! and the children, too!” exclaimed poor Captain Wareham,
+in a tone of despair, annoyance having thoroughly mastered the vague
+respect inspired by the superior style of all which surrounded the
+Hamiltons. “Well, this certainly is rather inconsiderate, Ellen; but
+when people make great matches they grow fine, and you seem quite to
+forget your poor old father’s means are not quite so ample as Mr.
+Hamilton’s.”
+
+He turned round, but started at the ghastly appearance of Ellen.
+Henry had suffered agonies for his sister, and had tried to lead his
+father aside, that he might briefly explain to him the case, without
+proclaiming it to the whole household. Ellen answered with the
+composure of despair.
+
+“You must let me stay in this house, father—I do not care where—only I
+must have the shelter of your paternal roof.”
+
+“I can go to the inn perfectly well, dear father,” added Henry.
+
+“And Ellen can have her old room,” interposed Matilda; “little Caroline
+can sleep with me, and George can sleep on the sofa in Mr. Allenham’s
+dressing-room; and now it is all arranged, so don’t you be cross,
+papa. Ellen looks quite ill, and I dare say she is faint for want of
+something to eat, so leave it all to me, and don’t make a fuss, that’s
+all, papa,” and she gave her father a playful tap on the cheek. She was
+a high-spirited, warm-hearted, ingenuous girl, in many respects the
+precise opposite of her sisters. If her father was cross, her spirit
+rose; and she consequently possessed that sort of control over him
+which the most decided, positive, and wilful, generally obtains over
+the less resolute temper, whatever may be their relative positions. She
+was also an excellent manager, always had cold meat in the house, and
+was never at a loss for an expedient on any emergency.
+
+Caroline was exceedingly uneasy at the appearance of Ellen, and
+remembered her fainting fits when she had been last at Belhanger.
+Her look of settled grief, coupled with the absence of Mr. Hamilton,
+made her fear that, notwithstanding the affection which had formerly
+subsisted between them, their quarrel must have been a serious one, and
+that her unannounced arrival must mean that they were separated. She
+found, also, that only the two Cresford children accompanied her; and
+this served to confirm her fears.
+
+Even Captain Wareham began to be alarmed at the subdued yet resolute
+manner of Ellen; and looked from one to the other, perplexed, amazed,
+and annoyed.
+
+“I suppose you want something to eat, Ellen?”
+
+“No, father! I could not touch any thing.”
+
+“And the children must have supper.”
+
+“Matilda, you will give them some tea, poor little things?” she
+answered, turning towards Matilda.
+
+“I could not eat a mouthful either,” said Henry, “so do not get any
+thing for me, father. I wish you would just step this way, I want to
+consult you which inn I had best go to.”
+
+“My dear boy, it is very chilly to-night, and you may just as well
+consult me here by the fire.”
+
+“Ellen,” added Henry, “would you not be better up-stairs on the sofa?
+Ellen is not well, father, and we must take great care of her!”
+
+“You do not seem well indeed, Ellen. Why, you look ten years older,
+girl, than when I saw you last!”
+
+Ellen had risen from her seat, and was mechanically obeying Henry in
+walking up-stairs, when he said,
+
+“Do give Ellen your arm, Allenham, she is faint and weak. I have some
+things to arrange, and will follow you presently.”
+
+Captain Wareham, whose parental tenderness had been awakened by the
+expression of suffering in Ellen’s face, was following also, when Henry
+laid his hand upon his arm, and forcibly detained him. He closed the
+door after them. Captain Wareham turned round.
+
+“What does all this mean, Henry? Really it is very disagreeable, and
+you quite frighten me; I wish you would not be so odd and mysterious.”
+
+“Listen to me, father. I scarcely know how to break to you the news I
+have to impart.”
+
+“Speak, for Heaven’s sake. I always hate being kept in suspense.”
+
+“Cresford is alive! alive, and coming home, as he thinks, to the arms
+of his beloved wife!”
+
+“Impossible, Henry! you are jesting;” and Captain Wareham attempted to
+smile; but he dropped powerless into his chair, and clasped his hands,
+adding, “If this is a jest, it is a cruel one!”
+
+Henry then, in a few words, gave him an outline of the case, and told
+him that Ellen and he had agreed, that until Cresford arrived, and
+that the truth was past all hope of concealment, it was best to treat
+it as an amicable separation on the score of temper. Henry had advised
+Ellen not even to confide the truth to Mrs. Allenham; for amiable and
+kind-hearted as she was, still she was not free from an inclination
+to gossip, and she would never be able to prevent such a secret from
+escaping her lips, to some of her old and dear friends in her native
+place.
+
+Captain Wareham, whose good heart and high feeling of honour rendered
+him, in fact, an estimable man, approved of all that his unfortunate
+daughter had done; and was cut to the soul when he looked forward to
+the miserable fate which probably awaited her.
+
+“And when Cresford does return, Henry, how will he conduct himself? I
+dread his violence!”
+
+“I dare say he will make her a liberal allowance,” answered Henry;
+“for he was always noble about money; but at the same time I cannot
+help fearing he will take the children from her. In common justice, he
+cannot visit upon her, farther than that, the consequences of his own
+rash imposture.”
+
+“I hope not; but you were too young when he went to France, to know
+the full violence of his character—the vehemence of his ungoverned
+passions. But we must go to my poor, poor unhappy child.”
+
+Her sisters had been all kindness to Ellen, though Matilda, in her
+thoughtless fondness, had asked a thousand painful questions concerning
+Mr. Hamilton, her pet Agnes, &c.; but Caroline, who was quite persuaded
+she understood the whole case perfectly, discreetly avoided every thing
+that led to such subjects, till Matilda went to see to her hospitable
+arrangements for their accommodation, and they were left alone.
+
+“Dearest Ellen!” Caroline then said, “I was afraid it would come to
+this, when I left you a month ago. Who would ever have thought that Mr.
+Hamilton could have turned out so ill, for I am sure you could never
+have been the one to blame; nobody ever saw you out of temper in your
+life.”
+
+Ellen looked up.
+
+“Breathe not a word against him, Caroline: he is the most perfect, the
+most faultless of human beings! I always thought my happiness was too
+great to last, and it has proved so. May Heaven, in its mercy, protect
+and bless him!”
+
+“Ah, you always were a gentle, forgiving creature!” answered Mrs.
+Allenham.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ See the poor captive from his dungeon break,
+ Where long he pined, and hail the light of day,
+ With eyes that in the broad effulgence ache,
+ With smiles that ’mid deep lines of anguish play!
+ How eagerly he meets the morning gale
+ With lab’ring lungs that each sweet breath would seize!
+ How fondly views the hill, the plain, the vale,
+ Green meadows, brooks, fields, flowers, and waving trees!
+ And, “Gods!” he cries, “how dear is liberty!
+ Is there in Heaven’s large gift a boon beside?
+ The world is mine, and all the good I see!”
+ But soon, too soon, his raptures wild subside,
+ And sighing sad, “Not Freedom’s self to me
+ Is sweet,” he cries, “if one to share it be denied.”
+
+ _Unpublished Poems._
+
+The next day Henry was obliged to return to London: indeed, he wished
+to be upon the spot, in case of Mr. Cresford’s arrival; and Ellen was,
+on the same account, equally anxious he should depart.
+
+Mrs. Allenham made several attempts to learn from Ellen the particulars
+of her separation; but Ellen assured her the subject was at present
+too painful to dwell upon; and they remained together in melancholy
+calmness not unmixed with _gêne_, for Caroline was somewhat hurt at
+Ellen’s reserve.
+
+She had one conversation with her father, in which he was all kindness
+and sympathy, and she now sat down to a task which she deemed one of
+absolute necessity, although of the utmost difficulty, namely, to
+write to Mr. Cresford a letter which should meet him on his arrival in
+London, and convey to him the dreadful intelligence, which sooner or
+later, must reach him.
+
+It was as follows:—
+
+“I know not how to address you, and I dread lest you should have heard
+from some other quarter all that has occurred, and may cast aside the
+letter of one whom you deem untrue to you, without reading her own
+statement of the facts.
+
+“Believe me, when I swear by every thing we hold most sacred, that
+the first communication I received from you, from the time I read the
+official account of your death in the public newspapers, was the letter
+I received last month, dated from Gratz. I had then for two years
+believed myself the wife of Mr. Hamilton.
+
+“As I write these words, my spirit quails at the effect I know they
+must produce on you; my heart bleeds for the pain I am inflicting on
+you; for, indeed, I do justice to the strength of your affection for
+me, and I grieve to be thus the cause of anguish to one who loves me!
+It is a cruel return for all the fidelity you have preserved to me; but
+you must know the truth, and I had rather you should learn it from me,
+than from common report—from the busy tongue of slander.
+
+“Mr. Maitland never brought me the letter to which you allude. I
+have never seen any of your companions in misfortune, except Colonel
+Eversham, who told me how he followed your remains to the grave, and I
+have yet to learn by what means you effected your escape from Verdun.
+For two years I mourned you in sincerity and truth. During all that
+time I regulated my conduct by what I supposed would have been your
+wishes, if you had been able to express them to me before your supposed
+death.
+
+“Some months after the expiration of my two years’ mourning, I accepted
+the hand of Mr. Hamilton. You must feel, that, although this second
+marriage is null and void, and that in the eye of the law I am your
+wife, an eternal barrier is placed between yourself and me.
+
+“Upon the reception of your first letter, Mr. Hamilton left me,
+and I have not seen him since. Upon the confirmation of this first
+letter (in the authenticity of which we scarcely believed), I removed
+with—the—two children to my father’s.” [She had at first written
+“_your_ two children;” but she felt as if by that word she were tacitly
+yielding them up to him, and she substituted _our_. This she feared
+might imply that their reunion was not impossible, and she wrote
+_the_.] “Indeed, indeed, my conscience acquits me of having wilfully
+done any thing wrong, though I am aware I have cast a blight over the
+fate of all those whose happiness I would gladly die to secure. Would
+I could die! But it is our duty to suffer and submit. Misfortune has,
+I hope, taught you likewise the duty of resignation. Pray, as I do,
+for strength to fulfil our pilgrimage here on earth in unrepining
+patience and humility, so that we may hereafter be deemed worthy of
+our Maker’s promised blessings to those who do his will in this world.
+Our misfortunes have not originated in guilt: in that reflection let
+us find a supporting hope; and rest assured that, had I known you
+to be living, no length of absence, no human power, no imaginable
+circumstances, should have shaken my adherence to my maiden vow of
+constancy: you should have found me as you left me—
+
+ “Your faithful wife,
+ “ELLEN CRESFORD.”
+
+With what unutterable anguish did she write that name! For some minutes
+she held the pen suspended before she summoned courage to trace the
+dreaded characters. Yet why, when her whole letter avowed herself his
+wife, why fear to write the word? She forced herself to do so; but as
+she wrote, she felt guilty towards Algernon. She had been so completely
+in the habit of doing every thing with reference to him, of being
+guided by him, of acting as if his eye was always upon her, that she
+thought what would be his emotions, if he saw her thus deliberately
+deny him! Yet this was indeed her name, and if she avoided it, she
+might irritate him who was in very truth her husband; him, who had a
+right at any moment to tear her children from her! She would no longer
+hesitate—she would not give herself the opportunity of altering the
+signature; she sealed the letter, she directed it, she enclosed it to
+her brother, and when all was done, she felt her separation from him
+she loved more complete than ever. A gush of tenderness came over her
+soul. If Algernon had at that moment been at her feet, there is no
+knowing whether she might not have consented to fly with him to the
+wilds of America, or to any spot on earth where human institutions
+could not reach.
+
+When Algernon arrived at Belhanger, a few days after Ellen’s departure,
+he lost no time in sending little Agnes to rejoin her mother. He
+thought the presence of her child,—his child,—might afford her the
+sensation nearest approaching to pleasure of any thing she was now
+capable of experiencing. It was not without many a bitter pang that he
+brought himself to part from the only object that remained to him, of
+all that a few short weeks ago had made him the happiest man alive.
+But, in addition to his anxiety to lessen by any means within his
+power the bitterness of her fate, it is possible that a lingering hope
+mingled itself, that she could not refuse to let him occasionally see
+his child, and that he might perhaps thus obtain an interview with
+herself.
+
+His home was now utterly desolate. He wandered as she had done before,
+like an unquiet spirit, from room to room. He pictured to himself
+what must have been her feelings when she tore herself from them.
+He longed to know how she had passed that last sad month; he wished
+for every trifling detail concerning her occupations, her looks, and
+yet he did not like to question the servants. He saw in their faces
+an expression of wonder and dismay; they moved about with stealthy
+steps, and spoke with subdued voices, while in the part of the house
+which he inhabited; or else, as he passed by the offices, he heard
+the loud laugh proceeding from the servants-hall, or the blithe carol
+of the laundry-maids over their wash-tub, which jarred his feelings,
+and he was tempted to exclaim mentally against the heartlessness of
+menials. Their curiosity, and their want of sympathy, both checked the
+inclination to question them concerning Ellen, which his restlessness
+caused frequently to arise in his bosom. Moreover, he scarcely knew in
+what terms to speak of her.
+
+Mrs. Topham, however, spared him the trouble of deciding for himself.
+A few days after his return, she made her appearance to receive his
+orders about the furniture of the chintz-room, saying that Mrs.
+Hamilton had desired her to ask him what he wished to have done, and
+also to inquire his pleasure concerning the neck-cloths. He begged her
+to use her own discretion on those subjects, but still detained her in
+conversation, hoping she would, of her own accord, allude to Ellen.
+
+Finding that Mrs. Topham’s discourse was strictly confined to her
+business, he ventured at length to say,
+
+“I am afraid your mistress was not quite well when she left Belhanger?”
+
+“Why certainly, sir, Mrs. Hamilton did not look so well as she used to
+do. There was not a servant in the house that did not remark it. But it
+was very lonesome for her here by herself, and we thought perhaps that
+was the reason she appeared so low. I am sure, sir, we all heartily
+wished for you back again, if it was only for our poor mistress’s sake.”
+
+Mrs. Topham, whose curiosity had only been repressed by her respectful
+discretion, had no mind to lose this opportunity of ascertaining
+whether her master and mistress were really parted or not, and of
+satisfactorily clearing up the mystery of their late proceedings.
+
+“I suppose, sir,” she continued, “my mistress will be coming back
+soon;—do you not think it would be a good thing to get the muslin
+curtains in the boudoir washed before her return?”
+
+Poor Hamilton had wished to lead the conversation to Ellen, and now he
+had succeeded in doing so, he writhed under the questions,—he thought
+it better not to hear her name mentioned at all, than to be subject to
+them, and hastily bidding Mrs. Topham see to all those things in her
+own department, he hurried out to mount his horse, and to gallop like a
+maniac over the country, as if he could thus escape from the corroding
+care which followed faster than he could fly.
+
+When, in violent exercise alone, did he experience temporary relief
+from misery. At home every thing breathed of Ellen, and, though it was
+agonizing to him to see traces of her on all sides, he could not tear
+himself from the spot; he would pass whole hours in her morning room,
+looking over her books, turning over the leaves of the blotting book,
+in which were notes, memorandums, various little matters which belonged
+to her. He would gaze for several minutes upon any half-bound book,
+which had “Ellen Hamilton” written in her hand on the outside. Those
+two words contained for his heart a world of passionate and blasted
+feelings. The very household accounts were not without a charm in his
+eyes—for they perpetuated the memory of a time when she was his wife.
+
+There is no need to dwell upon the emotions of Ellen when the nurse
+brought her child. The smiles of the infant and the letter which
+accompanied it were a momentary balm to her heart. Algernon expressed
+his conviction that, whatever their own fates might be, he could in
+no way so effectually secure the ultimate and eternal welfare of
+their child, as by causing its young mind to be trained to all that
+was virtuous, under Ellen’s own immediate eye. She could not but be
+gratified by his opinion of her, and grateful for his kindness. It was
+about a fortnight from the period of their final separation, when Henry
+Wareham was one day called out of his office to speak to a gentleman
+who awaited him in a private apartment. Henry’s heart misgave him. His
+worst fears were on the point of being realized. It must be Cresford.
+
+The room was dark. Henry’s eyes were dizzy with intense anxiety; he
+thought he did not recognise the face; but it was Cresford’s voice
+which asked,
+
+“Are you Henry Wareham?”
+
+“Heavens! Cresford. Is it indeed yourself?”
+
+“Where is my wife?” uttered Cresford, in a choked tone of defiance.
+
+“Ellen is with her father,” stammered Henry.
+
+“Why was she not here to receive her husband?” continued Cresford.
+
+“Here is a letter, Cresford, which she desired me to give you, and
+which will explain all.”
+
+“Then what I have heard is true!” exclaimed Cresford in a burst of
+uncontrollable passion. “Your virtuous sister thought I was safe in
+an Austrian dungeon, and she has given the loose to her profligate
+fancies, under the specious veil of marriage! Well done, your
+sanctified hypocrite! The mourning widow of Ephesus with a vengeance!”
+And he laughed an appalling, withering laugh, which made Henry shudder.
+His eyes glared with the fire of madness. Henry almost shrank with the
+involuntary terror from which the bravest cannot defend themselves if
+they suspect mental aberration in a fellow-creature.
+
+“Cresford, read this letter, and I think you will not make use of such
+hard expressions. Though you may be miserable, you will not be so
+angry.”
+
+“So, because I have loved her with mad idolatry, because my passion
+for her has driven me to acts of desperation,—has driven me to set at
+nought my life—my safety, you think I am such a besotted fool, that
+three lines traced by her hand, are to turn the whole current of my
+feelings; that she can persuade me quietly to yield her to the arms of
+my rival.” He paused, then added in a deep and thrilling voice, “You
+neither of you know me. You know not half I have gone through.”
+
+“Cresford, all I implore is that you will read my sister’s letter. We
+all believed you dead. The partners in the firm all believed it.”
+
+“It was their interest—it was your interest to do so,” he answered with
+a bitter smile.
+
+However, he took the letter.
+
+“Oh, how I have longed to see any thing belonging to her. And now—”
+
+A tear gathered in his eye. Henry augured well of that omen, and stood
+in silence, somewhat apart.
+
+He had leisure to remark the havoc which time and suffering, and, as
+he began to fear, madness, had worked in the fine features of his
+brother-in-law. They were sharper, his nose more prominent, his lips
+thinner, and more compressed. His brow low on his eye, which glanced
+quickly and suspiciously from beneath it. Although still young, for
+Cresford was not yet thirty, his hair was considerably mixed with grey.
+
+Henry watched the varying expression of his countenance as he
+proceeded with poor Ellen’s letter, and he sincerely commiserated the
+wretched man, who was now a prey to the most agonizing passions of our
+nature—blasted hope—indignant jealousy.
+
+When he came to the part in which she spoke of having for two years
+believed herself the wife of Mr. Hamilton, he stamped upon the floor,
+and crushing the paper in his clenched hand, Henry thought would have
+destroyed it, in the paroxysm of his rage. However, he proceeded, and
+a softer shade stole over his face when he read of her grief at making
+such a return for all his kindness and affection. A tear trickled
+down his cheek as he came to the part where she described her strict
+adherence to his wishes; and when she mentioned her having parted from
+Mr. Hamilton upon the reception of his first letter, he vehemently laid
+his hand on Henry’s arm.
+
+“Is this true?” he said. “Did she part from that man at once?”
+
+“Indeed she did, and has not seen him since.”
+
+“Henry, did she love him?—answer me that.”
+
+Henry hesitated—“They seemed to live comfortably together, whenever I
+have seen them.”
+
+“Madness! distraction! Did they love each other?”
+
+“I saw but little of them, for I was always in the office,” replied
+Henry evasively.
+
+“I must see her—I must see her herself; I must know the truth!” He
+resumed the letter, but hastily passing over that part which spoke of
+resignation, “There is no use in preaching resignation to me! She might
+as well attempt to chain the ocean!” He glanced at the signature. “Oh,
+merciful Heaven! that I could forget all that has gone before; that
+I could annihilate the preceding words, and preserve nothing but the
+last, ‘Your faithful wife, Ellen Cresford!’”
+
+He gazed in rapturous tenderness upon the words; his tears flowed fast;
+he kissed the name again and again. Then hastily turning to Henry, he
+added, “I must see her once again, and then—God knows what will become
+of me!”
+
+He rushed out of the house, and before many minutes had elapsed was on
+his road to Captain Wareham’s residence.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ Shall then, in earnest truth,
+ My careful eyes observe her?
+ Shall I consume my youth,
+ And short my time to serve her?
+
+ Shall I beyond my strength,
+ Let passion’s torments prove me,
+ To hear her say at length
+ “Away,—I cannot love thee!”
+
+ GEORGE WITHER.—A.D. 1588.
+
+Ellen was one morning quietly seated in the back drawing-room which had
+been given up to her and her children; the elder ones were employed,
+George in reading to his mother, and Caroline in working, seated on a
+stool at her feet, while the little Agnes was playing on the floor.
+Ellen heard a knock at the door. Every sound made her start. She heard
+a loud voice in the passage! A voice! His voice! Yes it was his voice
+whom she had so long believed in the grave, uttering in loud and stern
+accents, “Show me to Mrs. Cresford,—I must instantly see her,” and he
+darted by the servant up the stairs.
+
+“Not into the front room, sir,” the servant called out; “there is
+company in the front room! the back room, sir, if you please.”
+
+Cresford burst open the door, and stood before her, pale and haggard.
+She did not faint, she did not scream: she had risen from her seat, and
+she stood transfixed!
+
+She was as beautiful as ever. Sorrow could but dim her brilliancy,—the
+finely chiselled features, the marble brow, the angelic expression, the
+feminine dignity, were all there. Cresford gazed in agonized admiration.
+
+“How I have longed for this moment!—this moment, which proves one of
+torture! Ellen, Ellen, you never loved me, or you could not have done
+what you have done. But I was resolved to see you again.—Yes, if heaven
+and hell had conspired against me, I would have gazed upon that face
+again.” She hid her face with her hands. “No,” he said, and forcibly
+removed them, “I will look upon those features. It was the recollection
+of those eyes, of that brow, those lips, which made me cling to life,
+while they induced me to hazard it a thousand times to gain another
+sight of them; it was to gaze on them that I practised the imposture by
+which I escaped from my prison; it was to gaze on them that I preserved
+my life, though treated as a spy, a prisoner, and a maniac!”
+
+Ellen shook from head to foot. Fear, simple, deadly fear, absorbed
+every other feeling. She spoke not, she struggled not.
+
+“Ellen, do you love me still? Have you thought of me in absence? Have
+you wept for me? Is your heart faithful?”
+
+A horrible surmise crossed her. Surely he could not contemplate the
+idea of taking her back.—“Do you love me, Ellen?” he repeated, and he
+still held her hands.
+
+“I pity you from the bottom of my heart.”
+
+“Do you love me?” and he dashed her hands from him.
+
+“No!” she exclaimed, clasping them earnestly, “No! my whole heart,
+soul, and affections are Algernon’s,” and she sank on the floor.
+
+“And do I live to hear you avow your guilt? Shameless, abandoned
+creature! You, whom I so worshipped! now, now,—in truth my brain will
+madden!” He struck his forehead with his clenched hands. Then looking
+round, “These are my children, are they not?—I believed them mine. Yes,
+yes, they are mine, and mine they shall be! Come with me, children; you
+shall not remain to be contaminated by the example of a creature who
+glories in her shame. And this,” he added, and lifted the little Agnes
+from the floor, “this, this is _his_ child! Take it,—take it, before
+I commit any crime I may repent of!” Ellen rushed to it, tore it from
+him, and hugged it to her bosom. “But these are mine!” he continued,
+and “these are mine, by every law of nature and of man!” He seized one
+in each hand. She flew to him,—she clung round his feet. He looked down
+on her in triumph.
+
+“Oh, spare my children! Oh, Charles, have mercy upon me,” and she
+desperately held the children who clung round her.
+
+At this moment Captain Wareham, who had heard the tumult, entered,
+
+“Captain Wareham, you see a man who claims his children—his children—by
+the law of the land, his! I conclude you will not interfere with the
+exercise of my rights as a free-born Englishman.”
+
+Ellen had sunk exhausted and sobbing on the floor, feeling that her
+father would protect her, and preserve her children.
+
+“Surely, Mr. Cresford, this is not the manner in which an Englishman,
+and a gentleman, would enforce his rights.”
+
+“I have been taunted by that woman with her love for another man, and I
+cannot leave my children in her keeping. They must be delivered up to
+me.”
+
+“They shall—they shall, Mr. Cresford. I pledge myself that before
+evening they shall be sent to you, at any place you may appoint.”
+
+“I am at the hotel opposite, sir, and there I await them within the
+next two hours.”
+
+He darted down the stairs, and out of the house.
+
+The terrified children hung round their mother; Captain Wareham
+supported her; Caroline—Matilda rushed in. Concealment was no longer
+practicable—despair and consternation prevailed through the whole
+house. The two Miss Parkses, who had been “the company in the front
+drawing-room,” discreetly took their departure, but not before they had
+seen and heard enough to be perfectly _au fait_ as to the cause of the
+confusion, and, in a quarter-of-an-hour, the fact of Mrs. Hamilton’s
+first husband’s return was known in every house in the Close, and in
+half-an-hour more throughout the whole town. But one feeling, however,
+prevailed—sincere sorrow for the unfortunate Ellen!
+
+Her manners were so gentle, she had not an enemy—her conduct so
+irreproachable, that even the slander of a country-town coterie had
+never approached her name. Every one felt disposed to be angry with Mr.
+Cresford for being alive, and many a parent made use of the event to
+impress upon the minds of their children the dreadful consequences of a
+deviation from truth, under any circumstances whatsoever.
+
+Why should we return to the scene where Ellen is helplessly kissing
+her two elder children, while they are as helplessly hanging around
+her? The idea of resistance never for a moment crossed her. The strong
+arm of the law she knew could wrest them from her—there was no hope of
+touching Cresford’s heart. Ellen thought this was the bitterest drop
+of all, in her cup of woe. To be parted from the beings over whose
+welfare, bodily and mental, she had so carefully watched; in whom she
+had with tender, and patient care, sown the seeds of good, which she
+now saw every day bearing fruit according to her most sanguine wishes!
+The instinctive bond between mother and child may be equally strong
+at all ages; but when, in addition to the natural pang at such a tie
+being severed, there is the sorrowful and disappointing prospect of
+seeing your labour of love all wasted, and the grief of seeing your
+sorrow shared by the innocent sufferers, there can be no anguish more
+poignant, more hopeless.
+
+In man there may exist a preference towards the children of the woman
+he loves, over those of the woman he has not loved—not so in the
+gentler sex. It frequently happens that maternal affection is the more
+powerful principle in those who have been disappointed in their hopes
+of conjugal happiness. The heart whose tenderness has been repelled
+in one quarter, expands and fixes itself in the one other lawful
+direction, and Ellen’s love for her elder children fully equalled that
+she felt for the child of Algernon.
+
+She has taken her last kiss of them; she has for the last time wrapped
+the handkerchiefs close round their throats to defend them from the
+chill of the evening; she has for the thousandth time bade them be
+good children, and implored them to remember all she has told them
+concerning their duty to God, and to their fellow-creatures. Above all,
+she made them both promise never to forget to say their prayers, and
+added, “never forget to pray for me, my children.”
+
+“No, no, mamma; but we shall see you again soon.”
+
+“We will hope so, my loves—we shall, I trust, meet again, here, or
+elsewhere,” and her eyes sought that Heaven to which her spirit longed
+to flee, and be at rest.
+
+“We are not always to remain with that pale dark stranger?”
+
+“He is your father, my children. You owe to him the same duty you owe
+to me.” But she could not bid them love him, obey him, watch his every
+look, and attend to his every word, as they did to hers, for alas!
+she remembered but too well what was his violent uncertain temper in
+happier days, and she trembled to think to what guardianship their
+helpless innocence was committed.
+
+“If strangers,” she added, “should speak slightingly of me,
+darlings,—my own dear good children will not believe them. I know they
+will not.”
+
+Once more they were locked in a long and close embrace—gradually she
+relaxed her hold. Matilda, Caroline, Captain Wareham gently unwound
+them from her. The awe-struck children let themselves be quietly
+withdrawn, and when Ellen recovered from her swoon, they were with
+their father some miles on the road to London.
+
+What were Cresford’s emotions?—Such was the tumult of his soul they
+could scarcely be defined. The circumstances under which the children
+had been introduced to their father were not such as to inspire them
+with filial affection; and, notwithstanding their mother’s parting
+injunction, they looked upon him with fear and horror, as the stranger
+who had made mamma so unhappy, and had taken them away from her in such
+a hurry. They could not the least comprehend what was meant by this
+man’s being their father, for they remembered wearing black frocks for
+a long time, because their father was dead.
+
+Cresford saw the instinctive terror with which, when he kissed them,
+and bade them love him, they shrank from his caresses. With increased
+bitterness he exclaimed, “She has taught them to hate me! My own
+children hate me,—my wife disowns me! I am an outcast on the face
+of the earth! It had been better, a thousand times better for me to
+have consumed away the remnant of my existence in my dungeon! There
+I had hope!—I could think of my Ellen,—of my children! and fancy the
+time might come when I should once more know happiness with them. Oh!
+for those visionary days of fancied bliss!—how much better than this
+horrible waking certainty of endless misery! But I will be revenged! If
+I am miserable, those who have made me so shall not be happy!” And at
+that moment he took the resolution of availing himself of every power
+which the law placed in his hands, of bringing her, who had caused him
+to be the wretch he was, to open and public shame.
+
+The rest of the journey was performed in silence. His heart had been
+too long seared by suffering, to open to parental affection. His
+children showed none for him; he was not in a state of mind to attempt
+to win it by patient kindness, and he felt injured as a father, as
+well as a husband. In truth, a calmer, gentler disposition than his
+might have had all the milk of human kindness turned to gall, in his
+situation. He had most truly loved his wife, and his case was as
+pitiable, and as hopeless a one, as can well be imagined. The mental
+aberration to which he had slightly alluded, and which had prevented
+him for some years from even attempting to make his imprisonment in
+Austria known, either to his friends or to the Government, had been
+brought on by the vehement and ungoverned nature of his passions;
+which, as might be expected, did not meet with the soothing treatment
+calculated to allay them, but, on the contrary, with every thing
+tending most to inflame and irritate them. The reason which might have
+controlled them remained, in some degree, weakened, while the passions
+themselves were in full force.
+
+Upon his arrival in London he deposited his children at an hotel, and
+sallied forth in search of a lawyer. He walked to Lincoln’s Inn, and
+knocked at the first door that presented itself. He was admitted, and
+was shown up to a middle-aged, quiet little man, with spectacles upon
+his nose.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ _Gomez._—And wouldst thou bare thy bosom’s grief to one,
+ A dull mechanic, who but stares on thee
+ With cold unmeaning wonder? I had rather
+ The secret pang should rankle at the core,
+ And eat my life away, than my dear thoughts
+ Be made thus stale and common. Hast no friend,
+ No tried companion, whose unwearied ear
+ Would ease thy o’ercharged breast?
+
+ _Pedro._— ... Not one—not one!
+ I am alone, with such a sum of ills
+ As o’erturns reason.
+
+ _Manuscript Tragedy._
+
+“Sir,” said Cresford to the lawyer, “I come to you for justice. You
+see before you a man who has been deeply injured in his honour, his
+affections, and his rights as a man, a husband, and a father.”
+
+Mr. M‘Leod pointed to a chair, and begged the gentleman to be
+seated—professed his willingness to lend any assistance in his power to
+a person who appeared to be suffering under such injuries, and begged
+him calmly to detail to him the circumstances of the case, that he
+might judge in what mode he could best render this assistance.
+
+“I am calm, sir: if you knew all, you would wonder at my calmness.
+During the year of peace in 1802, I was called to France on mercantile
+business. I left a wife I adored—Oh, sir! she was the loveliest
+creature that ever walked this earth—she seemed as pure as she was
+lovely. I worshipped her as the Persians of old worshipped the sun. She
+was every thing to me! I scarcely suffered the wind to blow on her.
+The gaze of another man appeared to me almost pollution to a creature
+so sacred. I left her with her father, as I thought, in honour and in
+safety, and with her my two children.
+
+“Every one knows the fate of those who were found in France upon the
+declaration of hostilities. I was one of the _détenus_, and at Verdun
+I was condemned to drag out many, many weary months, in absence from
+her I so madly adored. A vague jealousy, a fear of what might occur
+in my absence, racked my brain almost to madness. I would not accept
+my parole: the severity of my imprisonment was nothing to me. Of what
+avail was the liberty of wandering a few miles from the town, to one
+whose whole soul was in another land? It mattered little to me where I
+was detained, if I was far from her, and I would be bound by no ties
+of honour from attempting every thing in my power to make my escape.
+Several times I had nearly accomplished it, but each time the vigilance
+of my jailers overtook me.
+
+“At length I thought of a plan which proved successful. I wrote a
+letter to my wife, informing her that I intended to counterfeit
+illness,—on my feigned death-bed, to obtain permission to be buried by
+torch-light in the Protestant burying-ground outside the town, and with
+the assistance of my friend and only confidant, Morton, to follow my
+own funeral procession, at night, wrapt in a military cloak, as one of
+the mourners. Every thing succeeded to my wishes. I was considered as
+falling a victim to my mental sufferings, and my fate excited pity. I
+obtained the permission required. Morton administered a strong sleeping
+draught, and as he was my constant attendant, he pronounced me dead. I
+was placed in my coffin, and on the evening of my funeral, which was
+the next succeeding my supposed death, he begged to be allowed to weep
+in private over the bier of his best friend, and took that opportunity
+of opening the coffin, dressing me in the clothes which he had conveyed
+into the room, filling the coffin with some billets of wood which had
+been brought to make up the fire, and of concealing me in an adjoining
+closet till the moment arrived for the procession to move on. I then
+mixed among the mourners, and by favour of the darkness, escaped
+detection. As most of the other officers were on parole, there was
+no difficulty made as to the number who passed the gates, and with a
+palpitating heart, I found myself, unfettered by any pledge of honour,
+beyond the walls of Verdun.
+
+“It was not till all present were occupied in actually lowering the
+coffin into the ground that I ventured to absent myself. I took that
+moment to steal away, and plunging into a neighbouring thicket, I
+remained there closely concealed, till they had all wound their way
+back into the town.
+
+“Morton had placed for me a peasant’s dress, a bag of provisions,
+and some money, in a hollow tree, the situation of which he had so
+accurately described to me, that I found it without much loss of time,
+and having changed my dress, and carefully concealed my military
+costume, I dashed right onwards, and before morning had cleared three
+leagues. I need not tell you how I made my way from day to day—how
+I crossed the Rhine in an open boat, which in my wanderings I found
+moored to the shore; how I was, in Germany, immediately seized as a
+spy, and how for four years, I was enabled still to endure the tortures
+of an Austrian dungeon, by the distant hope of some day being restored
+to my Ellen,—_my_ Ellen! I thought her _mine_ then! I have escaped from
+my dungeon—I have returned! I came to my home—no one knew me—I asked
+for my wife—I received no answer—I inquired for my children—they were
+at Mr. Hamilton’s!—for that is his name—that is the name of the man who
+has robbed me of my wife—my wedded, lawful wife!—for she is my wife! By
+the law of the land, she is my wife, sir? There is justice for me in
+this land of law, of liberty, of impartial justice, is there not? She
+can be prosecuted for bigamy, sir. She must be found guilty. I come to
+you to learn how to proceed—Do you advise me, guide me. Oh! my brain is
+confused and maddened! I cannot, cannot think!”
+
+Cresford paced the apartment in violent agitation. The quiet lawyer
+looked up from his spectacles, and half wondered whether his would-be
+client was quite in his right senses. Cresford had not paused for a
+moment. There was a relief in thus disburthening himself of all that
+had long been pent up in his soul. He had found those who were nearest
+and dearest to him, severed, eternally severed from him. All other
+ties and affections were as nothing before those which had been thus
+rudely rent asunder, and having once begun to speak to this stranger,
+he poured forth all his tale as to his best friend. He might also be
+prompted to indulge in this confidence by a feeling unknown to himself,
+that a person totally unacquainted with Ellen would be more likely
+to listen with complete sympathy to his wrongs, than any one who had
+known, or even seen her.
+
+Mr. M‘Leod answered,
+
+“Indeed, sir, your case appears to be a very hard one. You wrote, you
+say, to your wife to inform her of the plan you meant to adopt?”
+
+“I wrote to her explaining the whole thing, and sent the letter by my
+friend Maitland, who succeeded in making his escape a month before I
+put my plan in execution. I waited to make sure he got off in safety.
+He wrote to me the evening before he sailed in a fishing-vessel for
+England.”
+
+“And you are confident she received this letter?”
+
+“She says she did not—but she had fallen in love with Hamilton! She
+never loved me, I am now sure she never loved me,” he repeated in
+a tone of deep despondency, but he continued with more bitterness:
+“It was very convenient to her to believe in my death; convenient
+to my partners in trade, to divide the profits of the business—very
+convenient for her brother to be admitted to a share. Ha, ha, ha! they
+have all revelled in my spoils—they have thought me safe in my dungeon!
+But I am here—I am alive—they cannot prove me dead. I will wrest my
+wife, my children, my property, from the spoiler’s grasp!” and he
+laughed a wild laugh of desperation.
+
+It had been Mr. M‘Leod’s fate frequently to see people under a state
+of great excitement, so that, although he feared his visiter’s mind
+might be somewhat warped by his misfortunes, he did not doubt there was
+ground for all he stated, and he now inquired methodically into his
+name, his connections, his residence.
+
+He remembered the name as one of considerable note in the mercantile
+world, and he had some recollection of having heard his death
+mentioned, as one of the melancholy consequences of the cruel and
+unjustifiable act of arbitrary power, which must always be a disgrace
+on the name of Napoleon.
+
+“Indeed, Mr. Cresford,” rejoined M‘Leod, “I pity you most
+sincerely—whether your wife may be to blame or not.”
+
+“Whether my wife may be to blame or not? And do I hear an Englishman,
+whose profession it is to right the injured, to procure justice for all
+indifferently—do I hear him advocate the cause of the faithless wife?
+then, indeed, have I little chance of redress!”
+
+“My good sir, you misunderstand me entirely. I do not mean to advocate
+her cause, or anybody’s cause. I merely mean to say, that I am very
+sorry for you, whether your wife did ever receive the letter you wrote
+to her, or whether she did not.”
+
+“She did receive it—she must have received it; and, if she did not,
+she should have waited for some more positive and certain information
+of my death than common report!”
+
+“Very true, Mr. Cresford—quite true, sir; yet, if you had been dead,
+it would not have been easy for you to write her word you were dead,
+though she might have expected to hear from you that you were alive.”
+
+“Is there justice for me in the laws of my country, or is there not?”
+repeated Cresford sternly.
+
+“Certainly, sir. In this country there is justice for everybody.”
+
+“Then how am I to seek redress? In what court?”
+
+“Why, if by redress you mean revenge, that is to be obtained by
+prosecuting your wife for bigamy, in which case the trial would take
+place at the assizes of the county in which the marriage ceremony was
+performed: but, under the circumstances of the case under which the
+crime of bigamy was committed, I conclude, that if she quits the roof
+of her second husband——”
+
+“He is not her husband, sir; I am her husband, and I will prove it.
+She, the immaculate—the refined—who seemed to shrink from my love as
+too impassioned—she shall be proved to have been living in sin with
+another man!”
+
+“Does she still reside with Mr.——I beg your pardon, what was the name
+you mentioned?”
+
+“Hamilton—Hamilton is his name—and curses on it!” exclaimed Cresford,
+goaded to madness by the cool and methodical manner of the lawyer, who,
+though a lawyer, was an honest straightforward man, with plain manners
+and a good heart.
+
+“Does she still reside with Mr. Hamilton?”
+
+“No! she is with her father. She had not the face to live on with
+Hamilton when she knew I was alive, and on my way home.”
+
+“And your children, sir, does she make any difficulty about sending
+them to you?”
+
+“No! I brought them away with me yesterday.”
+
+“Then I do not exactly understand what redress you seek at the arm of
+the law.”
+
+The clear head, and the kind heart of the lawyer, made him begin to see
+that, although a most singular and lamentable case, it was one in which
+all parties were more deserving of pity than of blame, and it seemed
+to him that the poor woman had acted as well as she could under the
+unfortunate circumstances.
+
+“Have you and Mrs. Cresford had an interview since your return, and in
+what manner did she comport herself?”
+
+“I saw her yesterday. I saw her in all her loveliness—I could almost
+have forgotten every thing—for the moment it was such rapture to gaze
+on her again; when she told me, in so many words, that her whole heart
+and soul were his—my rival’s.”
+
+“Poor woman!” ejaculated Mr. M‘Leod.
+
+“And is it she whom you pity? Am I doomed to be scorned and persecuted
+by the whole human race? To be hated by all who are bound to me by the
+nearest and dearest ties? Are even strangers to take part against me?
+But I will have revenge, if I cannot have sympathy. I will be feared,
+if I cannot be loved. I would fain be loved; it was my nature to love,
+and to wish for love in return.” His voice softened, and the tears swam
+in his eyes. “But I have never been loved—no, she never did love me!
+He had her first affections—her whole affections! Oh, how those words
+ring in my ears!”
+
+Mr. M‘Leod was moved by his expressions of wretchedness, and rising
+from his seat, he took his hand kindly.
+
+“Though I am a stranger to you, sir, I pity you most sincerely,” he
+said, “and I wish I could persuade you to look more calmly on the case.”
+
+“Can you—will you assist me?”
+
+“Explain to me in what mode you wish for my assistance.”
+
+“Will you undertake the prosecution of Ellen Cresford for bigamy?”
+
+“Why, I must consider a little about it. I am an odd sort of fellow,
+and though I am a lawyer, I have a corner of conscience,” and Mr.
+M‘Leod smiled. Cresford hated him for being able to smile. “I do not
+engage in any thing till I know a little more about the matter. I am
+very well off in the world, and I do not want to make money, by causing
+my fellow-creatures to be more unhappy than they need be. I can’t tell
+what I might do if I was poor; but, thank God, I can afford to dismiss
+a client, if I think that no good can come of gaining his cause.”
+
+“Then you dismiss me, Mr. M‘Leod?”
+
+“I do not justly say that; but I should like to know how truly your
+wife believed you were dead and buried, and whether she had got
+acquainted with the other gentleman before she heard the news of your
+death, and a few more such questions; for it runs in my head, that
+though your case is a hard one, hers may be a hard one too; and that
+the best thing you could both do, would be to let each other alone, and
+bear your misfortunes as well as you can.”
+
+“It is easy enough to preach forbearance, and patience, and submission,
+and resignation. You would not find them quite so easy to practise. I
+did not come to you, Mr. M‘Leod, for ghostly counsel! I came to you for
+professional advice. Thus much I have ascertained, that the offence
+will be tried at the county assizes, and the punishment——?”
+
+“Mercy upon me, sir! You do not really wish your wife to be
+transported, when you deceived her with a false report of your death!
+I will have nothing to say to the matter, Mr. Cresford. You may find
+another solicitor, who is sharper set for a job than I am.”
+
+Cresford seized his hat, and muttering between his teeth, “Friend and
+foe, stranger and the wife of my bosom,—all leagued against me!” he
+made a slight bow to the honest lawyer, and again found himself jostled
+in the busy throng of London.
+
+One thing, however, he had ascertained,—that the prosecution would
+take place at her native town, and he felt a certain pleasure in the
+idea that she would be held up to disgrace there, among the very people
+who knew he was the betrayed and the detested husband. Those who were
+aware of the humiliating situation in which he was placed, would be
+witnesses of his revenge.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ And sudden hurricanes sweep all around,
+ That strip the tender leaves, and whirl amain,
+ While dread convulsions heave the shuddering ground,
+ And rocks, and caves, with hollow moan complain;
+ For anger hight, the lord of this domain,
+ Who when he fondly deems the ruin brought
+ On others’ fame and fortunes, his dear gain,
+ Finds that his own destruction he hath wrought,
+ And on himself hath wreaked the vengeance that he sought.
+
+ _Manuscript Poem._
+
+One other mode of vengeance Cresford was determined to pursue, namely,
+to call out Mr. Hamilton. He returned to the hotel, and there he sat
+down to write a challenge couched in language such as he thought must
+goad any man to give him the satisfaction for which he pined.
+
+Having from the red-book ascertained the direction to Mr. Hamilton’s
+place, he sent it by the post, for there was no one to whom he could
+apply on this emergency. He had not yet communicated with any of the
+partners of his house; he had seen no one except Henry Wareham; he felt
+that all living beings were his foes, and he therefore could not bring
+himself to have recourse to any of those who formerly called themselves
+his friends. He fancied he should only thereby expose himself to
+meeting with fresh unkindness and want of sympathy.
+
+When he had despatched his letter to Hamilton, he sent for his children
+into the room where he was sitting. They came pale and frightened. He
+tried to talk to them. He strove to adapt his conversation to their
+age. He asked them how they liked London, whether they had walked in
+the streets, and told them they should go to Kensington Gardens; but
+his eye was wild, his manner fierce and hurried, and they scarcely
+ventured to answer him. He soon sent them back to their attendant, his
+feelings rather embittered than softened by the interview.
+
+When he was able to fix his mind to the consideration of any subject,
+he became aware that he ought to arrange something more proper and more
+advantageous for them than their present mode of life, and he resolved,
+provided he did not fall by the hand of Hamilton, to take a small house
+in the immediate vicinity of London, where they might reside with
+their _bonne_, who had been with them for some time, and where they
+might also have the advantage of masters.
+
+He impatiently awaited Hamilton’s answer. It came; and in the first
+rage of disappointment he tore it into a thousand fragments. Hamilton
+distinctly and positively refused to meet Mr. Cresford, and told him
+that no taunts, no insults, should ever induce him to do so.
+
+Cresford threw himself into a chaise, and in half an hour was on the
+Portsmouth road. When he arrived within sight of Belhanger, he gave a
+second letter to a messenger, and desired it to be instantly delivered
+to Mr. Hamilton. In this he branded him with the name of coward, and
+he flattered himself it was such as must secure to him the revenge he
+coveted.
+
+Dismissing his chaise, he approached the scene of Ellen’s former
+happiness, and prowled around the precincts with redoubled feelings
+of jealousy. The loveliness of the place excited his envy—the
+venerable-looking manor house, the old oaks, the deer! Yet from these
+things he gleaned a momentary consolation. Perhaps it was the splendour
+of the connection that tempted her! But, oh no! the expression of her
+countenance, when she said her whole heart, soul, and affections were
+Algernon’s! Those words sounded again in his ears, and he longed to
+find himself in mortal struggle with the man of whom she could so speak.
+
+He hurried back to the inn, hoping his last letter must have provoked
+an answer consonant to his wishes. He found an envelope containing his
+own despatch unopened.
+
+There was no further redress to be sought; and he had but to retrace
+his steps to London, if possible more infuriated than before.
+
+Algernon had not trusted himself to read this second letter. He had
+resolved that no earthly power should tempt him to lift his hand
+against her husband: he was determined to commit no act that would
+place a barrier between himself and Ellen, which neither time nor
+change of circumstances could remove. Cresford was mortal, as well as
+himself or Ellen; and if, although he might wait till extreme old age,
+there was a possibility of their ever being reunited, no act of his
+should have rendered their reunion impracticable.
+
+Cresford returned to London, and he quickly put into execution the plan
+for the establishment of his children. It was necessary to enter into
+something like an arrangement with his partners. As yet he had taken
+no measures towards resuming his place among them; he had made himself
+known to none of his old acquaintances; he had communicated with no
+one, except those we have already mentioned.
+
+But money now became necessary to him. He revisited the house, and
+begged he might be immediately put in possession of his share of the
+receipts. His place of residence became known, and many left their
+names for him at the hotel; but even with the few whom he occasionally
+saw, he preserved a moody silence—to none did he speak of his
+misfortunes or of his intentions.
+
+The only person whose house he frequented, was an old bachelor who had
+been a friend of the family, who was his godfather, and who had taken
+advantage of that sort of connection to lecture him, and to find fault
+with him, when he was a boy. He had always disliked him, and why he
+should now be the only person whose society he selected, was one of the
+strange and unaccountable freaks of a mind ill at ease with itself, to
+which the spectacle of content and cheerfulness is irksome, while it
+finds a kind of relief in the contemplation of another equally joyless.
+
+Sir Stephenson Smith had in his youth esteemed himself a man of
+gallantry. He had never been handsome, but he had thought himself
+insinuating; and he had been made a fool of by many a fair one of
+his day. He had always professed to be on his guard against the
+machinations of the sex; and, as he fancied, had preserved his liberty
+up to the present day;—that is to say, he had been by turns the tyrant
+and the slave, of any woman who had art and vice enough to think it
+worth her while to dupe him. His conversation chiefly turned upon the
+coldness and the heartlessness of women. To most others it would have
+been a shocking sight; but Cresford found a strange satisfaction in
+watching the blind and helpless old man, as he sat in his arm-chair,
+surrounded by all the luxuries, which to him were of no avail, and
+receiving, with querulous impatience, the attentions of a bustling
+nurse, who, through evil report and good report, whether he was cross
+or not, conscientiously did her duty by him, and quietly performed the
+offices for which she was hired.
+
+Cresford was one day paying Sir Stephenson his diurnal visit. He
+had sat for some time in silence; his two hands rested upon his two
+knees, his eyes looked vacantly, but fixedly, into the fire, when his
+meditations were broken in upon by the peevish lamentations of the old
+man.
+
+“There! that tiresome woman has not given me my snuff-box!” and
+his feeble, palsied hands, strayed over the table in search of the
+snuff-box which was in his pocket. “She has no feeling for me! she does
+not care whether I am comfortable or uncomfortable, as long as she gets
+her money and her perquisites—that is the way of women! Talk of their
+kindliness! They care for nothing but themselves. They can pretend to
+care for one, when one is young and handsome—and when one has plenty
+of money in one’s pocket too; but I never knew one of them who had a
+grain of feeling! I have been a pretty fellow in my youth, and have had
+as many women make love to me as my neighbours, but hang me, if any
+one of them ever loved me for myself. There is this Sarah Purbeck, she
+cares no more for me——”
+
+“What an infatuation it is,” exclaimed Cresford, “which can make
+us worship such fickle, heartless creatures! as variable as the
+weathercock, which changes with every wind that blows! But that time is
+past—I have awoke from my day-dream—I know what their love is worth
+now!”
+
+“Ay! and so do I, my boy. I never thought it worth much; and now I know
+it is worth—nothing at all! However, if I have not given them much of
+a heart-ache,” he added, laughing a feeble, old, cracked laugh, “they
+have not given me much of a heart-ache either!”
+
+“Do you think they are capable of loving truly and sincerely? Do you
+think they can love, though you and I may have lived unloved?”
+
+“Yes; they can love themselves, and their clothes, and their
+opera-boxes, and, sometimes, some man they ought not to love.”
+
+Cresford bit his lips, and knit his brows, and his fist lay clenched
+upon the table. A long silence ensued. At length the old man fidgeted
+about, rang the bell, and asked for his chocolate. He struck his watch:
+it was five minutes past the hour. He scolded Mrs. Purbeck for her
+inattention, and when she left the room, he said in a dejected tone—
+
+“It is a sad thing to have nobody to care for one: that woman does not
+love me. Perhaps, after all, if I had married, I might, in a wife, have
+found an affectionate nurse.”
+
+“Affection!” exclaimed Cresford—“affection in a wife! Have not I a
+wife?—and have I met with affection?” He several times paced up and
+down the apartment, and then hastily took his leave.
+
+These visits did not tend to put him in good humour with human nature,
+or with womankind: they still more soured and embittered his temper;
+and when he had put his affairs in train, had resumed his situation as
+partner, and measures had been taken for Henry Wareham’s withdrawal
+from a concern in which he found himself frequently and painfully
+brought in contact with Cresford, he left London, his mind fully made
+up to pursue his unfortunate wife according to the rigour of the law.
+
+He had ascertained from Mr. M‘Leod that the trial would take place
+at the assizes of the county in which the second marriage had been
+celebrated, the very one in which she at present resided. He took up
+his abode in a neighbouring village. His first care was to obtain the
+certificate of his own marriage at the cathedral church of ——. He
+proceeded to procure that of the second marriage at Longbury, for which
+purpose he sent to the minister of that place, a regular application
+for the extract from the parish register.
+
+Mr. Allenham had no option—he was obliged to comply; but he was
+inexpressibly alarmed at the application, and lost no time in informing
+Captain Wareham of the circumstance, while Caroline wearied herself in
+conjectures, and hopes, and fears as to what Cresford might meditate.
+
+This communication did not render Captain Wareham more easy and
+comfortable in his mind; and although the kindness of his heart
+prompted him to conceal his fears from Ellen, the additional weight
+of care rendered him more than usually difficult to be pleased. The
+Allenhams had returned to their own home soon after Ellen’s arrival,
+and her two poor elder children having been removed, the last few
+weeks had been passed in melancholy quiet. Still Matilda found her
+task more than usually difficult, and she was so subdued herself by
+the misfortunes of her sister, that she had no longer the buoyancy
+of spirit which enabled her, half gaily, half resolutely, to bear up
+against the daily worries of her father’s temper. To Ellen he never,
+on any occasion, spoke with captiousness; but he often appeared
+annoyed with the little Agnes, who was old enough to toddle about the
+room, to pull away grandpapa’s toast, to stumble over his foot as it
+was extended towards the fire, to frighten him lest she might fall
+against the fender, and to do the hundred things which are charming and
+attractive to those whose hearts are light, and who can give themselves
+up to watching the graceful awkwardnesses, the winning _espiégleries_
+of infancy, but which are inexpressibly wearisome when the mind is
+oppressed with deep and serious care.
+
+Ellen saw that her child, her only remaining child, was often
+troublesome to her father, and she kept it out of the room as much as
+possible. He was then vexed that the child should not be with them, and
+his good-nature made him fear he might have hurt Ellen’s feelings.
+
+Cresford having obtained the two certificates, now waited upon Mr.
+Turnbull, a country gentleman and a magistrate, and producing the
+two documents, informed him that he wished to indict his wife, Ellen
+Cresford, for bigamy, and required him to issue a warrant for her
+apprehension.
+
+Mr. Turnbull, although not personally acquainted with the parties,
+knew the respectability of their situations, and had heard under what
+circumstances the second marriage had been contracted. He attempted
+to dissuade Mr. Cresford from carrying matters to such an extremity;
+to which Cresford sternly replied, as he had previously done to Mr.
+M‘Leod’s remonstrances, that he did not apply to him for advice, that
+he simply waited upon him to demand the performance of his duty as a
+magistrate—that the case was clearly made out before him, and he was
+not to counsel, but to act.
+
+Mr. Turnbull, although he did so most unwillingly, had no choice but
+to grant the desired warrant. It was with a feeling of triumph that
+Cresford seized the paper, and, bowing to Mr. Turnbull, abruptly
+quitted him, before he had time to adduce any arguments in favour of
+delay.
+
+Cresford proceeded to the county town, and delivering the warrant to
+the constable, desired him to perform his duty.
+
+It so happened, that the constable to whom he addressed himself, was
+the very Will Pollard who had once lived as gardener with Captain
+Wareham, and who had known Ellen from her childhood. He had inherited a
+little money, and had set up for himself, as nurseryman and seedsman.
+He stood aghast when the paper was placed in his hand, and declared in
+round terms, that nothing should induce him to be the bearer of such a
+thing, “to Miss Ellen that was.”
+
+“Take back your paper, sir! If you are for taking the law of her, sir,
+you must find somebody else—I’ll have nothing to say to it,” and he
+shoved the paper back to Cresford in no very civil manner.
+
+“You cannot help yourself,” Cresford replied with an exulting calmness.
+“You must execute a magistrate’s warrant—you cannot help yourself.”
+
+“I a’n’t bound to do such a thing as this?” asked Pollard the gardener,
+of Simpson the shoemaker, who happened to be present.
+
+“I don’t know what right you have to refuse,” answered Simpson, who was
+a man of wisdom, and read all the newspapers.
+
+Pollard hesitated. He had not long been established in a concern of his
+own, he was new in office, and he looked up to Simpson for advice and
+guidance: after having scratched his head, brushed his hat with his
+sleeve, and pruned a thriving young shrub considerably more than it
+required, he said,
+
+“Maybe if ’tis to be done, I may be able to speak kinder to her than
+another, and she always was partial to me from a child.” So he took the
+paper and held it doubtingly and distrustfully in his hand. “No,” he
+said, again scratching his head, “I don’t half like the job; you had
+better get Mr. Clarke the carpenter, on the left-hand side, to do it
+for you, sir. He is a constable as well as me.”
+
+“Mr. Pollard, the law must have its course. You know that, as well as I
+do. You had better take the warrant I have now given you, and bring the
+person therein mentioned before the magistrate, as the law directs.”
+
+“Well,” said Pollard, “what must be, must be, and it don’t signify
+argufying. And when is it to be served?”
+
+“To-day, sir! Now!” answered Cresford in a stentorian voice. “I expect
+to meet you at Mr. Turnbull’s with—with the person specified in that
+warrant, in your custody. In three hours I shall be there.”
+
+Cresford departed, leaving poor Pollard perplexed and confounded. It
+went against him sadly to do what was required of him. He turned in
+his head how he might open the business to Miss Ellen “just easy like,
+without putting her in a fluster;” and in the first place he resolved
+to change his dress. “He wasn’t no ways tidy to appear before Captain
+Wareham and his family. He would look clean and decent at least. He
+would do nothing as was not respectful by the family.” So Pollard
+retired to repair his toilette, feeling that he thereby softened the
+blow which was hanging over poor Ellen.
+
+His wife was surprised to see him all in his Sunday’s best.
+
+“Why, what merry-making are you ever going to, Will?” said she: “is it
+your club day?”
+
+“No, ’tan’t my club day, woman; you know well enough that a’n’t till
+next week?”
+
+“Why, in the name of fortune, where are you going to, then? You are not
+going to Tharford fair, sure!”
+
+“No! I a’n’t going to no fair, nor no merry-making,” and he stood
+brushing his hat round and round with the sleeve of his coat; “I am
+going where I have no mind to go.”
+
+“Why, Will, you quite fright me! You can’t have done any thing wrong?”
+
+“No! But I’ve got a warrant to sarve.”
+
+“Why, Lord bless us, this is not the first warrant you have had to
+sarve! But I never knew you dress yourself out so fine to sarve a
+warrant before,” and Peggy smiled.
+
+“You would not laugh, if you knew who that warrant was made out
+for—It’s for my Miss Ellen as you have heard me talk of, many and
+many’s the time. She’s the one, as I’ve often told you, was as quick
+up the ladder as I was myself—and such a one as she was to sow seeds!
+and she could make cuttings almost as well as I could myself! Miss
+Caroline, she was always for walking in the streets, and looking out
+for the beaux, but Miss Ellen, she would hoe and rake for me all her
+play-time, if they would let her.”
+
+“A warrant for her, Will? You are dreaming.”
+
+“No, I a’n’t; But hold you tongue, and mind your business. There’s no
+good in prating—we must all do what is appointed us.”
+
+Will marched out at the door with a tear called up by his own eloquence
+gathering in his eye.
+
+He proceeded to Captain Wareham’s. He knocked at the door.
+
+“If you please, James,” said he, “if you please, I want to have a word
+with Mrs. Hamilton—that is—Mrs. Cres—Miss Ellen that was—my Miss
+Ellen.”
+
+“Step in, Master Pollard, I’ll tell her directly.”
+
+Pollard stood twirling his hat, and debating within himself how he was
+to open his business, when James came back, and bade him walk up.
+
+“Mrs. Cresford is alone—she bids us all say Mrs. Cresford now,” he
+whispered; “she says there’s no use in standing out about a name,—and
+yet she takes her letters every morning as if she did not half like to
+touch them.”
+
+Pollard entered the room where Ellen sat, meek and dejected, with
+little Agnes in her lap playing at the table—she looked up with a
+faint smile.
+
+“I have not seen you a long time, Pollard; I hear you are become a
+married man since you left my father.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am, so I am, an’t please you.”
+
+“I hope you are quite comfortable; I should have been to call on you,
+but I have not been out lately.”
+
+“Thank you, ma’am, all the same for thinking of me. ’Twould be a pride
+and a pleasure to me, to show you how nice and comfortable I’ve got
+every thing about me—but——”
+
+“Speak out, Pollard; you are a very old friend: you were a great
+play-mate of mine in my childhood. If you have any little favour to ask
+of me, I shall be glad to do my best, though I am not quite so rich now
+as I once was.” Her eyes dropped, and a paler hue stole over her cheek.
+
+“No, ’tisn’t that, bless your kind heart, ’tisn’t that. I had rather by
+half ask a favour of you, for I know ’twould be a pleasure to you to
+grant it. But I’ve got a bit of paper here, ma’am. You see, ma’am, I’m
+a constable, and they have put this upon me. They say as I must give
+you this here bit of paper, and I scarce know what will come of it.”
+
+Ellen received the paper from Pollard’s trembling hand, while with
+the back of the other he brushed off a tear. She still thought some
+misfortune had befallen his family,—that most likely it was a
+petition,—and it took her some moments to collect her thoughts so as
+to comprehend the full purport of the warrant.
+
+The idea that she could be prosecuted for bigamy had never before
+crossed her imagination. The misfortune of no longer being the wife
+of Algernon, and the disgrace and shame of having lived with him for
+two years, had completely occupied her whole soul. She had not been
+able to imagine any misery beyond this. No one had ever hinted at
+such a possibility, nor indeed had any one believed that Cresford,
+however keenly he might himself suffer from the consequences of his
+own imprudence, would have wreaked his useless vengeance upon his
+unfortunate wife.
+
+Ellen was thunder-struck! The poor constable begged her pardon,
+entreated her to believe it was no fault of his; that he was bound to
+obey the law. “We can’t help ourselves, ma’am; we must do what the law
+directs,—them as have to execute the laws, and them as have to obey
+them,—’tis all one for us both.”
+
+Poor Ellen begged him to find her father, and to bid him come to her.
+She was scared, frightened. She could not be more completely separated
+from Algernon,—her children were already torn from her. She was,
+therefore, simply, vaguely frightened.
+
+Captain Wareham came. She gave him the paper. He guessed the purport
+but too well, and turned deadly pale: “When is this summons to be
+attended, Pollard?”
+
+“Why, sir, Mr. Cresford said we must meet him at Squire Turnbull’s
+in three hours from the time he was at my house, and that was at two
+o’clock, just as I had done dinner.”
+
+“Meet him! Am I to meet Mr. Cresford? Oh, father! any thing but that!”
+
+“Dearest child, there is no avoiding it. You must exert all your
+strength of mind: you must not give way. Mr. Turnbull is a good sort
+of man, and there will be no one else present. Cresford is a brute, an
+unmanly brute! If you could feel half as angry with him as I do, your
+anger would give you strength to go through the interview.”
+
+“I am too miserable to feel angry, father. Besides, I am sorry for
+him:—I have made him very unhappy. I know what pain it is to be
+separated from what one loves, even when one knows one is loved in
+return. What am I to do, father?” she meekly added.
+
+“The sooner we get this unpleasant business over, the better, my
+dearest child. Go and put on your things; I will order a chaise
+immediately.” He hurried Ellen out of the room; he longed to be for
+a moment freed from her presence; he knew that this summons was the
+prelude to a prosecution; he knew that the punishment of bigamy might
+be transportation. Though he had no idea matters would ever be brought
+to such an extremity, he felt awed and nervous in the extreme, and he
+paced the apartment in the greatest agitation. Pollard stood still,
+perplexed and grieved. “Get along, Pollard,” exclaimed Captain Wareham,
+angrily; “can’t you wait down-stairs? Why do you stand here watching
+me?” He rang the bell violently, and ordered the hack chaise to be
+instantly procured.
+
+Captain Wareham kept no carriage. Ellen had strictly conformed to her
+father’s mode of life: she would not consent to live in splendour upon
+the money Mr. Hamilton would fain have forced upon her.
+
+The hack chaise came to the door. The lovely, the graceful Ellen, who,
+as the wife of Mr. Cresford, had been used to all the luxuries of life,
+and, as the wife of Algernon Hamilton, to all its refinements, ascended
+the jingling steps, and, rustling through the straw, seated herself
+at the farther corner of the narrow seat, while the constable of the
+parish, mounted on the bar before, conveyed her like a common culprit
+before the magistrate.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ Cosmus, Duke of Florence, had a desperate saying against perfidious or
+ neglecting friends, as if those wrongs were unpardonable. “You shall
+ read,” saith he, “that we are commanded to forgive our enemies, but
+ you never read that we are commanded to forgive our friends.” But yet
+ the spirit of Job was in a better tune: “Shall we,” saith he, “take
+ good at God’s hands, and not be content to take evil also?” and so
+ of friends in proportion. This is certain, that a man that studieth
+ revenge, keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do
+ well.—LORD BACON.
+
+ Redeemer, heal his heart! It is the grief
+ Which festers there that hath bewildered him.
+
+ SOUTHEY’_s Roderick_.
+
+The events of the morning had been so sudden and so bewildering, that
+Ellen scarcely comprehended what was happening. The knowledge that she
+was again to be brought into the presence of Cresford, was the one
+idea that possessed her mind. “What does he want me for? What am I to
+say to him, father? What is this to lead to?”
+
+“I scarcely know, my child. You have nothing to do but to answer the
+truth. Your conduct has been irreproachable. You have nothing to blush
+for.”
+
+“Oh, how I dread meeting those eyes again! Keep close to me, father.”
+
+They arrived. Ellen, pale and trembling, was supported by her father
+into the hall. They were instantly shown into Mr. Turnbull’s study,
+where he waited to receive them. He offered Ellen a seat. There was a
+dignity in her timidity that awed, while it excited compassion; and
+Mr. Turnbull, though a plain matter-of-fact man, treated her with more
+polite deference than usually appeared in his manner towards women.
+
+“I believe,” he said, “I must now summon Mr. Cresford, that he may go
+through the form of his deposition.”
+
+Ellen bowed assent, and trembled through every limb. But she kept her
+eyes on the ground, and moved not. Cresford entered,—she did not stir.
+
+As he approached the table, he gazed on her, though it was rather in
+triumph than in love; but her veil was down, her bonnet tied close,
+her form enveloped in a cloak. The oath was administered. Mr. Turnbull
+said:—
+
+“I believe, madam, you must for a moment remove your veil, that the
+complainant may identify you.”
+
+Ellen drew it aside, and turned on him her pale, sad face; but still
+she raised not her eyes. Cresford advanced a step towards the table, to
+take the Bible, and to swear that the prisoner was Ellen Cresford, his
+wife. She instinctively seized her father’s arm, and sheltered herself
+behind him.
+
+Cresford showed his marriage certificate. The servant who had formerly
+lived with him, and the clerk of * * * *, were present to prove the
+celebration of the marriage. He then produced the extract from the
+Longbury register.
+
+Mr. Turnbull asked Ellen what she had to say in reply. In a faint
+voice, she answered “Nothing!” She had but one absorbing feeling—that
+of bringing this painful interview to a close. But Captain Wareham
+interposed.
+
+“I cannot allow this cruel and unjust statement to be made, without
+simply mentioning the circumstances under which my daughter’s second
+marriage was contracted. Mr. Cresford chose to publish an account
+of his own death—he chose to enact his own funeral—his friends
+and relations mourned him as dead. Two years and two months after
+the receipt of the paper containing this account of his decease, my
+daughter contracted a second marriage. Should any man in justice, in
+honour, prosecute such a case?”
+
+“Certainly not,” was Mr. Turnbull’s concise reply. He looked at
+Cresford: “Do you wish me, sir, to proceed?—it is yet time to pause.
+You will no longer be at liberty to retract. If I make out the
+commitment, you are bound over to prosecute.”
+
+“I know it, sir! It is my intention so to do.”
+
+“Madam, my duty is a painful one, but I must proceed according to
+the provisions of the Act!” and Mr. Turnbull drew out the warrant of
+commitment; at the same time he informed the constable that he would
+himself attend that evening, with a brother magistrate, to admit her to
+bail; and that he authorised him to conduct her back to her own house,
+there to await his arrival, rather than at the county gaol.
+
+“Father, father! I am not to be taken to prison! Impossible! He cannot
+mean to bring such disgrace upon the mother of his children?”
+
+“My dear madam, I will attend you at your own house: as the presence
+of two magistrates is necessary, I will bring Sir John Staples with
+me. Captain Wareham can then give us bail for your appearance at the
+ensuing assizes.”
+
+“The assizes! Oh! he cannot be in earnest! This is too, too cruel!
+Drag me before the eyes of the whole county! blazon our misery, and
+our shame to the world! bring upon us the mockery of the coarse and
+the unfeeling mob! Oh, Charles! what have I done to deserve this?” She
+burst into an agony of tears.
+
+“What have you done? Have you not blasted my happiness, broken my
+heart, and maddened my brain?—and she asks what she has done!” he
+added, turning round to those present, with a wild and fearful laugh.
+
+Mr. Turnbull hastened to bring the scene to a close, and lost no
+time in leading poor Ellen back to her hack chaise. He almost turned
+Cresford from the door, and instantly galloped off himself in search of
+Sir John Staples, to proceed with him to Captain Wareham’s house, and
+there to admit Ellen to bail, that, at least, she might thus be spared
+one painful and ignominious part of what she was doomed to endure.
+
+Ellen threw herself, sobbing and weeping, into the corner of the
+carriage.
+
+“So I am to be tried, father—tried for bigamy, I suppose! Oh! have
+mercy Heaven! tried like a common malefactor! placed at the bar, with
+all the lawyers to look at me; and the dirty mob to laugh, and bandy
+jests upon me! Oh! I never, never thought of this! And must it be? Is
+there no escape?”
+
+“Alas! alas! my poor Ellen, I know of none. There is no chance of
+bringing Cresford to reason; every attempt to do so seems but to
+incense him. I really think his intellects are affected,—he is
+scarcely in his right senses.”
+
+“I have done that!” she said, in a dejected tone. “It is not for me to
+be too hard upon him.” After a pause of some length, she added, “And,
+father—the punishment?”
+
+“Oh, my child! do not think of that! no jury on earth can find you
+guilty.”
+
+“But I am guilty, father!—it is true I have committed the crime! I am
+guilty of bigamy—though it is not my fault.”
+
+“They will not condemn you.”
+
+“But if they should? I should like to know the worst.”
+
+“Why, under aggravated circumstances, the punishment may be
+transportation for seven years; but they will never pass such a
+sentence, so think no more of that.”
+
+“I had rather it had been death,” she replied, in a quiet tone of
+despair. After another pause she asked, “If I were to be transported,
+would that annul my marriage? Should I be free?”
+
+“No, my love, even that would not annul your marriage.”
+
+“Perhaps it is best so. I am glad it would not: I would not mar his
+glorious and honourable career in his own country. It is enough to have
+the ruin of one fellow-creature on one’s conscience.” She spoke no more.
+
+They arrived at home. In less than an hour Mr. Turnbull and Sir John
+Staples arrived, and with them Lord Besville, whom Mr. Turnbull also
+called upon, and who became bail, with Captain Wareham, for her
+appearance at the assizes.
+
+The constable was dismissed. Poor Will Pollard! Never had the law of
+the land a more unwilling assistant in its execution. When he returned
+to his cottage late in the evening, he threw down his hat on the table.
+
+“Well,” he muttered to himself, “this has been the worst day’s job that
+ever I had to do. I would not have such another, no—not to be justice
+of the peace, and a squire to boot. Why,” he exclaimed in a louder
+voice, and striking his fist on the table, “why, that fellow had no
+more business to come back alive, after having sent word he was dead,
+than I have to bring in my bills twice over! Shame upon him!”
+
+It was some time before Peggy got at the rights of the case.
+
+“So, ’tis her second husband as is her true love. Poor soul! Well, ’tis
+very hard. Why ’tis almost worse than if it was her husband’s ghost
+come to haunt her—not that I should any ways like to see the ghost of
+my first lover Tom Hartrop, as was drowned off Ushant.”
+
+Peggy had been a beauty, and was rather fond of talking of her first,
+her second, her third, and her tenth lover. Will Pollard was in no mood
+to listen, and, with a manner unusually surly, bade her, “hold her jaw,
+and make haste with his supper.”
+
+It was a sorrowful evening at Captain Wareham’s. Ellen retired early
+to rest, or rather to weep. Captain Wareham sat up late preambulating
+the small drawing-room, while the measured creaking of his shoes, and
+periodical stamp of his foot, were heard by Ellen in her apartment
+above, and by Matilda in hers, as they each passed the greater part of
+the night in painful watching.
+
+Ellen sat down to write to Algernon for the first time since she had
+quitted his roof, and resumed the name of Cresford. To him she now
+looked for succour. The cruelty of Cresford seemed to have widened the
+breach between them, and to draw her irresistibly towards one whose
+conduct throughout had been dictated by the very spirit of honour,
+generosity, and tenderness.
+
+She detailed to him all which had that day taken place. She told him
+she was to be tried, publicly tried; that she must, in vindication
+of her own fame, produce every proof that they had received the most
+authentic accounts of Cresford’s death. She begged him to take every
+means towards finding a copy of the newspaper containing the official
+return of the deaths at Verdun. She begged him to inquire for Colonel
+Eversham, and, if possible, to discover what had been the fate of
+young Maitland, to whom Cresford had entrusted the letter which was to
+apprize her of his plan.
+
+“I write to you, Algernon,” she continued, “because I know you will
+leave nothing unattempted to serve me, and to rescue me from the only
+one additional misery which can now be heaped upon me—that of being
+supposed to have sinned knowingly. Perhaps I may always have been
+too much alive to the opinion of the world. Perhaps one ought to be
+satisfied with knowing one’s intentions to have been innocent, and it
+may be nobler to despise the idle gossip of those one neither loves
+nor esteems; but my error, if it is one, is the safest for woman; and
+you, who know that I would neither see you, nor correspond with you,
+till I fancied the two years of my widowhood expired, can alone guess
+what I feel at thus having my miserable history dragged before the
+public. I have been stunned, annihilated by the blow. The idea of such
+a consummation to my earthly woes never crossed my mind before. But now
+my one only hope is at least to prove I sincerely believed myself free
+when I gave myself to you,—that I did not wittingly involve you in the
+misery which attends all in any way connected with me.
+
+“You must secure for me the best lawyer. In short, I trust every
+thing to you. This will be expensive; it has not been pride, but my
+deference for that world before whom I am doomed to be degraded, which
+has hitherto prevented my allowing you to contribute to my support.
+I know full well that all you have might be mine; I know from my
+own what your feelings are, and for this cause, for the cause of my
+honour, I am ready to let you incur whatever expense may be necessary.
+I write to you at once that not a moment may be lost. The assizes are
+to be held the 20th of next month. If possible, discover the fate of
+Maitland.—Adieu! I write no more—but you may communicate with my
+father. May Heaven preserve you to be a blessing to all who are allowed
+the happiness of belonging to you!
+
+“Our child—oh, there is still one link which binds us together!—our
+child is well and lovely.
+
+ ELLEN.”
+
+Algernon, upon the receipt of this letter, was nearly frantic with
+rage and indignation. If Cresford longed to find himself hand to hand
+engaged with his rival, not less did Algernon burn to meet him in
+mortal strife; but still Cresford would have been safe with him in a
+desert, so closely did he cling to some distant hope of reunion with
+Ellen.
+
+Though he was wild with indignation at Cresford’s unmanly and cruel
+revenge, there was a sense of relief to him in having a definite object
+to pursue. He had hitherto remained in utter seclusion and inactivity.
+He feared to injure or to distress her, by any measure he could take,
+and he had lived the life of an anchorite, wandering among his own
+woods, far from public business, useless alike to himself and to
+others. At length he was roused to exertion, and, horrified as he was
+at the image of his lovely, refined, delicate, shrinking Ellen being
+exposed to the gaze of a public court, there was a comfort in being
+actively employed in her behoof. He threw himself into his carriage to
+fly to London, and there to begin the necessary inquiries.
+
+He first drove to the house of the most eminent lawyer of the day,
+to secure him as counsel. Cresford had been there before him. He had
+retained him; and although he was so engaged that he did not attend
+this circuit, he was effectually prevented from affording Algernon any
+assistance. He proceeded to another, whose name stood high as a man of
+overpowering eloquence, when he had justice on his side, although not
+perhaps equally skilled in making the worse appear the better cause. He
+found him free, and he was instantly retained.
+
+He next repaired to the newspaper offices, and there having stated the
+date and the title of the paper of which he was in want, they gave him
+every hope of soon procuring it.
+
+And now to find Colonel Eversham! He looked in the army-list. He
+found the name. He proceeded to the Horse Guards. He there learned
+that Colonel Eversham was with his regiment in Spain, having joined
+the army under the command of Sir John Moore. He instantly applied
+to the adjutant-general. He wrote to the military secretary of the
+commander-in-chief. He explained the case, and implored that leave of
+absence might be despatched to Colonel Eversham to quit his regiment,
+and if possible to return to England before the 20th of the ensuing
+month.
+
+The most difficult point remained. Maitland! He had no clue whereby to
+discover who or what Maitland was. The army-lists and navy-lists, for
+the years 1801, 1802, 1803, were turned over and over again. No one
+appeared whom he could make out to have been a _détenu_.
+
+At length he thought of applying to the Court Guide, and of personally
+calling at every house in London inhabited by any one of the name of
+Maitland. He might by chance discover whether any relative had been a
+_détenu_, and thus ascertain his fate.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ For peace is with the dead, and piety
+ Bringeth a patient hope to those who mourn
+ O’er the departed.
+
+ SOUTHEY’_s Roderick_.
+
+With the guide-book in his hand, Algernon proceeded in his search. It
+was the time of year when London was very empty, and at many houses he
+found the family were out of town. On such occasions he ascertained the
+address of the master of the house, resolving to write his inquiries
+should other means fail. At one large mercantile house in the city, he
+found a portly old man, who said a brother of his had a natural son,
+who had been abroad some years ago, and was now in India, he believed;
+but “he had been a wild chap, and he did not rightly know what had
+become of him.” This sounded as if he might be the person in question;
+but if so, the prospect was most unsatisfactory. Still Algernon was
+not disheartened. The next house at which he continued his inquiries
+was that of a widowed lady, in Upper Quebec Street. He knocked at the
+door. He asked for Mrs. Maitland. He was shown up-stairs into a small,
+two-windowed drawing-room, very tidy, very clean, and very formal. Not
+a chair was out of its place; the sofa was against the wall. At one
+side of the table, with her knitting, sat an oldish lady, very neatly
+dressed, and with a sweet but melancholy expression of countenance.
+On the other sat a younger person, evidently her daughter; but pale
+and faded, and decidedly past the bloom of youth. She was engaged in
+needlework.
+
+They both rose on the entrance of the stranger, and the elder lady
+begged him to be seated, with a gentle formality, while she and her
+daughter resumed their seats, and mildly awaited what he had to say.
+Their calmness and their politeness made him experience a sensation
+more akin to awkwardness than was usual to a person so accustomed to
+the world, and so gifted with a prepossessing manner. Moreover, a sort
+of intuitive conviction came over him, that he spoke to a widow who had
+lost her son, whether or no, she might be the parent of him of whom he
+was in search.
+
+It was with a certain degree of hesitation that he opened his story,
+and explained, that for reasons which were of the most vital importance
+to himself and others in whom he was deeply interested, he was anxious
+to know what had become of a young Mr. Maitland, who had been a
+_détenu_ at Verdun, and had effected his escape thence in the beginning
+of the year 1804. He saw the daughter look anxiously at the mother, and
+drop her work. He saw the mother’s hands shake as she knitted two or
+three more stitches before she spoke.
+
+His kind heart grieved for the pain he had evidently given, but yet he
+felt a throb of pleasure as he hoped he had succeeded in discovering
+the object of his search. Mrs. Maitland laid down her knitting, and
+taking off her spectacles, replied in a calm voice,—
+
+“My only son was a _détenu_, sir, and he never returned to me. He was
+lost in an open boat, off the coast between Antwerp and Bruges.”
+
+The mother slightly clasped her two hands, as they fell quietly on
+her knee, in the attitude of a person who is meek, and resigned, and
+accustomed to her sorrow.
+
+He turned to the daughter.
+
+“It gives me infinite pain, madam, to continue to ask questions upon
+a subject which must be so trying to your mother’s feelings, but if
+you knew how much the peace and respectability of the person on earth
+most dear to me is implicated in the replies to my questions, you would
+pardon me for persisting.”
+
+He then briefly stated his and Ellen’s story to Mrs. and Miss
+Maitland. They listened with kindness and attention, and told him, in
+return, that young Maitland had been travelling in France for pleasure,
+and to see the world; that in a year he would have been of age, when
+he would have come into a large property which was strictly entailed
+upon him. That he would then have placed his mother and sister in a
+situation of comfort and affluence. But the war broke out. He became
+a _détenu_. She said that he had often mentioned Mr. Cresford’s name
+in his letters, and had alluded to the impatience with which he bore
+his imprisonment. That they had never heard from him, from the time
+of his making his escape, but that from all they could learn, he had
+reached Bruges in safety. That he had there waited for some time in
+hopes of being able to row to some English vessels which were cruising
+off the coast. That at length he and some companions had one night made
+a desperate attempt to do so. But the weather was too tempestuous for
+the small fishing-boat which they had succeeded in unmooring from the
+shore, especially as it was manned by young men who were not accustomed
+to the perils of the sea. That only two, out of the five, had survived,
+having been picked up by the English vessels when the daylight dawned.
+
+The young man having thus perished before he came of age, the mother
+and sister had continued to live in poverty and seclusion. Care had
+long since impaired the bloom of his sister, who it seems was some
+years older than the youth, who had been the hope, the joy, the darling
+of them both.
+
+The parties had become mutually interested for each other, and Hamilton
+easily obtained from them a promise of committing to paper their
+statement of young Maitland’s death, and allowing it to be produced
+upon the trial. If possible, he would spare them the unpleasantness of
+being subpœnaed to appear in person.
+
+They parted in kindness, and Algernon returned home, anxiously
+expecting his answer from the Horse Guards. He was informed that
+Colonel Eversham’s leave would be granted; that he should be allowed
+to return to attend at the assizes, and, wind and weather permitting,
+there was every prospect he would arrive in time. He despatched a
+letter to Colonel Eversham to inform him of the purpose for which his
+presence was so necessary, and entreated him to use all diligence in
+reaching England.
+
+In the course of time, the newspaper was found which contained the
+account of Cresford’s death, and Algernon felt some satisfaction in
+reflecting that every thing was now in a fair way to clear his Ellen
+from any suspicion, or shade of blame. He obeyed her injunctions by
+communicating only with Captain Wareham. His whole soul was bent as
+devotedly as hers could be, to the object of making her innocence shine
+forth untarnished.
+
+The report of the trial which was to take place soon became public, and
+excited the greatest sensation and interest in the whole neighbourhood.
+Every one felt for Ellen, and all were anxious to prove their pity
+and their personal respect for her. Captain Wareham’s humble door was
+literally besieged with carriages and inquirers. Every one of any note
+in the vicinity left their names, as a sort of homage to her character.
+
+Lord Besville, who had so kindly come forward at the first moment,
+offered his carriage to conduct her to the court, when the awful day
+arrived, and his offer was accepted with thankfulness.
+
+These tokens of approbation, and the support of all around, were some
+consolation to poor Ellen. She hated notoriety; she had rather have
+retired into obscurity, and, hoping that her fate was unnoticed and
+undiscussed, have hid her head in peace and humility: but, if she
+must be brought before the world, these testimonies of the esteem
+of her friends and neighbours in some measure soothed her feelings.
+People are seldom so wretched, that the proofs of sympathy in their
+fellow-creatures are not agreeable to them. The list of the inquirers
+is read with interest and gratification, by the sick and by the
+mourner. No feeling more bitter than that your sufferings, whether
+mental or bodily, are uncared for.
+
+Ellen had written her wishes to Algernon. She knew that every measure
+which human zeal and foresight could pursue to clear her fame would
+be adopted: upon that subject, therefore, she rested in security,
+and she passed her time schooling her mind to bear the worst and
+seeking strength and assistance from the one only unfailing source of
+consolation, under misfortunes such as hers.
+
+She believed her father, when he told her it was next to impossible
+that, supposing the sentence of transportation should pass, it would
+be carried into execution; and yet she thought it would be wiser to
+accustom her mind in some degree to such a possibility, than to allow
+herself to be so completely taken by surprise as she had been, when
+first the idea of undergoing a trial had opened upon her. Visions
+of the hulks, of foreign lands, of being associated with horrible
+criminals,—a thousand half-defined, ill-understood horrors would visit
+her. In her dreams she fancied herself torn from her remaining child,
+a stranger, and an outcast, at Botany Bay; and though, when she woke,
+and shook off the images conjured up by sleep, she assured herself
+that such a result was most improbable, she could not be certain that
+such was impossible. She knew not what farther evidence Cresford might
+adduce of his having duly warned her of his intentions: her proofs
+were all negative; and sometimes the anticipations of what might be
+her future fate were so appalling, that her ardent desire to exercise
+the virtue of resignation, and her fear of increasing the misery of
+others, were not strong enough to save her from paroxysms of terror and
+despondency.
+
+Mrs. Allenham had, upon the first intelligence of what was to take
+place, hastened to her sister. Captain Wareham was so full of care,
+and so unhappy, that he rejoiced in the presence of some one who
+should spare him the task of giving hopes, which, from the despondency
+of his own nature, he was far from feeling. Ellen would weep by the
+hour together, with the sympathizing Caroline, who, as usual, was all
+kindness and gentleness. Matilda, who was younger, and scarcely able
+to enter into the full and complicated miseries of the case, attempted
+to inspire Ellen with a proud feeling of disdain for her unjust
+accusations, and a confident expectation of an honourable acquittal.
+The three sisters were one day sitting together, and Ellen was
+bidding Caroline watch tenderly over her little Agnes, if their worst
+anticipations should be fulfilled, when Caroline could not help saying—
+
+“But, Ellen, if you really believe there is a chance of any thing so
+dreadful, I almost think, if I were you, I would fly the country with
+Mr. Hamilton, and your child. You were married to him too, after all.”
+
+“Caroline, I resisted Algernon when he pleaded. If Algernon’s voice,
+if Algernon’s beseeching countenance, if Algernon’s eyes, failed to
+persuade me, fear will not! No; my fair fame shall be tarnished by no
+wilful act of my own.”
+
+“That is right, Ellen!” exclaimed Matilda; “I would die sooner!
+Respected as you are by everybody now, I would die sooner than be
+looked down upon!”
+
+“Well, you are quite right; it was very wrong of me to have thought of
+such a thing. And I, a clergyman’s wife too! But, I am afraid, if Mr.
+Allenham was to try and persuade me, I should not be so firm as you
+are.”
+
+“But he is your husband, Caroline.”
+
+“Yes, quite true; and then if he said it, it must be right, whatever it
+might be.”
+
+Time stole away. Hamilton watched with anxious eyes the vane of the
+neighbouring church, the smoke of each chimney of the houses opposite.
+He had arranged everything with Ellen’s counsel, and a fortnight before
+the day fixed for the trial he went to Falmouth, there to look out for
+the arrival of every packet, every transport, every fishing vessel,
+that he might be sure not to miss Colonel Eversham.
+
+The wind had been favourable for conveying the despatches which
+contained Colonel Eversham’s leave of absence, but it continued in the
+East, long after Algernon had wished it to veer round. Steam-vessels
+were not then in use, and every thing depended on the elements.
+
+The morning of the 18th arrived. Colonel Eversham had not yet
+appeared—Algernon was in despair—but leaving his servant to watch
+for him, he could no longer remain absent from the spot where his
+beloved Ellen’s fate was to be decided, and he hastened to ——. On the
+evening of the 19th he had an interview with Captain Wareham, and was
+obliged to tell him that Eversham had not yet landed, but that he had
+Mrs. Maitland’s account of her son’s death, and that their counsel was
+confident of success. Mrs. Maitland was in the town, that in case her
+statement was not considered sufficient she, if necessary, might be
+called into court.
+
+Hamilton was so painfully interested, and so occupied with business,
+that it was not till the busy streets were quiet, the tumult of the
+well-filled hotel hushed, and midnight approaching, that he had time to
+reflect how short a space divided him from Ellen and from his child.
+
+How his heart yearned towards them! how he longed to be allowed to
+see them! but he determined to do nothing, till the eventful morrow
+was passed. His counsel should be able to aver, with truth, that they
+had never met from the time they heard that Cresford was living. He
+would not even indulge himself by walking before the house, and looking
+at the exterior of the dwelling which contained his soul’s treasures,
+lest any one might recognize him, and might fancy he had visited her
+clandestinely. He passed the night, however, in restless sleeplessness.
+He sat at the window of his bedroom, and having thrown open the sash,
+he gazed out upon the clear deep blue, quiet heavens: the busy hum of
+men had subsided; the streets were deserted; the lights one by one had
+been extinguished; not a sound was to be heard but the monotonous call
+of the watchman, pacing his rounds. A gentle breeze just whispered
+through the poplar trees of a neighbouring garden, and brought with it
+the refreshing smell which the dews of evening extract from them. It
+was a season for gentle and holy musings.
+
+“And yet,” he reflected, “how many beings are now enduring the utmost
+pangs of human anxiety! The culprits in the gaol—their relatives—my
+poor Ellen—her father, and myself—Cresford too—the wretch whose
+very name makes my blood boil; he—even he, must suffer! He must
+feel remorse, repentance—he must have been hurried into this act of
+unreasonable, useless cruelty, by a sudden impulse of passion. I pity
+the unfortunate man! Yes, I pity him—for he has lost her! Is not that
+enough to madden him? Oh! what will the morrow bring to us all? What
+will be our fate?” His eyes glanced to the heavens; “Whatsoever may be
+our fates on earth, that placid Heaven, those innumerable stars, those
+signs of Omnipotence, speak to us of another world, in which happiness
+must assuredly be my Ellen’s portion, and where I may humbly hope to
+share in that heavenly joy, which we cannot conceive nor comprehend,
+but in the truth of which we may firmly place our trust!”
+
+Ellen, meanwhile, was in some measure spared the overwhelming anxiety
+of that night, by another source of disquiet. Agnes was feverish and
+unwell: perhaps it was a fortunate occurrence for her, that such was
+the case; under any circumstances she could not have slept. While
+sitting by the sick bed of her little girl, her thoughts were drawn
+away from her own miseries; and when, at length, the child dropped off
+into a calm and easy sleep, the sense of relief almost resembled joy.
+But to this succeeded the dreadful thought,
+
+“If I should be torn from her! If this should be my last night of
+watching over her! If she should be worse to-morrow, and I far away!
+Imprisoned! alone! and my sick child away from me! It is possible—very
+possible! and I shall survive this; for I have survived being torn from
+Algernon, and from my poor George and Caroline!”
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+ For thyself
+ Thou hast had thy fill of vengeance, and perhaps
+ The cup was sweet; but it hath left behind
+ A bitter relish.
+
+ SOUTHEY_’s Roderick_.
+
+Little Agnes was better in the morning. Ellen’s name was not the first
+on the list; a common case of burglary was nearly disposed of when she
+was summoned.
+
+Lord Besville’s carriage, as previously arranged, conveyed her to the
+court-house. The curious mob gave way, with an expression of pity, as
+Ellen, assisted by her father, and by Lord Besville, and accompanied by
+Mr. Turnbull, alighted from the carriage. She was supported through the
+crowd of black, shabby-genteel, greasy-looking attendants, who are to
+be found about the purlieus of a court of justice. She had to wait some
+minutes in the passage, till the thief who had preceded her at the bar
+was removed. She was then led in, and placed where he had stood.
+
+There was an universal whisper and commotion throughout the assembly,
+as her graceful form took the place of the coarse, vulgar, brutal
+figures, which had usually occupied that spot.
+
+A silence of a moment succeeded. She held by the iron bar before her,
+as if to sustain herself. A request for a chair was heard from every
+quarter, and in a few seconds she was enabled to seat herself. There
+was another pause—Mr. Cresford’s lawyer then rose. He felt he had
+the sense of the court against him—that all instinctive and human
+feelings must be in favour of the delicate and shrinking creature
+before them.
+
+She sat shrouded in a wrapping black cloak, her face concealed by a
+close bonnet and a thick veil. Scarcely any thing was visible except
+the slender, rounded, swan-like throat, and one white hand which
+occasionally clutched the iron bar.
+
+Though one of the ablest men in his profession, he had scarcely his
+usual self-possession when he began; but he soon warmed with his
+subject. The fact of bigamy was clearly to be proved; and he expatiated
+upon the feelings of the adoring and deserted husband, and made use of
+the very interest excited by her appearance, as an argument for the
+sympathy he deserved, an enhancement of the injury received.
+
+Hamilton had, unobserved, crept into a retired corner. He had heard
+the eloquent appeal. Accustomed to read the effect produced upon his
+fellow-creatures by public speaking, he had perceived that the able
+counsel had affected his audience; that in truth the very interest
+excited by Ellen did tell against her. He could not bear the situation
+any longer. He rushed into the street, and paced it up and down in
+agonized perturbation. He longed to madness that Colonel Eversham
+should arrive. His evidence was material. He had continued to hope
+against all reason that he would appear, and he now felt ready to
+accuse him and the Government, the winds and the waves, of cruelty.
+
+At the close of the case for the prosecution, Ellen for the first time
+raised her eyes, and saw the large round green table, surrounded by
+the youthful faces of the lawyers in their powdered wigs. She took
+one fearful glance at their countenances, to see if, accustomed as
+they were to make their harvest of the woes and the crimes of their
+fellow-men, there might not be a lurking expression of levity or mirth
+among them. She ventured one look at the judge. He was a firm, but a
+venerable and mild-looking man; and she hoped for justice, tempered
+with mercy, at his hands. One other look towards the jury. She thought
+she recognized some faces she remembered in her youth.
+
+“Ah! they will have pity on me,” she thought.
+
+The certificates of the two marriages had been produced—the witnesses
+were called. At this moment a voice was heard in a loud whisper
+addressing one of the counsel,
+
+“Colonel Eversham is come!”
+
+Ellen looked up. She saw on the right of the judge’s seat, at the door
+by which the lawyers, the high sheriff, &c., had free ingress and
+egress, Algernon’s eager beaming face!
+
+It was the first time she had seen it since they had parted at
+Belhanger. She gave a faint scream, and uttering his name, fell back in
+her chair. The assistants who were near at hand quickly lifted up her
+veil; they took off her bonnet, and in their awkward attentions, they
+loosened her comb, and her long black hair fell in showers around her.
+The marble brow, the fringed lids, the pencilled eyebrows, the oval
+face, the graceful form, caused a sensation of enthusiastic admiration
+and pity, and tears fell fast from the eyes of the few ladies who had
+had nerves to attend the trial. They handed smelling-bottles and drops,
+and in a few moments she revived. Her father was close at hand, and he
+supported her drooping head, while the tear-drops coursed one another
+rapidly down his pallid cheeks.
+
+Cresford stood apart, stern and immovable. He had seen the cause of her
+agitation; he had watched the direction of her eye, and the fiend of
+jealousy possessed his soul and scared every softer emotion.
+
+The case for the prosecution was quickly closed. Ellen’s counsel rose,
+relieved by finding there was no further evidence produced against his
+client than what he was fully prepared to meet, and inspirited by the
+comfortable assurance that Colonel Eversham was at hand.
+
+Of course he did not attempt to disprove the fact of the two marriages;
+but in a clear and circumstantial manner he stated the events with
+which the reader is already well acquainted, and wound up the whole
+with so touching a description of the sufferings and virtues of the
+“exemplary lady then writhing under the unmerited disgrace of being
+placed in the situation in which they beheld her,” that most people
+present agreed with Will Pollard, that Cresford had no business to be
+alive. Making a forcible appeal to their feelings, he continued:—
+
+“And when we contemplate such unmerited sufferings, does not every
+thing that is human in us array itself in her defence? Do we not feel
+ourselves rather called upon to minister relief than to inflict
+punishment? Good God, gentlemen, when we see this blameless lady, the
+victim of an imposture (for although perhaps an excusable one, still it
+was an imposture, an enacted lie),—when we find her, in consequence
+of this imposture, deprived of the name to which she was an honour, of
+the station in society of which she was so bright an ornament,—when we
+see her torn from her children, and her children bereft of a mother’s
+watchful care,—when we see her thus doubly widowed, severed from
+the man to whom in innocence and purity of thought she had given her
+affections at the altar,—from the man who so well deserves and still
+possesses those affections, of which, gentlemen, we have even now
+witnessed such affecting evidence,—can we, can we, I say, contemplate
+such accumulation of unprecedented distress, and call it guilt? Forbid
+it reason! Forbid it justice! Forbid it truth! And what, in her
+sorrows, her privations, her bereavement, what does this injured lady
+ask? But to live in virtuous singleness and seclusion—to devote her
+days to her aged father, to her innocent child—the babe from whose bed
+of sickness she has this day been dragged before you?”
+
+But one feeling prevailed throughout the court. Captain Wareham,
+Hamilton, Henry Wareham, all felt confident of the result. Every
+thing that had been stated in favour of Ellen was amply borne out by
+the newspaper, the account of Maitland’s death, and the evidence of
+Colonel Eversham, who distinctly detailed each particular concerning
+the supposed death of Cresford, and also declared he had reported
+every detail to Mrs. Cresford upon his own return to England, which he
+effected a short time afterwards.
+
+The judge clearly and concisely summed up the evidence, and told the
+jury it was for them to decide whether the prisoner was, or was not,
+guilty of the crime with which she was charged.
+
+The jury retired for a few minutes. To Ellen they appeared an age. The
+whispered hopes and consolations of those around, fell on her ear,
+without entering into her mind. She had suffered so much, that she
+durst not give way to hope.
+
+The jury could not do otherwise than bring in the verdict “guilty”
+of the crime, though at the same time they recommended the prisoner
+to mercy. She heard but the first word. A mist came over her eyes, a
+rushing noise sounded in her ears; she fainted before she had time to
+hear the sentence of the judge.
+
+He premised that bigamy came under the head of felony, which by the
+statute 35th of George III. rendered persons liable to the same
+punishments, pains, and penalties as those who are convicted of grand
+or petit larceny. Under aggravated circumstances, therefore, the
+punishment might be transportation for seven years;—but under those of
+the present case, he commanded the prisoner to be fined one shilling,
+and to be forthwith discharged.
+
+Though unseen himself, Hamilton’s eyes had been riveted upon her. He
+instantly darted to her side when he saw her fall. The impulse was
+uncontrollable. The sentence had passed, and before he had time to
+think, to feel, to reflect, to calculate, he had taken her from Captain
+Wareham’s trembling arms, and had carried her into the lobby. She was
+still insensible, but he supported that beloved form, and the moment
+was one of rapture!
+
+She faintly opened her eyes, and it was from his voice that she first
+heard, “You are free, Ellen, you are free!”
+
+“Free?” and she gazed wildly around her. “Free, from him? May I become
+lawfully your wife?”
+
+Her scattered senses were not yet collected—she scarcely knew what had
+passed, or where she was. The words “you are free,” sounded in her ear
+as if the fatal tie was dissolved. He had not the courage to undeceive
+her, while, under this impression, she leaned weakly and trustingly on
+his arm.
+
+Captain Wareham was preparing to explain the meaning of his words, when
+Cresford rushed forward. His eyes flashed fire, and hastily pushing
+aside all around, he forced his way by her father, he seized her
+helpless form, and sternly fixing his hand against Algernon’s breast,
+he forcibly repelled him.
+
+“The law of the land has just pronounced this woman to be my wife, and
+you—her paramour.”
+
+“Unmanly wretch!” and Hamilton’s dark eye flashed on him with as
+infuriated a glance as his own, his lip quivered with rage, but he
+restrained himself. “Say what you will—insult me—strike me—to me you
+are sacred.” Hamilton drew himself up to his full height, and looked
+with proud contempt upon Cresford.
+
+Ellen had strength enough to struggle from Cresford’s grasp, and to
+fling herself into her father’s arms, who implored him to have pity
+upon his poor worn-out child, and not to make her the subject of a
+common brawl, in the public sight.
+
+Angry as Cresford was, he felt that he was only exposing himself to the
+ridicule, as well as to the blame of all around, and turning to Captain
+Wareham, he said,—
+
+“In your hands—in the hands of her father I am content to leave her.
+But I owe it to myself, that she should be preserved from one who
+is avowedly nothing to her. I trust my wife’s honour in your hands,
+Captain Wareham. When I have seen you and your daughter safely placed
+in the carriage, which awaits you, I shall depart.”
+
+Sternly folding his arms, and placing himself between Hamilton and
+Ellen, he watched them into Lord Besville’s carriage.
+
+Hamilton, ever fearful of adding to Ellen’s sufferings, commanded
+himself, restrained his feelings, and saw her dear form depart, without
+making a movement to follow or to assist. When the carriage had driven
+away, Cresford and Hamilton, for one short minute, gazed fixedly on
+each other; each seemed to wish to look the other dead, but neither
+spoke. Cresford was not so deprived of all sense of reason, and honour,
+as to farther insult a man who would not raise his hand against him.
+Hamilton still maintained his resolution that no provocation should
+urge him to place an impassable barrier between himself and Ellen.
+
+Each turned on his heel and walked away, with a storm of turbulent and
+angry passions raging in his bosom. They returned to their respective
+hotels.
+
+Did Cresford feel the happier for having accomplished his revenge? No!
+he only felt, if possible, more injured, more miserable, than ever.
+It is true he had increased the wretchedness of Ellen, but had that
+afforded his own any alleviation? He had merely given her the occasion
+of proving how innocently she had contracted her second marriage, and
+how exemplary had been her conduct, how conscientious and considerate
+that of his rival, since they had discovered that he was still in
+existence. He had merely given the world an opportunity of knowing how
+little share he had in her affections, how dear to her was Hamilton.
+
+Algernon’s mind was scarcely less agitated. The sight of Ellen had
+distracted him. How were they to drag on their weary lives in hopeless
+absence? The blank and cheerless prospect before them, never struck
+him so forcibly as now. The excitement of the last six weeks had kept
+up his spirits. There was something to be done, something to look to,
+something to hope, something to fear. He felt it impossible to seek
+again his solitary home; impossible to pursue any regular fixed course
+of life, to which there seemed no period, no end, except in the grave.
+His child, too! his only child was ill. He had a father’s longing to
+see it; he knew not what to do, or how to act. He would not expose
+Ellen to another outbreak of Cresford’s passion, and he at length made
+up his mind, that if the next day his child was going on well, he would
+leave the neighbourhood, but that, when Cresford had also departed, he
+would arrange with Captain Wareham that he should occasionally see his
+little Agnes.
+
+Poor Ellen had reached her home. Exhausted by the overwhelming emotions
+of the day, she had scarcely feeling left, to comprehend any thing
+beyond being restored to her child. Caroline, to whose care she had
+committed her, and Matilda, whom her father had not allowed to attend
+the trial, received her in their arms, and almost carried her to her
+child’s bedside.
+
+Little Agnes was better, and Ellen sat close by her, with a vague weak
+feeling of gratitude to Heaven for re-uniting them. They persuaded her
+to lay herself on the bed by her side, and in a very few moments she
+was wrapped in slumber, as calm, as placid as the child’s.
+
+It was late in the evening before she awoke. Caroline and Matilda were
+both in the room. She started up. “Is it over?” she cried; “is the
+trial over? or did I only dream it?”
+
+“It is over, all well over, dearest sister, and you are restored to us.”
+
+“Thank you, dear creatures. And my child, she is better; she is
+sleeping nicely, and quite close to me. Oh, the relief of finding
+myself among you all, without the fear of those dreadful hulks! Where
+is my father, my poor father! He has gone through a great deal to-day.”
+
+
+“He has just stolen out of the room. He has been here, looking at you
+and Agnes, as you both slept, till the tears streamed down his face.”
+
+“Oh, let me go to him!” She hastened down-stairs, and poor Captain
+Wareham felt almost happy when he saw a smile, though it was a troubled
+and an unquiet one, upon Ellen’s lips.
+
+“Oh, father, I scarcely thought I should ever again feel any thing
+so near akin to joy as this. If you knew how the horrible idea of
+transportation preyed upon my mind! I did not like to own how much I
+thought of it. At least, I can look round and feel that from all of
+_you_ I need not now be parted. Yet mixed with this sensation of joy,
+which is so strange to me, there comes such a yearning for George and
+Caroline, my poor dear children, whom I must not see. Oh! if I could
+kiss them once, if I could look upon them, if I could know they were
+well! My poor dear innocent children!” She sat down and wept freely,
+weakly, gently, as a person utterly worn out, body and mind.
+
+Latterly she had not spoken much of her elder children; her mind
+had been bent to the one point, and the fear of another, still more
+dreadful misfortune, had prevented her dwelling so much on their
+absence. But now that her heart, for the first time, gave way to this
+unwonted feeling of happiness, she longed for their presence, with a
+passionate desire.
+
+She breathed not Algernon’s name. But when they all retired to rest,
+and she found herself alone in her chamber, she seated herself in an
+arm-chair, and covering her eyes with her hands, she yielded herself up
+to a sort of dreamy but delightful consciousness that she had seen him,
+heard him; that her eye had met his, that her head had rested on his
+shoulder, that his voice had sounded in her ear. She dreaded to move,
+and to rouse herself to the sad prospect that she was to see him no
+more—that days, months, years, must roll on, and she must meet those
+eyes, and hear that voice no more!
+
+But this weakness was not to be indulged; she shook it off, and calmed
+and refreshed her soul with humble and grateful prayer.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+ Cher petiot, bel amy, tendre fils que j’adore,
+ Cher enfançon, mon souicy, mon amour,
+ Te voy, mon fils, te voy, et veux te veoir encore,
+ Pour ce trop brief me semblent nuiet et jour.
+
+ CLOTILDE DE SUUVILLE, 13th _Century_.
+
+The next morning Captain Wareham, at Ellen’s request, wrote a note to
+Algernon to tell him she was well, and that little Agnes was rapidly
+recovering, and also to assure him that Ellen’s mind was comparatively
+at ease. In his answer to Captain Wareham he told him that having
+heard so satisfactory an account of those in whose welfare his every
+feeling was centered, he should quit * * *, as he feared his presence
+in the town might occasion Cresford’s also remaining there, in jealous
+irritation; but that he trusted, when every thing was quiet, and
+Cresford (as he flattered himself he would) had resumed his habits of
+business, he might be allowed to visit his child; that he likewise
+claimed some pity, and that a father’s heart yearned towards his only
+child. He said no more. He wished to accustom her to the idea that he
+must, that he ought to see Agnes, and he hoped by degrees to persuade
+Ellen to allow him an interview herself.
+
+Cresford, as Hamilton had anticipated, left * * * when he had
+ascertained his rival’s departure, and he returned to London. He then
+entered with ardour into the concerns of the house,—peremptorily
+insisted upon the speedy adjustment of the affairs, which had been
+rendered perplexed by his return, and resolved that he would make
+himself a name as the first and greatest of English merchants. If, in
+private life, he stood in the contemptible position of the discarded,
+the deserted husband, in the world he would be respected as one of the
+most leading men in the city. But his mind, weakened, excited, and
+unsettled by what he had undergone, was not equal to accomplishing all
+he undertook. His schemes were wild and visionary, and neither added to
+the stability nor to the consideration of the house.
+
+Henry Wareham, who had lost no time in withdrawing himself, had found
+little difficulty in gaining admittance into another establishment of
+equal, if not greater, note; his capital, which, though not large,
+had increased during the time he had formed one in the Cresford
+partnership, his character for steadiness and industry, and his clear
+practical head, making him an acquisition in any concern, while the
+cause of his retirement from his present business excited an interest
+in his favour.
+
+There is no want of generous and kind feeling in this country. A case
+of undeserved misfortune, if once known and understood, rarely fails to
+create friends and protectors.
+
+Ellen’s ardent desire to see her elder children increased, rather
+than diminished, with time. The savage wildness of Cresford’s eye and
+manner filled her with uneasiness for their fate. Henry had ascertained
+that he had taken for them a small house at Brompton, and that he
+visited them once or twice a week. The _bonne_, whom she had placed
+about them, she knew to be a good creature, although not possessed
+of much information, nor by any means the person to whom she would
+willingly have entrusted the complete guidance of their minds and
+characters. Still she was grateful that he left them under her care,
+and she rejoiced that he did not habitually live with them, and that
+consequently they were not exposed to the starts of passion which, even
+in better days, had been formidable.
+
+She thought if she could once see them, unknown to themselves,—merely
+see them as they passed by, and ascertain that they looked healthy and
+happy, that she should feel more contented.
+
+She opened this idea one day to Captain Wareham, who treated it as
+fanciful and romantic. The irritability of temper, which, during the
+time of great and serious distress completely subsided, had gradually
+again grown into a habit. He was too old to alter, and although
+his heart was most kind, his feelings for Ellen tender, yet in the
+every-day intercourse of life she could not avoid sometimes perceiving
+that she brought much trouble and discomfort upon him in the decline of
+life.
+
+She proposed a visit to Caroline and to Mr. Allenham, who had urged
+her completing the cure of little Agnes by trying change of air. She
+knew that the kind-hearted Caroline would willingly agree to any plan
+which might promise her a moment’s comfort, and, if Mr. Allenham would
+give his consent, she could not have more respectable sanction and
+assistance.
+
+Caroline, as she expected, was all good-nature, nor did Mr. Allenham
+disapprove of the idea. He saw that she was in so restless a state,
+that she was so possessed with the notion that if her children were
+sick, she would not be apprised of their illness,—that they might
+be dying, and she remain in ignorance,—that he really thought it
+desirable her mind should be relieved upon this subject. One thing he
+premised,—that she should not make herself known to them. If it ever
+came to Cresford’s ears, he might secrete them where she would have no
+means of hearing or knowing about them; and at all events it would be
+wrong to excite curiosity, useless regrets, or premature sensibilities
+in the children; still more so to accustom them to mystery and
+concealment. She saw the reason of his arguments: all she begged was to
+be allowed to disguise herself in the dress of a common maid-servant,
+and to walk in the street near which they lived, till she could once
+see them pass along, healthy and cheerful.
+
+In compliance with her wishes, they all three repaired to London. Ellen
+and Caroline dressed themselves in the most homely apparel, and Ellen
+solemnly promised Mr. Allenham to do nothing which might cause herself
+to be recognised. They entered a shop nearly opposite the dwelling
+which contained her children. Mrs. Allenham busied herself bargaining
+for threads, tapes, and ribbons, while Ellen stood near the door, half
+out of sight, watching with a palpitating heart, and eyes which were
+almost blinded with intense gazing, the windows, the doors of the house.
+
+After some time the sash was thrown up, and she saw her own little
+Caroline run into the balcony. The child looked well and blooming; her
+fair hair hanging down her back in glossy ringlets, her laughing eyes
+sparkling with gaiety, her cheeks glowing with health! Those ringlets
+which she had so often fondly twisted through her fingers, those eyes
+she had so often kissed, those cheeks which had so often been pillowed
+to rest upon her bosom!
+
+She had pledged herself to do nothing to attract attention,—and she
+kept her word. But a fearful chill ran through her. Where was George?
+Why was not he playing with his sister? Was he ill? She could no longer
+watch every graceful movement of Caroline, so agonizingly did she look
+for her boy. George, the playful, the high-spirited George, what could
+keep him within? The suspense was almost too much to endure without
+betraying herself. She had nearly made up her mind to ask the shop
+people, in as unconcerned a tone as she could command, whether they
+had lately seen the little boy who lived opposite. She had approached
+Mrs. Allenham, and had grasped her arm in almost speechless tremor,
+when she saw George appear for one moment at the window, and beckon his
+sister in. She breathed again, and, seating herself for a few moments,
+recovered her self-possession. Mrs. Allenham had turned round with an
+anxious look of inquiry.
+
+“It is nothing,” whispered Ellen, “it is all right now!”
+
+“Are you ready to go,” rejoined Caroline.
+
+“Yes—oh, no, wait a few minutes longer.” She returned to the door to
+look once more. All was quiet—no one was to be seen at the window. At
+length Caroline could devise no fresh articles to purchase, and they
+left the shop. At that moment the door opened, and bounding down the
+steps, she saw both children with rosy cheeks and active forms, and
+radiant faces.
+
+She stopped, trembling, and gazed till they were out of sight. They
+passed on, unconscious and contented, each holding a hand of the good
+old _bonne_, and jumping as they went with the light-hearted merriment
+of childhood. She faithfully made no sign, nor movement that should
+attract attention, and turned her steps towards their temporary
+domicile, satisfied and relieved; but, such is the inconsistency of the
+human heart, that, anxious as she was to know them happy, a painful
+feeling shot through her to think how joyous they were without her.
+While she—yet she wished them to be joyous, though it was bitter
+to think her children should grow up without any love for her, any
+recollection of her.
+
+If such thoughts did cross her mind, they found not utterance in words.
+She professed herself satisfied, and they returned to Longbury. She
+loved Longbury; it was there she had first seen Algernon. It was there
+he had first breathed his vows of love; it was there she had, as she
+then fancied, bound herself to him by ties, which death only was to
+sever.
+
+Since the trial, Cresford insisted upon her receiving alimony from him.
+It was painful to her to do so; but he would have been furious at the
+idea of her being beholden to Hamilton. Her father, though he had the
+will, had not the means of supporting her; and feeling also that her
+miseries tended rather to depress him, and to throw a gloom over the
+youth of Matilda, she retired to a very small cottage in the outskirts
+of the town, and there resided in the deepest retirement, seeking
+consolation in the performance of the few duties which remained to her
+to fulfil,—devotion to her child, and attention to the poor around
+her; her only amusement, the cultivation of her tiny flower-garden.
+
+The neighbouring peasants soon learned to look upon her as their
+friend, and applied to her in all cases of distress. She had heard
+Algernon’s opinions upon the mischief produced by indiscriminate
+charity, and she tried so to regulate her’s, as not to reward the idle
+and complaining, while the frugal, industrious, and contented, were
+unnoticed, and unassisted. She felt, while making this her study, that
+she was in some measure executing his wishes. How well she succeeded
+in doing real good, is another question. The task is one of great
+difficulty; but she succeeded in making herself loved by all the best
+of her poor neighbours, though she might occasionally be imposed upon
+by some of the worst.
+
+Her gentle words, her good advice, her attempts to convert the wicked,
+and to console the suffering, could do no harm, even when they failed
+of effecting good.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ Las! Si j’avois pouvoir d’oublier
+ Sa beauté, sa beauté, son bien dire,
+ Et son tant doux, tant doux regarder,
+ Finiroit mon martire.
+ Mais, Las! Mon cœur je n’en puis ôter;
+ Et grand affollage
+ M’est d’esperer,
+ Mais tel servage
+ Donne courage
+ A tout endurer.
+ Et puis comment, comment oublier
+ Sa beauté, sa beauté, son bien dire,
+ Et son tant doux, tant doux regarder?
+ Mieux aime mon martire.
+
+ _Complainte à la Reine Blanche, par Thibeaut._
+
+Some months had now elapsed. Algernon ventured to write to Ellen
+herself, describing to her his life of loneliness. He assured her that
+if he might look forward to the prospect of seeing her and his child
+at stated periods, however rare, however distant, he might again be
+able to exert himself, and strive to be an active and an useful member
+of society. That at present his existence appeared so aimless, so
+hopeless, that he could not rouse himself to attend to public any more
+than to private affairs.
+
+These arguments were to her irresistible. She knew too well what were
+the yearnings of a parent for his child, and she would not inflict upon
+Algernon what she herself endured.
+
+His fame too! His position in the world! His utility to his
+fellow-creatures! Her pride in his fame was second only to her love
+for himself, and though she would not have consented to that which was
+wrong in itself, even for his sake, she thought she might promise to
+see him once in every six months, and in the presence of her father,
+without compromising herself.
+
+Having consulted Captain Wareham, and obtained his consent to this
+plan, she wrote Algernon word, that she agreed to his proposition, but
+that he must give her due warning of his coming, and that she would
+not see him except in the presence of her father. That she would meet
+him as a dear and valued friend, but they must not indulge in vain
+repinings, or in useless or sinful hopes.
+
+Her letter was calm, it cost her much to make it so—but it was calm.
+
+Such as it was, it infused new life into Algernon. He doubted not her
+love. He respected her scruples. He was so happy at having gained that
+much, that he did not quarrel with the measured style. He should see
+her again! He should again hear the music of her voice! And his eye
+beamed once more with hope—he moved with a more elastic step.
+
+The very servants observed the altered aspect of their master, and Mrs.
+Topham remarked, as he walked by the windows of the housekeeper’s room
+to the stables, that she “had not heard her master tread so light and
+quick, since her poor mistress went away;” she wondered “whatever had
+come to him!”
+
+He appointed the day following that on which Ellen should receive his
+answer—the hour one o’clock. And meanwhile he was in a restless state
+of joyful expectancy, which allowed him to fix his mind to nothing.
+
+He thought a hack chaise was the most unobtrusive mode of conveyance,
+and that which was least likely to excite observation, and he departed
+on his journey alone.
+
+With what feelings did Ellen await his arrival? She strove to preserve
+the even composure of her mind, but in vain!
+
+“Algernon will find me sadly altered,” she thought, as she arranged her
+dress with more attention to what was becoming than she had done for
+many months. “This mode of dressing my hair makes me look ten years
+older, and my cheeks are grown so thin!” She checked herself for the
+vain thought: “What business have I to wish to look well in his eyes
+now? I ought not to think of such things.” But we will not pledge
+ourselves that she might not pass rather more time at her toilette
+that morning, than she had usually done; perhaps she was almost sorry
+she had adopted the habit of wearing her hair smoothly parted on her
+brow, instead of in the luxuriant ringlets which used to fall in
+showers on her cheeks. Yet had she nothing to regret. The touching,
+holy, Madonna-like expression of her countenance at present, fully
+compensated for what she might have lost in brilliancy.
+
+To Agnes’s appearance, however, she devoted herself without any fear of
+doing wrong, and the blooming little creature amply repaid her cares.
+She was now able to lisp a few words, and Ellen had taught her to say
+papa, and bade her be sure so to call the gentleman who was coming, as
+soon as she saw him. Captain Wareham had walked down early to Ellen’s
+cottage, and they remained waiting in perturbed expectation. Ellen felt
+confused. Her situation was so strange—so new. There was no precedent
+by which to shape her conduct. But she had the best of guides: her
+guileless heart, her innate purity.
+
+Exactly as the clock struck one, a post-chaise drove to the door.
+In one second, Algernon sprang from it; in another, he was in the
+drawing-room.
+
+Ellen’s heart beat, till she thought her bosom would burst. Algernon
+rushed towards her—but she extended her hand to him before he
+approached her, and he merely pressed it to his lips in speechless
+agitation.
+
+“Look at your child, Algernon,” she said, as soon as she could command
+utterance; “she looks quite well now.”
+
+“I will, I will—but at this moment I can see nothing but you.”
+
+Ellen withdrew her hand, and seated herself in an arm-chair.
+
+“You have not spoken to my father,” she added.
+
+Algernon brushed his hand across his eyes, and turning to Captain
+Wareham, he pressed his in silence.
+
+Little Agnes whispered,
+
+“Mamma, is that the gentleman I am to call papa?”
+
+“Yes, my love, go to him!” and the obedient child timidly advanced
+a few steps. Algernon caught her in his arms, and devoured her with
+kisses, while the tears flowed fast down his manly cheeks.
+
+The tears of a man are always powerfully affecting. What must the
+tears which Algernon shed over their child have been to Ellen? She did
+not weep. She had worked herself up to be firm, and not to allow this
+interview to lead to any out-pourings of the heart, to any expressions
+of feelings, for which she might afterwards reproach herself.
+
+At length Algernon spoke.
+
+“Our child, Ellen, is not like you,” and he looked from one to the
+other with eyes of such melting tenderness, that it would have been
+difficult to say, to which, at that moment, his heart went forth most.
+
+“Oh, no!” she exclaimed, “thank Heaven, she is like you!” but she
+presently added, in a more composed manner, “She has quite recovered
+her looks, and her strength now.”
+
+She loved to hear Algernon say _our_ child. And yet how strange to see
+the father of her child clasp it to his bosom, shed tears of love over
+it, and to be obliged to keep up a calm, company, conversation!
+
+Captain Wareham now inquired which road Algernon had taken, whether
+the rain had not made it very bad travelling, and a few more such
+interesting questions.
+
+“Did you come straight from Belhanger?” asked Ellen in a low and
+tremulous voice.
+
+“I left it yesterday afternoon.”
+
+“It must look very pretty, now the spring is come; and is my—is the
+garden very nice?” One silent tear stole down Ellen’s cheek as she
+spoke.
+
+“_Your_ garden is lovely! It might be a paradise! but to me, it is a
+place of torment.”
+
+“Oh do not say that! Algernon. But you do not look well. You have come
+a great way this morning; you must be hungry; will you not have some
+luncheon?”
+
+“Hungry!” he said, and gave her a half reproachful glance: “thank you,
+I could not eat!”
+
+Captain Wareham now inquired what Hamilton’s political friends thought
+of the Spanish war, and whether the Spaniards were sincerely attached
+to the cause of liberty.
+
+“I do not know, my dear sir. I never communicate with my political
+friends. I know nothing about them.”
+
+Ellen’s heart smote her, that she should be the cause of his abandoning
+a career for which he was so well fitted.
+
+“This must not be,” she said; “you ought to exert yourself, Algernon.
+Indeed this is not right!”
+
+“But tell me, Ellen, how do you pass your time? What occupations have
+you?”
+
+“I will tell you what she does, Mr. Hamilton,” interrupted Captain
+Wareham, “she goes about doing good, and there is not a poor distressed
+creature within miles, that does not know her, and bless her.”
+
+Algernon at first felt vexed with Captain Wareham for taking up the
+answer to his question, for he longed to hear the music of Ellen’s
+voice; but he no longer regretted it was her father who had spoken, for
+the report of her good deeds was equally sweet in his ear.
+
+“God will bless you also, Ellen!”
+
+“I wish to remember all you have told me about the management of the
+poor, and I hope I do not encourage the idle; but I have no influence
+here, and I cannot give them good cottages, and gardens, as you have
+done, and have thus enabled them to live comfortably, without charity.
+Are the cottages as nice as ever?”
+
+“I believe they are. Yes, they look very neat as I ride by.”
+
+“And how is poor old Amy Underwood?”
+
+“Dead!—poor old soul! She died last winter.”
+
+“Poor Amy! So she is at rest! Who takes care of her little
+grand-daughter?—She made me promise I would always be a friend to her
+when she was gone. Algernon, you will see that the child is religiously
+and virtuously brought up. I cannot,—you know.”
+
+“Yes, yes! that I will! Can you think of nothing else for me to do?
+Tell me more protégés of your’s, that I may attend to them. Express
+your wishes, give me your orders. You will invest anew Belhanger with
+interest in my eyes. You will give me something to live for.”
+
+Ellen smiled faintly, and gratefully.
+
+“Have pretty Jane Earle and her husband got a cottage yet? If they had
+a tidy cottage to themselves, it might confirm him in his reformation;
+now he has such a pretty wife too.”
+
+In this manner Ellen endeavoured to lead him to again interest himself
+in his peasantry, while to herself there was a certain melancholy
+pleasure in uttering the names, and picturing the spots, once so
+familiar to her.
+
+Agnes meantime had nestled herself comfortably into his arms. Perhaps
+she had some indistinct recollection of him; perhaps it was merely the
+caprice which sometimes makes children immediately attach themselves to
+one person, while they take an antipathy to another, but from the first
+moment she seemed attracted by him. Ellen looked at them, and thought
+how happy were those who might, in peace and honour, gaze every day of
+their lives upon their child, and the father of their child.
+
+The hour for departure approached. At four o’clock the chaise was again
+to be at the door. Captain Wareham’s dinner-hour was five, and he had
+to walk back into the town.
+
+In a clear and gentle voice Ellen addressed Algernon—
+
+“One thing I wished to ask you, Algernon, before you went. Should you
+not like to have Agnes pay you a visit at Belhanger?”
+
+“Not for worlds, Ellen, would I rob you of her for a moment!” It was
+true that he would not have robbed her for a moment of that which was
+her only pleasure; but he also wished to put an end to such an idea, as
+it would deprive him of his one excuse for seeing Ellen. “And are we
+not to meet again for six months, Ellen?” he added, after a pause.
+
+She exerted all her might, and answered—
+
+“Not for six months.”
+
+“I may write to you?”
+
+“No; we must not correspond. If Agnes should be ill, of course I will
+let you know; and if you should be ill, you must write to me. For God’s
+sake, write if any thing should be the matter!” she repeated with an
+expression of terror from the image she had herself conjured up.
+
+The chaise had been some time announced. Captain Wareham, though from
+the bottom of his heart he pitied them both, thought there was no use
+in prolonging this distressing interview—to himself doubly so, for he
+felt himself a third; and yet Ellen had made him promise to give her
+the support of his presence. She thought, if the interview should not
+remain unknown (and what does remain unknown in the present civilised
+state of society?), her fair name could not suffer if it was conducted
+under the sanction of her father.
+
+Algernon had kissed his child; he had wrung Captain Wareham’s hand;
+Ellen had risen from her seat, and again held forth her hand to him.
+
+“May heaven bless you, my dear and valued friend!” she said.
+
+“Ellen! my own Ellen!”
+
+“You had better go now,” she gently replied. “My father is not so young
+as he was, and we must not make him too late for his dinner. This day
+six months we meet again!”
+
+Algernon replied not. Slowly and reluctantly he left the room: he dared
+not remonstrate; he knew her firmness to do what she deemed right, and
+he feared by word or deed to lose the grace he had obtained: he threw
+himself into his carriage, and drove away.
+
+Captain Wareham walked home to dinner, and Ellen at length gave way to
+the tumult of feelings which she had resolutely subdued.
+
+It would be impossible to say whether joy at having seen him, or sorrow
+at having parted from him, preponderated: she certainly found it
+more difficult to resume the occupations to which she had accustomed
+herself; but still she had a point to look to, a bright speck in the
+distant horizon, to lead her on through the cheerless desert of life.
+
+Algernon religiously executed all Ellen’s innocent behests, and, for
+her sake, did resume in some measure his former habits of practical
+utility: he attended parliament—he was put upon committees—his eye
+once more flashed with fire—his countenance recovered its animation,
+his manner its energy.
+
+His re-appearance in the world was hailed with joy by all who knew,
+and consequently loved and respected him. Though there was still a
+corroding care within—though there was still a cheerless void in his
+heart, yet when once he began again to mix with his fellow men, and to
+enter into public affairs, there were so many objects to interest and
+occupy a man, that the next six months were not to him so immeasurably
+long as to Ellen.
+
+At the appointed day and hour he was again at the cottage, and claimed
+her approving smile for his obedience to her wishes. She had carefully
+spelled every newspaper, waded through columns of parliamentary
+debates on subjects she could not comprehend, for fear of missing, or
+not properly appreciating, some short reply of his; but it had been
+with joy she had seen his name frequently among the speakers, and her
+approving smile was not wanting to reward him.
+
+When his parliamentary duties were over, he found his lone and loveless
+home so cheerless that he again became a frequent visiter at Coverdale
+Park, and Ellen often heard of him when there, through Caroline. It
+was a consolation to him to see Ellen’s sister, and to talk to her
+of past happiness. Lord and Lady Coverdale were friendly people, and
+Miss Coverdale was a gentle, pleasing girl, who loved Ellen with the
+enthusiastic warmth of admiration, which girls often feel for a young
+married woman a few years older than themselves.
+
+The consciousness that she did full justice to his beloved Ellen, that
+she had tact and discrimination enough to perceive her superiority to
+other people, formed a bond of union between them, and the Coverdales
+were almost the only family of his former acquaintance, from whose
+society Algernon appeared to derive any pleasure.
+
+From his frequent visits, and from the intimacy which subsisted between
+him and Miss Coverdale, reports arose which immediately came to the
+ears of Mrs. Allenham. Some people have the faculty of always hearing
+news, and Caroline was one of those.
+
+She knew how totally groundless was such an idea; but she thought if
+such gossip should reach * * *, it might be very unpleasant to Ellen,
+and that she should do well to warn her against giving any credit to
+it. In short, to prevent her hearing it, she immediately wrote her word
+of it.
+
+She told her “It was quite a foolish notion of some meddlesome
+neighbours; that Algernon’s pleasure in the society at Coverdale was
+principally on account of their all knowing Ellen so well, and because
+Coverdale was so near Longbury;” and she bade her “not fret herself at
+all, if she did hear such silly things said.”
+
+The very possibility that Algernon should think of any other wife, or
+that people should imagine he could think of any one else, was almost
+agonizing to Ellen. She instantly drove the suspicion from her mind.
+She felt too certain of his unceasing affection for her. Yet when she
+had done so, she reproached herself for selfishness in wishing to
+doom him to a life of singleness—him so formed for every domestic
+affection. She told herself she ought rather to wish he should find
+happiness with another, as she was for ever precluded from contributing
+to it.
+
+“But I am sure,” she thought, “quite sure, there is no truth in the
+report. I know him too well!”
+
+Still the rumour having ever arisen was disagreeable. Implicit as was
+her reliance on his devotion, it proved how completely he was looked
+upon in the world as a free man. How entirely null and void the world
+considered her marriage to him. She knew it. The fact had been too
+painfully proved and ascertained! but she experienced a sense of
+humiliation, that it was so decided by the law of opinion, as well as
+by the law of the land.
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ God doth not leave the unhappy soul, without
+ An inward monitor, and till the grave
+ Open, the gate of mercy is not closed.
+
+ SOUTHEY’_s Roderick_.
+
+Cresford, as we have before mentioned, had given his mind to business;
+but his visionary schemes of aggrandizement had not proved successful.
+He had, on the contrary, involved the concern in considerable
+embarrassments, and to retrieve all, he ventured on a still bolder
+speculation,—which failed!
+
+In a few words, the house broke.
+
+He had gone through much during the time that these difficulties had
+been thickening around him, and when at last the storm, which had been
+long gathering, broke upon his head, it found him totally unequal to
+bearing up against it,—in impotent anger against himself, and every
+one else.
+
+It was galling to his spirit to find that by his rashness and
+imprudence he had reduced from affluence to a state of indigence, men
+who had been honestly labouring all their lives. For himself, if he
+could not make himself a name, as one of the richest merchants of the
+great emporium of commerce, he cared not if he were the poorest. But he
+felt for his children. He loved them, though it was not with a tender
+love. He meant his son should be as great a man as any in the kingdom;
+he intended that his daughter should be the most accomplished of girls;
+he would have spared nothing for their education.
+
+Ellen first learned the failure of his house from the public papers,
+and she mourned over the altered fortunes of her children. She
+grieved, too, for the unfortunate man who seemed doomed to have his
+hopes blasted in this world, while his earthly sorrows had not as yet
+softened or prepared his heart for happiness in another.
+
+Her brother Henry soon wrote her word of some further particulars, and
+informed her that the firm would be able to pay a good dividend in the
+pound; so that, although a bankruptcy, it would not be a disgraceful
+one. He had called to inquire about Cresford, and the answer was, that
+he had been ill, but was now better, though not well enough to receive
+visiters. Henry could not ascertain what prospects there were for his
+future provision; but promised to let her know when he could learn any
+thing farther.
+
+Pity swallowed up all other feelings, and she anxiously awaited the
+result. Henry again wrote to her. He had called a second time, and was
+refused admittance. The servant shook his head, and said “he feared
+his master was very ill. The doctors said they could do nothing for
+him unless his mind was kept quiet; and as for keeping his mind quiet,
+that was impossible. He was night and day poring over papers, and the
+lawyers were with him two or three times a day; if they did not come,
+he kept sending for them; so there was no use in telling them not to
+trouble him till he got a little better.” The servant added, he thought
+“it would be a good thing if he would go to Brompton, and be with his
+children for a while; but it made him worse to talk of that. He said he
+could not bear to think of his poor ruined children, much less to see
+them.”
+
+Ellen’s heart bled for him. She sometimes considered within herself
+whether duty did not call her to him in his present miserable state.
+But perhaps her presence might only irritate him; and even if he
+did wish for it, could she bring herself to attend his summons? She
+scarcely thought she could do so. She begged Henry to discover whether
+he ever mentioned her name. It would be a relief to know he did not
+think of her.
+
+Henry, the next time he called, sounded the servant, who was an old
+acquaintance of his, as he had been porter at the time when Henry
+belonged to the house. He could not find that Cresford ever alluded to
+his wife. Once, when he was very ill, he had said, “If I get worse, let
+her be written to!” without mentioning any name.
+
+Ellen’s mind was set at ease upon this subject. She had nothing to do
+but patiently to wait the event.
+
+It was some time before she heard again, and then it was from Henry,
+to say he had seen Cresford; that, having learned he was considerably
+worse, he had again called, and had ventured to send up word that he
+was there; that Cresford had admitted him, and that he had been shocked
+at the havoc which a few months had made in his appearance; that he was
+certainly very ill, but he thought it was the mind, which preyed upon
+the body—the sword consuming the scabbard: his face was haggard—his
+eye was restless—his voice feeble and hollow. There seemed to be no
+positive complaint, except a slight but frequent cough. He spoke much
+of his affairs—said he did not care for himself, but he lamented the
+fate of his children; that, perhaps, his schemes had been imprudent,
+but that his partners hampered him. They would not enter into his
+views, and their timid prudence prevented his projects being carried on
+in the only manner which could lead to a successful termination, boldly
+and gallantly as they had been conceived.
+
+“God knows,” he added, “what remnant of fortune may be saved from the
+wreck, or whether I may have anything to allow—your sister. That
+thought torments me past all others. She will be supported by Hamilton
+after all!”
+
+Henry added that he had done all he could to tranquillise his mind—had
+told him how few her wants were; that he and Captain Wareham would do
+their utmost to supply them—in short, said all the soothing things he
+could. He had left him with the promise of calling again in a few days.
+
+Before these few days had elapsed, Ellen received an express from
+Henry, imploring her to come forthwith to London—that a change for the
+worse had taken place, and that the physicians thought Cresford could
+not survive many days, perhaps not many hours; that, upon being made
+aware of their opinion, he had expressed a passionate desire to see
+her; and that he thought she ought to lose no time in acceding to it.
+
+In two hours from the moment she received Henry’s letter, Ellen was
+on her way to London, having left little Agnes with her father and
+Matilda. Captain Wareham was not well, and was quite unequal to so
+sudden a journey.
+
+The journey was long. She had time to think, and to think of every
+thing—of every probability, of every possibility. But there was one on
+which she dared not allow her mind to rest.
+
+What was to happen if Cresford died? She felt it criminal to look
+forward to what would then ensue. If he recovered, what then? Would her
+visit to his bed of sickness be a reconciliation? Could he wish to take
+her back, when he knew her whole heart was another’s? What would, what
+could happen? She strove not to look forward beyond the present moment.
+She had but one course to pursue. She could not refuse such an appeal
+from a dying man, and that man her lawful husband. The path of duty
+was clear; for the rest, she must trust to Providence for guidance and
+support.
+
+She first drove to her brother’s lodgings: she found him there. His
+countenance betrayed anxiety, his brow was care-worn.
+
+“He is yet alive,” he said; “I sat up with him all night. In your
+absence he will scarcely allow me to leave him.”
+
+“Oh, Henry, this is an awful meeting! How will he receive me? Does
+he feel kindly towards me? Or must I endure his reproaches from his
+death-bed?”
+
+“He is entirely changed; he is gentle and forgiving now; all his former
+love for you seems to have revived.”
+
+“That is almost worse! Poor Charles! his love has ever been a source of
+woe to both of us.”
+
+Henry lost no time in conveying her to Cresford’s house, which was
+attached to the office, and, although not in the most fashionable part
+of London, was roomy and commodious, and was usually inhabited by the
+head-partner of the concern. In that house she had passed four years as
+his wife.
+
+It was with painful recollections, and painful anticipations, that
+she traversed the stone-hall, and mounted the broad but dismal oak
+staircase, once so familiar to her.
+
+Henry left her in the drawing-room, while he went up-stairs to prepare
+Cresford for her arrival. She looked round; there were the curtains
+which she had chosen, the carpet, the sofas, of her selection—now
+dirty and dingy with years of London wear.
+
+Henry returned. He said the physicians were at that moment visiting
+their patient, and that when they left the room he would apprise him of
+her arrival. She had still to wait. When once the mind is worked up to
+the performance or the endurance of any thing disagreeable or painful,
+a few additional moments of suspense are almost agonising.
+
+She mechanically took the hand-skreen off the chimney-piece. It was
+one she had herself ornamented with wafer cameos, and little scraps
+of verses. The gold paper was all tarnished, the cameos broken, the
+writing half effaced; but she could still distinguish some lines, which
+carried her back to the feelings of former days, and the emotions under
+which they had been selected, till the flood of recollections which
+crowded upon her almost bewildered her.
+
+In the course of ten minutes the physicians entered. Ellen felt awkward
+and confused. They must think her presence so odd! She knew not what
+tone to take, and it was with timidity and shyness that she ventured to
+ask what was their opinion of Mr. Cresford.
+
+The taller, a pale slender man, with a sweet countenance, and
+soft manner, informed her, “that he could not venture to say the
+symptoms had improved; that the lungs and the heart both seemed to
+be affected, and that although he might linger some time, or indeed
+might ultimately recover, still a fatal termination might take place
+in a few hours—that it was a case in which medicine could do little
+or nothing!” and having delivered this most conclusive and luminous
+opinion, he sat himself down to a table, and there wrote prescriptions
+for some draughts, some pills, an aromatic mixture, a liniment, and a
+warm plaister for the chest, and prepared to take his leave.
+
+The second physician, who was a short, thick man, with a bob-wig, stood
+quietly by, while there played around his mouth something approaching a
+smile, at the inutility of all these measures at the present stage of
+the disorder.
+
+Ellen ventured to turn to him with an inquiring countenance.
+
+“Madam,” he said, “if you wish to know my opinion, it is that he cannot
+recover. He is too far gone for that. But we do not justly know what
+his complaint is, so we may prove wrong, and while there is life there
+is hope. So I wish you a good morning!” and away he trudged, having
+made a short, abrupt bow to Ellen.
+
+When they were gone, she sat down for a few moments, and tried to
+collect her thoughts for the interview which approached.
+
+She heard Henry’s step on the stairs; her heart felt sick within
+her—his hand was on the lock of the door.
+
+“Now, Ellen!” he said, “Cresford is tolerably composed. But how pale
+you are! Shall I get you any thing?—a glass of water?”
+
+“Nothing! thank you; I am quite well now.”
+
+She took Henry’s arm, and he led her up stairs. He gently opened the
+door—the apartment was darkened. As they entered, the nurse discreetly
+slipped past them out of the room.
+
+Coming from the full light, Ellen could scarcely see. She approached
+the bed; he was propped up with pillows and cushions, almost in a
+sitting posture. She could distinguish that he looked ghastly; she
+shook from head to foot, and leaned heavily on Henry’s arm.
+
+“Ellen! are you come at last? I was afraid you would not have arrived
+in time. I am ill—very ill—and I wished to see you once more; you
+will soon be free of me, and then—but I wished to see you, and to
+forgive you for all I have suffered on your account, and to ask your
+forgiveness for having made you miserable too. I ought not to have
+brought you to a trial;—it was a bad feeling of revenge which drove me
+to it, and I repent it now; but I was maddened—goaded to desperation.
+Ellen! I have loved you fearfully! I have loved you unto death—for I
+am dying of a broken heart! The doctors do not know my complaint—I can
+tell it them!”
+
+Ellen had sunk on her knees by the bedside. She sobbed audibly.
+
+“Tell me you are sorry for me,” he continued; “and tell me that you
+forgive me, as truly as I forgive you.”
+
+“Oh, Charles! you know I do pity you, and I have from the beginning. I
+have not wilfully done any thing to increase your wretchedness. As for
+forgiving you, that I do, indeed, from the bottom of my heart.”
+
+“Well, I have your pity!—and your forgiveness!—your love I never had!”
+
+There was a mixture of dejection and of hardness in the tone in which
+the last few words were uttered. Ellen could not reply. It would have
+been a glaring falsehood, to say it was true love she had ever felt for
+him; an impious, and an useless falsehood, to lie to one on the verge
+of eternity.
+
+Turning to Henry, he inquired,—
+
+“Are the children come yet? I wanted to bless them, and to bless my
+wife too; for you are still my wife, Ellen!—as long as I am alive, you
+are my wife—I am your husband!”
+
+There was a shade of his former stern and violent manner, which made
+Ellen shudder to her inmost soul.
+
+“Are my children coming?” she faintly asked.
+
+“Yes! I sent for them hours ago. Why do they not come, Henry Wareham?”
+he inquired, in a peremptory and authoritative voice.
+
+“I expect them every moment,” replied Henry.
+
+“Ellen, come nearer!” She drew nearer. He extended his thin and bony
+hand. “Give me your hand—no! the other!” He took her left hand, and
+looking solemnly in her face, “Who put that ring on your finger?” he
+said. She could not reply. She had never had the heart to take off
+the ring Algernon had placed there; and in all the agitation of the
+last day, she had not remembered any thing concerning the rings. “Is
+that the ring I placed upon that finger?” and he held her hand with a
+firmness that appalled her: “answer me, and answer me truly!”
+
+“No!” she faintly replied.
+
+He dashed the hand he held away from him, with a strength of which all
+who had seen him for the last few days would have deemed him utterly
+incapable.
+
+She tremblingly drew off the ring, and offered it to him, as a token of
+submission, and recognition of her duty to him.
+
+“Take it away!—destroy it!—I cannot look on it!” He turned away his
+head, and spoke with a vehemence which alarmed them. “Throw it into the
+fire—let me know it is consuming.”
+
+In humble penitence for having, by her inadvertence, so embittered the
+last moments of the unhappy man’s life, she walked to the fire, and, as
+he bade, committed the treasured ring to the flames. As she was doing
+so, she felt her soul die away within her.
+
+He had raised himself up with the unnatural strength of great
+excitement to witness the execution of his behest, and he fell back
+exhausted and faint. He gasped for breath. Henry and Ellen hastened
+to him. They thought his last moment was approaching; but he rallied.
+“Where is the ring I placed upon your finger?”
+
+“It is at home: I put it carefully away when—”
+
+“Speak on; finish your sentence.”
+
+“When—the other—was placed there.”
+
+“You have kept it, then? You did not cast it away?”
+
+“Indeed I preserved it religiously. Are you not the father of my
+children?” she added in a gentle deprecating tone. “Oh, Charles, do
+not thus agitate yourself! Be calm, be patient. We are all weak,
+frail, erring creatures; we should mutually forgive, as we hope to be
+forgiven. Your children will soon be here, and let them not see their
+father thus perturbed and restless.” She paused.
+
+“Speak on; your voice does soothe my perturbed and restless spirit;
+speak on, Ellen,—and come here to the light. Open the curtains, Henry;
+let me look on her face while my eyes can yet see.”
+
+She stood trembling beneath his fixed and melancholy gaze. “Oh, Ellen,
+how I have loved you! I am too near the grave to curse any one, or
+else I could breathe forth a malediction on that tyrant, who, in his
+unmanly, deliberate, and useless vengeance, has blighted the prospects,
+ruined the characters, and blasted the hopes, both in this world and
+the next, of hundreds of unoffending fellow-creatures. I am not his
+only victim! Mine is not the only ruin of body and mind for which he
+is answerable! But I will forgive, as I hope to be forgiven. Ellen,
+repeat the Lord’s prayer to me; I think from your voice it will do me
+good.”
+
+Ellen and Henry knelt by the bed-side, and Ellen reverently and humbly
+obeyed him. As she spoke, his eyes gradually closed, and soon after he
+fell into a short but refreshing slumber.
+
+When he awoke, the nurse stole in to inform them that the children were
+come. He bade them enter.
+
+It was now more than a year since they had been parted from their
+mother, and when they unexpectedly saw her, they ran to her arms in
+silent joy. They made no exclamation, for the subdued voices of all
+the attendants, the darkened room, the vague awe of a death-bed,
+overpowered their young minds, and prevented any burst of delight.
+They clung round her, and she folded them to her bosom, with mingled
+emotions, in which pleasure bore no inconsiderable part.
+
+“Children,” said Cresford in a gentle tone.
+
+“Your father speaks,” Ellen hastily whispered; “go to him, my loves.”
+
+“My children,” he continued, “kneel here by my bed-side: I wish to
+give you my blessing, my parting blessing. Be good, and never let your
+passions get the better of you. Mind what your mother says, for she is
+an excellent and a conscientious woman, and she will teach you your
+duties. Ellen, I give you my blessing, too; may you be happy!”
+
+Ellen was on her knees. She seized his pale hand as it lay feebly on
+the bed, and covered it with tears and kisses. He smiled faintly and
+gratefully upon her, and pressed her hand. He soon again dropped off to
+sleep.
+
+The children were removed, but Ellen remained. She had an earnest wish
+to do her duty by him to the last.
+
+In the evening, when the physicians came, they found him considerably
+better; the sleep he had enjoyed had refreshed him. His pulse was
+steadier, he was able to take some nourishment, and they appeared
+almost to imagine permanent improvement might take place.
+
+These words fell strangely on Ellen’s ear. She could not but rejoice in
+his amendment. Dreadful as was the prospect for herself, it was not in
+the nature of any thing so gentle, so feminine, so forgiving as Ellen,
+to watch the painful breathing, the feeble smile, the hectic cough,
+and not wish the breathing less painful, the cough less frequent.
+
+The comparative tranquillity of his mind had a wonderful effect upon
+his frame, and for two whole days it almost seemed as if the natural
+vigour of his constitution would conquer. On the third, however, a
+violent fit of coughing caused the rupture of a blood-vessel, and there
+was no doubt but that a few hours must close his sad existence.
+
+The effusion of blood could not be stopped. He gradually became weaker
+and weaker. As his strength declined, his tenderness towards Ellen
+increased, and all angry feelings vanished. From her hand alone would
+he receive either food or medicine. She watched over him with unwearied
+attention; and when at last his spirit quietly departed, so calmly, so
+gently, that the by-standers could scarcely ascertain the moment when
+he drew his last breath, it was her hand that closed his eyes, and she
+imprinted on his cold forehead, clammy with the dew of death, one pious
+kiss of duty and affection.
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+ Methinks if ye would know
+ How visitations of calamity
+ Affect the pious soul, ’tis shown ye there!
+ Look yonder at that cloud, which through the sky,
+ Sailing alone, doth cross in her career
+ The rolling moon! I watch’d it as it came,
+ And dream’d the deep opake would blot her beams;
+ But, melting as a wreath of snow, it hangs
+ In folds of wavy silver round, and clothes
+ The orb with richer beauties than her own,
+ Then passing, leaves her in her light serene.
+
+ SOUTHEY’_s Roderick_.
+
+Ellen remained in the house till the last duties had been performed.
+The funeral of poor Cresford was conducted without pomp or show, and
+she then returned, with her restored George and Caroline, to her own
+cottage.
+
+She put his children in the deepest mourning. For herself, she also
+wore deep mourning; but she did not dress herself in weeds: she felt,
+under all the circumstances, that it would be a mockery.
+
+She had not written to Algernon to inform him of Cresford’s death. She
+had felt a superstitious horror when his wedding-ring was committed
+to the flames; and the last parting scenes with Cresford had to her
+feelings sanctioned and confirmed anew her first union, so that at the
+moment when she was free to give herself for ever to Algernon, she felt
+herself more severed from him than she had ever yet done.
+
+She knew not where he was; she had not allowed him to correspond with
+her; and though she felt it was scarcely kind not to be the first to
+inform him of the event, she had not courage to write to tell him she
+was free. She had never believed the rumours which had arisen from
+his frequent visits to Coverdale Park: she had been so sure of his
+devotion, that she would have felt guilty of ingratitude towards him,
+if she had allowed them to give her any uneasiness: yet now, for the
+first time, the recollection of the report would recur to her mind. It
+was possible, just possible, there might have been some foundation for
+it. She had heard, she had read a thousand times, that while there was
+hope, man might remain faithful; but that it was woman and woman only
+who could live a life of hopeless devotion. She should have no right
+to complain, if he had at length looked elsewhere for domestic bliss.
+He would still have been true and kind to her, beyond what she had any
+right to expect.
+
+As she did not write at first, from a feeling of delicacy towards the
+memory of Cresford, she now felt unwilling to do so from the shrinking
+sensitiveness which had always formed a leading feature in her
+character.
+
+She was not long, however, kept in suspense. Algernon had been in
+Scotland at the time, and more than a week elapsed before he learned
+the event. He instantly returned to London. He there found that Ellen
+was at her cottage, and he followed as fast as four horses could carry
+him.
+
+She was startled from a reverie of much hope, mixed with a little fear
+and wonder, by the clatter of a carriage at her door. Her heart leaped
+within her; she doubted not who it was, and in two seconds she found
+herself pressed to Algernon’s bosom.
+
+She did not, this time, insist upon two years of widowhood; but
+consented, at the end of one month, to be privately re-married.
+
+They agreed to renew those vows, to which their hearts had so strictly
+adhered, at Longbury Church, and to Mr. Allenham’s they speedily
+removed: Captain Wareham and Matilda followed, and Henry arrived from
+London.
+
+It was late in the month of October. The party had gathered round a
+cheerful, blazing fire, on the evening preceding the ceremony. It was
+long since they had met together with feelings of peace and happiness,
+such as they now experienced, although in some of the party it was
+happiness chastened and subdued by all they had previously endured.
+
+Algernon’s eyes were fixed on Ellen with an expression of holy love,
+which bordered on veneration. Matilda remarked upon his steady gaze,
+and told him he would put Ellen quite out of countenance.
+
+“I was thinking,” he replied, “that if she had not been as virtuous
+as she is beautiful, as pure as she is kind, as firm as she is
+affectionate, if she had listened to me, when I wished to fly to
+America, we should never have known this hour of unalloyed happiness.”
+
+“Well,” answered the lively Matilda, “those thoughts were very
+respectful, and respectable thoughts. I cannot find any fault with
+them!”
+
+Ellen smiled through the tears of virtuous gratification which
+Algernon’s words had called forth.
+
+“It is quite a comfort to see you smile, Ellen,” said Caroline; “I
+thought I should never have seen those white teeth again! And when do
+you mean to curl your hair? I long to see your glossy black ringlets!
+Do not you, Mr. Hamilton? Do not you miss the ringlets very much?”
+
+“I miss nothing!” replied Algernon; “Ellen is once more my Ellen. I
+have scarcely looked to see how she dressed herself.”
+
+“Now that is what I call true love,” exclaimed Matilda; “Algernon does
+not look at Ellen’s beauty. Ellen is Ellen, and that is enough for him.
+You all call me proud and difficult, but when any man like Algernon
+loves me as Algernon loves Ellen, then I will love him as Ellen loves
+Algernon.”
+
+“Do you give this as a proof you are not difficult, Matilda?” replied
+Ellen, smiling almost gaily: “there are not Algernons to be met with
+every day!”
+
+“Then I will stay and take care of you, papa. You know you would not
+manage at all well without me! you would have nobody to scold! and,
+what is more, there would be nobody to scold you,” she added, playfully
+tapping her father on the cheek.
+
+“I will tell you what, Matilda,” replied Captain Wareham, who was too
+happy to be angry, “you must keep down this same spirit of your’s, or
+nobody will put you to the trial.”
+
+Matilda looked archly at Caroline, as if Caroline and she knew
+something that disproved Captain Wareham’s prognostics.
+
+The marriage was to take place early in the morning, as they meant to
+reach Belhanger the same day. The children had been already sent there,
+that they might be ready to greet them on their arrival.
+
+Before eight o’clock the whole party walked quietly up the hill to the
+church.
+
+There Mr. Allenham again pronounced over them the nuptial benediction.
+They both repeated after him, clearly, distinctly, and fervently, each
+word of their vow; and with a delightful but sober certainty of waking
+bliss, of assured happiness, the small party wound their way down again
+to the parsonage.
+
+It was a fine October morning, and the sun was quickly dispersing the
+vapours which still hung in the low grounds.
+
+The valley had, half an hour before, appeared almost like a lake, as
+they looked down on the mist below. The trees, the spires, the knolls
+of higher ground were gradually emerging, and in a few minutes all was
+clear and joyous, dancing in the morning sunshine. The robin redbreast
+sung cheerily from the dewy hedges, which were still bright in their
+rich autumn livery.
+
+“All Nature smiles upon us, Ellen,” whispered Algernon: “So the clouds
+of our early life are dispersed! All before us is bright and serene.”
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ SPOTTISWOODE and SHAW,
+ New-street-Square.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Notes:
+
+
+Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.
+
+Perceived typographical errors have been changed.
+
+New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public
+domain.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75982 ***
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+</head>
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75982 ***</div>
+
+
+<h1>RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHAPERON.</h1>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p class="center xlarge">STANDARD</p>
+<p class="center xlarge">NOVELS.</p>
+
+<p class="center large">N<sup>o</sup> <abbr title="114" style="text-decoration: none;">CXIV.</abbr></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>“No kind of literature is so generally attractive as Fiction. Pictures of
+life and manners, and Stories of adventure, are more eagerly received by
+the many than graver productions, however important these latter may be.
+<span class="smcap">Apuleius</span> is better remembered by his fable of Cupid and Psyche than by
+his abstruser Platonic writings; and the Decameron of <span class="smcap">Boccaccio</span> has outlived
+the Latin Treatises, and other learned works of that author.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p class="center xlarge">RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHAPERON.</p>
+
+<p class="center large p2">COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p4">LONDON:<br>
+RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET;<br>
+AND BELL &amp; BRADFUTE, EDINBURGH.<br>
+1849.
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="NOTICE">NOTICE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The Proprietors of <span class="smcap">Circulating Libraries</span> in all parts of the
+country are compelled by the new Copyright Act to discontinue
+purchasing and lending out a single copy of a foreign edition of
+an English work. <em>The mere having it in their possession ticketed
+and marked as a library book</em> exposes them to</p>
+
+<p>A PENALTY OF TEN POUNDS.</p>
+
+<p>By the new Copyright Act and the new Customs Act, even
+single copies of pirated editions of English Works are prohibited
+both in Great Britain and the Colonies. Copies so attempted to
+be passed are seized.</p>
+
+<p>☞ These measures will be rigidly enforced.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp57" id="i_frontis" style="max-width: 50em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+
+<p class="center"><i>Clara Cawse, pinx.</i> <i>G. Cook sc.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">RECOLLECTIONS OF A CHAPERON.</p>
+
+<p><i>Isabella looked surpassingly beautiful when
+bending over the marble basin, while she laughingly
+twisted dahlias into her hair.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>London, Published by Richard Bentley, 1848</i></p></figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<p class="center xlarge">RECOLLECTIONS</p>
+
+<p class="center large">OF</p>
+
+<p class="center xlarge">A CHAPERON.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center large p2">EDITED BY</p>
+
+<p class="center xlarge">LADY DACRE.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center large p4">LONDON:<br>
+RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET;<br>
+AND BELL &amp; BRADFUTE, EDINBURGH.<br>
+1849.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">London</span>:<br>
+<span class="smcap">Spottiswoode</span> and <span class="smcap">Shaw</span>,<br>
+New-street-Square.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+<p class="center large">RECOLLECTIONS</p>
+
+<p class="center">OF</p>
+
+<p class="center large">A CHAPERON.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTORY_CHAPTER">INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I was left a widow with seven daughters. I have married
+them all, or rather, I have let them marry themselves; for I
+never took any active measures towards bringing about a result
+which I own to be a desirable one in a family consisting
+of seven daughters and one son.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen manœuvring mothers succeed; but I have as
+often seen them fail in their matrimonial speculations. I
+have seen dignified mothers with modest daughters, pass year
+after year, unnoticed and unsought; but I have also seen the
+unobtrusive daughters of retiring mothers form splendid alliances;
+and at the very beginning of my career as a Chaperon,
+I came to the conclusion that, as there was no rule
+which could ensure success, it was safer and more respectable
+to do too little than to do too much; better simply to fail,
+than to fail and to be ridiculous at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, when I had mounted my feathered hat and
+black velvet gown, or my white satin gown and flowered cap,
+as the occasion might require, and patiently taken my station
+upon the chair, seat, or bench which I could most conveniently
+appropriate to myself, I beguiled the weary hours
+by studying those around me, trusting for the rest to chance,
+and to the principles which I had endeavoured to impress
+upon the minds of my girls; viz. not to flirt so as to attract
+attention,—not to think too highly of their own pretensions,—and,
+above all, not to be betrayed into laughing at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>any man before they knew him, by which means more than
+one girl of my acquaintance has been obliged, for consistency’s
+sake, to repulse a person whom, upon further acquaintance,
+she might have sincerely preferred.</p>
+
+<p>My daughters were not beautiful enough, nor did they
+marry brilliantly enough, to excite the jealousy of other
+mothers. I had brought them up to avoid a fault odious in
+all, but especially so in the young, that of being more ready
+to perceive the failings than the merits of their companions:
+we were, therefore, a popular family. I had myself the happy
+knack of being interested in the concerns and distresses of
+others, and I listened with pleasure to details however trifling:
+I had consequently many intimate friends.</p>
+
+<p>As people never were afraid of me, transient emotions, and
+harmless weaknesses, which would have been concealed from
+a sterner, cleverer, or more important personage, were confessed,
+or, at all events, permitted to escape in a <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i>
+with the good-natured, quiet, inoffensive Mrs. ——. But
+what am I doing? I wish to preserve my incog., and only
+hope I have not already betrayed myself by the mention of
+my white satin, and my black velvet gowns.</p>
+
+<p>I will write no more, lest some unguarded expression
+should give a clue to my name: I will simply add, that my
+last daughter having been comfortably established a year ago,
+“Othello’s occupation is gone;” and my purse being somewhat
+drained by the purchase of so many <i lang="fr">trousseaux</i>, I have
+occupied my leisure, and, I trust, shall recruit my finances,
+by portraying characters and feelings which I believe are
+true to nature, although under circumstances and in situations
+not founded on fact.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SINGLE_WOMAN">THE SINGLE WOMAN<br>
+<small>OF</small><br>
+A CERTAIN AGE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="1" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Duke.</i> And what’s her history.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Viola.</i> A blank, my lord.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Why is it that the bustling matron, who (having, without
+preference or selection, married the first man who proposed
+to her,) has spent her days in the unsentimental details of a
+household, a nursery, and a school-room, merely considering
+her partner as the medium through which the several departments
+are provided for?—why is it that the languid
+beauty, who has sold herself to age or folly for an opera-box,
+an equipage, a title?—why is it that the scold, who has
+jangled through a wedded life of broils and disputes—and
+the buxom widow, whose gay and blooming face gives the lie
+to her mourning garments?—why is it that they all cast a
+pitying glance of contempt on the “single woman of a certain
+age” who ventures an opinion on the subject of love?
+Why do they all look as if it were impossible she could ever
+have felt its influence?</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, the very fact of singleness affords in itself
+presumptive evidence of the power of some strong and unfortunate
+predilection. Few women pass through life without
+having had some opportunities of what is commonly called
+“settling;” therefore the chances are, that betrayed affections,
+an unrequited attachment, or an early prepossession,
+has called forth the sentiment of which they are supposed
+incapable—and called it forth, too, in a mind of too much
+delicacy to admit the idea of marriage from any other motive
+than that of love.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
+<p>The following story, which is ushered into the world by so
+unattractive a title, might afford an example, that a life which
+appears “a blank” in the history of events, may be far from
+“a blank” in the history of feelings.</p>
+
+<p>By the death of her father, Lord T——, Isabella <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> Clair
+found herself, at the age of nineteen, an orphan possessed of a
+considerable fortune, of great personal attractions, and of all
+the accomplishments which, in these days of education and
+refinement, are expected to grace young ladies of fashion.
+Her brother, the young Lord T——, was not of an age to
+serve as her protector, and accordingly she removed to the
+house of her uncle and guardian, Sir Edward Elmsley.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Edward and Lady Elmsley were of that respectable
+class of English gentry who, by not attempting to move in a
+more elevated circle than that in which they are naturally
+placed, command the esteem and respect of those above, as
+well as of those below them. Their daughter Fanny, although
+of the same age as her cousin Isabella, had not yet
+been initiated into the pleasures and the pains of a London
+campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella, who had been accustomed to a life of excitement,
+was not sorry, at the expiration of her mourning for her
+father, to join in whatever gaiety was going forward, and to
+exercise once more the power of that beauty which, even in
+London, had attracted its full share of admiration.</p>
+
+<p>In the country, where beauty, rank, fashion, fortune, and
+accomplishments are not so common, of course the brilliant
+Miss <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> Clair was the star of every ball; and all the young
+men of any pretensions in the county vied with each other
+in obtaining a word, a smile, a look from the lovely Isabella.</p>
+
+<p>Nor did the charms with which she was really endowed
+lose any thing from want of skill in the possessor. She had
+the art of keeping an indefinite number of persons occupied
+with her alone; she had left her shawl in the next room,
+and, with a thousand graceful apologies, she asked one person
+to fetch it for her, at the same time holding her cup in a
+helpless manner, and casting a beseeching glance around her,
+which brought a hundred eager hands to set it down. Then
+she looked timidly confused at having given so much trouble.
+Presently she had a message to send to her cousin Fanny,
+with which she despatched one admirer, while she hinted in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>a low voice to another, who was pressing her to stand up in
+the next quadrille, that she did not like to do so while Fanny
+was sitting still. The devoted youth flew to dance with
+Fanny, claiming as his reward the hand of Isabella for the
+ensuing waltz. She knew how to pique and to excite the
+vanity of each: to one she implied she had heard something
+of him which certainly had very much surprised her; to
+another that she understood he had been abusing her horridly;
+she playfully scolded a third for not admiring Fanny half as
+much as he ought, and wondered how he could be so blind.
+She assured a fourth that he and all the world had quite
+mistaken her disposition; indeed, that scarcely any one did
+understand her; implying there was depth of character and
+feeling beyond the reach of the multitude, and thereby piquing
+and interesting the sentimental youth to discover these hidden
+treasures.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny, meanwhile, placid and contented, enjoyed what she
+met with that was agreeable, without its ever crossing her
+imagination to feel envy or jealousy of her cousin. She was
+not mortified, for she saw her so beautiful, so brilliant, that
+all rivalry seemed out of the question. They were happy
+and affectionate with each other. Isabella, constitutionally
+gay, good-humoured, and joyous, was never crossed or thwarted
+by Fanny, and, although an acute observer might discover in
+her fondness for her cousin, a tone of superiority, a protecting
+kindness, Fanny so completely acquiesced in that superiority,
+that it never for a moment wounded her self-love.</p>
+
+<p>About a year after Isabella’s arrival at Elmsley Priory, the
+society of that neighbourhood received a very animating addition
+in the young Lord Delaford, who, soon after his return
+from his travels, established himself at his beautiful Castle of
+Fordborough. He joined to the most prepossessing appearance
+and manners, an excellent character, considerable talents,
+and extensive possessions. He paid a visit to Sir Edward
+Elmsley, and of course Isabella counted upon him as her
+devoted slave, and thought such a conquest was not to be
+neglected.</p>
+
+<p>She was rather surprised that he handed the quiet Fanny
+to dinner, but she satisfactorily accounted for this circumstance
+by supposing he considered it a courtesy to which the
+young lady of the house was entitled. But when, in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>course of the evening, he voluntarily seated himself by Fanny,
+and appeared interested by her conversation, she certainly was
+very much astonished, and not much pleased.</p>
+
+<p>To Lord Delaford, who had lately come into the country,
+wearied and disgusted with the dissipation of Paris, and the
+turmoil of London, the style, the vivacity, and even the beauty
+of Isabella, were too much what he had been in the habit of
+seeing every day, to possess any peculiar attractions for him;
+while the calm brow, the placid air, the perfect innocence and
+unconsciousness of Fanny’s manner, appeared to him as soothing
+and refreshing as the green trees and verdant meadows
+after the glare and confusion of the streets. In conversation
+he found her modest and well-informed, and he sought her
+society the next day and the next. By degrees his manner
+assumed a tone of admiration which, to a person accustomed
+as she was to be placed in the shade, had more than the usual
+effect attributed to admiration, that of enhancing the charms
+by which it was first excited.</p>
+
+<p>Those who imagine they do not please, often neglect the
+means by which they might do so; whereas, if they once become
+aware that all they say and do finds favour in the sight
+of others, they are no longer ashamed of being charming, or
+afraid to be agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>People in general were astonished at the wonderful improvement
+in Fanny, but her mother remarked that, when
+Lord Delaford entered the room, her soft brown eyes shone
+with a lustrous consciousness, that if he addressed her, the
+colour mounted in her pale and delicate complexion, and she
+understood full well the cause of this improvement.</p>
+
+<p>If Lord Delaford had been originally attracted by the unruffled
+placidity of her expression, he was infinitely more so
+by finding that his presence had the power of disturbing that
+placidity. Though he could not doubt that he possessed
+many qualities which might make him an object of preference
+to young ladies, and every adventitious qualification to make
+him approved of by the old; though he must have known he
+had been sighed for by daughters, and sought by mammas;
+still he was not one of those men who are piqued by coldness,
+and inflamed by the difficulty of winning the object. On the
+contrary, there was a natural diffidence about him which made
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>him vulnerable to the attentions of women, and easily daunted
+by any appearance of disinclination.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was too amiable and too humble ever to have felt
+jealous of her cousin, but she was not insensible to the pleasure
+of finding herself suddenly preferred by the one person
+whose favour all were desirous to gain. Every thing seemed
+to prosper to the utmost of her or her parents’ wishes. Lord
+Delaford became every day more serious in his attentions, and
+there appeared to be no reason why Fanny should not yield to
+the engrossing fascinations of a passion which, if felt for the
+first time at the age of twenty, combines with the freshness of
+a first love the depth and strength of which the more formed
+character is susceptible.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time Isabella no longer found the same gratification
+in the insipid crowd of common-place admirers, whose
+suffrages had before elated her. She felt, truly enough, of
+how much more value were the sincere esteem and affection
+of one true heart, than all the frivolous admiration of people
+she did not care for; all her former conquests lost their value
+in her eyes; she, for the first time, felt herself the forgotten
+and neglected one. Vanity, like ambition, only becomes the
+more insatiable by being fed, and, as the single Mordecai,
+who refused to bow before the pomp of Haman, embittered all
+the glories of his triumph, so the one person who was proof
+against her charms outweighed, in her estimation, the herd
+who acknowledged their power.</p>
+
+<p>She had too much tact, too much knowledge of the world,
+too much spirit, to allow these feelings to be visible to the
+eyes of common observers. Lord Delaford and Fanny were
+so completely occupied with each other that they could not
+remark any thing about Isabella; but Lady Elmsley, with
+maternal quick-sightedness, perceived her mortification, and
+with pride, which may perhaps be pardoned in a mother,
+could not help being pleased that, at length, her daughter’s
+merits should be valued, as they deserved, above those of
+Isabella.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally Isabella caught a glance of triumph which
+escaped from the eyes of Lady Elmsley, and she resolved to
+let slip no opportunity of gaining the attention of Lord Delaford.</p>
+
+<p>Mortification is but half felt while it is only felt in secret.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>It is not till we perceive it has been remarked by others, that
+it becomes one of the most painful sensations to which the
+weak, the vain, and the worldly, are liable, and one from
+which the most humble and pure minded can scarcely boast of
+being entirely free.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="2" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="es"><i>Gerarda.</i>—Que todo se aprende hija y no hai cosa mas facil que engañar a los
+hombres de que ellos tienen la culpa; porque como nos han privado el estudio de
+los ciencios en que pudieramos divertir nuestros ingenios sutiles, solo estudiamos
+una, que es la de engañarlos, y como no hay mas de un libro, todas lo sabemos
+de memoria.</p>
+
+<p lang="es"><i>Dorotea.</i>—Nunca yo le he visto.</p>
+
+<p lang="es"><i>Gerarda.</i>—Pres es excellente letura, y de famosos capitulos.</p>
+
+<p lang="es"><i>Dorotea.</i>—Dime los titulos signiera.</p>
+
+<p lang="es"><i>Gerarda.</i>—De fingir amor al rico y no disgustar el pobre.</p>
+
+<p lang="es">De desmayarse a su tiempo, y llorar sin causa.</p>
+
+<p lang="es">De dar zelos al libre y al colerico satisfacciones.</p>
+
+<p lang="es">De mirar dormido, y reir con donayre.</p>
+
+<p lang="es">De estudiar vocablos y aprender bailes.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p lang="es">Y de no enamorarse por ningun acontecimiento, porquè todo se va perdido, sin
+otros muchos capitulos de mayor importancia.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Lope de Vega.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Isabella had attentively studied the character of Lord Delaford,
+and she felt sure that if she could once get him within
+her toils, she should be able to keep him there. She had discovered,
+that although too refined not to be disgusted by any
+open attempt to attract him, there was a considerable mixture
+of vanity and of humility in his composition; and she flattered
+herself she could work upon both these feelings.</p>
+
+<p>She one day happened to sit next him at dinner, and contrived,
+with a tact for which she was peculiar, to turn the
+conversation upon himself. She said she never knew any one
+of whom she was so much afraid: to which he replied,</p>
+
+<p>“That is very odd! I have always been reckoned a good-natured
+sort of fellow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes!” she answered; “I am sure you are good-natured;
+but your very good-nature helps to frighten me.
+You are so unlike other people; and I feel so awed when you
+are present.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that is strange! I don’t think I ever awed any
+body before. Do I look so cross?”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
+<p>“Oh! it is not that; but you are so good; and you always
+say just what you should say, and no more. I should
+be afraid to utter, or to do any thing foolish before you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I should be as useful to you as Prince Cheri’s ring
+in the fairy tale. It is a pity I am not always by your side!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! but then I should always be in a fright;—not that
+I mean it is a disagreeable sort of fright.” And she turned
+the conversation, fearful of showing any design of attracting
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, he, as usual, turned over the leaves of
+Fanny’s music-book, while she was singing, or forgot to turn
+them over, while gazing with delight upon those melting, yet
+innocent eyes, which met his so kindly and so trustingly—eyes,
+that looked as if there lurked in the heart beneath,
+depths of unawakened and unexplored feelings, which only
+waited to be excited.</p>
+
+<p>But when he was alone, the remarks of Isabella recurred
+to his recollection, and he wondered what in him could have
+struck her as being so singular and so reserved. The next
+day, when they were riding, he found himself near her, and
+reverted to the conversation of the preceding day.</p>
+
+<p>“I have been quite uneasy, Miss <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> Clair, at finding I am
+so disagreeable as I must be, if I am the precise, formal,
+measured person you describe me to be.”</p>
+
+<p>A certain step is gained, when, instead of starting a new
+and indifferent subject, the topic of the preceding conversation
+is resumed. Most coquettes know, by intuition, that the best
+mode of accomplishing this is to talk to persons of themselves.
+Isabella’s heart beat quicker at finding how well she had succeeded
+in awakening his curiosity; but assuming a nonchalant
+manner, she answered,</p>
+
+<p>“Disagreeable! Surely I never could have said any thing
+half so uncivil?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, certainly you did not tell me in so many words that
+I was disagreeable; but you implied it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no! Indeed, I think I said every thing most flattering—that
+you were so very good.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I suppose if I am so very good, I must not consider
+being good, and being disagreeable, as synonymous terms;
+and yet you made it appear yesterday as if they were!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Lord Delaford! how can you accuse me of saying
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>any thing so shocking? I only declared you were so good, so
+superior, I was afraid of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But a person who makes you fear him, must be disagreeable
+to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, indeed: I like to be awed. I am fond of an organ
+in a cathedral; and I admire lofty mountains, and beautiful
+stormy skies, and every thing that is grand and sublime in art
+and in nature! Could one bear to hear one’s own feeble voice
+mingle itself with the pealing reverberations of the organ in the
+glorious pile of <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> Peter’s? And does one not feel one’s own
+nothingness when among the mountains, the torrents, the precipices,
+the peaks, the glaciers of the stupendous Alps? Yet
+surely these are pleasurable emotions! With me, at least, awe
+and pleasure are very compatible sensations.”</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke her large and brilliant eye glanced upwards
+for a moment, with an expression of lofty enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford gazed upon her, and mentally exclaimed,
+“That girl has a soul!” Presently, relaxing into a smile, as
+if ashamed of her own eagerness, she added, “I believe Doctor
+Spurzheim would discover in me the bump of veneration;”
+and putting her horse into a canter, the whole party became
+mixed together, and she addressed herself to some one else.
+Lord Delaford mechanically found himself by the side of
+Fanny; but it was some time before they became engaged in
+any thing that deserved the name of conversation.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees, however, the unobtrusive gentleness of Fanny
+had its usual effect upon him; and they discoursed calmly
+and agreeably upon subjects of literature, or the immediate
+events of the neighbourhood; but that day there were none
+of those flattering turns of phrase, that deferential manner of
+listening, which, not appearing in the common-place form of
+compliment, have the effect of flattery, without putting one
+on one’s guard against it.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny returned from her ride less exhilarated than usual.
+She thought the wind was rather cold, and her beautiful,
+thorough-bred horse, not quite agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner Lord Delaford sat between Isabella and herself,
+and his attention was, to say the least, divided between the
+cousins. Isabella was in high spirits. She was animated by
+the desire and the hope of pleasing. She caught an uneasy
+look from Lady Elmsley, and she could not suppress an emotion
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>of gratified pique. She had too much the tone of good
+society ever to run the risk of being noisy; her flow of spirits
+only showed itself by being exceedingly droll and lively; and
+though perhaps she amused in some degree at the expense of
+the absent, her dancing dark eyes glanced with such brilliancy,
+such merriment, such a look of gay archness, that no one could
+suspect her of harbouring a feeling of ill-nature towards any
+one. Nor in truth did she harbour any such feeling; she
+only wished to amuse; and there are few people who have
+not occasionally been led by the intoxicating pleasure of causing
+a laugh, into ridiculing persons towards whom they felt no ill-will.
+Lord Delaford was entertained, and laughed incessantly
+at her quaint ideas. He wondered why Fanny did not seem
+more to enjoy sallies which appeared to him so full of talent
+and of wit. He thought it argued a want of imagination,
+which disappointed him. Fanny meanwhile was depressed,
+she knew not why; but when she retired to rest, in the stillness
+of her chamber, she made a discovery as painful as it was
+humiliating.</p>
+
+<p>Surprised to find herself so very serious when others were
+so much amused, in doubt and trembling she looked into her
+own heart, and she found it to be nearly engrossed by one
+overwhelming passion. She had always intended to keep herself
+“fancy free” till she could devote her whole soul, her pure
+unhacknied affections, to one only object for ever. From the
+easy footing of society in a country-house, her intercourse
+with Lord Delaford had been free and unconstrained; his attentions,
+although constant, were not marked, and nothing had
+occurred to call her mind to the effect they were gradually,
+but surely, producing. It was not till the fear came over her
+that he did not care for her, that she discovered she had ever
+believed in his preference; it was not till she felt how inexpressibly
+painful was that fear, that she discovered her affections
+were fixed on one only object for ever.</p>
+
+<p>She was suddenly aroused from her fancied security, and
+found within the heart which she had imagined fresh and
+uncontaminated, love,—unrequited love, and jealousy,—jealousy
+of her dearest friend. She thought herself degraded.
+She was miserable. But she did not allow her mortification
+to swallow up all other feelings. Maidenly pride remained,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>and she determined he should never perceive the power she
+had allowed him to acquire over her.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford, on his part, reflected upon the increased
+attractions of Isabella, and upon the want of vivacity of Fanny.
+Though no coxcomb, he thought it possible Fanny might
+entertain for him feelings which, his conscience told him,
+would have been wounded by the unusual degree in which he
+had been occupied with Isabella. His goodnatured heart
+smote him at the idea of giving pain to so gentle and lovely
+a being, and he joined the breakfast party the next morning
+full of kindness and interest for Fanny, flattered by the interpretation
+he had himself given to her coldness, and well prepared
+to return any indications of preference which he might
+perceive in her manner towards him.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny had schooled her heart, and the more she was really
+agitated, the more was she resolved to wear a calm exterior;
+the more she knew there was a sentiment within her bosom
+which could not be confessed, the more was she resolved no
+human eye should discover it. She was aware that sudden
+coolness might be construed into pique, and she determined to
+be merely careless and indifferent. She did not remember
+that she might, by this means, lose what most she wished to
+gain. She did not calculate. The abstract idea that any
+woman should love any man better than he loved her—that
+any woman should be won unwooed, roused her pride for the
+sex in general; and that she herself should be one of these
+poor, weak, infatuated creatures, gave her a sense of humiliation
+against which her very soul rebelled.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford watched for some indications of the sentiments
+he had in his own mind attributed to her; but he found her
+as she intended to appear,—gay, careless, cold. He did not
+perceive any affectation in her gaiety, or any thing studied in
+her carelessness.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Elmsley precisely read the state of her heart, and put
+the right construction upon the trifles which constitute encouragement
+or repulse, and which denote preference or indifference;
+but Lord Delaford was quite puzzled, and somewhat
+mortified.</p>
+
+<p>It is said there is an instinct which teaches every one to
+read their fellow-creatures where love is concerned. This is
+true of all indifferent spectators, who can decipher emotions,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>often not acknowledged by the individuals to themselves. Not
+so the persons most interested. Sometimes they twist appearances
+to suit their hopes or fears. Sometimes, being aware
+that their judgment is likely to be prejudiced, they dare not
+trust to their natural impressions. Lord Delaford watched
+the countenance, the eyes, the expression, the words of Fanny
+for a day or two, and he became each day more convinced his
+own self-conceit must have misled him. He had studiously
+avoided such attentions as might commit him, and he now
+took care to divide them equally between the two cousins. To
+Fanny, who had been accustomed to his exclusive devotion,
+this was a virtual withdrawal of them; and she set a more
+strict watch than ever over all her words and looks. Isabella,
+who was exhilarated at receiving half, when she had been accustomed
+to none, was <i lang="fr">pétillante de graces</i>. The more Fanny
+was aware of Isabella’s attractions, and the more she perceived
+that Lord Delaford became aware of them, so much the more
+she wrapped herself up in impenetrable, but good-humoured
+reserve. Her manner lost that confiding, innocent gaiety,
+which a short time before had been one of her greatest charms,
+without regaining the bashful ingenuousness, which had at first
+attracted him from its novelty. She laboured hard to appear
+calm, and unfortunately succeeded but too well in her endeavours.
+Lord Delaford was half provoked with himself for
+having been so ready to fancy he was irresistible; and half
+provoked with Fanny, for having given rise to his dissatisfaction
+with himself.</p>
+
+<p>He was in this frame of mind when an accident occurred
+which confirmed him in his opinion of her coldness. He was
+riding a restive horse, which he alone had succeeded in subduing,
+and which he thought was so completely tamed, that
+he might venture to ride it with the ladies. Isabella admired
+a flower in the hedge, and he turned his horse round to gather
+it for her. The animal, who had proceeded quietly by the
+side of the others, did not like being separated from its companions;
+and rearing suddenly, fell backwards with its rider.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella was close to him at the moment of the accident, and
+was naturally dreadfully frightened. He had contrived to slip
+off on one side, and was not hurt; but there was a moment
+when horse and rider appeared as if they would be crushed
+together.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span></p>
+<p>Fanny was some yards in advance, and only turned round in
+time to see him as he was getting up from the ground, and
+was therefore spared the first alarm. She was not a nervous,
+hysterical person; and although she turned pale, and trembled,
+she did not fall from her horse, or do any thing that attracted
+attention to herself. Isabella, really agitated, and really nervous,
+(as indulged and flattered people are very apt to be,)
+shrieked aloud, and burst into tears—real tears—for she
+affected nothing; she only gave way to what she felt, from
+the consciousness that she was charming, and that her emotions
+would not appear disagreeable and uninteresting.</p>
+
+<p>She was lifted off her horse, in a fainting state. Lord
+Delaford was supporting her. Every one was busy about her.
+In the confusion, her hat fell off, and all her ringlets were
+floating on the wind: her eyes were half closed; and the
+long lashes looked beautifully dark on her cheek, which was
+really pale. Fanny thought she never saw any one look so
+lovely! Lord Delaford watched her revival with an expression
+of intense interest; and Fanny sat still on her horse, unnoticed
+and unregarded, with feelings of hardness and bitterness
+which never before had been the inmates of her gentle bosom.
+This protracted exhibition of sensibility appeared to her perfectly
+unnecessary; and she could not help thinking that
+Isabella might have recovered much sooner; that she might
+have twisted up her own hair, and tucked it under her hat,
+without any assistance from Lord Delaford; and that there
+was no occasion for several ringlets to be allowed to escape,
+and to stray over her face and shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Such were her thoughts when the party remounted, and
+proceeded homewards; and she “hoped Lord Delaford was
+not the least hurt,” in a guarded, constrained, and scarcely soft
+voice, which grated on his ear, after the languid accents of the
+fainting Isabella. He turned away from Fanny, and devoted
+himself entirely to her cousin, whose interest in his safety
+gave her a sort of right to his care and solicitude.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they reached home, Fanny rushed to her room,
+and there paced the apartment in an agony of mind which
+frightened herself. She envied Isabella the interest she had
+excited, while she felt she would rather have died than have
+betrayed such emotion: yet she was angry with herself for
+having appeared cold and unfeeling. Presently she heard
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>footsteps approaching her door; and hastily composing her
+looks, she seized a book, and appeared buried in its contents. It
+was Lady Elmsley, who came to tell her there was some company
+expected at dinner. She longed to open her heart to her
+mother, who, she was sure, by the increased tenderness of her
+manner, had read the state of her feelings: but Lady Elmsley
+never sought, or encouraged confidence upon the subject.
+She saw that Isabella had superseded her Fanny in Lord Delaford’s
+heart, and that her child’s hopes were blighted—she
+knew that an acknowledged preference was far more difficult
+to eradicate than one which had never been confessed—that
+pride, and constancy, and consistency, had induced many a
+girl to persevere in a devotion which, if it had never been
+avowed, would have died away; and she judged of Fanny by
+the rest of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The end of this day passed off as many succeeding ones
+did—in sad and bitter calmness on the part of Fanny—in
+flattered vanity, and growing love, on the part of Isabella—in
+gratitude, admiration, amusement, and pique, which were
+fast ripening into love, on the part of Lord Delaford.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="3" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Though Marian’s frolic mirth so gay</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The sultry hay-field cheer,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Say, when the short, cold, sunless day,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Shall close the parting year,</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Will her gay smile then beam as bright,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And beam for only thee?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Will winter’s toils to her seem light</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">As they had seem’d to me?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Say, will she trim thy evening hearth?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Duteous, thy meal prepare?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Nor know, nor dream, a bliss on earth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Save but to see thee there?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Unpublished Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>At length the decisive moment came. Lord Delaford made
+his proposals to Isabella, and was accepted. Isabella herself,
+in all the flush and agitation of the event which decided her
+fate for life, came to Fanny’s room and told her what had
+happened,—not to triumph over her. No: she had of late
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>been so completely occupied by her own feelings, that she had
+almost forgotten those she had suspected in Fanny, and she
+came simply in the fulness of her heart, to give vent to all the
+mingled emotions which every woman must experience on
+such an occasion. Fanny had for some time prepared herself
+for this termination to all her hopes and fears. Yet when the
+fact was certain, when she heard it with her own ears, it came
+upon her like a thunderbolt. She turned deadly pale; she
+thought that she was going to faint; but the recollection that
+she should be committed, not only to her successful rival, but
+through her to Lord Delaford himself, again restored her self-possession,
+and after a momentary struggle, which, thanks to
+the dim light of the embers over which they were sitting, and
+to the engrossing nature of Isabella’s own thoughts, escaped
+observation, she was able to say, “God grant you may both
+be as happy, as from the bottom of my heart I wish you both
+to be!”</p>
+
+<p>She spoke with earnestness and solemnity; and Isabella
+gazed on her for a moment with surprise. The tone was not
+exactly that in which young ladies usually converse upon such
+subjects, and Isabella’s former suspicions flashed across her
+mind. But she looked at Fanny’s tearless eyes, and satisfied
+herself that it was “only Fanny’s way. Her cousin always
+had a more serious turn of mind than most girls.”</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps she was as willing not to see, as Fanny was anxious
+to conceal, the true state of the case; for though her thirst of
+admiration might lead her to do that which was most painful
+to another, she was not more unfeeling than a coquette must
+necessarily be. Moreover, prosperous love opens and softens
+the heart, and for the time at least produces an amiable disposition
+of mind. Though consideration for Fanny could not
+have prevented her attempting to gain Lord Delaford, yet now
+that she had succeeded in her object, it would have been
+exceedingly distressing to her to know the pangs under which
+her gentle cousin was at this moment writhing.</p>
+
+<p>The half-hour bell rang. Isabella hurried away, and Fanny
+was left alone with her dreary, desolate, mortified, crushed,
+hopeless heart.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner the engaged couple did not sit next each other.
+As there were strangers among the company, Lord Delaford
+thought it more delicate towards Isabella not to bring observation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>upon her. As a safe person he offered his arm to Fanny,
+and consequently sat next to her. Totally unsuspicious of her
+preference, and feeling on the contrary that her coldness had
+nipped in the bud the affection he had at first been inclined to
+entertain for her, he spoke to her of his happiness with the
+frankness of a friend. He expatiated on the perfections of
+Isabella, on the beautiful union of liveliness and of gaiety
+with that depth of feeling, which, though people in general
+might not suspect it, formed the true basis of her character.</p>
+
+<p>Lovers always invest the object of their love with such
+merits as they have settled in their own minds to be indispensable
+qualifications.</p>
+
+<p>There is also something particularly fascinating in the idea
+that one has discovered hidden treasures of mind that have
+escaped the observation of the common herd.</p>
+
+<p>Every word that Lord Delaford uttered was a several infliction
+on Fanny. All he said of Isabella’s liveliness and gaiety
+she felt was an unflattering contrast to what her manner, of
+late at least, had been. All he said of Isabella’s sensibility
+she knew to be far from true; and she, who was wrestling
+with a thousand conflicting feelings, was treated by implication,
+as a calm, cold, philosophical automaton, by the very
+person who was torturing them almost past endurance. Every
+word that he spoke of hope and happiness, was answered by
+an internal groan of hopelessness and misery.</p>
+
+<p>But her countenance was unchanged; and her eyes, which
+were habitually downcast, only remained the more firmly riveted
+to the table-cloth, for fear they should allow any of the emotions
+that were working within, to shine through them.</p>
+
+<p>When the ladies retired, the mammas congratulated Lady
+Elmsley in audible whispers upon the brilliant prospects which
+they perceived were opening before her daughter, and the
+daughters looked arch when they asked Fanny what sort of a
+person their new neighbour Lord Delaford was.</p>
+
+<p>The fire and earnestness of his manner at dinner, and the
+downcast reserve of Fanny’s, coupled with the reports which
+had previously been abroad, in consequence of Lord Delaford’s
+frequent and protracted visits to Elmsley Priory, had been
+misconstrued by them all, and they fancied the case so clear,
+that it was fair to congratulate, and to quiz.</p>
+
+<p>In vain Fanny repelled all their insinuations with something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>approaching annoyance and peevishness. Isabella cast
+a meaning glance of amazement, and of mutual understanding,
+which only confirmed the young ladies in their preconceived
+notion; and when the gentlemen came into the room, they
+contrived to leave a place vacant by Fanny, while they crowded
+round Isabella at the pianoforte, to look at a new song, and
+be rapturous over a new <i lang="fr">galop</i>. Lord Delaford, who thought
+he had done his duty in avoiding Isabella at dinner, was only
+intent upon gaining a place next her, and did not even perceive
+Fanny, who had been detained from joining the young
+set, by an old lady who was very particular in ascertaining
+the stitch of Fanny’s work. By the time Fanny had completely
+explained the mysteries of the stitch, Lord Delaford
+was among the youthful party, and she then felt it utterly
+impossible to get up, and to walk across the room to that side
+of it where he was.</p>
+
+<p>She saw Lord Delaford’s devoted manner to Isabella: she
+felt herself deserted! she knew by intuition, that all the people
+who had just been complimenting, congratulating, and quizzing,
+were in the act of becoming aware that she was not the
+object of his attention, that she was not the attraction to
+Elmsley Priory.</p>
+
+<p>Such trifles as these, when the blighted prospects of a life
+are in question, seem to an observer, and to the person concerned,
+when once they are past, as not deserving of a thought,
+yet, at the moment, they add not a little to the bitter feelings
+of an already crushed spirit. Singing became the order of
+the evening, and Fanny was of course called upon. She had
+had time to reflect upon her present position, and also to
+resolve it should ever remain unknown to others; she roused
+all her energies, and the unusual excitement brought colour
+into her cheeks, and animation into her eyes. There were
+other gentlemen in the room, and they were enthusiastic in
+their admiration of the power, sweetness, pathos of Miss
+Elmsley’s voice. But what were these praises to her? They
+fell cold and sickening on her heart; Lord Delaford had been
+in low and earnest conversation with Isabella in the embrasure
+of the window, and scarcely knew that she had been singing.
+When the music was over, however, they left their retirement,
+and both were struck with the fire, the gleam of worked-up
+resolution in Fanny’s eyes, and Lord Delaford whispered to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>Isabella, “How brilliant your cousin looks to-night!” These
+few words made her heart beat with a joy at which she was
+herself shocked, and when she retired for the night, she looked
+courageously into her own feelings, and severely reproved herself
+for having felt pleasure in exciting a look of admiration
+in the betrothed of her cousin. She determined no longer to
+give way to sad retrospection—to dwell no more on blighted
+hopes, but to further, as far as in her lay, their future prospects
+of happiness. She knew Isabella’s character thoroughly,
+and could not but be aware there were many points in it
+which were not calculated to make a happy <i lang="fr">ménage</i>. Love of
+admiration, a consciousness of power, and a delight in exercising
+that power, were among the most conspicuous. She
+also thought Lord Delaford was a man likely to be much influenced
+by those he loved, and lived with—and she resolved,
+if possible, to lead Isabella’s mind towards using her influence
+over him for none but good purposes.</p>
+
+<p>She came down to breakfast the next morning placid, and
+even cheerful. Isabella, whose mind had been quite relieved
+from the lurking apprehension of having cut out her gentle
+and unpresuming cousin, by the brilliancy and animation of
+Fanny the preceding evening, and had settled that she could
+not care about Lord Delaford, as she was so evidently elated
+by the admiration of the other gentlemen, was completely confirmed
+in this notion by her cheerfulness at breakfast, and by
+the manner in which she opened the conversation upon Isabella’s
+marriage when they were alone.</p>
+
+<p>In vain did Fanny try to inspire her with the same notions
+of devotion and self-sacrifice which she herself entertained.
+Isabella was in love with Lord Delaford—that is to say, she
+preferred him to all others, and exceedingly liked his love of
+her; but as for considering his happiness, his pleasure, his
+advantage, his interests, before her own, the idea seemed to
+her an idle romantic dream.</p>
+
+<p>Weeks elapsed, and the settlements were arranged; the
+wedding clothes prepared.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford had returned, after a fortnight’s absence,
+for the few days preceding the marriage, which was to take
+place in the village church of Elmsley Priory. Fanny was
+glad that the ceremony was to be performed in the church,
+for she thought that the solemnity of the scene, and the holiness
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>of the place, would more completely eradicate from her
+bosom the feelings which she feared were rather smothered,
+than destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, a day of trial, almost beyond the strength
+of even her chastened spirit to endure, without betraying the
+struggle. She was bridesmaid, and she had to stand unmoved
+during the whole of a ceremony which, to the least interested,
+is touching and affecting. She heard him utter the solemn
+vow which separated him for ever from her—she saw their
+plighted hands—she heard the priest’s benediction on the
+youthful couple as they knelt before him. She did not shed
+a tear, she scarcely trembled, when Isabella, half-fainting,
+leaned on her for support. She sustained her graceful bending
+form, she whispered her words of encouragement, till, at
+the close, the bridegroom proudly led his wedded wife from
+the altar.</p>
+
+<p>They returned to Elmsley Priory that the bride might
+change her dress; Fanny, of course, assisted her friend to
+take off the wedding-garments, the Brussells lace veil, the
+orange flowers, &amp;c. which were to be replaced by a more quiet
+travelling costume, and accompanied her to the room in which
+breakfast was prepared, and the intimate friends and relations,
+who had been collected for the occasion, were assembled.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella flushed, agitated, happy, blushing, looked all one
+could wish a lovely bride to look. Fanny was calm, deadly
+calm.</p>
+
+<p>At length the travelling carriage came to the door; the
+packages were all arranged, the servants were on the box, and
+Lord and Lady Delaford took leave of the family party. The
+parting kiss went round—Lord Delaford, as one of the family,
+dutifully embraced his new uncle, his new aunt, his new relations.
+Fanny saw her turn would come, and she thought
+she could bear any coldness rather than this kindness; she
+felt her heart beat as he drew near the side of the room where
+she stood, she was almost inclined to slip away; but pride got
+the better; she resolved to do nothing that could look like
+emotion, or might possibly attract attention, and she stood
+her ground. When he took her hand and approached his lips
+to her cheek, she felt a cold shudder run through her, and she
+became, if possible, paler than before. He scarcely touched
+her cheek; she looked so coldly, purely immoveable, that he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>instinctively durst not give to her the kindly kiss which, in
+the joy and warmth of his heart, he had given to the elder
+branches of his new family.</p>
+
+<p>They hurried through the hall, and, in a moment, the
+sound of their carriage-wheels was heard rolling by the windows.
+All rushed to take a last look at them, and Fanny remained,
+as it were, petrified, fixed on the spot where she had
+parted from him.</p>
+
+<p>All the visions of her days of hope crowded on her memory;
+every sign of affection, every flattering attention he had ever
+shown her, appeared at one and the same moment present to
+her mind—all that had subsequently passed seemed like a
+dream; she felt for an instant as if she had been robbed of
+her betrothed; she had to rouse herself and to look round at
+the signs of the wedding feast, the cake, the ices, the fruits,
+and to assure herself of the sad reality. Fortunately, before
+the attention of the guests was withdrawn from the window,
+she had recovered her self-possession, had sent back all the
+feelings which she now considered as positively criminal, back
+to the depths of her heart, till she had leisure to drag them
+forth once more to the light, to examine into them, and to
+expel them resolutely from their fastnesses.</p>
+
+<p>Her head bewildered with all the thoughts she would not
+think, and all the feelings she would not feel, she mixed
+among the guests, and was again the kind, the gentle, the
+well-bred Fanny, attentive to the wants and wishes of every
+one; and although she did once help a good old aunt to jelly,
+when she asked for chicken, and gave ice to a cousin, who
+wanted champagne—though she did put a black satin cloak
+on the shoulders of a worthy old clergyman who was taking
+his leave, still, in the confusion, these inadvertencies escaped
+all remark, and the only observation made was, that Fanny
+was a sweet, amiable creature, but she had not much feeling—they
+never saw a girl so unmoved during the ceremony,
+which generally made people cry, and she did not show any
+sorrow at parting from her charming friend and cousin, who
+must be such a loss to her.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” added a maiden friend, “there’s no use in such a
+deal of sensibility. Fanny has just enough—enough to make
+her amiable and kind, and not enough to make her unhappy.”</p>
+
+<p>There was one heart which had read poor Fanny’s—one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>person who had watched her during the few moments when
+she had stood transfixed—who had remarked the trifling mistakes
+she had made in her civilities; and a keen observer
+might have read Fanny’s secret by the devoted attention which
+her mother showed her, if he had not already discovered it
+by the coldness with which Lady Elmsley returned the
+affectionate embrace of the bride and bridegroom. Time does
+not stand still, though it sometimes moves but slowly, and at
+length the company dispersed.</p>
+
+<p>The pieces of bride-cake were all directed by Fanny, till
+her hand was weary of writing “With Lord and Lady Delaford’s
+compliments,” or “love,” or “kind regards,” according
+as the degree of intimacy might require.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner succeeded, a large family dinner, very formal,
+consisting of the Dowager Lady Delaford, an old admiral,
+uncle to Lord Delaford,—his wife, and a very missish
+daughter, who thought it odd her cousin should have overlooked
+her charms when he was thinking of a wife;—Lord
+T——, the bride’s brother, a youth at college,—two school-boys,
+Fanny’s brothers,—the clergyman who performed the
+ceremony, who had been Lord Delaford’s tutor, and was a
+total stranger to the inhabitants of Elmsley Priory,—and the
+lawyer, an old friend of the family, whose eternal flow of
+prosy anecdotes concerning people whom no one knew by name,
+proved, for the first time, invaluable,—they prevented the
+clatter of knives and forks, and the creaking of footmen’s shoes,
+from falling so sharp on the ear as they would have done, if
+they had had no accompaniment except the low, gentle voice of
+Fanny, who was imparting to the worthy clergyman all the
+details he wished to know concerning the charity-school in
+the village. When the cloth was removed, the health of the
+bride and bridegroom was drunk, and the garrulous old lawyer,
+who had not forgotten in his quirks and quibbles his original
+taste for beauty, expatiated till the tears stood in his pale
+glassy eyes upon the virtues, the discretion, the gentleness of
+the bride, all which hidden qualities had been made manifest
+to him by the rosy lips, the blooming cheeks, the dark eyebrows,
+the white forehead, the glossy ringlets which had
+dazzled his eyes the preceding evening when she had signed
+the settlements. Inspired by the subject, warmed by the
+generous wine, the happy lawyer, directing his eyes across the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>table to Fanny, begged leave to propose another toast—that,
+before six months were over, he might again find himself at
+Sir Edward’s hospitable board on as pleasing an errand; and
+he hoped the bridegroom might be just like Lord Delaford—he
+could not wish his young hostess a more charming husband!
+All eyes turned to Fanny—her brothers, with a loud “Ha!
+ha! Fanny!—catch your fish, Fanny!”—Miss Melfort,
+the admiral’s daughter, with a suppressed giggle; and Lady
+Elmsley, with a face full of anxiety and fear lest her child
+might betray herself. Fanny, who had never deviated from
+the calm and collected manner she had resolved to maintain
+throughout the whole of this trying day, upon finding herself
+suddenly the object of remark, felt the colour rush over
+her forehead, her neck, her arms; she scarcely knew what
+they were wishing her; she thought he was wishing her
+married to Lord Delaford. Every thing became confused—her
+eyes grew dim; when Lady Elmsley, pretending that
+she was overcome by the heat, made the signal for departure,
+and the ladies left the dining-room. Fanny’s trials were not
+yet over: Miss Melfort, naturally curious upon such subjects,
+wished to hear all about the whole affair—how it began—how
+long they had suspected it—whether he fell in love at
+first sight—whether he or she was most in love—whether
+he proposed for her to Sir Edward, or whether he spoke first
+to Isabella herself; and then, as she was dying that Fanny
+should wonder how he could have been insensible to her attractions,
+she began to wonder how it was, that he should
+have preferred Miss <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> Clair to Fanny; that, for her part,
+she did not admire such tall people, nor did she admire such
+very long ringlets. She was little herself, and her hair was
+exceedingly <i lang="fr">crêpé</i>.</p>
+
+<p>There is an end to all things: at length the wine and
+water came, and every one retired to rest, and Fanny found
+herself alone in her own room, and she sat down to indulge in
+all the luxury of grief. Yes, there is “a joy in grief:”—she
+revelled in letting her tears flow, and her sobs succeeded
+one another without interruption, till, exhausted and spent
+with weeping, she fell asleep the moment she laid her head on
+the pillow, and never woke till morning.</p>
+
+<p>She was not a person whose eyes betrayed that she had
+been weeping; and she went down to breakfast, with no outward
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>traces of all she had suffered, but inwardly feeling guilty
+in having allowed herself to shed such bitter tears for the
+husband of another. They were, however, to be the last.
+She saw that her mother read her heart, and was grieved,
+and she would not throw a gloom over the declining years of
+the parent she adored, and whose health, always delicate, had
+of late become more so. She stifled all vain repinings; she
+was cheerful, and full of occupation. Her hand did shake
+when she opened her first letter from Lady Delaford, and her
+heart sickened when she saw her signature for the first time;
+and it took a long time to write her first answer, and, perhaps,
+when finished, it was somewhat measured and cold: but all
+such letters are more or less constrained, and Fanny was not
+<em>demonstrative</em>, and it all passed off very well.</p>
+
+<p>Lord and Lady Delaford went abroad soon after their
+marriage, and she was not put to the trial of a meeting.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="4" style="text-decoration: none;">IV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">Surtout les femmes nourries dans la mollesse, l’abondance et l’oisiveté, sont
+indolentes et dédaigneuses pour tout ce détail. Elles ne font pas grande différence
+entre la vie champêtre et celle des sauvages de Canada: si vous leur parlez de bled,
+de cultures de terres, de différentes natures de revenus, de la levée de rentes, et
+des autres droits seigneuriaux, de la meilleure manière de faire des fermes ou
+d’établir des receveurs, elles croyent que vous voulez les réduire à des occupations
+indignes d’elles. Ce n’est pourtant que par ignorance qu’on méprise cette science
+de l’économie.—<span class="smcap">Fenelon.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Poor Fanny’s thoughts were soon called off to real and actual
+sorrow, in which all other griefs were absorbed; and she almost
+wondered how she ever could have felt so much about any
+thing that did not concern her mother. Lady Elmsley’s health
+declined rapidly; and the whole family repaired to Clifton,
+in hopes that she might derive benefit from the springs. In
+vain! Fanny was doomed to endure that sorrow, to which,
+as being in the due course of nature, some say the mind reconciles
+itself with more calmness than to many others. But
+notwithstanding all the arguments of cool philosophy, the loss
+of a parent is one of the most acute and lasting griefs to which
+human nature is liable. It often befals the young and the
+prosperous, and, coming upon them in the midst of health,
+strength, and happiness, finds their minds unprepared and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>unchastened by any previous suffering. Moreover, it is a loss,
+absolutely irremediable, which, though time may soften, can
+in no length of time, ever, ever be replaced.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of her mother’s illness, Fanny was so
+occupied in her anxious attendance upon her, that every other
+thought was banished from her mind. When Lady Elmsley
+once, and once only, alluded to the state of Fanny’s affections,
+and spoke favourably of an amiable young man, of excellent
+connexions, and fair prospects, whose attentions had been unequivocal,
+she was able to assure her mother, with truth,
+“That although Mr. Lisford had not succeeded in making
+himself agreeable to her, all prepossession for another was
+quite over.”</p>
+
+<p>It is vain to dwell on the melancholy details of gradual decay.
+Suffice it to say, that Fanny watched, with agonised
+feelings, the last moments of a beloved parent; and only conquered
+her own emotions, to alleviate those of her father.</p>
+
+<p>After the funeral, they returned to their desolate home.
+Their hearts sank within them as they drove along the well-known
+avenue, which led straight to the front of the house,
+on which the hatchment met their eyes, for the last half-mile
+of their approach.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny supported her father into the drawing-room, where
+every object which met their eyes was but a renewal of grief.
+The easy chair, with cushions of every shape, to procure ease
+to a frame wearied and worn out—the invalid sofa-table, the
+footstool, just where Lady Elmsley had last used it—the
+portable book-case, containing her favourite authors, stood on
+the table as usual—the large basket of carpet-work, which
+was deemed too cumbrous to be taken to Clifton—the glass
+vase, which Fanny always kept replenished with the choicest
+flowers, and which the gardener had now filled with care, that
+the room might look cheerful, and which the housemaid had
+placed on the accustomed spot, all combined to make their return
+more painful, if possible, than they had anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, when, before her father left his room,
+Fanny altered the disposition of the furniture, and removed
+the things which so forcibly reminded them of her for whom
+they mourned, she felt it almost a sacrilegious act to touch
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Time, however, rolled on, and Sir Edward became calm and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>resigned; but Fanny’s spirits did not rally. She had fervently
+loved her mother; she missed her in every occupation, in every
+duty, in every amusement. Strange to say, her thoughts,
+which during her mother’s illness had been so completely
+weaned from the subject of her own disappointment, in her
+present quiet and solitude would revert to former scenes.</p>
+
+<p>She did not recur to the happy days of delusion, when she
+believed herself the object of Lord Delaford’s preference; she
+felt that would have been a sin: but she fancied that by
+dwelling only on recollections, in which the images of Lord
+Delaford and of Isabella were blended together, she was accustoming
+herself to the idea of their union, and preparing her
+mind for seeing them, as man and wife, when, on their return
+from the Continent, they were to pay their promised visit to
+the Priory. She forgot that,</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza" lang="fr">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“En songeant qu’il faut l’oublier,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Elle s’en souvient.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>As she wandered about her lonely flower-garden, she at one
+time remembered how Lord Delaford had gathered some of
+the beautiful double dahlias, and had called Isabella’s attention
+to the rich blending of their various hues; how Isabella had
+laughingly twisted them into her hair: and how surpassingly
+beautiful she had looked when bending over the marble basin
+(she had used it, as nymphs of old, for her looking-glass,)
+while the evening sun just tipped her dark brown curls with
+a golden hue, and tinged her downy mantling cheek with a
+more mellow bloom. Fanny could almost fancy she again saw
+the eyes of rapturous admiration with which he watched her
+graceful action.</p>
+
+<p>At another time, if she were training the straggling honeysuckles
+over the treillage, she recollected how her hopes had
+received their death-blow, when, on entering the drawing-room
+before dinner, she found Lord Delaford and Isabella in their
+morning dress, still occupied in reducing the unruly tendrils
+to obedience; and how Isabella blushed to find it so late, and
+Lord Delaford insisted it must be Fanny who had mistaken the
+hour. In recollecting these circumstances, she again experienced
+the same painful feelings of mortification and despondency;
+she did not thus acquire forgetfulness, or indifference.</p>
+
+<p>After an absence of about a year, Lord and Lady Delaford
+announced their return to England, and their intention of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>finding themselves very shortly at the Priory. Fanny believed
+herself rejoiced at the intelligence, and began setting every
+thing in order for their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>She was agitated when they actually came, but at that
+moment the recollection of her mother, and of the sad change
+that had taken place in her home, was uppermost in her mind,
+and almost all the tears she shed, were from a pure and holy
+source.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella was truly sorry for the loss of her aunt: Lord
+Delaford was all kindness, although the sort of <i lang="fr">gêne</i> which
+exists between the dearest and most intimate friends, when
+they meet after any severe misfortune, prevented their at first
+deriving much pleasure from each other’s society. The persons
+least interested do not feel sure how far they may venture to
+allude to the sad event, how far they may venture to be cheerful,
+and their fear of not exactly falling in with the tone of
+feeling of the mourners, imparts to their manner a want of
+ease which is infectious, and prevents a free and unconstrained
+flow of confidence.</p>
+
+<p>This, however, did not last long. Fanny soon poured forth
+into Isabella’s ear every melancholy detail of the last moments
+of her beloved parent, and found her heart warm towards the
+person to whom she could dwell upon the subject.</p>
+
+<p>When nothing occurred to call forth her love of admiration,
+her love of power, or her love of the world, her naturally good
+heart, and her constitutional good temper, rendered Isabella as
+loveable as she was lovely. Her faults had been fostered by
+her early education, while her good qualities had not been
+cultivated.</p>
+
+<p>Since her marriage, the devotion of her husband had rendered
+her fully aware of her unbounded influence over him;
+while, at the same time, the society with which she had
+mixed on the Continent, and the unsettled life of travellers,
+had been peculiarly unfavourable to the acquirement of domestic
+habits.</p>
+
+<p>When Fanny, in return, inquired into the manner which
+Isabella had passed her time abroad, preparing her mind for a
+picture of conjugal bliss, and resolving to rejoice in the happiness
+of two people for whom she felt so sincere a friendship, her
+feelings were put to a very different trial from that which she
+anticipated. All Isabella’s descriptions were of the gay parties
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>at Florence; the delightful riding parties from Rome; the
+agreeable Dukes, and Princes, and Cardinals, and Monsignores,
+they had met with: the brilliant fancy balls, the entertaining
+masquerades, the gorgeous fêtes, the select soirées, the exclusive
+<i lang="fr">petits soupers</i>, and Fanny wondered that Lord Delaford
+should be grown so fond of dissipation. Yet she remarked
+than when he spoke of foreign scenes, he seldom dwelt on
+those which alone had formed the subject of Isabella’s descriptions.
+He frequently spoke of home and of rural occupations
+as delightful, and conversed with Sir Edward on the state of
+the agricultural interest, and that of the poor. On such occasions
+Isabella would laughingly interrupt him, and beg the
+gentlemen to be more gallant, and not to discuss subjects which
+could be of no possible interest to them. Fanny, who had been
+accustomed to consider attention to the humbler classes as one
+of the duties of the rich, could not help one day saying to
+her, when the gentlemen left the room,</p>
+
+<p>“But don’t you think, Isabella, it is rather interesting to
+us, who live in the country, to learn how one may do good,
+and not run the risk of doing mischief, when one wishes to be
+useful to one’s fellow creatures?”</p>
+
+<p>“But, my dear, you don’t imagine I am going to be buried
+in the country all my life, enacting the part of a Lady Bountiful
+at Fordborough Castle. I have no objection to supplying
+the money, but, as to staying to distribute it, I leave that to
+the clergyman’s wife, whose business it is to attend to that
+kind of thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“But Lord Delaford is so fond of the country, and he always
+talks of what he means to do at his own place. Depend
+upon it he means to live in the country a great part of the
+year; I have heard him say he thought it right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes! You know it is never worth while to argue a
+point—I hold it out of the question for a man and wife to dispute;
+but I have not the least idea of letting him put these
+golden-age romantic notions in practice. Not that I have the
+least objection to the country at Christmas, or at Easter, or
+occasionally in the autumn, in a reasonable way; but, as for
+taking up my abode at Fordborough Castle, I shall not do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But every thing is prepared for you now. He has had
+the drawing-room and saloon new furnished, and your own
+boudoir is made lovely!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span></p>
+<p>“Oh, you know it could not be left as it was in my
+good mother-in-law’s time, with straight-backed chairs, and
+pembroke-tables; but I shan’t live there, you will see if
+I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Isabella, I am convinced Lord Delaford wishes it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! he fancies it would be vastly agreeable; but, in fact,
+he would be moped to death there, and so should I.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I don’t understand being moped to death with a
+husband one loves,” and she felt a slight blush rise to her
+cheek, which she attributed to the little rebuke implied in her
+answer; and she added, half smiling, “you know, you do like
+him very much, Isabella!”</p>
+
+<p>“Like him! to be sure I do. He is the best creature in
+the world; and, after all, nobody looks so like a gentleman.
+He was generally the best-looking man in the room, except
+Count Pfaffenhoffen, and he was so foolish that one was
+ashamed to be seen talking to him, though one endured his
+conversation for the sake of his waltzing. He is the most
+becoming waltzer! He is just the right height, and he does
+not bend too forward, nor too far back, and he holds his arm
+just right. What a pity it is he should be so silly!”</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this conversation Lord and Lady Delaford went
+to their own place, where they established themselves very
+comfortably. Fanny spent a day with them. She began to
+flatter herself that Isabella’s worldly notions were only to be
+found in her conversation, and not in her actions. She left
+her very busy, and apparently happy, in making discoveries
+of curious old China, and arranging it in the drawing-room.
+While these and similar occupations lasted, she was amused
+and contented, and her husband was delighted to see her, as
+he thought, acquiring a taste for the country.</p>
+
+<p>One short week afterwards, Fanny received a note from
+her, written as she was setting off for London, to meet her
+dear friend Lady B——, who was only in town for a few
+days, on her way from Paris to Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>She soon again heard from her, that she was very unwell,
+and that Doctor S—— had ordered her warm sea-baths, and
+that she was therefore obliged to go to Brighton.</p>
+
+<p>There they remained till Christmas, when they returned to
+Fordborough Castle, and brought with them a large party of
+friends. Fanny was to join them at the particular wish of Sir
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>Edward, who lamented that she did not regain her natural
+spirits.</p>
+
+<p>She found Lord Delaford looking harassed and oppressed.
+His company was not of his own choosing, and wearied him.
+Of his wife he saw but little, and he had no time for his own
+occupations.</p>
+
+<p>One day he had to do the honours of the place to a party
+of particular friends, for whom he did not care a straw;
+another to provide shooting for a set of young men, who
+thought it a very bad day’s sport if the birds did not get up
+as fast as two <i lang="fr">gardes de chasse</i> could load their guns.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing more agreeable than the exercise of hospitality
+towards those whom you like, and who like you in
+return; but when every point in which the accommodation
+and luxuries of your house, fall short of those at such a hall,
+or such a castle, where every amusement you may be able to
+provide, merely provokes a comparison between the sport Lord
+so and so, and the Duke of so and so, gives his friends; the
+delightful and poetical rites of hospitality, become a tiresome
+tax upon the time and patience of the luckless possessor of an
+ancient mansion and an extensive domain.</p>
+
+<p>This fashionable, but most unsatisfactory party dispersed,
+and Lord and Lady Delaford were on the point of going to
+town for the meeting of Parliament, when they obtained a
+promise from Sir Edward, that Fanny should pay them a visit
+in London after Easter. To do Isabella justice, she felt real
+affection for Fanny, and sincerely regretted seeing her so joyless,
+and conscientiously believed that the pleasures of London
+would prove a balm for every sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was unwilling to leave her father, and had a vague
+dread of being so entirely domesticated under Lord Delaford’s
+roof. Had her mother been still living, she would have interfered
+to prevent her child’s feelings and principles being put
+to so unusual, and so needless a trial; she would have taken
+care that the peace of mind she had striven so hard to regain,
+should run no risk of being disturbed; but Sir Edward would
+not hear of her dutiful regrets at leaving him; and if she
+harboured any other thought in her mind, it was one which
+could not be hinted at,—one she scarcely dared own to her
+secret soul, without implying a mistrust of herself.</p>
+
+<p>To London, therefore, she went. She found Lady Delaford
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>in the full vortex of dissipation. She possessed beauty, rank,
+talents, and riches. Many women who might boast of these
+advantages, are not the fashion. But Lady Delaford added
+to them all, the wish, and the determination to be a leading
+person in society. What wonder, then, if she instantly accomplished
+her object, when, without any of the qualifications
+before enumerated, it is often attained by simple, strong
+volition.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="5" style="text-decoration: none;">V.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">Nae mair of that, dear Jenny: to be free,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">There’s some men constanter in love than we.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">They’ll reason caumly, and with kindness smile,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">When our short passions wad our peace beguile:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Sae, whensoe’er they slight their maiks at haine,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">’Tis ten to ane their wives are maist to blame.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Gentle Shepherd.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford, though considerably occupied with politics,
+was not entirely engrossed by them, and he wished extremely
+for the quiet enjoyment of domestic life. When he returned
+from the House, he would fain have been greeted by his wife,
+or at least he would have been glad to know where he might
+join her; but among the many engagements for each night,
+he did not know where to find her; and after having once or
+twice followed her through the whole list of parties, he gave
+up the point, and went to bed, jaded and out of spirits.</p>
+
+<p>She seldom came down-stairs till so late, that he had long
+breakfasted, and was on the point of going out to some committee.
+Sometimes, being free from business, he determined
+to remain at home, and to devote the morning to the society of
+his young and lovely wife. On these occasions he usually
+found her so beset till two o’clock by her maid, by milliners,
+by tradesmen, by innumerable notes to answer, and arrangements
+to make, that she could only answer him with an absent
+air, her thoughts evidently intent on the organizing of some
+plan of amusement for that, or the ensuing day. After two
+o’clock, her drawing-room was of course crowded with dandies
+whipping their boots—with sage politicians, a race who
+peculiarly enjoy the <i lang="fr">délassement</i> of a pretty woman’s society,—and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>with literati, a tribe who are very apt to find peculiar
+gratification from the favourable suffrage of the lovely and
+titled, though upon the most dry and abstruse work, into
+which the fair critic had never looked, and which, if she had
+looked into it, she could not possibly have understood. This
+select crowd (for none but the most distinguished of each
+genus was admitted) did not disperse till the carriage had been
+long announced, and the hour of some appointment was long
+past; when, hurrying away from the admiring throng, she
+drove from her own door without having given a moment of
+her attention to her husband.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford’s anticipated morning of conjugal felicity
+generally ended in his seizing his hat and stick, and marching
+forth at a quick pace, and in no very enviable frame of mind.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was at first bewildered by this mode of life, but she
+accompanied her friend through the whole routine, till she
+found that neither her spirits nor her health could stand such
+constant wear and tear; she was obliged occasionally to remain
+at home, while Isabella continued her giddy round of
+pleasures; and she could not avoid perceiving that Lord
+Delaford was a man formed for all the charities of life—and
+that Isabella was throwing away happiness such as seldom
+falls to the lot of woman.</p>
+
+<p>The gradual decline of wedded happiness is a melancholy
+subject of contemplation to the most indifferent by-stander;
+how much more so to one deeply interested in the welfare of
+both parties! She felt justified in her dejection. Perhaps,
+if she had witnessed the unrestrained flow of confidence, the
+fulness of mutual devotion, she might not have found the
+sight so exhilarating as she sincerely believed it would have
+been. However that might be, reassured by her sorrow at
+not seeing her wishes for their happiness fulfilled—that her
+joy, if they were fulfilled, would be as great, she reposed in
+fancied security that the interest she took in his welfare was
+that of simple friendship, and she did not think it necessary
+to avoid him, if he found her alone in the drawing-room,
+where he in vain sought the wife of whom he was still deeply
+enamoured.</p>
+
+<p>He would sometimes sigh to find her still absent, and
+would occasionally express his desire of a more domestic life;
+he even confessed feelings of discontent and dissatisfaction—he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>wished his wife would give him more of her society—he
+wished her disposition was more like Fanny’s.</p>
+
+<p>These words fell on her ear with a sensation she scarcely
+knew how to define. Was it pleasure?—was it pain?</p>
+
+<p>It is a dangerous situation for any young woman to be the
+confidante of any young man’s sorrows, especially if they
+proceed from blighted affections and deceived hopes; but to
+Fanny, how tenfold dangerous!</p>
+
+<p>The world is scarcely sufficiently indulgent to those who
+are deprived of the tender vigilance of a mother; nor are the
+young who enjoy such a blessing, sufficiently thankful for
+possessing it. Had Lady Elmsley lived, Fanny would never
+have been placed in the position of confidante to the domestic
+sorrows of the man who had won her young affections, as the
+lover approved of, and courted by, her parents. Was it in
+nature that she should not think, “If I had been his choice,
+the happiness of which he so feelingly deplores the loss might
+then</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">‘Have blest his home, and crown’d our wedded loves.’”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Another circumstance occurred, which roused her from the
+security into which she had lulled herself.</p>
+
+<p>Among the multitudes of young men who frequented Lady
+Delaford’s house, some were sensible to the unpresuming
+charms of Fanny, and especially Lord John Ashville became
+seriously attached to her. There was no possible objection to
+him, and Isabella flattered herself she should have the pleasure
+of announcing to Sir Edward that, under her auspices,
+Fanny had made a brilliant match. Both she and Lord
+Delaford were astonished when he was rejected, and Fanny
+herself was grieved to find she could not love him, as she
+thought it her bounden duty to love the person to whom she
+should swear eternal constancy. She would have been glad
+to prove to herself that former impressions were completely
+obliterated; but she could not succeed in persuading herself
+that she preferred him to all others.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing is more common than that a person under the influence
+of mortification and disappointment should rush headlong
+into a fresh engagement; but this most frequently occurs
+when the mortification is one of which others are aware, and
+such a measure, it is hoped, will be a virtual disproval of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>fact. Though a dangerous experiment, it is one which succeeds
+oftener than might be expected from so desperate a
+remedy. Fanny’s sense of right and wrong, however, could
+not reconcile itself to the plain fact of solemnly vowing an
+untruth, and she already found the duty of watching over her
+secret affections sufficiently difficult, not to venture to impose
+upon herself the additional one of loving where she was not
+inclined to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps time and perseverance might have conquered her
+objections, but, a proposal once made, and once rejected, an
+opportunity is seldom afforded for further acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>This event had an unfavourable effect upon her mind. It
+proved to her that her heart was not free, that she had combated
+in vain.</p>
+
+<p>She was one day looking back upon her wayward fate, and
+reproaching herself for her weakness, when Lord Delaford
+entered the room, and inquired for Isabella.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny told him “she was walking in Kensington Gardens
+with the Miss Merfields.”</p>
+
+<p>“And when do you expect her home?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lady B—— takes her from Kensington Gardens to
+Grosvenor Place, where they dine together; and she accompanies
+her to the French play in her morning dress, so I
+am afraid she will not be at home till she returns to prepare
+for the balls.”</p>
+
+<p>“Balls! why how many is she going to to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, there are five on the list; but she is only going to
+two.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what becomes of you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I dine with my father’s old friend, Mrs. Burley, and then
+I shall go quietly to bed; for I was at the Duchess’s ball
+last night, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“So, I suppose, I must dine at my club, for I hate a
+solitary dinner in my own house. If I cannot have the
+comforts of home, I will play at the independence of a
+bachelor. Well, when I married, this was not the life to
+which I looked forward. But how comes it you are so quiet?
+Why do not you run the same course? Why are you not at
+all in the ring? You can endure the sight of your own fireside.
+You can find time for conversation, for reading.
+Your mind is not in a perpetual whirl.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
+<p>“Oh, but you know I am not very strong; I could not do
+so much.”</p>
+
+<p>“But have you, then, the inclination?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, not quite; I like it very much in its way; nobody
+can enjoy society more, I am sure, only——”</p>
+
+<p>“Only you have room in your heart for other things; you
+are not wholly engrossed by that all-devouring passion for the
+world. Ah, Fanny, if you had been able to like me when
+first we were acquainted, I should have been a happier man.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Delaford!” exclaimed Fanny, in a voice of doubt
+and fear.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you know, when first I went to Elmsley Priory,
+you were the person I should naturally have liked, only you
+did not care for me, and Isabella did. Kind and affectionate
+as you are in other respects, you seem to have no room in
+your heart for love, as poor Lord John has experienced also.
+But Isabella! she then seemed made up of feeling!”</p>
+
+<p>Fanny dared not speak, breathe, move, for fear of betraying
+her agitation. Did she hear from his own lips that he
+had loved her? Did she hear him accuse her of coldness,
+while her brain was dizzy, and her heart throbbing with
+feelings, which, for two long years, she had attempted (she
+now felt how vainly attempted) to quell? And must she sit
+still and allow him to think her insensible and heartless?
+Yes! religion, principle, and duty, forbade her betraying, by
+word or look, emotions which might have invested her in his
+eyes with the only charm in which he fancied her deficient.
+Impossible to let him ever guess she could harbour an unlawful
+preference for the husband of another, that other her
+kind and unsuspecting cousin. The very idea made her
+recoil with horror from herself. A pause ensued. She longed
+to break it—could she trust her voice to speak? What
+would Lord Delaford think of her silence? But, if he should
+perceive that her voice trembled! She was relieved from
+her difficulty by his exclaiming,—</p>
+
+<p>“No! it could not have been my own infatuation! Isabella
+was then all I believed her to be!”</p>
+
+<p>Fanny perceived he was not thinking of her, and she had
+time to compose herself. The love to which he had so calmly
+alluded, had left not a trace behind, unless the confidence he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>felt in her now, might owe its origin to the esteem he had
+then imbibed for her character.</p>
+
+<p>Following the course of his own thoughts, he continued to
+compare what Isabella once was, to what she was now become.
+He regretted their tour on the Continent, and attributed
+her present dissipation to the habits acquired in Italy
+and at Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was able to utter common-place hopes that her
+cousin would soon be weary of this useless life, and assurances
+that her heart was still true and warm.</p>
+
+<p>When she was alone, Fanny found herself fearfully happy.
+A load seemed taken off her mind. Painful as it might be
+to know that, by her own pride, (false pride, perhaps,) she
+had lost the happiness of her life; the joy of finding that she
+had not let herself be won unsought,—that she had not wasted
+the whole affections of her young pure heart upon a person to
+whom they had always been a matter of perfect indifference;
+that her love had not been wholly unrequited,—relieved her
+from that humiliation which had constantly sunk her to the
+earth.</p>
+
+<p>She was, however, convinced, that a longer residence under
+Lord Delaford’s roof would not be conducive either to the
+peace or the purity of her mind. She had been considering
+what excuse she should make for wishing to return to Elmsley
+Priory, when, in the course of conversation, Lord Delaford
+one day spoke of her presence, her example, her advice, as
+the pillar on which he rested his hope of reclaiming Isabella
+to the quiet duties of a wife, and he entreated her to use all
+her influence over her cousin towards the accomplishment of
+this object.</p>
+
+<p>This request gave a new current to her thoughts. If it
+was true that she had influence over Isabella, that she might
+reclaim her from the worldly course she seemed likely to run,
+would she be justified in leaving her friend at this moment?
+If she could be the means of causing his happiness, though
+through another, would she refuse to attempt it?</p>
+
+<p>People often argue themselves into believing it their duty to
+do what their inclination prompts. In this case, however,
+Fanny really wished to find herself once more under her
+father’s roof. She trembled at the undertaking before her—she
+felt a salutary fear and doubt of her own heart, which she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>had found so weak, and she humbly strengthened herself for
+the task imposed upon her. She looked with satisfaction to
+the prospect of being really useful to others, and she thought
+that, next to being the object of his love, the most enviable
+situation was to be the object of his gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Modest and unpresuming, she had never ventured to remonstrate
+seriously with Isabella upon her mode of life; indeed,
+she had always experienced a degree of shyness in alluding to
+Lord Delaford, and to the feelings of a wife, which had prevented
+her saying what she might naturally have done. She
+had also an instinctive horror of interfering between man and
+wife—on most occasions, a praiseworthy fear; but which,
+in complying with Lord Delaford’s wishes, she thought it right
+to overcome.</p>
+
+<p>But how to introduce the subject?</p>
+
+<p>Common and trite observations upon the duties of matrimony,
+she knew would only excite Isabella’s raillery upon her
+antiquated notions; but perhaps, by alarming her fears, she
+might have some chance of arresting her attention.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was so little accustomed to having any plan, any
+ulterior object in her communications with her fellow-creatures,
+that her heart beat, and she felt almost guilty, as she seized the
+first opportunity when they were alone, to say,—</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder, Isabella, you are not afraid of quite losing
+Lord Delaford’s affections.”</p>
+
+<p>“Quite lose his affections, Fanny! What can you mean?
+I certainly do not anticipate any such misfortune,” she
+answered, smiling; and her eye glanced complacently over the
+mirror, at which she was trying on the hat which she was to
+wear that evening at a <i lang="fr">bal costumé</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my dear Isabella, you must be aware he is not
+what he was—that your indifference is beginning to have a
+corresponding effect upon him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense, Fanny, you are joking!” But she took off
+the beautiful hat, and sat arranging and re-arranging the feathers,
+though in a manner which would have been far from
+satisfactory to the artiste, who had hit off that particular disposition
+of feathers, in a fortunate moment of inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>Instinct had served Fanny on this occasion, as well as
+a deeper knowledge of the world; for vanity and affection
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>can both take alarm at the idea of losing the devotion they
+have been accustomed to. She now remained silent, simply
+because she did not know what she had best say; but her
+silence had the effect of piquing Lady Delaford. After a
+pause of several minutes, Isabella added:</p>
+
+<p>“Lady B—— and Mrs. Clairville tell me they never saw
+any husband so devoted as mine; they wish I would impart
+my secret, that they might profit by it.”</p>
+
+<p>“They mean he is kind, and lets you have your own way;
+that he is the least selfish of human beings: but you must
+know, and feel, that he is not the contented, cheerful person,
+he once was; that his countenance does not brighten when he
+sees you, as it once did; that he is silent, abstracted. You
+cannot be happy, Isabella, and see your husband—and such
+a husband!—gradually weaning himself from your society,
+his confidence lessening, his affections cooling? Did I say he
+was indifferent? No, not indifferent! But he is hurt—wounded!
+he is shutting up his heart from you! Oh, Isabella!
+and can you let such a heart close itself to you? you, who
+might have all the treasures of that noble mind, that manly
+understanding, that warm generous soul, poured out at your
+feet—can you throw away such happiness?—you, who
+might be the happiest woman in the whole world!”</p>
+
+<p>Her voice faltered—a tear trembled in her eye—she dared
+not trust herself to speak another word. Isabella was struck
+by Fanny’s manner, though she jestingly replied:</p>
+
+<p>“One would think I was the worst wife in the world! Now,
+I could name you a dozen, much worse, among our most intimate
+acquaintances.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Isabella, are you satisfied with not being a bad wife?
+Don’t you wish to be a good one?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I do not see what harm I do. I am never cross;
+I never worry him; I do not run in debt; and I am very
+civil to all his friends, whenever he asks them to dinner, however
+great bores they may be: and it is not every wife who
+can say as much for herself!”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Isabella, of what comfort are you to him? If he
+has any annoyance, does he find you ready to sympathise with
+him? If he has any joy, are you there to share it with him?
+When do you communicate your thoughts, opinions, pleasures,
+pains, to each other? You do order dinner for him; but
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>really I cannot see what other advantage he derives from
+having a house, a home, a wife, <i lang="fr">une maison montée</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I see what you are driving at, all this time; I will
+make breakfast for him to-morrow morning—that will be
+quite right and wife-like.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, the servant entered to say that the box at
+the French play, which her ladyship had wished to have, had
+been given up, and that it was at her service for that evening.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Fanny, that is charming! We can go there for the
+two first pieces, and come home to dress.”</p>
+
+<p>“But Lord Delaford was to dine at home, and he will dine
+alone if we go.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! he does not mind that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Doesn’t he?” said Fanny, in a low, marked tone.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Delaford desired the servant to let the man wait; and
+Fanny felt she had gained something.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, I don’t think he will care a pin whether we are at
+home or not; and he goes back to the House afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not till ten o’clock, he said.”</p>
+
+<p>“Married people should not see too much of each other.
+<i lang="fr">Toujours perdrix</i> is insipid!”</p>
+
+<p>“How much have you seen of him to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, let me see! he looked in, did he not, just as we
+had done breakfast, about one?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; and your Italian improvisatore came two minutes
+afterwards, whose energetic rhapsodies of gratitude for your
+patronage, and admiration of your talents, were delivered in
+so stentorian a voice, that he took his departure, to prevent
+the drums of his ears from being broken. And yesterday—what
+did we see of him yesterday?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, he dined out, you know, at a political man-dinner—that
+was not my fault—and in the morning we were at
+Lady F.’s breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the day before?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! that was the day of our water-party to Greenwich;
+and that occupied the whole day. Well, I see how it is—but
+you will make me spoil him; and then, when he is quite
+unmanageable and untractable, I shall reproach you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, dearest Isabella, I give you full leave to do so—then!”</p>
+
+<p>Lady Delaford rang the bell, and sent back the tickets.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
+<p>“Now, how bored we shall all three of us be to-day at
+dinner! I shall be thinking all the time of that dear little
+Mademoiselle Hyacinthe.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, you won’t, dear Isabella. You will be your
+own gay, agreeable self.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford came home to dinner, and seemed pleased to
+find so small a party. Isabella told him, with an arch glance
+at Fanny, that he was very near finding a still smaller one;
+that the tickets for the best box at the French play had been
+sent to them after all.</p>
+
+<p>“And why did you not go?” asked Lord Delaford.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella did not like to take all the credit, when she felt she
+deserved but little, and she answered: “Why, I believe
+Fanny suspects you of having a bad conscience; at least she
+thought you would not like to be alone.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Delaford cast a glance of gratitude towards Fanny,
+which made her heart beat with a joy for which she had no
+occasion to reproach herself. He thanked them both for their
+attention to him, and was more gay and communicative than
+he had been for some time. The dinner was agreeable. Isabella
+was pleased to feel she was doing right, although she
+did not know that was the reason she was in spirits. Lord
+Delaford was gratified, and full of hope that more domestic
+days were about to dawn upon him. Fanny was animated;
+but there was a flutter in her animation, she scarcely knew
+wherefore.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="6" style="text-decoration: none;">VI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="it">Trepideva pur anche per quel pudore che non nasce dalla triste scienza del male,
+per quel pudore che ignora se stesso, somigliante alla paura del fanciullo che trema
+nelle tenebre senza saper di che.—<cite>I Promessi Sposi.</cite></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The next morning Isabella did come down to breakfast; but
+it was a great effort, and she soon relaxed into her former
+habits. Engagements previously formed could not be broken
+through, and one engagement led to another. Occasionally,
+however, Fanny persuaded her to give up one or two of the
+many evening-parties, and she succeeded in making her rather
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>more quiet in the morning, so that her husband sometimes
+found her at liberty, and he could sit down and converse upon
+the passing events.</p>
+
+<p>When he was alone with Fanny he almost invariably talked
+over his future prospects, and attributed to her every symptom
+of improvement in his wife. Though these thanks and praises
+fell on her ear as the most delightful music, still she felt
+rather uneasy at the kind of understanding that existed between
+them. Though the subject was one so wholly unconnected
+with herself, and so conducive to his future conjugal
+felicity, she could not help a guilty consciousness, when, upon
+the entrance of Isabella, they changed the topic of their conversation.
+She resolved, when once she had accomplished
+the grand object of persuading Isabella to take up her abode
+at Fordborough Castle, she would rescue herself from her
+trying situation, return to her father’s house, and devote herself
+with redoubled energy to being the consolation and solace
+of his widowed home.</p>
+
+<p>London was growing thin. Balls became more rare: water-parties
+more frequent; well-laden carriages, awfully encumbered
+with wells, imperials, boots, trunks, and bonnet-boxes,
+&amp;c., were constantly seen whirling along the streets. One day
+they happened, all three, to be standing at the window debating
+whether the weather was sufficiently settled for Mrs.
+Clairville’s rural fête to take place, when they were amused
+by watching the immense number of nurses, children, boxes,
+and bundles, which were crammed into an immense coach, one
+of the three carriages which were getting under weigh at the
+opposite door. Lord Delaford thought this would be a good
+moment to enter on the subject, by asking, in an easy tone,
+but well aware of the difficulties he was going to encounter,</p>
+
+<p>“And when shall we go to Fordborough Castle, Isabella?”</p>
+
+<p>“Heavens, Lord Delaford! London is just beginning to
+be agreeable. All the bores are gone, or going, and society is
+becoming really select, and every thing on an easy, sensible,
+pleasant footing. The sight we see opposite, gives one a
+delightful promise of what London will be! Don’t you hear
+that sound?” as the three carriages were set in motion, and
+rumbled heavily along the street. “Society will be as light
+and elastic when cleared of such heavy component parts, as
+the air after a thunder-storm!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
+<p>“And have you not had enough of society yet? I am
+almost sick of my fellow-creatures’ faces, and yet I am no
+misanthrope! Do you not long to see green fields and trees
+and flowers, and to smell the sweet smells of the country?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is just the reason why I like water-parties, and
+excursions into the country, and Mrs. Clairville’s breakfasts, so
+much! How lovely the evening was as we rowed down the
+river from Richmond! and as for flowers, where can you see
+any half so beautiful as at Lady P——’s enchanting villa?
+You can have no taste, no refinement, if you do not doubly
+enjoy all the beauties of nature in the society of the most
+polished, the most gifted, in short, of the master spirits of the
+age! to say nothing of all the prettiest women.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not wish to see all the pretty women;” and he
+added with some bitterness, “I only wish to see one woman,
+who, if she was as perfect in mind as she is in person, would
+be all-sufficient for my happiness; though,” and his tone
+changed to one of deep mortification, “I see how little I am
+so to hers,” and he left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella was somewhat startled. Fanny looked at her with
+a beseeching face of woe, and eyes full of tears.</p>
+
+<p>“You are playing a dangerous game, Isabella. Heaven
+grant you may not repent it! You have nearly destroyed
+the happiness of one of the most perfect of human beings.
+Heaven grant you may not alter his nature too! Heaven
+grant that may remain unchanged! To see his kindly temper
+soured, his manly character degraded into the mere obsequious
+husband of a London fine lady,—I beg your pardon, Isabella,
+but it would indeed be a melancholy sight!”</p>
+
+<p>“You seem to take a very lively interest in his welfare,”
+answered Isabella, a little frightened at the effect she had produced
+on her husband, and consequently half inclined to be
+pettish.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny rejoined with warmth,—</p>
+
+<p>“Who can see one woman wilfully cast from her a fate
+which would be the summit of happiness to almost every other,
+and not feel warmly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Fanny, I never saw you so animated; I believe
+you have fallen in love with him yourself, and are envying
+me this same fate of mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Fanny’s face became suddenly crimson. She had been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>carried away by her feelings—she had forgotten her own
+secret, she was so moved at seeing him mortified, and wounded,
+that she thought only of him.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella’s half-joking speech recalled it all to her; she felt
+betrayed, discovered, and her confusion knew no bounds.
+Isabella, surprised at the effect she had produced, in a moment
+recollected the suspicions she had once entertained, but
+she was just smarting under the mortification of finding she
+had over-calculated her complete influence over her husband,
+of finding that Fanny was right in her advice, and of feeling
+she deserved her rebuke, and she exclaimed,—</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I never saw such a guilty face.”</p>
+
+<p>Fanny was thunder-struck, bewildered—she burst into
+tears, and, hiding her face with her hands, she exclaimed—</p>
+
+<p>“Spare me, Isabella! spare me! if you have discovered
+my secret, spare me!” and, throwing herself on her knees,
+she hid her face in Isabella’s lap. “Yes, I have loved your
+husband, but I loved him before you thought of him, and I
+have struggled and combated, and fought to subdue my feelings;
+indeed I have. And I have loved him with a holy
+love,”—and she lifted up her tearful face with an expression
+of solemn grief and earnestness which was almost sublime:
+“Yes! I call Heaven to witness, never, for a moment, have
+I ceased to wish for your happiness, to pray for it, to use
+every endeavour to forward it. Is it not true? Isabella, I
+appeal to yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>“Get up, my dear Fanny! For Heaven’s sake! I had
+not an idea—I did not mean”—and Isabella burst into
+tears also. She remembered, what she had almost forgotten,
+how she had once believed him attached to Fanny; she remembered,
+what she had often persuaded herself was not so,
+how she had used every art in her power to wean him from
+her, and she felt almost as guilty as Fanny did.</p>
+
+<p>She had never intended to inflict such keen anguish on any
+one, and she was grieved to see what she had done. Had
+there been any thing to excite jealousy, or that might have
+touched her vanity, perhaps she would not have felt so amiably;
+but she was perfectly certain poor Fanny’s love was unrequited,
+and there was nothing mortifying in her husband’s
+having inspired so deep and fervent an attachment. Moreover,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>an uncontrolled burst of feeling, in a person habitually placid
+and reserved, is in itself almost an awful sight.</p>
+
+<p>The two friends stood mutually abashed before each other,
+when Fanny exclaimed,—</p>
+
+<p>“Do not utterly despise me, Isabella. Oh! if you knew
+half what I feel at this moment you would pity me. And I
+have been venturing to lecture you, to teach you your duty!
+But, indeed, I spoke from pure motives, indeed—though—I
+have—loved him”—and she again blushed crimson, her
+cheeks, her temples, her neck, at hearing herself speak words
+which, till that day, had never found utterance from her lips,
+“it was for your sake, as well as for his——”</p>
+
+<p>“Dearest Fanny,” interrupted Isabella, “do you think I
+doubt your motives? No! they are pure and excellent as
+your own innocent heart. I spoke in jest—you so entirely
+succeeded in concealing your feelings——”</p>
+
+<p>“But do you not utterly despise me now? Me, whom
+you once thought retiring and dignified, to have been so lavish
+of my affections as to love one who is devoted to another,
+to pass my life nurturing a hopeless and an unlawful preference!
+Oh! that thought almost maddens me sometimes.
+You must look down upon me as a poor, abject, weak, and
+wicked creature.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fanny, don’t speak so of yourself, you make me miserable—it
+is I who ought to beg your forgiveness—it is I who
+have been guilty towards you—my foolish, selfish vanity
+could not bear to see him prefer you, and I did all I could to
+take him away from you; but I had no idea you really cared
+about him so much; I only meant to try my own power;
+and then, if you had seemed unhappy, I would have desisted,—at
+least I thought I would. But you appeared so cool, so
+indifferent, and then I liked him myself, and then I thought,
+if you cared so little, why there was no reason why I should
+give up so brilliant a <i lang="fr">parti</i>, and then—I forgot all about you,
+and thought only of myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“You do think, then, he did like me once?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was that which piqued me so much; but, if I had
+known what you were feeling, dear Fanny——”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Isabella, this is ridiculous! You are, as it were, defending
+yourself to me—to me, who stand here self-betrayed—self-accused.
+Oh! it is all wrong; this must not be; we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>must forget all this—bury it in oblivion—let it be as though
+it had never been. Only make him happy, dearest Isabella,
+for your own sake—for his sake, and a little for my sake too.
+Make him happy, and I shall rejoice in the fate that has made
+you his wife; make him happy, as you value your own happiness
+and his, in this world and the next. But I forget myself
+again. It is not for me to guide others—weak, erring,
+sinful creature that I am.”</p>
+
+<p>She sank on the sofa, and, pressing her hands upon her eyes,
+and resting her head on the arm of the sofa, she strove to command
+and to subdue herself.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella stood motionless beside her, in thought as deep and
+as painful. A mist seemed to have fallen from her sight. She
+looked on life with different eyes from what she had done an
+hour before.</p>
+
+<p>The broken-hearted quivering form before her read her a
+lecture upon the effects of worldliness, which she had never
+thought of before. She saw, for the first time, what havoc
+blighted affections might cause. She thought of her husband,
+and she said to herself, “Shall I, through my own wilful folly,
+cause the misery of two good and amiable beings? I have already
+blasted the prospects of one, shall I throw a blight over
+those of the other, and that other the being I have sworn to
+love as long as I have life? Shall I have robbed poor Fanny
+of what would have made her happiness, and shall I not value
+the prize myself?”</p>
+
+<p>A flood of tender and self-reproachful feelings rushed over
+her soul. Fanny’s grief cut her to the heart; she gazed upon
+her till she felt herself cruel and odious. She pictured to herself
+what sufferings she must have inflicted upon her during
+the days of her courtship, on her wedding-day, on a thousand
+other occasions; she remembered her unfailing, uncomplaining
+gentleness; she thought of the good advice she had given her
+at various times, and felt how generous and how judicious it
+had been.</p>
+
+<p>Seating herself by her side, she gently lifted her head from
+the sofa—she kissed her—she wept with her—she used
+every tender and endearing epithet—she implored her to be
+comforted.</p>
+
+<p>“I am weeping for my own degradation,” she replied,
+“that the secret I scarcely dared own to myself should be uttered
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>in positive words, and to you, to his wife!—and you will betray
+me to him, you will tell him, I am sure you will. Oh!
+that I should have come to this!—I, who hoped to have
+passed through life with a fair, untarnished name, though my
+wretched heart might break! Oh, Isabella! in pity keep my
+secret—spare me this last bitter drop in the cup of life! He
+respects me now, and I think it would kill me to be despised
+by him.”</p>
+
+<p>Her broken voice was choked by sobs—she again hid her
+face in her hands—she seemed to shrink into herself.</p>
+
+<p>“Dearest Fanny! what shall I say, what shall I do? If
+you knew how your anguish harrows my very soul! I will
+promise any thing, I will do any thing that can relieve your
+mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you indeed do any thing that I ask?” said Fanny,
+looking up from her tears with a face in which beamed a high
+and lofty hope: “Then, all I ask of you is, to be happy:
+and to be truly so, you must place all your happiness in him;
+you must let no other feelings interfere with what is conducive
+to his welfare, his respectability. Promise this, Isabella, and
+I ask no more.”</p>
+
+<p>“I promise you, dearest Fanny!” and, kneeling at her feet,
+her hands clasped and laid on Fanny’s knees, Isabella solemnly
+repeated, “I promise you that, for your sake, as well as for
+his own, I will love, cherish, and obey him, in sickness and in
+health, in joy and in sorrow, in poverty or in wealth: I will
+strive to be unto him a loving, dutiful, and virtuous wife.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, my own Isabella!” exclaimed Fanny, and,
+throwing themselves into each other’s arms, they mingled tears
+and embraces. At length Fanny added, “It is a weight off
+my mind that I have no longer anything concealed from you,
+Isabella; and if I could but feel sure that you, and you only,
+should know my weakness——”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I promise?”</p>
+
+<p>“Do, dearest Isabella; let me hear a vow of secrecy pass
+your lips, and I think it will go farther towards eradicating
+every vestige of former folly than anything else can do.”</p>
+
+<p>“I promise you that no one word of this day’s conversation
+shall pass my lips; and I promise that, except by my future
+conduct, you shall never be reminded of it. Will that satisfy
+you?”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span></p>
+<p>“Oh, yes, generous, kind, good Isabella! You are only too
+good, too kind, and make me feel so inferior to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Fanny, we must make haste and go into the country.
+How soon can we go? I wish we could set out to-morrow; I
+long to begin my new career; I am so afraid of growing
+worldly again in London,—I mean worldly in my inclinations;
+my actions I can control, and my vow is sacred. But how shall
+I set about opening the subject to my husband? He was really
+angry to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“What so easy, dearest Isabella? Go at once to him, and
+say you saw he was annoyed, and that you are sorry he was
+so, and that, rather than annoy him, you are ready to go whenever
+he wishes.”</p>
+
+<p>“He will think a very sudden change has come over me:
+however, I will try.”</p>
+
+<p>That evening Fanny pleaded a headache, and went to bed.
+She was totally unfitted for society, and could not have ventured
+into Lord Delaford’s presence; so that, when he came
+in, he found Isabella alone.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time he wished for company; he felt a <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i>
+with his wife awkward and unpleasant. He was displeased
+and disappointed: it was evident to him he was not
+loved as he loved, and he was not yet worked up to the point
+of accomplishing by authority, what he fain would have accomplished
+by affection: his manner was cold and abstracted.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella perceived that Fanny’s advice was not given before
+it was needed.</p>
+
+<p>After a silence of some minutes, during which she had
+twisted a note into every variety of form of which a note is
+capable, and he had turned over the leaves of a very old Review,
+in which there was not one entertaining article, she
+resolved to break the ice at once. Shaking back her long
+locks, she looked up in his face, and, holding out her hand to
+him, she said—</p>
+
+<p>“I want to make friends, Henry.” Then, smiling with a
+frankness of manner, which, when combined with any thing
+of emotion, was in her almost irresistible—“I don’t want to
+lose your affections by being obstinate and wilful, and I am
+ready to go into the country whenever you please.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you in earnest, Isabella, or am I dreaming?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am in real good earnest, and you had better take me in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>earnest, for fear my good resolutions should evaporate. I do
+really wish to go into the country, and to be very good;—as
+good as Fanny.”</p>
+
+<p>“But can you be happy with only me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I mean to try;” and she gave him a glance, such
+as a pretty woman can give when she feels she has regained
+her power, but means to use it in the most agreeable manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I am the happiest of men!” said, and thought,
+Lord Delaford.</p>
+
+<p>Reconciliations, joy and peace of mind, are totally uninteresting;
+therefore, the sooner the present story is brought
+to a close the better. Lord and Lady Delaford went almost
+immediately to Fordborough Castle—Fanny returned to her
+father. She experienced real pleasure in finding herself
+again at home, and in ministering to the comforts of her
+kind parent.</p>
+
+<p>By some odd turn of the human mind, the avowal of her
+secret feelings to the very person towards whom they were an
+injury, went farther towards eradicating them, than all her own
+reflections and resolutions. Her conscience felt lighter; she
+looked back upon them as a matter of history; and her affection
+for Isabella had warmed into a real and ardent friendship.
+Every one loves a person whom they have served,
+essentially served; and every one loves a person over whose
+conduct they feel they have great influence.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, Lord Delaford, having rode over to Elmsley
+Priory, took an opportunity of telling Fanny that he was the
+happiest of men, and that he was aware he owed all this happiness
+to her. Then did Fanny enjoy pure and unalloyed
+satisfaction! She felt she had not lived in vain: she had been
+of service to her fellow-creatures, and she felt raised in her
+own estimation.</p>
+
+<p>Isabella, meanwhile, laboured hard to put in practice all the
+good advice she had received from Fanny. The happiness
+she found she had the power of bestowing, repaid her for her
+self-denial in relinquishing the exciting pleasures of the great
+world; and before she had time to weary of her domesticity,
+she found herself in a situation which called forth other, and
+as tender, feelings.</p>
+
+<p>While she was in Italy, a premature confinement had prevented
+her knowing the engrossing affection of a mother, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>had allowed her to plunge again into the vortex of dissipation.</p>
+
+<p>A growing family is an excellent nostrum for keeping
+down an active, restless spirit. Time, health, and thoughts
+must be, in a great measure, devoted to their children, by
+those mothers who do not utterly neglect their duty; and the
+constant intercourse with such a mind as Lord Delaford’s, and
+the frequent visits which, after a time, Fanny paid at Fordborough
+Castle, gradually produced in her character a reformation
+of all that was reprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>Fanny found new objects of interest in Isabella’s children:
+she was full of occupation at home; she was her father’s
+darling. Her life was a retired one, especially when Lord and
+Lady Delaford were in London in the spring; and as there
+are not many very charming <i lang="fr">partis</i> in the immediate neighbourhood
+of Elmsley Priory, and as she would doubtless be
+somewhat difficult in her choice, and as she is no longer quite
+as young or as blooming as she has been, it is more than probable
+she may become a “single woman of a certain age.”</p>
+
+<p>Though such should be her fate, may she not be allowed to
+have an opinion, should “affairs of the heart” be discussed in
+her presence?</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="MILLY_AND_LUCY">MILLY AND LUCY.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="1" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2">Affection true and strong, and simpleness</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">His goods and chattels, and her bridal dower!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Riches more sure two wedded hearts to bless</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Than fortune’s proudest gifts in partial hour:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Unknowing to define by words the power,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">That held their spirits in that blissful thrall;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Pride cannot chill nor jealous anger sour,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Each other’s wish they evermore forestall,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And of Love’s darts and flames they never talk at all.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Manuscript Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Well, nurse, a wedding is not a merry thing, after all.
+I could not help crying bitterly to-day when my sisters were
+married, and yet it is what we have all been wishing for so
+much. I am sure papa and mamma were in the greatest of
+frights when they thought Captain Langley would sail without
+proposing to Lizzy; and when Sir Charles spoke out to papa,
+after we were all gone to bed, I never shall forget what a
+banging of doors there was, mamma popping into all our
+rooms to tell us the good news!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, poor young ladies!” said nurse Roberts, as she was
+undressing the blooming Lucy, the evening of the day on
+which two of her sisters had been safely disposed of to two
+gentlemen, the connection with whom gave great satisfaction
+to Colonel and Mrs. Heckfield.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor young ladies!” repeated Lucy in a tone of surprise:
+“why do you pity my sisters, nurse?”</p>
+
+<p>“La, Miss, I don’t justly know; but somehow ’tisn’t the
+sort of wedding as I likes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what sort of wedding do you like?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, Miss Lucy, I am an old woman, and I have old-fashioned
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>notions; but I likes to see young people marry as
+has a respect for one another.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, nurse, I am sure Captain Langley and Sir Charles
+were quite respectful. What can you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“There wasn’t no time, Miss, no time for them to get to
+have a respect for one another. I have heard talk of love at
+first sight, to be sure, but to my mind there wasn’t no love at
+all; and that’s the truth of it. ’Tis my belief the Captain
+he wanted to take a wife to India, because, as I’ve heard say,
+ladies are scarce there, and here there’s more of a choice;
+and Sir Charles he wanted a lady to sit at t’other end of the
+table, and be civil and genteel to the gentlefolks when they
+comes a visiting to him; and as for poor Miss Sophy and
+Miss Lizzy, I don’t see that they liked these two gentlemen
+a bit better than twenty other gentlemen as have been here at
+one time or another.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well! I never should have guessed you were so romantic,
+nurse. Do you know this is really the true spirit of romance?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! no! ’Tan’t romance, nor book-nonsense, as I’m
+talking about. But when a woman’s once married, she may
+have many trials and troubles. There’s Miss Lizzy going into
+foreign parts, and there’s no knowing what a wife may have
+to go through for her husband, first or last, whether at home
+or abroad; and if she has not a spirit in her that she does not
+care where she goes, nor what she does, as long as it’s for his
+sake, why, sometimes ’tis hard to bear.”</p>
+
+<p>“But when people marry, they marry to be happy, not to
+go through trials and troubles.”</p>
+
+<p>“And do you think, Miss, unless Miss Lizzy loves Captain
+Langley dearly, she will be happy when she is a thousand
+and a thousand miles away from her friends, and in a strange
+country? No! no! I knows what ’tis to be alone among
+strangers, and I knows ’twould have been hard to bear, if it
+had not been for poor John’s sake!”</p>
+
+<p>“Were you very much in love, then, nurse?” and Lucy’s
+eye twinkled with an arch glance of amusement as she asked
+the question, for at the moment she saw reflected in the glass
+her own blooming cheeks, rounded chin, rosy lips, and flowing
+locks, and the withered face, thin lips, grey hair, and close-crimped
+cap of the old woman. “Were you very much in
+love?” she repeated, in rather a drawling sentimental tone.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span></p>
+<p>“I don’t know about that, Miss; but he was true to me,
+from the time I was quite a slip of a girl, and it would have
+been hard if I had been the one to change. I told him I
+never would; and I kept my word.”</p>
+
+<p>“And did he keep his?”</p>
+
+<p>“That he did, poor soul! There was not a better nor a
+truer-hearted man anywhere, than my poor John was. And
+though I had known some trouble before, I never knew what
+’twas really to grieve till I lost him!” The poor old woman
+gave a deep sigh; and Lucy said, in a kind and feeling tone of
+voice,—</p>
+
+<p>“Was it in America you lost your poor husband? I
+know you once were there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! sure enough was it, my dear young lady; and not
+a friend nor a relation (besides my two fatherless babes) had
+I that side of the water, when I saw my poor John put into
+the ground. ’Tis that makes me think so much about Miss
+Lizzy. I am old, Miss, and I have known troubles and
+crosses; and I can’t help looking forward to what may
+happen.”</p>
+
+<p>“But Captain Langley, you know, has friends and relations
+in India; and every body says Lizzy will have so many
+people to wait on her, and beautiful jewels, and all kinds of
+things! How could you, dear nurse, go into a foreign land,
+if you had no friends and relations there?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Miss Lucy! ’tis a long story; and you had better
+go to bed, and go to sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now do tell me to-night, nurse? I can’t go to sleep, I
+am sure; and I do feel so interested about you and your poor
+John.”</p>
+
+<p>The old woman’s heart warmed at hearing her husband’s
+name spoken so kindly; and she was nothing loth to begin
+her story.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you see, Miss, John and I, we were neighbours’
+children, and we used to come home from school by the same
+path; and we often went nutting and gathering blackberries
+together, and he was always a civil, good-tempered boy, and
+the folks used to call us the little sweethearts; and so, when
+we grew bigger, we wished to get married: but father he
+said, ‘No, by no means! he would not hear of it!’”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span></p>
+<p>“But why did your father object to such a respectable
+young man?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you see, Miss, he was a ropemaker, and was in a
+good way of business, and had got above the world; and
+John, he was only under-gardener at the Squire’s. He was a
+handy, sharp young man; but he had not any thing but just
+what he earned from week to week; and father said, he would
+not hear of no such nonsense, and we must leave off courting.
+We both saw that father was right not to agree to our marrying
+then; but we thought it hard that we were not to speak
+to each other any more. My own mother was dead; and my
+father’s second wife she aggravated him against us, and said,
+if we saw each other as usual, we should be sure to marry;
+and then he would have to keep us off the parish; and that I
+was a likely, fresh-coloured girl, and might do better for myself,
+and might get somebody who would be a help instead of
+a hindrance to the family. So I told John I would not
+marry without father’s leave, for I knew that would be wrong;
+but that I would never have any body but him, if it was ever
+so.</p>
+
+<p>”My stepmother, she never let me out of her sight, and
+always kept me to my work at home; and I never saw John
+to speak to him. Of a Sunday, when we came out of church,
+he always stood near the hand-gate, and sometimes, if there
+was only father, he opened it for us: and as long as he did
+that, I was sure he was true to me.</p>
+
+<p>“One morning, about a year after my father had said he
+would not hear no more of John Roberts, and that his girl
+should marry somebody as had a house to take her to, and
+enough to keep her when he had got her there; ’twas a Monday-morning,
+and I had washed up the tea-things, and swept
+up the hearth, and was just holding a bit of wood-embers in
+the tongs for father to light his pipe by, before he went to his
+work, when what should I see but John’s face as he went by
+the window to the door. I was like to let the tongs fall, it
+came upon me so sudden! John knocked at the door, and I
+shook all over, as if I had got the ague; for I thought, to be
+sure, father would be in a towering passion. Father, he never
+turned round; but he kept drawing in his breath to make the
+pipe light, and he said, ‘Why don’t you go and open the door,
+girl?’ So I went to the door, and opened it, and in stepped
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>John; and he said never a word to me, he only just gave me
+a look, and he went straight up to father, and said:—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Mr. Ansell, don’t take it amiss if I am come to say a
+few plain words to you. You won’t let me have your daughter—you
+think we shall come into trouble, and be a burthen upon
+you; and you think Milly can do better for herself?’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Yes!’ said my father; ‘you speak right enough.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘But Milly has told me, she’ll never have nobody but
+me; and you know, Mr. Ansell, she’s a girl of her word; and
+you know you could not get her to marry Mr. Simpkins, the
+tailor; no, nor you won’t be able to get her to marry no other
+lover, if she should have a dozen—I know you won’t; and I
+won’t have no other girl! But that’s neither here nor there—what
+I’ve got to say is this:—I have just had sent me a
+letter from my brother as is in Canada; and he tells me, if I
+want to make my fortune, I have only to take ship at Liverpool,
+and come to him at Halifax; and there, he says, any
+man as knows a little of gardening, and such like, has no more
+to do, but to get as much land as he likes, to set to work, and
+he will have a good market for his vegetables, and he can be
+made a man of in no time. He sends me money enough to
+pay my expenses out, and he says he will see that I want for
+nothing, till I get into a regular way of business. And now,
+Mr. Ansell, if Milly an’t afraid to venture over the seas with
+me, I think we shall be able to shift for ourselves; and we
+need never be no burthen to you, nor none of our friends; and
+if she won’t go,—why, I’ll go by myself; and I’ll try to
+make my fortune alone, and come back and marry her some
+day or another, please God to spare me.’”</p>
+
+<p>“What did your father say to this, nurse?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, father seemed very angry when first John began
+to speak. I looked at him, and my heart sank within me;
+then I looked at John, and his face was flushed like, and his
+eyes seemed quite bright, he was so full of hope, and I
+thought I could never bear to disappoint him. My stepmother
+had come in when she heard John’s voice, and so
+father turned to her, and said,—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well, Sarah, what do you think of this young chap’s
+notion? I don’t much like to have my Milly go away from
+me altogether, and beyond seas too; though she has been a
+little testy, or so, about John—I don’t half like it!’</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
+<p>“I felt so, I did not know what to do; and I began to
+cry and to sob; and John said to me then,—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Milly,’ said he, ‘speak your mind. Do you think you
+could venture across the water, all the way to America, with
+me? You know I’ll work hard for you, and I’ll be as tender
+of you as if you were a babe; and whichever way it is, I’ll be
+true to you, if so be I live.’</p>
+
+<p>“Then father said,—‘Milly, if you an’t willing to go
+along with him, why there’s an end of it at once, and so speak
+out.’</p>
+
+<p>“I looked at John again, and the longest day I have to
+live I never shall forget his face that minute. He was as
+pale as ashes, and his two eyes were fixed on me with such a
+beseeching look! I thought I could do any thing, and bear
+any thing, sooner than have him go quite away by himself,
+and so I said,—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Father, I am ready to go anywhere that John takes me
+to; I know he will always be kind to me. I an’t afraid with
+him.’</p>
+
+<p>“Poor John! To be sure, how his face did change! his
+colour came again, and he looked up so proud and so kind
+like! I thought nothing would be a trouble to me for his
+sake then.</p>
+
+<p>“Father did not half like what I answered; but his wife
+was very good-natured, and said, that perhaps we should do
+very well in America; she had a cousin once that made a
+great fortune somewhere beyond seas, and that it was very
+true what John said, we should be no burthen to our friends
+when we were so far off.”</p>
+
+<p>“She was evidently very glad to get rid of you,” interrupted
+Lucy.</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe ’twas so, for sometimes father and she had words
+about me. Father never could bear to see me put upon;
+however that was, she was very kind now, and by degrees we
+brought father to think about it. And then John, he had to
+tell him we must get married out of hand, for the ship was to
+sail in a week, and we had to go to Liverpool, and to buy the
+things as were wanted on board ship.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only a week! That was very short notice indeed!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Miss, and father flew out sadly at first. But there
+was no help for it, if I went at all. So John went to the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>minister, and talked to him about it, and the minister helped
+him how to get a licence; and on the Tuesday, John walked
+to the town, seven miles off, and he bought a licence, and a
+deal of money he paid for it; but his sister gave him something
+towards it, and he bought the wedding-ring, and he
+came to me Tuesday evening, and showed them both to me,
+and I thought to be sure it was a dream. Next morning I
+was to be married, and I dressed myself as neat as I could.’</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, by the by, what did you do for wedding clothes?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I had a light-coloured gown as good as new, and
+the minister’s daughter gave me a new straw bonnet, and my
+stepmother gave me her second-best shawl, and we went to
+church, and my little sister was bridesmaid, and all the girls
+round about, as I knew, came to the wedding. Poor father,
+how he did cry! and the minister, he was obliged to stop
+once, and put down the book to wipe his eyes. He said it
+was awful to see two such young things going out into the
+wide world, so left to themselves like—but he was not
+against it, for all that; and John, he cried too. The rector
+told father he had never seen so many people crying at a
+wedding in all his ministry. Well, it was a sad day to us
+all; now that I was married to John, and was sure I was not
+going to lose him, it almost broke my heart to see father take
+on so, and to look round at the chairs and tables, and the
+dresser I had cleaned so many times, and the plates and jugs
+and cups I took such pride to set in order, and the strings
+of birds’ eggs as I had hung over the chimney-piece, with
+two peacock’s feathers John and I had picked up in the
+Squire’s park, and the sweet-brier we had planted when we
+were children, and which grew up quite tall by the house.
+Ah, sure, it seems all as plain before me as if it was yesterday.
+Father sat with his hands on the top of his stick, and his
+chin resting on his hands, looking at the fire, and he took
+little notice of any of us. My stepmother, she was bustling
+about, and seemed to wish to do all she could for us the last
+day.</p>
+
+<p>“Next morning, Thursday, we parted from father, and
+brothers, and sisters, and all, and we got on the top of the
+coach, and we went off so fast, it made me quite dizzy as it
+were. We got to Liverpool, Friday evening; I seemed as
+though I was lost in that great busy place, but, whenever
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>John saw me begin to look sad or frightened, he thanked me
+so for coming along with him, that I felt I cared for nothing
+as long as he was contented.</p>
+
+<p>“On the Saturday we got all the things they said we must
+take in the ship with us, for there are shops as sell every thing
+ready to hand. And Sunday we went to church for the first
+time together as man and wife, and for the last time together
+in our own country. As we came out of the church-door,
+John said to me, ‘Milly, I am glad we have been able to go
+to church together once more in Old England; we don’t know
+what places of worship there may be in this new country.
+But we can read our Bible wherever we go.’</p>
+
+<p>“The vessel was to sail Monday, just one week from the
+day John surprised us so as I was making our own little
+kitchen tidy at home. We were all on board ship early in
+the morning. To be sure, how frightened I was! but I had
+made up my mind not to be down-hearted, and I bore up
+against it all. We had a good passage, and, as soon as we
+had got our little matters safe on shore, we set out to look for
+John’s brother, who kept a shop for seeds and such like; we
+soon found the shop, but it was a sad time for us when we
+got there. But la, Miss,—there’s the clock striking twelve,
+and you not in bed! What will your mamma say to me for
+keeping you awake with my old woman’s tales? but it is not
+often I talk of by-gone days, and when once I begin I hardly
+know how to stop.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="2" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">What spirit e’er so gentle shall be found,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">So softly reared in humble privacy;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">What form so fragile on wide earth’s vast round,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shrinking from every blast beneath the sky,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That will not brave severest destiny.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Bear, uncomplaining, want and cruel wrong,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And look on danger with unblenching eye,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">If love have made that gentle spirit strong,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Love, pure, approved by Heav’n, led that frail form along.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Manuscript Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lucy would not hear of going to bed till she had heard the
+rest of Milly’s adventures.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span></p>
+<p>“You must go on, nurse. I cannot let you stop—you
+know I love any story, and you know I love you, and so you
+may guess how much I must be interested.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very good, Miss, to say so. Mine’s a very plain
+homely tale, but you always was a kind young lady, and
+somehow, when I have got over the first talking about my
+poor husband, and all our troubles, I can’t say but there is a
+kind of pleasure, like, in going over it all again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now there’s a good nurse, mind you tell me every thing.
+What had happened when you got to your brother-in-law’s?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! poor man! he was dead—dead and buried. He
+died just three weeks after he wrote to John; and, though the
+widow kept on the shop, she could not do for us as he would
+have done. Poor soul! she was left with five young children,
+and she was almost beside herself with care and trouble. However,
+she took us in, and told us we should not have to pay
+for lodging while we stayed there, but she could not afford to
+keep us. She told John who was the proper person to apply
+to, to get what they call a grant of land, and he went next
+day to see about it, for he was loth to be a burthen to the poor
+widow.</p>
+
+<p>“He found he could not get any garden nor any land near
+the town, but he must go a great way off to the back woods,
+where there were new settlers, and where he must cut down
+the trees and dig up the soil fresh for himself. This was a
+great disappointment, and he lost a deal of time trying if he
+could not get something that would suit better. But you see,
+ma’am, every thing goes by interest in one country just like
+another; and now his brother was gone he had nobody to put
+in a good word for him, and he found there was no use in
+haggling on any longer. So he set about buying the goods
+and the tools which they said were quite necessary for a new
+settler, and by the time he had got his grant of land, and had
+bought his things, all our money was pretty well gone, and I
+was not in a way to be much of a help to him. Poor John!
+He said he would not have me begin a long journey in this
+condition, and when I got to the end of it have no roof over
+my head, and be in a lonesome place with nobody to do for
+me when the time of my trouble came. My sister-in-law was
+very good, and she promised to take care of me. She got me
+needlework, and I could earn enough for my own keep; and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>so John set off all alone to this land that was to be his. He
+was to get the trees felled, and a log-house built, and some
+ground trenched, and every thing quite comfortable in a manner;
+and he was to come back for me in the spring. I did
+not half like this. As long as I was with him I felt as if I
+could do any thing; but when he was gone, I don’t know
+how it was, but I had no spirit to any thing. But he would
+not let me go. He said, ‘No! he had told father I should
+be treated tenderly, and he would never let me be worse off
+than the very gipsies in Old England.’</p>
+
+<p>“The autumn seemed very long to me; but I worked
+hard, and earned enough to get every thing nice for my baby,
+and to have a few household things ready to take with me
+when the spring came. After my child was born, I began to
+grow quite happy with thinking how pleased John would be
+to see it. I had got together all my little goods, and had
+packed them up, and I was waiting every day for him to
+come. I thought every step I heard at the door might be
+him; for there was no post in those outlandish parts, and I
+had only heard from him twice by a private hand since he
+went. One day I was startled by hearing a strange voice ask
+for me. It was not John, I knew well enough; and there
+came such a fright over me I could not answer, nor I could
+not go to the door. Though I was always wishing John
+would come, and wondering he did not, yet it never before
+came into my head to be frightened, I felt so sure he would
+come at last; but I don’t know how it was, I thought now
+there was something bad in store for me.</p>
+
+<p>“My sister-in-law went to the door, and she brought me
+up a letter. It was in his own hand-writing. But when I
+had got it, I could hardly read it, I was in such a hurry, and
+all over in such a tremble. However, it told me he had been
+very ill; he had had a bad rheumatic fever, and was not able
+to come for me yet; but he was getting better, and hoped to
+be able to set off before summer came. I made up my mind
+directly what I would do—to set off the next day as ever
+came, and go to him. So I went down stairs to the man as
+brought me the letter, and I asked him which was the road,
+and what were the names of the places I had to go through,
+and how I was to find out his settlement. I was a pretty
+middling scholar, so I wrote it all down from his mouth.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>That night I packed up my bundle, and I sold the linen and
+things I had bought, for I could not carry them, and I knew
+I should want the money. My sister-in-law lent me a little
+she was able to spare, and next morning I set out. I reckoned
+I could walk fifteen miles a-day, and that, as it was three
+hundred miles up the country, it would take me about three
+weeks to get to him. I was very tired the first day, for I had
+to carry my bundle on my back, and my child in my arms;
+but I did not care. I thought so of getting to John, I hardly
+knew that I was tired. I found a decent little inn, and a civil
+woman, who made me pretty comfortable that night, and I
+had nothing to complain of for several days more; but after
+a week or thereabouts, the country was very bare, and there
+were but few houses to be seen. One day I had to walk better
+than twenty miles before I could get taken in, and, after all,
+the place was a miserable hovel, and the woman as kept it was
+so old, and dirty, and smoky, and she spoke so short to me,
+and looked at me so sharp, that I felt frightened, and almost
+sorry, when, after a little haggling, she let me into the hut.
+It seemed to belong to her; but some men who came in after
+me, ordered her about as if they were masters of her and all
+she had; and she did not think of refusing them any thing,
+and they swore at her terribly, and made themselves quite at
+home. I had got away into the inner room when I saw them
+coming, and I never went back into the kitchen. The old
+woman seemed no ways anxious that I should. I begged her
+to let me lie down, and she said I might do as I would; so I
+tried to get some rest; but I could see these men through the
+chinks of the logs, and I could hear most of what they said.
+They drank, and they sang, and, by their way of talking, I
+think they led a rough sort of robber-like life; but I could
+not half understand what they said. At last they rolled themselves
+up on the floor, and went to sleep, and I went to sleep
+too. All my little stock of money, which was getting very
+low, but which was my only dependence for reaching my poor
+husband, was under my pillow, and I resolved I would not
+part with it if I could help it. In the middle of the night
+my child began to cry; I felt sure these strange men would
+wake and rob me, and perhaps murder me too. I heard one
+move, and I could see him sit up, rub his eyes, stretch himself,
+and he wondered what the noise could be; but I managed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>to pacify the child, and he settled himself again. To be sure,
+I was glad when I heard him breathe quite hard! I did not
+sleep any more that night, and by day-break the hunters (for
+they had guns, and powder-pouches, and bags—so I suppose
+they were hunters) were astir, and left the hut. I asked the
+old woman who they were, and which way they were likely to
+take; but she did not like being questioned, and so, when I
+thought they had been gone about an hour, I set out again on
+my lonesome journey.</p>
+
+<p>“That day the road lay through a great forest of very tall
+trees, taller than any trees we have here. I never did feel so
+lonesome before; there was not a creature to be seen anywhere,
+and the tall trees made the road so dreary, and it was
+all dark and hollow each side; for in those great woods the
+trees stand clear of each other, and there is no underwood,
+nor bushes, nor briers, but the boles go up straight, and
+the branches meet at top, and one may go miles and miles
+and never see the blue sky over one’s head. There was
+no telling what might come out from those dismal hollows,
+and I kept looking round every minute, and trying to see into
+them, but ’twas impossible: I could see the trunks of the
+trees for a little way, and then ’twas all as black as night. It
+made one feel so alone, and yet one did not know what might
+be near one; and I thought what would become of me if I
+was benighted in this dreary place; and I thought of the
+wild Indians, and of the bears, and of my poor innocent
+babe; but then I thought again of my husband on his sick-bed,
+and I took courage.</p>
+
+<p>“It was past the middle of the day, and the sun had sunk
+some way below those tall dark trees, when I sat down to
+rest myself, and to drink from a clear stream by the roadside.
+I was wondering how much farther it could be to the end of
+the forest, where I had been told I should find something of a
+decent hut, when I was startled at hearing voices and the
+report of a gun; and presently three of the men who had
+passed the night in the old woman’s hovel came out from
+among the gloomy trees on the other side.</p>
+
+<p>“They looked surprised to see me, and came straight up to
+me. I don’t know how it was, but when the time came I did
+not seem so timid as I thought I should. I remembered how
+poor I was, and it could not be no object to any body to rob me;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>and I knew I was doing my duty in going to my husband, and
+I thought God would protect me. I sat quite still, and did not
+tremble nor shake. One of them asked me how I came
+there? So I told him the truth, and spoke quite civil, and
+yet, as it were, bold and steady, that I was walking from
+Halifax to my husband at the far settlement. So another of
+the men said, quite sharp—‘If you have got a husband, he
+had better keep a sharper look-out after such a tight lass as
+you are.’</p>
+
+<p>“The first man said—‘You have got a long journey
+before you, my girl.’</p>
+
+<p>“And I answered, ‘Yes, sir; but I have got safe through
+more than half of it, and I hope, with the blessing of God, to
+get safe through the rest of it to my husband, to nurse him in
+his illness.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘Oh! he’s ill, that’s it,’ said the second.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Well, you can’t be travelling all this way without
+money,’ says the third, who had not spoken yet.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Come, come, poor girl,’ interrupted the first, and gave a
+wink to the last speaker, ‘we won’t hinder your journey any
+longer: you had better push on, or you’ll be in the dark.’
+And he took the other by the arm, and he seemed to persuade
+them both to go away; and when I saw them go off into the
+woods again, I thanked God for his goodness, and thought he
+was indeed a Father to the fatherless, and that he never did
+desert them as put their trust in him in the time of their
+need.</p>
+
+<p>“I hugged my baby close, and quite forgot how tired I
+had been a little while before, and walked and ran till it was
+nearly dark, when the trees grew thinner, and I thought I
+could see lights glimmer in the distance. I made all the haste
+I could, and at last I got to a small settlement of half a dozen
+log-houses. I stopped at the first door, and I never felt so
+happy as when I saw a light, and a fire, and a woman’s face
+again. She had a child in her arms too, and I felt quite
+safe.</p>
+
+<p>“Next day I was very tired, and the woman at the little
+inn wished me to stay all day, and rest myself; but when I
+was walking and toiling, I did not feel so much about John:
+the moment I was still, I thought how ill he might be, and I
+could not bear to keep quiet. Besides, the woman’s husband
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>was going part of the same road, to make a bargain about
+some furs; so he kept me company through the rest of the
+forest, and he begged the fur-merchants, as he came to speak
+to, that they would see me safe to the village where I was to
+stop that night. This day my baby began to grow fretful,
+and no wonder; for, though I did the best I could for it,
+’twas next to impossible to get any thing fit for a baby at the
+places I stopped at, and I lived so hard myself that I made
+but a poor nurse.</p>
+
+<p>“My shoes were quite worn out, and my feet were so sore,
+I thought I must afford myself a pair of shoes, as I should
+not have another opportunity. They were very dear, for
+every thing was brought from Halifax. I was sorry afterwards
+I did not make shift without them. Next morning my baby
+was so ill I went to the doctor, for there was a doctor there,
+and they said he was the only real doctor anywhere for miles
+and miles. He gave me something as quieted the child; but,
+when I had paid for this too, my purse was so low, I began
+to fear I should not have enough to buy me any thing to eat
+after the two next days; and as for begging, I had never been
+brought up to think of such a thing. I touched nothing but
+the coarsest and cheapest food I could get, and drank nothing
+but cold water, and I walked farther each day to get sooner to
+the end of my journey. I was almost worn out, and (as I
+reckoned) I had still three days’ travelling between me and
+my husband when I paid away my last farthing. I scarcely
+hoped ever to reach him, but I walked on till I got to a small
+settlement, and then I sat down by the way-side, and thought
+what should I do?</p>
+
+<p>“I could not help crying, and thinking what would father
+say if he could see me then; and it hurt me so! for I knew
+he would feel angry with John, and fancy it was through him
+his child was brought into such trouble, and forced to beg her
+bread; for there was no help for it, if I wished to see my
+husband, and not to let my baby die, I must that night ask
+charity of strangers. So I knocked at the nearest door, and I
+told my story, and asked for food and lodging. I have often
+thought, a mother with her infant in her arms has something
+which goes to the hearts of their fellow-creatures, if they have
+any kindness left in them. I’m sure I never see a poor
+beggar-woman with a baby at the door but I think of myself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>that weary night, and I never have the heart to send them
+away without some little trifle, though, maybe, I’m often imposed
+upon.</p>
+
+<p>“Well! the man as opened the door took pity upon us
+directly, and bade me come in and sit by the fire. His
+daughter, a nice girl of fourteen, brought us some potatoes
+and some milk, and let me share her bed. They would have
+given me enough to pay my way for the next two days if they
+had had it to give; but I was forced to ask charity again that
+night, but it did not seem to give me such a choking in the
+throat as it did the first time; and I thought how soon we
+lose our spirit when we get low in the world, and how easy it
+is to go on from bad to worse! The next night I hoped to
+get to my husband. They told me to keep along the banks
+of a great river on my left, where there was something of a
+path, but ’twas so overgrown with the long rank grass, ’twas not
+easy to find. The new settlement was near the river-side, for
+the trees, which the settlers cut some way higher up, drifted
+down the river till they came to this place, where the ground
+was particular rich, and then they pulled them ashore, and
+built themselves log-houses. There were about seven families
+together, as they told me, and my husband’s house was the
+farthest but one. How my poor heart did beat all the way I
+went! I longed so to get there, and I dreaded it so too. I
+walked on and on, and still I saw no people, nor no huts, nor
+no fields, and I began to think I must have come wrong; for,
+though it was all open and flat, I could not see very far before
+me, for the grass was long, and the rushes very tall, sometimes,
+by the river-side. Of all the day’s journeys I had
+come, this did seem to me the longest; but I suppose ’twas
+only because I was so impatient to get to the end of it. I
+looked at the sun, and it was not above half-way down. Just
+then there was a rise in the road, and I could see some smoke,
+and the roofs of some low huts, and some little patches of
+ground that were cultivated, and I strained my eyes to try
+and make out the last but one. I don’t know how I got over
+the ground, but I soon did reach the first house, and I saw a
+child at play, and I asked him which was John Roberts’s. I
+could hardly breathe while he answered, ‘He lives out yonder.’
+He lives! and when I heard him say that, I first knew I had
+been afraid of never seeing John again.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span></p>
+<p>“I ran as well as I could to the hut. It looked wretched
+and half finished; the door was ajar—I pushed it open—there
+was nobody in the kitchen—I heard no noise—I listened—I
+did not dare step on. Just then my child cried,
+and a voice from within said, in a hollow tone, ‘Who’s
+there?’ I ran into the bed-room, and there lay my husband,
+sick, pale, and weak, but it was my husband alive, and all
+seemed well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, nurse,” exclaimed Lucy, “I never heard any thing
+half so interesting in my life. Poor souls! and how was your
+husband? He got well?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Miss, he did get well after a time. He fretted so
+much to think he could not go for me, that it had kept him
+back, and he had nobody to make him any thing nice, nor to
+do for him; leastways not to do for him as I could, though
+the neighbours looked in now and then and made his bed, and
+boiled his potatoes for him, and such like. Sure! how overjoyed
+he was to see me, and how pleased he was to see the
+babe. He soon began to mend, and then he was so vexed to
+think he had not been able to get the place to rights a bit before
+I came.</p>
+
+<p>“The fence outside was all broken down, and the garden
+was only half-planted; but I had not been there a fortnight
+before I got it all to look quite different. I cleaned up the
+house, and settled the few things he had got in it, and I
+helped him to mend the fence, and he was soon able to dig
+again, and the things grow very quick in that rich soil, and
+our house and garden were quite decent, and we were so glad
+to be together again, that we did not see no faults in any
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>“In the winter-time John had been lucky in shooting, and
+had sold some furs for enough to buy him a cow, and some
+chickens; and then, being a pretty middling gardener, he had
+helped his neighbours, and put them in the way to crop their
+gardens as they should be; and most of them gave him a
+trifle, some one thing and some another, so that now he was
+pretty well, and I was there to keep matters tidy, we were
+very comfortable. The winter was cold and long, and in the
+spring he had another touch of that nasty fever, as was so
+common in them low swampy grounds. In the summer I
+had my Betsy—you know my Betsy, as is married to Farmer
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>Crofts?—some of the neighbours were very kind to me, and
+I got over it pretty well. Of a Sunday we used to read our
+Bible together, and think how true John’s saying was, when
+we came out of church at Liverpool, that there was no knowing
+what places of worship we might find where we were
+going to. But John often said all places might be made places
+of worship if one had but the mind to it, whether it was a real
+church, or the tall, dark, still woods, or the damp wide savannah,
+or our own log-hut; and so, I hope, when we read
+our prayers there, it did us as much good as if there had been
+a minister and a pulpit, and all as it should be.</p>
+
+<p>“I believe I was too happy then for it to last. With the
+spring came the rheumatic fever again, and my poor husband
+was quite laid up. He could not do any thing, and he
+fretted so to think his land was not trenched, nor any thing
+seen to! and, what with the children, and the house, and the
+cow, and the things out of doors, and poor John to nurse, I
+had more than one pair of hands could well do. This would
+not have signified if John had but mended when the summer
+came, but he got worse and worse. He was so weak, and he
+suffered a deal of pain, and there was no doctor. Then I did
+wish we had never left England, and I thought it would have
+been better we should both have worked and laboured in our
+own country, till we had got old, and earned enough to marry
+upon. But we did for the best; and if John was so set upon
+coming, even without me, why, then, it was best I came too,
+for he had some one to do for him. It was all written, I
+suppose; and perhaps ’twas for our good—but this was hard,
+very hard to bear.</p>
+
+<p>“One evening I had got the children off to sleep, and I
+had taken my bit of work, and was sitting by John’s bedside,
+when he said to me—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Milly, you must not stay here when I am gone. If you
+sell all the little matters we have got together here, you’ll
+have enough to pay your journey to Halifax, and your passage
+home too, as I reckon. Your father will be good to you, I
+think—I hope. Tell him I meant for the best when I persuaded
+you to come.’</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Miss Lucy, I never thought to see that day: I had
+always hoped I should have been the first to go. But it
+pleased God otherwise.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
+<p>The poor old woman sat with her apron to her eyes, in
+quiet, silent tears. Lucy took one of her withered hands, and
+pressing it between her own, told her, with tears in her eyes,
+how much she felt for her, and how much she admired her
+husband’s kind and manly character. She found this was the
+chord to which, after so many years, the old nurse’s heart
+still vibrated.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Miss Lucy,” and her faded eyes flashed with almost
+youthful brightness; “he was the kindest-hearted, the truest-hearted,
+and the bravest-hearted man as ever lived. He feared
+nothing, but to do wrong, and to part with me. His thoughts
+were always on me; and when he was taken, the last words
+he ever spoke were, ‘my own Milly,’ and the last look he ever
+gave was for me, and my hand felt the last pressure his ever
+gave.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy’s tears flowed fast. She had read many novels, but
+the fictitious woes of their heroines did not seem to her half
+so touching as her old nurse’s plain story.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Miss Lucy, I buried him there; he lies by the
+banks of that great river, and there’s the roaring sea, and
+miles and miles of dreary land between me and my poor John;
+and, what’s more, when I die, we shan’t lie near each other;
+that frets me sadly sometimes; but he told me to come home,
+and so, Miss, I could not do no other. I thought when I turned
+my back on the log-hut, where we had passed some such
+happy days together, and when I passed by the place where
+he was buried, at the other end of the settlement, I thought
+my heart must have broke; and, if it had not been for the
+children, I should have thought it a mercy if it had.</p>
+
+<p>“There was some people going to Halifax, and I travelled
+with them. I fancied myself in trouble when I went that
+road before, but now I thought how happy I was then, for I
+was going to see my husband’s face again. But God is very
+merciful, he never gives us more than we can bear. I bore it
+all, and I got to Halifax, and I went to my sister-in-law.
+She was a kind woman, and she was sorry for me, for she
+knew what it was to be a widow. I took my passage on board
+a vessel for England, and I and my two children left America.
+Though my husband’s grave was so far up the country, I felt
+when I left the land, as if I was more parted from him than
+ever. But ’twas on board ship that I learned to be thankful
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>to God for what was left, and not to grieve too much for any
+of his creatures. My little boy sickened and died, and he was
+not buried, decently buried in the earth, but my poor child
+was thrown into the sea. I could not get over that for a long
+time. It did seem so unnatural like. But I learned then
+never to think myself so low, but what God might afflict me
+more, and I learned to be grateful for my Betsy. And she
+has been a blessing to me—a kind and a dutiful girl—and
+one as will never let her old mother come to want, as she gets
+in years.”</p>
+
+<p>“My poor, dear nurse,” exclaimed Lucy, “I can’t bear to
+think I should ever have been a naughty pettish child, and
+have plagued and worried you when I was little, and you with
+all these heavy afflictions on your mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord bless your sweet heart! you never plagued me;
+and, as for your little vagaries, I believe they made me love
+you all the better.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="3" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">“Il faut très peu de fond pour la politesse dans les manières: il en faut beaucoup
+pour celle de l’esprit.”</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap right">La Bruyere.</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This simple history of such interesting feelings made Lucy
+reflect a good deal. She looked back on her sisters’ courtships
+and weddings, and could not persuade herself they had either
+felt or inspired sentiments half so noble, or so disinterested, as
+John’s and Milly’s; and she resolved, in her own mind, she
+would never marry unless she was really in love—very much
+in love.</p>
+
+<p>It seldom happens that people, on the subject of matrimony,
+act according to the plan they have proposed to themselves.
+The girl who settles she will marry a tall dark man,
+is sure to marry a little fair man; the man who resolves he
+will have a meek and gentle wife, is caught by some wild
+coquette, to whom he tamely submits for the sake of a quiet
+life. So the young lady, who has made up her mind that
+love is folly, and that, if she repents, it shall be in a coach and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>six, runs away with a pennyless captain; and Lucy, though
+extremely anxious to emulate Milly, never found the object to
+which she could thus devote herself, and ended by repenting
+in a coach and six.</p>
+
+<p>In the empty dandies and lounging officers who frequented
+L——, the watering-place near which Colonel Heckfield’s
+small property was situated, she saw nothing superior to Captain
+Langley, or to Sir Charles Selcourt; and Nurse Roberts
+had decidedly not thought Sophy or Lizzy in love with either.
+But she was very young, and she had plenty of time to look
+about her. Her three elder sisters were married; her two
+younger ones had not yet emerged from the school-room; her
+numerous brothers looked on her as the pet and the beauty of
+the family, and they all reckoned she was to captivate something
+brilliant in the way of a <i lang="fr">parti</i>. There was a floating wish in
+her mind to be heroically devoted, as, through her homely language,
+she perceived Milly Roberts had been; and yet a desire
+not to disappoint the expectations of father, mother, brothers,
+sisters, and governess.</p>
+
+<p>All their acquaintances exclaimed at the good fortune of the
+Heckfields.</p>
+
+<p>“They did not know how Mrs. Heckfield managed it, but
+her daughters no sooner appeared than they were snapped up—they
+were pretty, certainly. Harriet, the eldest, was a fine
+rosy girl, but she never had an air of fashion. Lizzy had
+pretty eyes and fine teeth, but her features were decidedly bad.
+Sophy had a beautiful figure, but she was so pale!” (Sir
+Charles Selcourt thought that a little rouge would make her
+look exceedingly well at the head of his table.) Lucy was the
+beauty, so they supposed she looked very high.</p>
+
+<p>About this time Lord Montreville came to the watering-place
+of L——. He had but lately succeeded to the title of
+his elder brother; having passed through the career of a gallant
+gay Lothario, with the reputation of having been the most
+irresistible, and the most discreet, but the most general of
+lovers.</p>
+
+<p>As the charming, but half-ruined Lord Arthur Stansfeld, he
+had been safe from the machinations of mammas; but the
+hearts of the daughters had not been safe from his. Secure
+in the impossibility of his being considered as an eligible <i lang="fr">parti</i>
+for the very lovely and high-born beauties who alone could
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>attract his notice, he had not feared to pay such attentions as
+generally excited a preference on the part of the young ladies.
+As to the married women, whose names had been coupled with
+his, in a manner more gratifying to his vanity than to their
+honour, the list would be painfully long. Still he had avoided
+any <i lang="fr">éclat</i>, and no one could accuse him of betraying, by a word
+or a look, any consciousness of his own powers of attraction.
+On the contrary, he preserved enough of the tone of the <i lang="fr">vieille
+cour</i> to make his manner respectful and devoted, and he had
+acquired enough of the ease of the present day to prevent its
+being the least formal. He had arrived at that age when, if
+he had not been so good-looking, so attentive to his dress, so
+lively in society, he would have been called by the young an
+old man; but, as it was, he was only called an agreeable man,
+without any reference being made to the number of years that
+had passed over his head. Having now succeeded to the family
+title and estates, he began for the first time to think seriously
+of marriage. But every charm which had formerly proved
+attractive to him now filled him with alarm. He had had
+every opportunity of becoming acquainted with the foibles and
+the faults of ladies of fashion, and none of estimating their
+good qualities. He regarded with suspicion style, manner,
+vivacity, talents, grace; and he resolved to choose some young,
+unsophisticated creature whom he could mould according to
+his own views, and who should be as unlike as possible to all
+those with whom he had had any former connexion.</p>
+
+<p>He was accidentally introduced to Lucy, and she appeared
+to him precisely the thing of which he was in search. She
+was decidedly very pretty, and lacked nothing but what a
+week’s tuition would give, to have <i lang="fr">un air distingué</i>. Her
+head was small—it was naturally well put on. Her figure
+was slender, her foot was not large; and, though her hands
+were a little red, they were well-shaped. Some almond-paste,
+the best shoemaker, and Mademoiselle Hyacinthe, would set
+all quite right. He thought he should not alter the style of
+her coeffure. The back of her head was so Grecian in its
+contour, she might venture upon her own simple twist and long
+ringlets.</p>
+
+<p>Having thus made up his mind, he proceeded to ingratiate
+himself with the family. There was a public ball at the concert-rooms,
+and thither he went.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
+<p>He never danced: he knew he was too old, and he never
+affected youth. But, when Lucy was dancing, she often
+found his large, intelligent, expressive eyes fixed on her from
+beneath the very dark eyebrows which shaded them, without
+giving them any look of harshness. She felt flattered, without
+being distressed, for the expression was that of kindly pleasure
+in seeing a lovely young woman innocently gay. The gaze
+expressed that he did think her lovely, though it contained
+nothing that could alarm the most shrinking modesty.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the evening he conversed a good deal with
+Mrs. Heckfield, in whose common-place remarks he seemed to
+find much pith and substance.</p>
+
+<p>Between the dances, when Lucy returned to her mother, he
+rose to give her his seat, not as if he was merely doing an act
+of common courtesy, but as if it afforded him real heart-felt
+pleasure to be of any possible use to her, and it was with
+kindliness, rather than gallantry, that he flew to fetch her some
+tea, or some lemonade.</p>
+
+<p>He handed Mrs. Heckfield to supper, and sat between her
+and Lucy, who found her partner quite dull and stupid, in
+comparison with this very agreeable new acquaintance. He
+did not talk much; he said nothing which she could afterwards
+remember as being either clever or amusing. But he
+had a manner of listening with a deferential air, his eyes fixed
+with attention on the speaker, while his countenance seemed
+to say, the remark made was new and luminous, something
+which had never struck him before, so that people believed
+themselves delighted with him, while, in truth, they were delighted
+with themselves.</p>
+
+<p>In a cabinet-council, Colonel and Mrs. Heckfield agreed
+that, as he appeared to find so much pleasure in their society,
+they might venture to ask Lord Montreville to dinner. But
+who to invite to meet him? That was a question of much
+consideration. The Bexleighs were agreeable, but they were
+so numerous, that it would make the party dull to have so
+many of one family. It is dreadful if members of the same
+household get near each other; they cannot seize that moment
+for talking of family affairs, neither can they make conversation
+like strangers.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us have the Thompsons, my dear,” said the Colonel.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
+<p>“La! Colonel Heckfield! Mrs. Thompson! so fat and
+vulgar, and Mr. Thompson, so silent, unless you talk of stocks
+or consols.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, then, Colonel Danby and his daughter.”</p>
+
+<p>“They will do pretty well; but I was thinking of Mrs.
+Haughtville, who, you know, has always lived in the first
+circles.”</p>
+
+<p>“What! that deaf old woman? I can’t see of what use
+she can be.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my dear, it won’t do to ask just common-place
+country neighbours. We must get somebody Lord Montreville
+is likely to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very true! And then my friend Dolby, he knows every
+body, and can talk thirteen to the dozen.”</p>
+
+<p>“He knows every body who has been in India, but I very
+much suspect he does not know any body that Lord Montreville
+would think any body,” answered the lady, who never
+could endure her husband’s jolly friend, who certainly did eat,
+drink, talk, and laugh thirteen to the dozen, but who, she not
+unwisely thought, would be a very bad ingredient in this refined
+party; “Surely Sir James Ashgrove, the member for
+the county, would be a better person; we can give him a bed,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well—Ashgrove is a good fellow, and a sensible
+fellow, but he never gives you much of his conversation, unless
+you talk of the last division in Parliament, and then he will
+tell you which way every member voted, and the reasons of
+his vote into the bargain.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he is a man of good birth and good connexions,
+and quite a friend of the family besides; James’s godfather
+and all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then, if we ask our good parson and his two daughters,
+we shall have quite enough. I don’t like a great let-off; it is
+much best to take matters quietly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good heavens, Colonel Heckfield! you cannot be in earnest.
+What! that old proser, who makes a comma between
+every word, and a full stop nowhere! and those two Misses,
+one as old as the hills, and the other as giggling a girl as ever
+I saw. Besides. Lucy and she will get laughing and gossiping
+together, and Lucy never appears to advantage when Bell
+Stopford is with her.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
+<p>“Whom had we best have then, my love?” responded the
+Colonel, who began to be weary of the discussion.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, first of all, Mrs. Haughtville,” answered Mrs.
+Heckfield, who had long ago prepared her list in her mind,
+“and Sir James Ashgrove (as <em>you</em> wish), and young Mr.
+Lyon, Lord Petersfield’s nephew, and Sir Alan Byway, the
+great traveller, and Miss Pennefeather, who wrote those sweet
+novels; she is quite the lion of these parts, and people of
+fashion like to meet a genius; and then, my dear, I thought
+of asking Lord and Lady Bodlington.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mercy upon us, wife! why I don’t know them by sight.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I do, Colonel Heckfield, and a sweet woman she is.
+I was introduced to her at the ball the other night, and it
+would be but civil to ask them to dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think it would be much better to have Mr. Denby and
+his nice daughter. But it is all the same to me; I don’t
+like running after fine folks, who care not a rush for us,
+that’s all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if Lord and Lady Bodlington cannot come, then we
+will ask the Denbys. But I really am half pledged to ask
+them, for Lady Bodlington said the other night she heard I
+had the prettiest green-house in the world: and I said I hoped
+to have the pleasure of showing it to her.”</p>
+
+<p>“But we do not dine in the green-house?”</p>
+
+<p>“I assure you, my love, I understand these little matters
+better than you do, and it would seem quite marked if we did
+not ask the Bodlingtons.”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Heckfield did not quite understand what would
+seem marked, but he acquiesced.</p>
+
+<p>The distinguished personages mentioned by Mrs. Heckfield
+proved propitious, with the exception of Sir Alan Byway,
+whose place was filled, though most inadequately filled, by a
+young shy lordling, who was at a private tutor’s in the neighbourhood.
+Mrs. Heckfield preferred him, on account of his
+name, to the Indian friend Dolby, whom Colonel Heckfield,
+on the secession of the loquacious traveller, made another attempt
+to insert.</p>
+
+<p>The eventful day arrived. Mrs. Heckfield, in her secret
+soul, was in a great fuss, though she maintained a tolerably
+placid exterior; she was so afraid, after all her pains to exclude
+any unworthy guests, that the party might prove dull, or
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>not <i lang="fr">bien assorti</i>. Colonel Heckfield was really composed and
+easy: he did not like seeking great people, but, if they fell in
+his way, they did not annoy him. The place, though small,
+was pretty; the house was <i lang="fr">bien montée</i>; there was nothing to
+be ashamed of, and he did not see how it could much signify
+whether one, out of the many pleasant, cheerful dinners, which
+had taken place under his hospitable roof, proved, or did not
+prove, the quintessence of perfection.</p>
+
+<p>Not so Mrs. Heckfield. She had settled that, on the impression
+made that day, depended the future fate of Lucy.
+When she let herself alone, she was a pleasing, popular woman;
+but on this occasion, she wished to be more elegant and well-bred
+than usual. Mrs. Haughtville being rather deaf, could
+not hear a word she said; and, as Mrs. Heckfield would not
+commit the vulgarity of speaking loud, every word they addressed
+to each other, might have figured very well in the
+game of cross questions and crooked answers. Lady Bodlington
+was a good-humoured very insipid little woman! Lord
+Bodlington the most common-place man imaginable. Mr.
+Lyon was an empty dandy, and he was unfortunately seated
+next to Miss Pennefeather, whom he regarded with horror,
+fear, detestation, and contempt, as a blue—and, worse than
+all, a country blue! Miss Pennefeather, in a yellow toque
+and red gown, sate up, waiting to be drawn out—but—she
+waited in vain. The fashionably low tone of voice in which
+the mistress of the mansion spoke, and her studied desire to be
+perfectly well-bred, communicated a <i lang="fr">gêne</i> and formality to the
+whole party, which, re-acting upon the suffering hostess,
+would have made the evening one of unmitigated pain to herself,
+and of unmitigated bore to her company, if Lord Montreville’s
+tact and good breeding had not come to the relief of
+all parties.</p>
+
+<p>He asked Miss Pennefeather some questions upon modern
+literature, which gave her an opportunity of pouring forth her
+stores of information into the ears of the loathing dandy. He
+made a remark concerning the number of members who had
+paired off upon the last important division in the last session
+of Parliament, and Sir James Ashgrove was in his element.
+He informed Lady Bodlington what was the proper name for
+that species of sable of which her boa was composed, and she
+became eloquent to prove that, whatever its name, it was of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>the most approved sort—in Paris at least—whatever it might
+be in Russia. He told young Lord Slenderdale he ought to
+look at Captain Charles Heckfield’s brown mare, for she was
+the cleverest hack he had seen for a long time, and the two
+young men soon found themselves able to speak. He complimented
+Colonel Heckfield on his wines, and Mrs. Heckfield
+on the beautiful china of which the dinner service was composed;
+and he told her in a friendly, confidential manner,
+the only place where such rare china could be matched. By
+degrees the conversation became general, and then he listened
+to each, so as to make each person—each lady at least,
+believe herself an object of interest and attention to him.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield felt quite at her ease concerning the fate of
+her dinner, and perfectly intimate with Lord Montreville, but
+not quite happy about Lucy, who, since the first awful silence,
+had given way to a comfortable universal clatter, had grown
+so merry with her brother and Lord Slenderdale, that Mrs.
+Heckfield felt convinced Lord Montreville would set her down
+in his mind as a missish hoyden, and entirely dismiss her from
+his thoughts. In vain were sundry maternal glances levelled
+at poor Lucy—knittings of the eyebrows (suddenly smoothed
+and converted into sweet smiles if any one looked her way),
+all were wasted on the unconscious girl, who, in the gaiety of
+her heart, continued to laugh and to talk till she was on the
+verge of laughing a little too loud, and, as Mrs. Heckfield
+thought, of losing a marquisate.</p>
+
+<p>But she was mistaken. Lord Montreville knew the sex
+well, and he saw that it was an innocent, gay, natural laugh—that
+there was neither freedom nor coquetry in her merriment;
+he knew how quickly women catch the tone of good
+society, and he still thought she would do.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield hastened the signal for the departure of the
+ladies, in consequence of Lucy’s ill-timed mirth, and they all
+sailed out, Lady Bodlington first, the Honourable Mrs.
+Haughtville next, Miss Pennefeather followed after, and Mrs.
+Heckfield was able quietly, but angrily, to whisper to Lucy,
+“that she giggled just as if Bell Stopford had been with
+her.”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="4" style="text-decoration: none;">IV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Il n’est pas bien honnête, et pour beaucoup de causes,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Qu’une femme étudie et sache tant de choses.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Former aux bonnes mœurs l’esprit de ses enfans,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Faire aller son ménage, avoir l’œil sur ses gens,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Et régler la dépense avec économie,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Doit être son étude et sa philosophie.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Nos pères sur ce point étaient gens bien sensés,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Qui disaient qu’une femme en sait toujours assez</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Quand la capacité de son esprit se hausse</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">A connaître un pourpoint d’avec un haut de chausse.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Les leurs ne lisaient point, mais elles vivaient bien,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Leurs ménages étaient tout leur docte entretien;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Et leurs livres, un dé, du fil, et des aiguilles,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Dont elles travaillaient au trousseau de leurs filles.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Les femmes d’à present sont bien loin de ces mœurs,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Elles veulent écrire, et devenir auteurs.—<span class="smcap">Moliere.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>There is no moment more trying to the mistress of a house
+than that in which the ladies first gather round the fire when
+they leave the dining-room. If a silence ensues, or if the
+conversation is begun in too low a tone of voice, that voiceless
+utterance which denotes and produces shyness, the die is cast—the
+character of the evening is stamped.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately Mrs. Heckfield, in her anxiety to be attentive,
+just as the ladies were crowding round the fire, asked
+them if they would not “take a seat,” and was sufficiently
+wanting in tact to allow them to settle themselves, in something
+very nearly approaching a circle, and a circle some
+way removed from the fire.</p>
+
+<p>In vain were the sofas stuffed with cushions, in vain were
+the ottomans as low as possible, and the arm-chairs so deep
+that no one under seven feet high could reach the back of
+them; in vain were all the tables so orthodoxly covered with
+snuff boxes under glass cases, miniatures in beautiful frames,
+French souvenirs with liliputian artificial flowers, annuals in
+every variety of binding, prose albums, poetry albums, drawing
+albums, china cups and Sevres vases, Dresden inkstands, and
+mother-of-pearl letter pressers, till it was impossible to find
+a spot on which a cup could be safely deposited; all these
+appliances and means to boot will not produce ease if it is
+wanting in the mind of the hostess. From which, by the by,
+might be deduced the superiority of mind over matter.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Haughtville was a fine lady, and was anxious Lady
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>Bodlington should not labour under the erroneous impression
+that she was in her element with Miss Pennefeather and the
+Heckfields. She therefore took an early opportunity of asking
+Lady Bodlington how many Miss Heckfields there were, and
+whether this Miss Heckfield was older or younger than Lady
+Selcourt. Lady Bodlington answered truly and simply, that
+she did not know, as she had only met them once before at
+the ball. Mrs. Haughtville did not hear, and Lady Bodlington,
+who was straightforward and good-humoured, and did
+not wish to be uncivil, was quite distressed to know how to
+answer. Mrs. Haughtville continued to ask questions about
+the people present, forgetting that though she asked in a
+whisper, she could not hear the whispered answer.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield, who thought if Miss Pennefeather would
+talk every one must be delighted with her cleverness, was
+occupied in leading her to subjects on which she fancied she
+would shine and edify her audience; but Miss Pennefeather,
+who had found the dandy very unsatisfactory, and was not
+much pleased with the <i lang="fr">insouciance</i> of the ladies of fashion,
+and who thought herself privileged to have the sensitive pride
+of genius, was not so easily drawn out. Lucy, who had been
+daunted by her mother’s remark as they left the dining-room,
+was meek and silent.</p>
+
+<p>It was up-hill work for Mrs. Heckfield. At length she
+thought of some Italian views which had lately been sent to
+her by her eldest son, who was on his travels.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you seen these prints, Miss Pennefeather, that
+Henry has sent me? They are quite in your way, such an
+Italian scholar as you are.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Pennefeather revived; she piqued herself on her pronunciation
+of Italian. She looked at them with interest,
+read the names of each with great emphasis, scrupulously
+called Leghorn, Livorno, and Florence, Firenze; and expatiated
+on the beauties of each place, as if she had lived
+there all her life.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you had never been abroad, Miss Pennefeather?”
+said Lucy, timidly and simply.</p>
+
+<p>“No! I have never been abroad, exactly,” replied Miss
+Pennefeather, with a slight embarrassment, but, instantly recovering,
+she added with enthusiasm, “but I have heard and
+read so much of these hallowed spots, I feel as if I knew them
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>perfectly; as if I had roved with Il Petrarca, through the
+shady groves and by the purling streams of Valchiusa; as if
+I had accompanied the great author of the Divina Commedia
+in his wanderings; and I can almost fancy I had made one
+of that party of congenial souls in the enchanted skiff with
+Guido and Lappo,</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">‘E Monna Vanna, e Monna Bice poi,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">E quella sotto ’l numer delle trenta!’</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I never see a print of La bella Firenze, without thinking of
+her exiled poet, and,” she added with a sigh, and an upward
+glance, which was intended to speak volumes, “feeling with
+him—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent18" lang="it">‘Come sa di sale</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Lo pan altrui, com’ è duro calle,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Lo scender, e ’l salir per l’altrui scale.’”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Miss Pennefeather was poor, and her friends were extremely
+kind in frequently inviting her to stay at their houses, where
+she appeared to enjoy herself exceedingly, and gave no signs
+of sympathising with Dante.</p>
+
+<p>“What did she say?” asked Mrs. Haughtville.</p>
+
+<p>“Something about salt bread, and its being very hard to
+go up and down stairs,” answered the good-humoured Lady
+Bodlington.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” said Mrs. Haughtville.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Pennefeather cast a glance of contempt at the high-born
+pair, and relapsed into a dignified silence. Coffee came:
+that was a real blessing. Tea succeeded, which was some
+comfort. Mrs. Heckfield’s eyes turned frequently and more
+frequently towards the door; still the gentlemen came not.
+In her despair she bade Lucy give them a little music.</p>
+
+<p>“You are fond of music, I believe, Lady Bodlington?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes! passionately fond of music!” answered Lady
+Bodlington, with a suppressed yawn, and poor Lucy seated herself
+at the pianoforte.</p>
+
+<p>She had a pretty voice, but she was very much frightened.
+Miss Pennefeather was a critic, and Mrs. Haughtville looked
+so cold. Lady Bodlington she did not mind—she seemed
+good-natured, and the circumstance of her being a viscountess,
+had not the same effect on Lucy’s nerves as on her mother’s.</p>
+
+<p>She did her best, and Lady Bodlington, with a sweet smile,
+thanked her for that pretty Spanish air.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
+<p>“It is German!” said Lucy, with the <i lang="fr">naïveté</i> of youth;
+and both felt uncomfortable. Lady Bodlington, at having
+made a wrong hit, Lucy, at not having pronounced her words
+more distinctly. Lady Bodlington should have known better
+than to utter any phrase of commendation which committed
+her, as to the language in which a young lady’s song is
+couched. Lucy should have known better than to set her
+right, when she had made the mistake.</p>
+
+<p>“If Miss Pennefeather would favour us!” humbly suggested
+Mrs. Heckfield: “One of your own unique compositions,
+my dear Miss Pennefeather. Miss Pennefeather
+composes words, and music, and all, Mrs. Haughtville, and
+they are the sweetest things!”</p>
+
+<p>This account of Miss Pennefeather’s multifarious talents
+excited a slight emotion of curiosity in Mrs. Haughtville’s
+mind, and she accordingly begged Miss Pennefeather to grant
+their request. Lady Bodlington was very anxious indeed;
+and the poetess, whose pride, though easily wounded, was,
+through the medium of her vanity, as easily soothed, found
+the two fine ladies were more intellectual, and consequently
+more worthy of the efforts of her genius, than she had at first
+imagined.</p>
+
+<p>After a little bashful reluctance, she seated herself upon the
+round stool. She was short and thick, with a very small
+waist and a very full gown, and she sat extremely stiff and
+upright. Her arms were short, and when she meant to play
+<i lang="it">staccato</i>, she caught up her hands as high as her shoulders,
+and then she pounced down again on the affrighted notes as a
+kite upon a brood of chickens. The “sweet thing” she selected
+for the occasion was in a German style. A love-lorn
+damsel who sold herself to the spirit of darkness, that she
+might rejoin her murdered lover’s ghost in another, but not a
+better, world. Miss Pennefeather’s nose was small, and somewhat
+<i lang="fr">retroussé</i>; her eyes were large, black, and round (they
+were her beauty); her mouth would not have been ugly, but
+that it was difficult to decide where her chin ended and her
+throat began, so that, during the vehement and energetic passages
+which the nature of the subject called forth, when the
+head was thrown back, and the black eyes were darting their
+beams towards the ceiling, the double chin protruded rather
+beyond the natural and original one.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
+<p>The gentlemen entered just as the maiden was torn away
+to the realms below by the infernal crew, and, having repented
+her of her unholy compact, was invoking beings of the
+upper air to her rescue. The poor pianoforte reeled under
+the astounding accompaniment, in its lowest bass to the deep-toned
+exultation of the demons, and to the shrieks of the
+maiden in its highest treble; the Sappho’s cheeks were suffused
+with the excitement of the moment, the feathers in her
+yellow toque were waving as rapidly as the plume of a hero in
+the thickest of the fight. The sight, the sounds, were awful!</p>
+
+<p>The dandy reached the door—he saw—he heard—and,
+he fled. He retreated to the hall, and hastily seizing a hat
+(which, by the by, happened to be Lord Montreville’s instead
+of his own,) and throwing around him his military cloak, he
+boldly sallied forth in a drizzling wet night to walk two miles
+to his lodgings.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“He’d brave the raging of the skies,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But not”—Miss Pennefeather.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The other gentlemen were less easily intimidated, and made
+good their entrance. Lord Montreville seated himself by the
+side of Lucy, and, without speaking enough to be uncivil towards
+the performer, he contrived to make Lucy perfectly understand
+that he preferred her conversation to Miss Pennefeather’s
+singing, although he was passionately fond of music,
+and should like of all things to hear her sing.</p>
+
+<p>When the performance was concluded, he assured the Corinne
+of the evening that her composition was one which could
+be heard with indifference by no one. Miss Pennefeather was
+charmed, and asked if his Lordship was an admirer of the new
+style of English music, which had been introduced since the
+Captive Knight and the Treasures of the Deep had made
+such a sensation.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you know the Treasures of the Deep? They
+tell me I have caught something of the inspired authoress’s
+expression.” Lord Montreville really trembled. He had
+heard it sung by the inspired authoress, and he hastened to
+avert the sacrilegious attempt, by begging for another of her
+own composition.</p>
+
+<p>Charmed and flattered, Miss Pennefeather again burst forth
+in a perfectly original piece, under cover of which Lord Montreville
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>entered into a most agreeable conversation with Lucy.
+His dark, lively, expressive eyes, looked at her with so much
+consciousness of being understood, that she immediately felt quite
+intimate, and perfectly satisfied that he was as much amused
+as she was, by Miss Pennefeather’s exhibition. These looks
+of mutual intelligence and amusement prevented her feeling
+any awe of his age or his rank, while his very age made her
+feel perfectly safe and innocent in immediately giving in to
+the intimacy which so suddenly sprang up between them.
+Their communication did not confine itself to a little good-humoured
+ridicule of the self-constituted Corinne; he had the
+happy knack of leading the conversation to topics interesting
+to the individuals with whom he conversed; and Mrs. Heckfield
+overheard Lucy, in the fullness of her heart, giving a
+detailed account of the death of a Newfoundland puppy, which
+was supposed to have been bit by a mad dog!</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield was in agonies: she looked unutterable
+things; but her looks were utterly thrown away. Lucy’s
+heart and soul were in her subject, and her eyes were sufficiently
+tearful to look very bright and melting. Lord Montreville
+thought this extremely countrified simplicity, charming,
+though he did not intend it should last for ever. He was
+himself a professed lover of animals, and he gave her, in return,
+an account of a horse who neighed when he came into the
+stable, and would put his nose into his pocket to find the bread
+he was in the habit of feeding him with.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy thought him the nicest, best-natured creature she had
+ever met with; and Mrs. Heckfield saw her, in the midst of
+his story, draw her chair nearer to him, her whole mind intent
+upon the sensible horse. Mrs. Heckfield thought, “How improper!
+how forward! how vulgar! What can ail Lucy to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>When the company dispersed, what was her horror to see
+Lucy put out her hand towards Lord Montreville, and shake
+hands with him cordially, heartily, and frankly; but her horror
+was mixed with astonishment, when Lord Montreville begged
+permission to call the next morning, as Miss Heckfield had
+promised to show him some beautiful puppies, and to allow
+him to select one, as he was a great dog-fancier.</p>
+
+<p>“What can be the meaning of this?” thought she, “he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>must be disgusted with Lucy’s manners to-day! They could
+not have been worse if Bell Stopford had been here!”</p>
+
+<p>When the last carriage had driven from the door, Mrs.
+Heckfield threw herself into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Lucy! I think you have done it to-day! When
+you knew I wished you to behave like a girl of fashion. When
+we had all the best company within ten miles round assembled
+here, just this one day, to giggle and laugh all dinner-time,
+and then to entertain a man of Lord Montreville’s refinement
+and taste with your dog’s death, and your puppies’ birth! He
+must think you have been brought up in the stables, rather
+than in the drawing-room.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, dear mamma! I assure you he asked me all about
+poor dear Hector’s death!”</p>
+
+<p>“Asked you about Hector’s death! How could he have
+known such a dog as Hector ever existed, if you had not begun
+about your own dog and your own affairs? Don’t you
+know that egotism should be avoided in every way, and that
+it is the most ill-bred thing in the world to talk of yourself and
+your concerns?”</p>
+
+<p>“So it is, mamma;—very true. I did not mean to talk
+of myself, and I am sure I do not know how I fell into it: but
+you don’t know how interested he seemed. I do not think he
+was bored, really: he says he is so fond of animals—just like
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Pooh, child!—he is a very well-bred man, and was too
+polite to let you feel you bored him. You must learn not to
+be led into pouring your own histories into people’s ears.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield forgot that at dinner she had given Lord
+Montreville a very long account of the manner in which she
+had become possessed of the china he had admired.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="5" style="text-decoration: none;">V.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">“Enfin ils me mettaient à mon aise: et moi qui m’imaginais qu’il y avait tant
+de mystère dans la politesse des gens du monde, et qui l’avais regardé comme une
+science qui m’était totalement inconnue, et dont je n’avais nul principe, j’étais bien
+surprise de voir qu’il n’y avait rien de si particulier dans la leur, rien qui me fût si
+étranger; mais seulement quelque chose de liant, d’obligeant, et d’aimable.”</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right smcap">Marivaux.</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lucy went to bed uneasy at having had such bad manners, and
+yet not altogether mortified; for, though she implicitly believed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>all her mother said of her behaviour, she did not think
+it had quite produced the effect she imagined upon Lord Montreville,
+“for mamma did not know how good-natured he
+was.”</p>
+
+<p>She generally chatted with Milly, as she was undressing;
+and Milly, who was aware that the party of that day was one
+which had excited some anxiety in her mistress’s bosom, inquired
+of Miss Lucy “how the gentlefolks had been pleased,
+and whether every thing was right at table.”</p>
+
+<p>“We were all pretty well placed, I believe, only mamma
+says I am not to sit so near Charles again, for if we get near
+each other we make too much noise; and Mr. Lyon did not
+like Miss Pennefeather at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sorry for that, miss; but I meant how the cross-corners
+did, for poor Mrs. Fussicome was in such a way.
+The jelly would not stand, and it looked so shocking bad
+when it was in the dish, that what did we do but beat up
+some raspberry cream in no time, and sent it in instead; but
+then it made two reds at the cross-corners; but I should hope
+nobody noticed it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure I did not, nurse, and I don’t think mamma
+did; at least she said nothing about it. Every thing looked
+very nice, tell Mrs. Fussicome.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, miss, that I will, for she has been quite put out
+about it; she said she could not enjoy her supper a bit, and
+she thought the soufflet was not quite right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mamma did not say any thing about it: indeed she saw
+no faults in the dinner, they were all in me. How I do wish
+I had not such spirits. I mean to be so quiet and demure,
+and as soon as the people begin to talk to me I forget. I do
+really believe Lord Montreville is very good-natured, and will
+not think the worse of me.”</p>
+
+<p>“La! miss, I’m sure your mamma can’t think there is
+any harm in talking and laughing with such an old gentleman.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is not so very old, Milly,” answered Lucy, though
+if Milly had not said so, she might have been the first to say
+it herself.</p>
+
+<p>About one o’clock the next morning, Lord Montreville
+arrived at Rose Hill Lodge, and was surprised to find Lucy
+shy, reserved, timid, and rather awkward. Mrs. Heckfield,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>anxious to efface from Lord Montreville’s mind all impressions
+concerning the kennel, and the stables, and the dog-hutches,
+led his attention to the flower garden, which was
+remarkably pretty, and to her small conservatory, which was
+in excellent order, at the same time taking care to let him
+know that the disposition of the flower-beds was according to
+Lucy’s taste, that Lucy had arranged the vases in the manner
+which excited his admiration, that the training of the creepers
+in festoons from one tree to another was Lucy’s fancy. She
+pointed out a beautiful new geranium which had been named
+after her little “madcap Lucy; for madcap as she is, Lord
+Montreville, she has a decided taste for botany and that kind
+of thing,” added Mrs. Heckfield, with a sweet smile at Lucy,
+who certainly that morning had not deserved the name of
+“madcap.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville immediately understood the state of the
+case, and was well pleased; he thereby perceived that Lucy
+was docile, easily subdued, and easily managed. However,
+as his present object was to win her confidence, preparatory to
+attempting her heart, he alluded to Miss Heckfield’s promise
+of a puppy of their beautiful breed of setters, and he begged
+to be taken to the kennel, as he was to be allowed to choose
+for himself. Mrs. Heckfield entreated Lord Montreville
+would allow her to send for the dogs. Lord Montreville
+insisted on not giving so much trouble, when the servant was
+seen issuing from the drawing-room windows, showing the
+way to Lord and Lady Bodlington, who had called to see the
+conservatory. Mrs. Heckfield had a fresh demand on her
+politeness, and after the proper greetings, Lord Montreville
+whispered Lucy that she must not allow him to be cheated of
+his puppy, that he had quite set his heart upon seeing the
+whole family, and entreated her to lead the way. She was at
+first somewhat confused, and looked uneasily towards her
+mother, who was some way in advance; but she did not
+know how to refuse, so they proceeded through the back-yard,
+by the coal-hole, and the bottle-rack, through the
+drying-ground, past the pigsties, to a range of out-houses,
+where Lufra and all her family were shut up.</p>
+
+<p>The moment Lucy opened the door, up jumped Lufra, to
+the great detriment of the pretty muslin gown which that day
+made its first appearance.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
+<p>“Oh, my best new gown!” exclaimed Lucy. “O dear!
+Why would mamma make me put it on?”</p>
+
+<p>She had scarcely uttered the words when it flashed across
+her why mamma had wished her to be smart and to look well.
+She stopped short, and blushed up to the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“This is too <i lang="fr">naïf</i>,” thought Lord Montreville; “but
+<i lang="fr">naïveté</i> soon dies away if it is not encouraged. Her mother
+wishes to catch me, I know; but the girl has no plan; I shall
+be able to mould her to my liking.”</p>
+
+<p>A young man would have flown off upon perceiving the
+mother’s views; but Lord Montreville had seen them plainly
+from the very beginning, and it did not affect his opinion
+as to whether Lucy <i lang="fr">était son fait</i>, or not. Because Mrs.
+Heckfield wished to catch him, there was no reason he should
+be caught; and he continued his observations of Lucy, and
+his calculations whether she would easily become the sort of
+wife he wished to have.</p>
+
+<p>After a long discussion concerning the several merits and
+beauties of the several puppies, in which Lucy found Lord
+Montreville’s taste in dogs perfectly coincided with her own,
+the puppy was selected, and Lucy’s heart had again opened,
+her reserve had vanished, she had made up her mind that, for
+once, mamma was wrong, and she was right; that her’s had
+been the most correct estimate of Lord Montreville’s character.
+She asked him if he admired young donkeys. He confessed
+that if he had a weakness, it was for a little baby
+donkey, with a shaggy forehead and a pointed nose. Lucy’s
+eyes sparkled at such a proof of sympathy in her companion.
+She proposed to show him her pet. He eagerly assented, and
+they proceeded through the chicken-yard to the paddock
+where the donkeys were grazing. The chickens expected to
+be fed, and all gathered round Lucy’s feet; the donkeys instantly
+set up a most sonorous braying, and galloped to her
+with their uplifted heads. Lucy was amused, and began to
+laugh, and to pat, and stroke, and pinch the dear sensible
+creatures, when a turn in the shrubbery walk brought Mrs.
+Heckfield, Lord and Lady Bodlington, and Mr. Lyon to the
+opposite side of the paddock, which commanded a view of
+Lucy and Lord Montreville. Lucy felt her cheeks glow, and
+her mirth subside. Her mother, who could not but know
+through what ignoble paths she must have led Lord Montreville,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>would be more displeased than ever. She was sobered
+in an instant. Lord Montreville perceived the blush, and the
+change in her countenance, and flattered himself there was
+something gratifying to himself in her emotions. They retraced
+their steps, but Lucy was silent and abashed, and
+looked heartily ashamed of herself when they rejoined the
+party.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville immediately addressed Mrs. Heckfield,
+informed her that “Miss Heckfield, at his earnest request,
+had allowed him to inspect the puppies, and to select the one
+he fancied; and that he had a childish passion for young
+donkeys, which she had also most kindly indulged.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield saw that no harm was done, and she was
+soothed. Lucy thought him more good-natured than ever in
+thus averting the storm she saw impending, and gratitude was
+added to cement the union of their congenial souls.</p>
+
+<p>He now became a frequent visitor at Rosehill Lodge, and
+his manner gradually assumed more the tone of gallantry.
+Reports arose. Lucy was rallied by her young friends, and
+began to look into her feelings.</p>
+
+<p>She had seen his beautiful equipage, his four blood bays;
+she had seen engravings of his magnificent seat in Staffordshire,
+of his lovely villa near London, of his ancient castle in
+Wales. She was proof against the splendour of Ashdale
+Park, and the elegancies of Beausejour, but the castle had a
+decided effect upon her heart. The walls were nine feet
+thick; there was a donjon keep, at the top of a tower nine
+hundred and forty-one years old; and Lord Montreville’s teeth
+were extremely good, almost as good as Captain Langley’s.
+From the vaults under the Caërwhwyddwth Castle subterraneous
+passages, to the end of which no one within the memory
+of man had penetrated, were supposed to extend to the ruined
+monastery of Caërmerwhysteddwhstgen; and then Lord Montreville
+was quite thin, not the least inclined to corpulency.
+He was older than Sir Charles Selcourt, but he was much
+more agreeable; he was certainly a great deal older than
+Captain Langley, but then Captain Langley was not the least
+clever. All their tastes agreed exactly. He was enthusiastic
+upon the self-same subjects,—puppies, donkeys, goslings, and
+Lord Byron.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span></p>
+<p>Her mind was in a wavering state, when the following conversation
+took place between herself and Milly:—</p>
+
+<p>“This is poor Miss Lizzy’s birth-day, miss, and we have
+all been drinking her health and happiness to-night at supper.
+She is twenty-two this very day.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I shall be nineteen next birthday, Milly. We are
+all growing very old. It is almost time I should be married.
+How old were you when you married?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nineteen, Miss Lucy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Just about my age. And how old was John?”</p>
+
+<p>“In his twenty-one, miss.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear! I don’t think that was difference enough. A man
+ought to be a good deal older than his wife, that he may advise
+her, and guide her, and all that, as mamma says, when she is
+out of sight of her mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t say, miss. The Bible says, ‘I will make an help
+meet for him;’ so I suppose the woman is to help the man, as
+well as the man to help the woman; and if they are to help
+one another, why I reckon they should be something of an
+age.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps that may be best, nurse, where they both have to
+work, and where the man should be young and strong to
+labour for his family; but in another line, nurse,—among
+richer people, you know,—where there is no occasion to be
+strong and to work hard, it is such a thing for a giddy young
+girl to have a steady sensible man, who can tell her all she
+ought to do—a man much cleverer than herself, a person she
+can quite look up to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe it is, miss.”</p>
+
+<p>“And then, as mamma says, a married woman, if she is
+not quite ugly, is liable, you know, to have men—young
+men—talk to her,—talk to her a good deal,—more than they
+should; and then it is such a thing to have a husband who
+can tell her exactly whom she should talk to, and whom she
+should not talk to.”</p>
+
+<p>“But sure, miss, I should think every woman, married or
+single, might know when a gentleman said any thing as was
+not becoming for her to listen to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, certainly; but mamma says that in the great world
+a young woman might get herself talked about just for talking
+all about nothing at all, to one of those fashionable dandies,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>and that if she has a husband who knows the world well, he
+will tell her just how far she may listen to such people.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my dear Miss Lucy, we poor folks don’t understand
+about talking, and being talked about, and listening, and
+not listening. For my part, for as long as I have lived in this
+wicked world—and a wicked world it is in some ways—I
+never knew a young woman as was married to a young man
+as was the man of her heart, as ever lost her good name for all
+she might be affable and pleasant like with her neighbours.
+But the gentlefolks knows best, to be sure.”</p>
+
+<p>Milly was unsatisfactory: she saw what was going on in the
+family, and she could not like it: it was no business of hers,
+and she would never think of stepping out of her place. Lucy
+was uncomfortable. She loved Milly, and, moreover, she had
+settled in her own mind to love like Milly. She longed to
+know what she thought of Lord Montreville, and at length
+she plunged into the subject.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you think Lord Montreville is a very pleasing-looking
+man, Milly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, miss; he looks very well for his years.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is so clever, you can’t think.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is he, miss?”</p>
+
+<p>“And so very good-natured!”</p>
+
+<p>“That is a good thing for all his servants, I am sure, miss.”</p>
+
+<p>“And for every one else who is connected with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, certainly, miss.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is the most agreeable person, and loves all sorts of
+animals, and seems to like to have every thing about him
+happy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, miss.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know, Milly, I should not be very much surprised
+if you might some day have an opportunity of trying
+whether he made those around him happy or not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, miss!”</p>
+
+<p>“Mamma says she is convinced he likes me very much;”
+and she added, in a coaxing manner, “now what shall we do,
+you and I, Milly?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure, miss, it is just as you please.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know that well enough,” answered Lucy, with a
+shade of pettishness in her tone; “I can say no as well as
+anybody, if I please, and mamma says she would not influence
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>my choice for the world; but it certainly is very true what
+mamma says, that I am so giddy I should always be getting
+into scrapes if I was to marry anybody as young and as giddy
+as myself. It was only yesterday she was talking about it,
+after Lord Montreville had brought me that beautiful bouquet of
+orange-flowers; and she asked me whether I had any objection
+in the world to him, and whether I did not think him clever,
+and agreeable, and good-natured, and whether there was any
+body else I thought more clever, or more agreeable, or more
+good-natured, and I’m sure I can’t think of any body just
+now. Lord Slenderdale and Mr. Desmond are handsomer, to
+be sure; but mamma would be shocked to hear me talk about
+beauty in that kind of way. It does not sound well in a girl,
+you know,” Then, after a pause, she added, “Did you think
+John handsome?”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe other folks called him a fine young man, but I
+am sure I never thought nothing at all about his looks.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” thought Lucy, “mamma is quite right; girls
+should not set any value on the exterior—one should only
+think of the mind. Besides, Lord Montreville is still very
+good-looking.” Presently she continued, “Did you think
+John very clever, Milly?”</p>
+
+<p>“La! miss, I don’t know, I am sure. The schoolmaster
+never said no other than that he was a very good boy at his
+book, but I never thought about his scholarship. That was no
+business of mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Was John agreeable, and pleasant, amusing, you know, to
+talk to.”</p>
+
+<p>“He was always pleasant to me, I’m sure; he never gave
+me a bad word nor an unkind look in his life, and he was
+always very agreeable to any thing I wished; and, as to being
+amusing, why we always had other things to think of, than
+amusing ourselves, so I can’t justly say.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” thought Lucy, “he was a good creature, but evidently
+very stupid and dull; and Lord Montreville is so lively
+and agreeable!”</p>
+
+<p>The result of this conversation was, that Lucy went to bed,
+pleased with Lord Montreville, and not quite pleased with
+Milly. She went to sleep and dreamed she was the Marchioness
+of Montreville, chaperoning her sister Emma to
+Almack’s. People cannot prevent their dreams. “<span lang="la">In vino</span>
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span><span lang="la">veritas</span>.” Likewise, in dreams, there is truth. Many a weakness,
+many a secret preference, which the waking thoughts
+would not be guilty of harbouring, have been revealed to the
+dreamer in visions over which he, or she, had no control.
+The emulator of Milly’s pure, disinterested, uncompromising,
+uncalculating affection, would never wittingly have allowed the
+idea of worldly vanities and splendours to have influenced her
+mind; but I fear we should lower our heroine too much in
+the opinion of the young and romantic reader, were we to inquire
+too deeply into the degree in which they did influence
+her view of the subject.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning she jokingly repeated her dream to
+Emma.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! Lucy,” exclaimed Emma, “what a charming dream!
+And you know mamma says, if you marry, I may come out at
+seventeen, and, if you don’t, I must stay in this poky school-room
+till I am eighteen. You never can refuse Lord Montreville.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="6" style="text-decoration: none;">VI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">“A l’age où j’étais on n’a pas le courage de résister à tout le monde, je crus
+ee qu’on me disait tant par docilité que par persuasion; je me laissai entraîner,
+je fis ce qu’on me disait, j’étais dans une émotion qui avait arrêté toutes mes
+pensées; les autres decidèrent de mon sort, et je ne fus moi-même qu’une spectatrice
+stupide de l’engagement éternel que je pris.”—<span class="smcap">Marivaux.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>What with the jests of others and her mother’s counsels, both
+open and implied, Lucy had no doubt of Lord Montreville’s
+intentions. The whole affair seemed only to depend upon
+herself. What was her surprise when at seven o’clock, instead
+of Lord Montreville, a note arrived, apologising for his
+absence, on the plea that he had been summoned away upon
+business. Lucy thought lovers were to be devoted things, who
+were to have no business but that of gaining their lady’s
+favour.</p>
+
+<p>There was a party that day, and she saw people looked surprised
+at hearing Lord Montreville was gone away so suddenly,
+and she felt a little mortified. “I am certainly in love,”
+she thought, “for every thing seems dull to-day. Yes, it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>all a blank now he is gone (how much is implied by the
+simple pronoun <em>he</em> or <em>she</em>); just as Milly said when John was
+gone to the back woods, and she was left at Halifax.”</p>
+
+<p>The resemblance between her situation and feelings, and
+those of Milly, would not have been so evident to others.</p>
+
+<p>Several days elapsed, and nothing was heard of Lord Montreville.
+His saddle-horses were seen to pass towards London
+with their horse-cloths packed upon their saddles, in travelling
+costume. Lucy thought he was certainly gone quite away,
+without proposing, and she felt acute pangs of mortification and
+disappointment. She was ready to cut out her tongue for
+having, of her own accord, spoken to Milly of her prospects in
+life, when those prospects were evidently mere conjurings of
+her own self-conceit; she could have beat herself for having
+repeated her foolish dream to Emma, who had repeated it to
+Mary, who had repeated it to the governess, who had made
+Lucy blush more than once by her allusions to it,—she could
+cry at thinking how faintly she had rebutted Bell Stopford’s
+innuendoes, and she worked herself up to a state of soreness
+and agitation, not unlike that which might be produced by the
+tender passion itself.</p>
+
+<p>It is not easy to distinguish how much of the emotions on
+such occasions proceeds from real preference, and how much
+from gratified or mortified vanity. I believe it does not often
+fall to the lot of any one, to feel the real, pure, passion of love
+to the highest degree of which their nature is capable; but
+the combination of other, less noble passions, will produce considerable
+pains, pleasures, blushings, and flushings; hearts
+will beat, cheeks turn pale, hands shake, knees even will knock
+a little together, and the symptoms pass muster very well, as
+love, true love. If the affair ends in marriage, and the parties
+suit, it does as well as love, and often ends in becoming
+love itself. If, on the contrary, the flirtation ends, as many
+flirtations do, these symptoms are mentally laughed at and forgotten,
+as having only been passing ebullitions of gratified
+vanity, or indignant pride; the heart is supposed, and really
+is, free, and ready for a real true passion whenever it may be
+called forth.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy passed a restless and uncomfortable week—annoyed,
+when they were asked where Lord Montreville was gone—annoyed,
+when they were obliged to answer they did not know—annoyed,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>when they were asked when he returned—annoyed,
+at being again obliged to reply they could not tell—annoyed,
+when people looked surprised at their answers—annoyed,
+when they looked wise and cunning, and treated these
+answers as discreet evasions.</p>
+
+<p>At length, on the tenth day from Lord Montreville’s departure
+his servant was seen riding up the coach-road, towards
+the back-door. Lucy’s heart beat very quick, and she thought
+it quite abominable of John not to bring the note up-stairs
+immediately. She would fain have told her mother that she
+had seen the servant arrive, and that John was evidently waiting
+to finish his dinner, and to prepare the luncheon, before
+he brought the note; but she was ashamed to show her impatience,
+and she resolutely continued to copy music.</p>
+
+<p>John, it is presumed, had a good appetite that day, at least
+the time appeared unaccountably long. At length, however,
+luncheon was announced, and the note delivered, with the information
+that Lord Montreville’s servant was to wait for an
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>“It must be the proposal; and the servant is not to return
+without the answer,” thought Lucy, and her eyes felt dizzy.
+She glanced at the exterior of the note—it was three-cornered!
+It could not be a proposal. No! Never did a proposal come
+in the shape of a three-cornered note! It was very short, announcing
+his return, and begging if Mrs. Heckfield had
+finished the third volume of some novel which he had lent her,
+that she would return it, as he was sending back a box of
+books to the library.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy durst not ask what were the contents of the note;
+but her mother threw it to her, bidding her look for the book.
+She read the momentous communication, the withholding of
+which by John had so excited her internal wrath, and she
+thought it the shortest, oddest note, she ever read!—so abrupt!
+evidently written in such a hurry! There could be no doubt,
+however, what it meant to convey—a complete breaking off
+of the intimacy with their family;—even sending for his
+book in such haste!</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, she hunted for the volume, and she packed it
+up, resolving in her own mind to beware of the base deceiver,
+man; and feeling herself a slighted damsel.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville’s absence had been caused by business
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>connected with the intentions he entertained towards Lucy; but
+if he had acted upon a plan, he could not have shown more
+consummate policy. Every one values more highly whatever
+they have lost, or believe themselves on the point of losing;
+and when, in the course of that very day, he himself called at
+Rosehill Lodge, Lucy felt very happy, and greeted him with
+a blushing cheek and conscious face, which made him think
+he had really inspired the young thing with the tenderest interest;
+and Lucy, when she felt her heart beat, said to herself,
+“This is love—it can be nothing else.”</p>
+
+<p>They were prepared for their walk, when Lord Montreville
+called; and he begged leave to accompany them. Mrs.
+Heckfield stopped to give some directions to the gardener,
+Lord Montreville proceeded along the shrubbery-path with
+Lucy, and Mrs. Heckfield was not so swift of foot as to overtake
+them without exerting herself more than she thought
+there was any occasion to do. The three-cornered note had
+not appeared to her such decisive evidence of a wish to withdraw
+from their acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville expressed his pleasure at returning to
+Lyneton,—not that he liked Lyneton—he thought it an
+odious place; but he was so glad to find himself once more in
+the neighbourhood of Rosehill Lodge: but great as was the
+pleasure he felt, he could hardly flatter himself his return
+could give any corresponding pleasure; if he could suppose so,
+he should indeed esteem himself fortunate.</p>
+
+<p>“It is coming,” thought Lucy; and she now felt as much
+afraid he should propose, as she had before felt afraid he
+would not. Her whole wish was to avert the momentous
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” she answered, “mamma is always very glad to
+see you. Where is mamma? perhaps she has missed us; we
+had better find her;” and she turned and mended her pace.</p>
+
+<p>“May I not hope to detain you one moment, Miss Heckfield?”
+asked Lord Montreville, in a voice of earnest persuasion.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! it is as good as come!” thought Lucy; “what
+shall I do?—Oh yes, certainly,” she answered, but walked on
+faster than ever.</p>
+
+<p>“If you would allow me a few moments’ conversation, Miss
+Heckfield, I have much to say that interests me deeply.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span></p>
+<p>“Where can mamma be?” rejoined Lucy, in a tone of fear
+and trepidation.</p>
+
+<p>“For a few moments you must listen to me!” &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it to say, Lord Montreville then proposed. The
+words of a proposal are horridly stupid to the ears of all but
+the parties concerned; and in what precise terms Lord Montreville
+couched the offer of his hand, heart, fortune, and
+titles, has remained, and will ever remain, unknown. A terrified
+“O dear!” uttered by Lucy when he began to unfold
+his mind, were the only words which escaped her lips. When
+he pressed for an answer, she did not say “No!” but she still
+walked on, her pace increasing every second, her close garden-bonnet
+well pulled over her face, which was rigidly directed
+on the gravel-walk before her, so that no one who was not
+immediately opposite had a chance of catching a glimpse of
+her countenance. Even Lord Montreville began to feel a
+little awkward. He had made love often enough, but he had
+proposed but once before; and that was in his early youth, to
+a very rich heiress, who had soon after married a duke. Fortunately
+for the nerves of both, they came upon Mrs. Heckfield
+at a turn in the walk. She saw with a glance that something
+decisive had taken place, and she hastened to relieve Lucy, and
+also to clench the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy slipped her arm within Mrs. Heckfield’s, and feeling
+comparatively easy and secure, now she had interposed her
+mother between herself and her suitor, she walked on in
+silence, carefully contriving to make each step so exactly keep
+time, that the somewhat rounded form of the matron should
+completely eclipse the slender form of the girl.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville explained himself in becoming and graceful
+terms; and Mrs. Heckfield, in a rapture of scarcely concealed
+joy, declared with what pleasure she should communicate
+Lord Montreville’s flattering declaration to Colonel
+Heckfield.</p>
+
+<p>“But, my dear Mrs. Heckfield, I have not yet been allowed
+to hope. Your daughter has not given me one word, one
+look of encouragement, and I need your kind influence to
+induce her——”</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy, my dear, you have not been so uncivil as to—My
+dear child, don’t be so silly. You must excuse her, my dear
+Lord Montreville, she is so young, and so little used to these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>agitating scenes. <em>I</em> know what her feelings are, and although
+she is not at this moment able to speak for herself, I think I
+may answer for it you need not despair. Perhaps, if you were
+to leave her for a short time to compose herself, she would be
+more able to enjoy your society by dinner-time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must I then depart without hearing my fate? But I
+would not distress Miss Heckfield on any consideration, and I
+had rather pass some hours of suspense and wretchedness
+myself than that she should feel one moment’s annoyance. I
+trust she will allow me to prove by my future life that such
+are my sentiments.” He took her unresisting hand, and
+pressing it between his own with an air of gallantry, he took
+his departure with very little doubt or suspense as to the
+result of the family colloquy. But he wished not only to be
+accepted, but to be preferred. He was himself totally incapable
+of again feeling the passion of love, if indeed any of the
+<i lang="fr">liaisons</i> and flirtations in which he had been engaged deserved
+such a name; but he wished to excite it, and it was to him an
+amusing and a gratifying study, to watch the flutter and the
+trepidations of the young thing who was apparently now experiencing
+them for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he was fairly out of sight, Lucy burst into tears,
+and threw herself upon her mother’s shoulder, saying, “Oh,
+mamma, I am as good as married!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my love, and do you wish to live single all your
+life?”</p>
+
+<p>“O no, mamma!”</p>
+
+<p>“And do you dislike Lord Montreville?”</p>
+
+<p>“O no, mamma!”</p>
+
+<p>“You seemed to me very uneasy and restless when he went
+away without proposing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, mamma, so I was, certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you looked very happy when he called just now.
+Were you not glad to see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, mamma, I certainly was.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my dear, if you were sorry he went away without
+proposing, you must be glad he has come back, and has
+proposed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I suppose I am, but I do not feel as if I was.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you wish me, then, to refuse him? I would never
+force any girl’s inclinations, as I have always told you, and I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>am ready to take the whole thing upon myself if you please;
+for really, after the encouragement you have given him, I do
+not see how you can consistently say he is not agreeable
+to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have I encouraged him so very much?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know, my love; but you allowed him to take
+your hand just now, and you always appeared to have neither
+eyes nor ears for any one else when he was present.”</p>
+
+<p>“He always had so much the most to say.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you know best: I can say no more than that if you
+dislike him, I am ready to refuse him for you. Do you wish
+me to do so?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no! not that——”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you wish me to accept him, in your name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, not quite that, mamma.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, girls must say Yes or No. As I have always
+told you, I will not put any force on your inclinations.”</p>
+
+<p>Nothing persuades people so much, as saying you would not
+persuade them,—nothing constrains them so much, as saying
+you would put no constraint upon them. This Mrs. Heckfield
+felt from female tact. It was from intuition, not by
+design, that she used these expressions, while at the same time
+she thereby re-assured herself that she was not hurrying Lucy
+into a worldly marriage.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you wish me to tell Lord Montreville that, although
+you may have seemed to prefer his society to that of others,
+you do not in fact prefer him, and that therefore you must
+decline the offer he is so flattering as to make you. Shall I
+say so?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, mamma; I should be very sorry, I am sure.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you wish me to say yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose I do, mamma.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my love, I think you have decided very wisely for
+yourself, and no girl ever had more reason to be delighted with
+her prospects. You have been selected from all the rest of
+your sex by a man who has been universally reckoned most
+fascinating and irresistible, and whom all the ladies were in
+love with, when he was only a younger brother; and now that
+he has a noble fortune, and high rank, and might choose from
+all the first beauties in the land, he picks out my little Lucy,
+who is crying like a child, at having got—just the very thing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>she was ready to cry because she thought she should not get,
+for I saw your face this morning when the note came.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy smiled through her tears; the picture of the conquest
+she had made was agreeable to her self-love, and the picture
+of her inconsistency was undeniably true.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield kissed her, and hastened to Colonel Heckfield
+to communicate the important intelligence.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="7" style="text-decoration: none;">VII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oh, never may the hope that lights thine eyes,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Sweet maid, be changed to disappointment’s gloom;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Never th’ ingenuous frolic laugh I prize</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">To the forced smile that care must oft assume;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But may the blissful dream of thy young heart,—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">That dream from which so many wake too late,—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of joys that love requited shall impart,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Be realised in thy approaching fate!</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Colonel Heckfield was a quiet, easy, amiable man, whom
+everybody loved. He was in the habit of thinking his wife
+understood such matters better than he did, and that as she
+had hitherto married all his girls extremely well, there was no
+need of his interference. He always considered the affair as
+appertaining to Mrs. Heckfield, and never felt as if his
+daughters had any other share in the whole transaction, than
+that of being the instruments employed by Mrs. Heckfield’s
+master-hand. So much did he look upon her as the principal,
+that he was once heard to say, “when my wife married Sir
+Charles Selcourt—”</p>
+
+<p>The happy mother proceeded to inform Mademoiselle
+Hirondelle of the high honours which awaited her pupil.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, madame, I thought well when Miss Lucy had such a
+bad headache yesterday <i lang="fr">que c’était l’objet</i>. Miss Lucy was in
+anger with me, but I had reason. I know myself what it is
+<i lang="fr">de se consumer dans l’absence</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield dreaded the history of mademoiselle’s faithless
+lover, the bookseller at Caen, who had not written to her
+for three years, seven months, and three weeks, and she
+hastened to tell Emma that she might now look forward to
+coming out very soon.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span></p>
+<p>“And I shall go to Almack’s with Lucy, after all,
+mamma?”</p>
+
+<p>Neither did Mrs. Heckfield fail to tell Milly of the lofty
+station to which her nurseling would be raised.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, ma’am! and so Miss Lucy is going to leave us,”
+said Milly, with a calm and stoical manner, very unlike that
+she usually had when any thing most remotely affecting one
+of the “dear children” was in question.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, nurse; and I do think I am the most fortunate of
+mothers.”</p>
+
+<p>“La! ma’am, to have all your children leave you so soon?
+Sure, you will be very lonesome when they are all married
+and gone?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, nurse, we mothers are never selfish. We wish for
+nothing but our children’s advantage.”</p>
+
+<p>How many parents sacrifice the happiness, under the firm
+conviction they are promoting the welfare of the children, for
+whom they would themselves be ready to endure every privation.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy had received her father’s cordial blessing, Mademoiselle’s
+Frenchified embrace, her sister’s thoughtless, merry
+congratulations, and Milly’s thoughtful, serious, good wishes.
+She came down to dinner with a cheek flushed by vague emotions,
+and conscious eyes, which durst not rest on any one.
+She looked really lovely.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was received by Mrs. Heckfield with unfeigned
+joy, by Colonel Heckfield with heartiness, by Lucy
+with a pleased tremor which was perfectly satisfactory. A
+look from Mrs. Heckfield, and he seated himself by Lucy’s
+side.</p>
+
+<p>“You will, then, allow me to prove by my future life, as I
+did this morning, when I sacrificed my own wishes to yours,
+that I prefer your gratification to my own.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed you are very good. I hope always——”</p>
+
+<p>Dinner was announced. Lord Montreville offered his arm
+to Lucy as the accepted lover, instead of to Mrs. Heckfield,
+as merely the visitor of highest rank.</p>
+
+<p>There was no retreating after this, even supposing she had
+wished to do so, for the Denbys and several others were
+present. He was more than usually amiable. His attentions
+were not too marked; his manners were so frank, and so
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>polite to every one, there was nothing that could make her
+shy or uncomfortable, so that she felt quite grateful to him
+for putting her so much more at her ease than, under the circumstances,
+she could have thought possible.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the evening, Mrs. Heckfield communicated
+the great event of the day to her friend Mrs. Denby, under a
+strict promise of secrecy, to which Mrs. Denby rigidly adhered;
+notwithstanding which, the small town of Lyneton, and the
+adjoining village of Purley, and half the country houses in
+the neighbourhood, were apprised of the fact before the next
+sun sank into the Western Ocean. The propagation of a
+secret is a mystery; every body promises, and nobody breaks
+their promise; and yet the propagation of the secret is rapid
+in proportion to the strictness of the promise; I cannot, and
+therefore will not attempt to explain this paradox.</p>
+
+<p>That night, when Milly attended Lucy’s <i lang="fr">coucher</i>, her
+countenance was unusually serious, and Lucy felt uncomfortable
+in her presence. She knew not what to say; and yet she
+was so much in the habit of making Milly a party to all the
+innocent pains and pleasures of her short life, that she felt
+awkward in not discussing this most momentous occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>“Nurse, I hope you will like Lord Montreville.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure, my dear Miss Lucy, I shall like any gentleman
+that makes you a good husband.”</p>
+
+<p>“He told me, to-day, he had rather be wretched himself
+than give me one moment’s annoyance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, miss! No gentleman can’t speak no fairer than
+that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose that is what all lovers say, though. I suppose
+John said that kind of thing to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord save your sweet heart, miss! John never said such
+fine things to me. He was but a plain-spoken young man;
+though he was always for saving me any trouble that he
+could, poor fellow, and nobody could work no harder for his
+family while he had health to do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t it be nice, having Emma to stay with me, and
+taking her out to the great balls? And then mamma has
+been longing to give Mary a good singing master. I can
+have her with me, you know, in London, where there are all
+the best masters; and poor mademoiselle would be so glad to
+see her sister; and I will have such a charming school for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>poor children (by-the-by, they shan’t have brown frocks, I
+like green so much better); and I shall be sure to have a
+beautiful horse, for all the ladies ride in the Park now. Oh!
+and I can give Dame Notter the new red cloak I have so long
+wanted to get her, only my pocket-money was so low. Do
+you know the Montreville diamonds are supposed to be the
+finest in England after the Duchess of P——’s? And when
+I am in London, where you know I must be while Lord
+Montreville is attending Parliament, I shall see Harriet every
+day, and all those dear children! I wonder how far <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr>
+James’s Square is from Upper Baker Street?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t say for certain, miss; but I think ’tis a good
+step.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it does not signify, for of course I shall have carriages;
+and I can send for them constantly when I do not go
+to Baker Street.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! you are a kind-hearted young lady; and good night,
+and God bless you, and may you be as happy as you expect
+to be, and as you deserve to be.”</p>
+
+<p>Milly sighed to think how much the notion of grandeur and
+of fine things of this world had taken possession of her young
+lady’s mind; “Though, to be sure, ’twas all in the way of
+being kind and good to others.”</p>
+
+<p>The next few days passed off agreeably enough. When
+among the rest of the family, Lord Montreville was so generally
+pleasing, that she felt happy and contented; but whenever
+they were alone, she felt unaccountably shy, and, if possible,
+she either left the room with her mother, or detained
+her sister by her side. The kind, protecting, almost parental
+manner, which had at first so won upon her confidence, while
+at the same time it flattered her vanity, was exchanged for
+something more of the lover; and the ease she had felt in his
+society was gradually diminishing, at the very moment it was
+most desirable it should increase. Moreover, she occasionally
+found that it was not impossible for her to do amiss in his
+eyes. Her inordinate passion for animals, which he had appeared
+to think so very <i lang="fr">naïf</i> and fascinating, did not always
+meet with the same looks of amused admiration, which had,
+unknown to herself, encouraged her in her avowed fondness
+for them. He frequently remonstrated with her upon running
+out without her bonnet, and upon taking off her gloves
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>when she was arranging the flowers, by which means she
+dirtied, and occasionally even scratched her fingers. He was
+dreadfully particular about shoes!</p>
+
+<p>These were trifles; but it seemed to her odd, that the very
+things he had appeared to think natural charms, “snatching
+a grace beyond the reach of art,” should now be the very
+points he wished altered.</p>
+
+<p>She was not aware how often the fault which excites disapprobation,
+allures, while it is condemned;—how often, also,
+the virtue which charms, is most perseveringly undermined by
+the person who peculiarly feels its attraction.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield insisted upon going to London to procure the
+wedding-clothes. Poor Lucy! Many people have a distinct
+abstract love of dress;—happy is it for them!—for as there
+is no doubt that a tolerably good-looking woman, very well
+dressed, will, in these days, eclipse a much handsomer one who
+is ill-dressed, surely it is a fortunate thing for those who can
+thus amuse, and embellish themselves at the same time. But
+this was not Lucy’s case. She was glad to look as well as she
+could, but the means of doing so were to her irksome; and
+she would fain have trusted the whole affair to mamma and
+to Mademoiselle. But no! Lord Montreville was exceedingly
+particular and anxious upon the subject. He especially recommended
+the only shoemaker who, to his mind, had an
+idea of making a shoe; and Lucy had at least half-a-dozen
+pair made, fitted, and descanted upon, before he was satisfied
+that they did justice to the shape of her foot, which proved
+extremely good when it was properly <i lang="fr">chaussé</i>. She was half
+angry at his numerous criticisms and remarks upon the make
+of her gowns, and considerably bored at the number of times
+he wished to have them altered; still he did it all in so kind
+and so good-humoured a manner, she could not do otherwise
+than submit. But when he recommended his own dentist,
+and various tinctures, and tooth-powders, she felt half insulted.
+With the full consciousness about her of youth, and health,
+and ivory teeth, she thought, though he might have occasion
+for dentists and dentifrices, she needed not such things, and
+she felt for a moment the full difference of their ages. It was
+but for a moment—she was his plighted wife—her young
+affections were vowed to him; and she would have fancied
+herself guilty, to wish him other than he was.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span></p>
+<p>There were moments when her spirits were somewhat depressed;
+but at others, she was dazzled and excited by the
+beautiful presents that arrived every day. The diamonds, the
+Montreville diamonds, which were now her’s. The large
+pearl, which had belonged to Henrietta Maria, and which had
+been given by her to an ancestress of Lord Montreville’s; a
+diamond ring, placed by Charles <abbr title="the second" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr> on the taper finger of the
+beautiful wife of a Sir Ralph Montreville, a short time previous
+to his elevation to the peerage; an antique aigrette, presented
+by Queen Anne, on occasion of a royal <i lang="fr">fête</i>! Ornaments
+of more modern date were showered upon her; but the heirlooms
+which assorted so well with the Welsh Castle, with its
+unpronounceable name, its donjon-keep, its subterranean passages,
+and its massive walls, were much more suited to her
+taste.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville had neither father, mother, brother, nor
+sister, to whom he need introduce his bride elect; and as all
+his cousins and other relatives were out of town at this season
+of the year, he lived entirely with his future family, without
+being called upon to introduce them to any of his own circle.
+This was precisely what he wished. Little did Lucy imagine,
+when, in the warmth of her heart, she was anticipating the
+kind things she would do to brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, and
+cousins, how little Lord Montreville intended to marry the
+whole family. Want of knowledge of the world, or rather of
+<i lang="fr">l’usage du monde</i>, was <i lang="fr">naïveté</i> in the blooming youthful Lucy,
+but not so in the middle-aged parents, or the hoyden younger
+misses. Lord Montreville was not much of a politician; he
+was not a man of deep reading, though his mind was sufficiently
+cultivated to give grace, if not depth, to his observations: he
+was not witty, though he was often droll, and consequently it
+was on living people and passing events that his conversation
+chiefly turned. Any one who knows every one worth knowing,
+and can talk of them and their concerns with some tact, and
+not much ill-nature, is reckoned agreeable; but he felt that
+his <i lang="fr">histoirettes</i> lost half their piquancy from the ignorance of
+his audience respecting the persons alluded to. Though it
+had amused him to enchant the whole family, especially while
+he had an ulterior object in view,—that object once gained,
+he found their society insipid, and in London he became peculiarly
+sensible how inexpedient it would be to transplant them
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>into his own circle. Mrs. Bentley, the eldest daughter, and
+the dear children of whom poor Lucy meant to see so much,
+were wholly out of the question.</p>
+
+<p>Country gentlefolks not of the first water of fashion (for
+the Heckfields were not vulgar—their dress, their house,
+their equipage were all perfectly presentable), are infinitely
+less objectionable to the very refined, than London gentility
+not of the first class. Mrs. Bentley was very rich, and her
+house in Upper Baker Street was a very good one, and she
+dressed in the extreme of the fashion; but she wanted the air
+<i lang="fr">distingué</i> which was natural to Lucy. Though handsome, she
+was inclined to be large and red, and withal, she was a little
+languishing, and she was especially languishing for Lord Montreville.
+She looked as strong as a horse, but she complained
+of nerves; she was a good woman, and loved her children, but
+she talked as if she could not bear to have them with her, and
+declared that their noise distracted her; and, in short, she took
+every possible pains to make herself appear as little amiable,
+and as unlike what she really was, as possible.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Charles and Lady Selcourt came to attend the wedding,
+and Lord Montreville soon perceived that Lady Selcourt was
+an unexceptionable person for Lady Montreville, or any other
+lady, to appear with in public; but he doubted whether her
+society at home would be as advantageous for any newly-married
+young woman. Her figure, which was always beautiful,
+was dressed in the most perfect taste; her eyes, which
+were very large and very dark, became lustrous from the addition
+of rouge, which, as we anticipated, she now habitually
+wore; and in the evening her skin, which by daylight was
+yellowish, became brilliantly white. There was not a fault to
+be found in her own manner; but Lord Montreville soon perceived
+by Sir Charles’s that she had proved not the weaker, but
+the stronger vessel.</p>
+
+<p>The morning after Lady Selcourt’s arrival in London, the
+sisters went shopping together; and after tossing over various
+silks and gauzes, they both fixed upon one which they pronounced
+to be quite lovely; when Lucy suddenly checked herself,
+saying—</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no, I won’t have it though, for Lord Montreville does
+not like pink!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
+<p>“Well, but he is not going to wear it himself,” answered
+Lady Selcourt.</p>
+
+<p>“But, I mean, he does not like that I should wear pink.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Lucy, you are not going to yield to all his fancies
+in this manner? You will entirely spoil him; you will make
+a tyrant of him. It would not do with a young man!”</p>
+
+<p>“It would not do with a young man,” grated rather unpleasantly
+on Lucy’s ears. However, when they were once
+more seated in the carriage, she resumed,</p>
+
+<p>“But, my dear Sophy, one must please one’s husband, you
+know; and though you would have that pink gauze sent with
+the others we are to look at by candle-light, I do not mean to
+buy it. Surely it is not worth while to annoy any one, for the
+colour of a gown.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Lucy, you are very young; you do not know
+what you are about; of course, in marrying, your idea is not
+to be merely an old,—a middle-aged man’s, play-thing. You
+owe it to yourself, to the station you will hold in society, I
+may almost add to Lord Montreville himself, not to be a mere
+cipher, but to be an independent and a reasonable person—a
+free agent. And, depend upon it, if you begin in this manner,
+you will never be able to rescue yourself from any thraldom
+in which he may wish to keep you. Every thing depends
+on the first start—I know it—and so did Sir Charles’s old
+French valet, for when we got into our carriage on the wedding-day,
+I had my beautiful in-laid India work-box, which
+you know is rather large, and I overheard old Le Clerc whisper
+to his master, ‘Sire Charles, Sire Charles—you band-box
+to-day, you band-box all your life!’ Sir Charles accordingly
+complained of the size of the box, and begged me to let the
+servant take care of it behind, but I felt, if I yielded then, I
+was undone. I explained to him the value I had for this particular
+box, and that it would break my heart to have it spoiled:
+and he saw I was so hurt at the idea of its being scratched or
+injured, that he gave up the point. Indeed, I must say, I
+have always found him very reasonable, and it is quite impossible
+for two people to go on better together. I never think
+of opposing his wishes when I am indifferent upon a subject.
+He knows, therefore, my anxiety to oblige him, and so he
+never thwarts me when he sees I am determined on any thing.
+Depend upon it, Lucy, if you begin in this manner before
+marriage, you will be no better than a slave after marriage.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
+<p>Sophy always had such a flow of words, and such a multitude
+of good arguments to adduce, that Lucy knew it was
+useless to dispute with her; besides, she was older, and she
+was a married woman, and she always was the cleverest; and
+Lucy was more than half persuaded there was a good deal of
+truth in what she said. Accordingly, she showed Milly the
+gauzes as she was dressing for dinner, and promulgated her
+intention of having a gown of the pink one.</p>
+
+<p>“La, Miss!” said Milly, “I thought my Lord did not
+like pink, and that he made you send back the pink hat.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but do you not think it is great nonsense to let one’s
+husband interfere about such trifles? What can it signify to
+him whether I wear pink or blue?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, Miss, as it can signify much to anybody;
+but I should think it signified more to him than to anybody
+else.”</p>
+
+<p>“But this is to be a smart gown to wear in company, and
+not at home with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“But sure, Miss Lucy, you don’t want to look well in any
+body’s eyes more than in your own husband’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is very true,” thought Lucy; “it would be very
+wrong to wish to be admired by other people, and not by one’s
+husband.”</p>
+
+<p>In the evening the gauzes were spread out, and Sophy expatiated
+on the beauties of the pink one. Lucy timidly admired
+it, and cast a glance towards Lord Montreville; she
+was half ashamed of appearing afraid to buy it, and was acquiescing
+in its merits, when Lord Montreville said,</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you are afraid of my admiring you too much,
+as you are bent upon the only colour which I do not think
+becoming to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you really dislike pink so much?” asked Lucy.</p>
+
+<p>“The colour is a pretty colour, but you know I think you
+look prettier in any other. Perhaps other people may admire
+you in it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure I do not want other people to admire me. It
+would be very wrong if I did, now. Do you like that
+<i lang="fr">vapeur</i>, Lord Montreville, or this white one? The white is
+the prettiest after all. Yes, I do like the white best, Sophy,
+and the white I will have.”</p>
+
+<p>And she put a resolute tone into the last sentence, that her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>submission should not look like submission in Sophy’s eyes.
+Why is it many amiable people are as much ashamed of appearing
+amiable, as many unamiable ones are of appearing
+unamiable?</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="8" style="text-decoration: none;">VIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Calantha.</i>—To court, good brother, ere her bloom of mind</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Be set for fruit? Oh, take her not to court,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Where we be slaves to petty circumstance</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of empty form and fashion. Where the laugh</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Pealed merrily from the joy-freighted heart,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Gives place to measured smiles still worn by all,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">As ’twere a thing of custom, and alike</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Lavished on friend and foe; where your fair child,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For coronals of buttercups and hare-bells,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Must prank her youth in gorgeous robes of state,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And where sweet nature’s impulses must all</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Be curbed, suppressed.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Manuscript Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>At length the awful day arrived. Lucy was married, and the
+Marquess and Marchioness of Montreville drove from <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr>
+George’s Church in the neatest of dark-green chariots, with
+four grey horses, leaving Colonel Heckfield sad, but satisfied,
+Mrs. Heckfield joyful, but dissolved in tears, Emma full of
+delight, wonderment, and awe, at her sister Lucy being actually
+a marchioness, Mademoiselle feeling herself the person
+most peculiarly concerned, inasmuch as it must have been
+entirely owing to the superior education she had given her
+pupil that she had been deemed worthy to be raised to so lofty
+a station in the peerage. Milly watched the carriage till it was
+out of sight, with tearful eyes, and left the window with a
+foreboding shake of the head.</p>
+
+<p>The bride and bridegroom spent the honeymoon at Ashdale
+Park, and Lucy was much edified by the grandeur of the
+place. The park was extensive, the pleasure-grounds immense,
+the gardens perfect. She had nothing to do but to
+enjoy all she saw. She went round the pictures several times,
+till she thought there was no pleasure in making her neck ache
+with looking up, and her eyes ache with peering through
+Claude Lorraine glasses; she repeatedly walked about the
+gardens, but she dreaded the sight of the gardener; he used
+such hard names, and he was such a gentleman, that she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>scarcely ventured to ask him the name of a flower, much less
+to suggest any fancy of her own. The house was completely
+<i lang="fr">montée</i>. The <i lang="fr">maître d’hôtel</i> sent in the bill of fare, but she
+could never have presumed to propose any alteration in the
+repast. She had heard that Ashdale Park was famous for
+bantams, and she one day expressed a wish to see them. Lord
+Montreville ordered the pony phaeton to drive her to the poultry
+establishment.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, let us walk, dear Lord Montreville; I had much
+rather walk.”</p>
+
+<p>“It has been just raining, my dear Lucy, and your shoes
+are thin.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I can put on thick ones in a moment.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hate to see a woman’s foot look like a man’s. Nothing so
+ugly as great coarse shoes upon a pretty woman’s little foot.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! but nobody will see me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I shall see you,” answered Lord Montreville, and
+Lucy felt frightened lest he should think she could have meant
+he was nobody. So the pony phaeton was ordered. In about
+three quarters of an hour it appeared, and a groom on another
+beautiful little long-tailed pony to follow, and Lucy’s wadded
+cloaks, and Lord Montreville’s fur cloak, and the boa, and the
+parasol, and the umbrella, and the reticule, &amp;c. were all duly
+packed and arranged, and they entered the carriage, and drove
+about a mile to the end of the park.</p>
+
+<p>Having summoned the poultryman, Lady Montreville
+was introduced to all the different yards and coops, the winter
+roosting-place, and the summer roosting-place, and the coops
+for early chickens, and the places for fatting; and Lucy soon
+felt that the poulterer, who did the honours of the establishment,
+was much more the master of the whole concern than
+she could ever be; so, having bestowed the requisite portion
+of approbation and admiration, she was departing without any
+particular desire to revisit the scene, when a young gosling
+waddled past her feet. She stooped to pick it up—it escaped
+her—she ran after it—she succeeded in catching it—she
+brought the pretty little yellow thing back to Lord Montreville
+in great delight at having secured it, and fully expecting that
+he would sympathize in her feelings.</p>
+
+<p>“Look at the pretty creature!—Is it not a love?—dear
+little thing!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span></p>
+<p>“My dear Lady Montreville, it will dirty you all over—its
+feathers are coming off: I beg, I entreat, you will put it
+down!” added Lord Montreville in a tone of annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy let the gosling go, and followed Lord Montreville to
+the carriage. When they had remounted, and again arranged
+the cloaks and shawls, Lord Montreville said—</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Lucy, you must remember that now you are a
+married woman, and my wife: these are little girlish ways
+that do not sit well upon you. I am sure your own good sense
+will point out to you that there ought to be something more
+<i lang="fr">posé</i> in manner for your present situation.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy acquiesced, and resolved not to catch goslings any
+more.</p>
+
+<p>They lived in the most perfect retirement. Lord Montreville
+did not mean to enter the world till he had tutored his
+wife into being precisely the thing he wished.</p>
+
+<p>She found the time hang rather heavy on her hands; she
+read, but she could not read all day; she wrote to her mother
+and sisters, but she had not much to say, and a bride’s letters
+are always very dull. No part of the household required her
+superintendence: she did not work much, for where was the
+use of working when she had plenty of money, and could buy
+every thing so much better than she could make it? She always
+hated torturing a piece of muslin, till the muslin was
+dirty and the pattern out of fashion. She played and sang a
+little; but Lord Montreville liked Italian music, and she sang
+English ballads. She liked long walks; but Lord Montreville
+always thought she would get tanned if the sun shone, and
+red if the wind blew, and wet if it had been raining, or was
+likely to rain. Then there were so many rooms, she never
+found any thing at the moment she wished for it: when she
+was at luncheon in the ante-room, she missed her reticule,
+which was left in the library, where she passed the morning;
+when she retired to her boudoir after her drive, she found she
+had left her letters in the saloon, where they breakfasted: in
+the evening, when they sat in the great drawing-room, she
+wanted her work, and the work-box was in the library. Lord
+Montreville rang the bell, and a servant was despatched to
+bring the work-box. He returned, but the one skein of silk
+of the right shade was missing, and it ended by her lighting
+a candle and going to look for it herself. In the morning,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>after hunting all over the library for the book she was reading,
+she remembered she had left it the preceding evening in the
+drawing-room; and she sometimes thought it would be vastly
+comfortable to live in one snug room, where one had all one’s
+things about one.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville had so far tamed her, that she did not
+think of setting out to trudge alone beyond the precincts of
+the shrubbery: she had learned not to pat every dog she met,
+or to kiss a donkey’s nose; and she was as steady from a gosling
+or duckling as a good fox-hound from a hare. When she
+wanted any thing at the other end of the room, she did not
+run, neither did she ever jump over the footstool, and she
+carried a candle perpendicularly, instead of horizontally. Lord
+Montreville thought it was time to ascertain a little what her
+manners would be in society, before he ventured to ask any of
+his own set to his house; and they sent forth a regular invitation
+to Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Delafield,
+Major and Mrs. Smith, and Mrs. Smith’s sister, Miss Brown.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy was a little appalled at the prospect of making the
+signal after dinner. Every woman must have felt that the
+first time of making this little mysterious bow is an epoch in
+her life. Lucy was sure she should stay too long or too short
+a time. Then, to which of the ladies was the sign to be
+made? Lord Montreville told her that when the conversation
+took the turn of horses, hunting, dogs, or partridges, which it
+invariably did somewhere between twenty minutes and half an
+hour after the servants had left the apartment, all women with
+any tact or discretion took advantage of the first pause to
+depart; and that the lady whom he should hand in to dinner
+would almost invariably prove the one towards whom she
+should direct her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The dinner went off very well. Lucy’s manners were perfect.
+She never was awkward, and her thoughts were sufficiently
+occupied with the idea of making the dreaded signal at
+the right moment to render her rather shy, and to prevent her
+spirits running away with her. She watched narrowly every
+thing that was said after dinner; and upon Major Smith
+asking her if she was fond of riding, she cast a glance towards
+Lord Montreville, to see if that was near enough the mark for
+her to rise; but, upon the whole, she thought not, as the
+question was addressed to herself. This occurred precisely
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>eighteen minutes after the last servant had changed the last
+plate on which there had been ice; and sure enough it led the
+way to the usual turn of gentlemen’s conversation before
+twenty-two minutes had expired.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy had answered, “Yes, but Lord Montreville had not
+yet found a horse he thought fit for her.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson remarked, that “Nothing was so difficult to
+procure as a good lady’s horse.”</p>
+
+<p>“Except a good hunter for a heavy weight,” said Mr.
+Delafield.</p>
+
+<p>“I can scarcely agree with you, Delafield,” rejoined Mr.
+Johnson; “for a lady’s horse should be so very safe, and all
+horses will stumble sometimes, and temper and mouth are so
+indispensable, besides action and ease.”</p>
+
+<p>“Temper is as necessary for a good hunter,” interrupted
+Mr. Delafield, “or they knock themselves to pieces; and I
+know that a heavy man like me can’t afford to have a horse
+take too much out of himself at first.”</p>
+
+<p>The moment was decidedly come; and Lucy, with a slight
+palpitation of the heart, looked at Mrs. Johnson. But Mrs.
+Johnson did not give a responsive glance: she was talking to
+Miss Brown. Lucy looked again; Mrs. Johnson was putting
+on her gloves, and did not raise her eyes. The conversation
+became every moment more sporting, and Lucy felt that if she
+had any tact or discretion she ought to depart. Her heart
+positively beat, but she could not venture to say any thing out
+loud, and she kept looking and looking, when Major Smith
+again addressed her, and she was obliged to answer him. He
+rejoined, and she found herself entangled in a fresh discourse.
+The half hour—more than the half hour must have elapsed!
+She answered with an absent air, still glancing uneasy glances,
+till at length Miss Brown nudged Mrs. Johnson, and Mrs.
+Johnson looked up, and Lucy hastily rose from her chair in
+the middle of Major Smith’s sentence.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Delafield made a great ceremony
+at the door, during which time the gentlemen stood bolt
+upright, with their napkins in their hands, waiting with exemplary
+patience while the ladies gave each other <i lang="fr">le pas</i>. At
+length they marched out arm-in-arm, with a slight laugh to
+carry off their uncertainties. Lady Montreville, in her shyness,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>slipped her arm within Miss Brown’s, and thanked her
+for making Mrs. Johnson look round.</p>
+
+<p>“Why could I not catch her eye before?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, don’t you know? She is only the wife of a younger
+son of a Baronet, and Mrs. Delafield is the wife of the eldest
+son of a Knight, so you know she was afraid of putting herself
+forward.”</p>
+
+<p>This was a new light to Lucy, who had never before been
+aware of these niceties.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Brown was rather pretty, with gay laughing eyes, and
+a lively countenance; and Lucy was so glad to meet with a
+person of her own age, and who looked as if she could be
+merry, that she forgot it was her duty to attend to the married
+ladies.</p>
+
+<p>She had shown Miss Brown all her diamonds and trinkets,
+and the wedding-gown. Miss Brown had half confessed she
+should soon be in want of such an article herself. Lady
+Montreville was in the act of trying to find out who was to
+be the happy man. They were in deep, interesting, and
+rather giggling conversation, somewhat apart, while Mrs.
+Smith, Mrs. Johnson, and Mrs. Delafield were sitting up
+quite prim, when the gentlemen entered. Lord Montreville
+was not pleased. Lucy, who was accustomed to her mother’s
+countenance when Bell Stopford was in question, instantly
+recognised the expression, and was frightened out of her wits.
+She was conscience-stricken; she broke off her discourse with
+Miss Brown; she came forward to the other ladies, and began
+talking to them with all her might.</p>
+
+<p>If people are easily offended by any want of attention from
+the great, in return they are easily soothed. The consciousness
+of being slighted is so unpleasant to the <i lang="fr">amour propre</i>,
+that if the intention to be civil is made manifest, they readily
+accept the will for the deed; and they soon forgave the lovely
+young Marchioness when they found there was no intentional
+neglect.</p>
+
+<p>The evening passed much like other evenings after a dinner
+in the country. There were no new people whom Lord
+Montreville wished to charm; they were old country neighbours,
+with whom there was no object to gain, and he let
+things take their course. He had merely wished to accustom
+Lucy to sit at the head of her table.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
+<p>When the company had all departed, he thus addressed his
+wife—</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy, my dear, what did I hear you saying to Miss
+Brown about Monday?”</p>
+
+<p>“I only asked her to come here. She is such a nice girl—is
+she not? I said I would send for her, that was all.”</p>
+
+<p>And Lucy began to fear that “all” was a great deal. It
+seemed so natural to ask Miss Brown to her own house at
+the moment she did so; but now that she told Lord Montreville
+what she had done, it did not seem so natural.</p>
+
+<p>“This will never do, my dear Lucy: Miss Brown is not
+at all the sort of person I wish you to be intimate with,—not
+at all the sort of person with whom I wish my wife to
+appear in public; and, if you are intimate in private, you
+must be the same in public. I hold it out of the question to
+begin intimacies you cannot keep up;—it exposes people to
+being accused of caprice and finery, which are very different
+things from the proper pride and self-respect which should
+make them move in their own sphere, and associate with persons
+in their own station. You understand me, my near
+Lucy?—and you will remember what I say:—and now let
+us see what can be done. Her coming here is wholly out of
+the question. If she is the first person who visits you after
+your marriage, it is proclaiming her your friend. I want to
+see my lawyer some time soon, and, instead of sending for
+him here, we will go to <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> James’s Square for a few days;
+and you can write a very civil note—mind, a very civil note—(I
+never affronted any body in my life), and tell her we
+are obliged to go to town on particular business.”</p>
+
+<p>All this was said in the sweetest and kindest tone imaginable;
+but Lucy was confounded and stupified when she found
+her having invited Miss Brown to her house for a day had
+brought on this complete <i lang="fr">déménagement</i>. She felt herself a
+cipher; she felt herself perfectly helpless. But the tone was
+so kind, and at the same time so decided, that she had not a
+word to say. Lord Montreville turned to other subjects,—told
+her he had seen her distress after dinner,—laughed with
+her at the rival dignities of the lady of the Baronet’s youngest
+son, and the lady of the Knight’s eldest son,—and was most
+gay and agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy did not quite like so entirely giving up her point
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>without a struggle. If he had spoken a little longer, if he
+had harped upon the subject, she would have rallied, and said
+something; but before she had recovered her first surprise, the
+whole affair was settled and done, and she did not know how
+to recur to it.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, after breakfast, Lord Montreville said,
+“Lucy, my love, write your note; and, as I am going to the
+stables, I will order a groom to be ready to take it to Miss
+Brown.”</p>
+
+<p>He left the room. There was no time to remonstrate.
+Lucy thought of Lady Selcourt,—she thought of her mother.
+Lady Selcourt would simply not have written the note; her
+mother would have had a thousand arguments before Colonel
+Heckfield had finished half his first sentence. She had not
+cool courage for the first line of conduct, nor had she had
+presence of mind for the latter. There was nothing left for
+her to do but to submit; so she wrote the note (not without
+three foul copies), sealed it very neatly, rang the bell, and
+gave it to the servant with a heavy heart; not that she cared
+for Miss Brown, but she felt herself imprisoned and enthralled.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="9" style="text-decoration: none;">IX.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">Une belle femme est aimable dans son naturel, elle ne perd rien à être negligée,
+et sans autre parure que celle qu’elle tire de sa beauté et de sa jeunesse. Une
+grace naïve éclate sur non visage, anime ses moindres actions: il y aurait moins de
+péril à la voir avec tout l’attirail de l’ajustement et de la mode.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right smcap">La Bruyere.</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>To London they went on Monday. Lucy was languid and out
+of spirits during the first part of the journey, but the rapid
+motion of the swinging vehicle and the four horses revived her
+young spirits, and the busy streets of London roused her, and
+the first sight of her house in London pleased her. The excitement,
+however, did not last. The hall was grand, the
+staircase noble, the rooms were vast, but they were not set out
+in order, as the family were not to take up their abode in
+London till the meeting of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The magnificent lustres were in canvass bags, the sofas in
+brown holland covers, the carpets only put down in the dining-room
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>and the smaller back drawing-room. One day, while
+Lord Montreville was occupied with his lawyer, Lucy, from
+real <i lang="fr">désœuvrement</i>, perambulated the desolate apartments, and
+uncovered the end of a sofa and the corner of an ottoman.
+She found them beautiful,—she longed to see the effect; she
+set to work, removed canvass bags, and paper coverings, &amp;c.
+Her blood began to flow, and her spirits to rise, at being
+actively employed: she took care not to send for the housemaid;
+she was quite glad to work hard. She was in the act
+of dragging forth a beautiful <i lang="fr">chaise-longue</i>, her bonnet tossed
+aside, her hair all out of curl, her gloves as gloves must be
+that have come in contact with London furniture, her shawl
+having slipped off her shoulders on the floor, her fine embroidered
+handkerchief covered with dirt and dust off some
+delicate little ornaments on the chimney-piece, the room spread
+with all the different envelopes she had abstracted from the
+furniture, when Lord Montreville entered, and, with him, a
+very handsome, very well-dressed, very pleasing-looking young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy stopped short in her employment, and no little boy
+caught by his schoolmaster in the act of stealing apples ever
+looked more shame-faced, more confused, more guilty. Worse
+and worse. Lord Montreville introduced the stranger as his
+cousin, Lionel Delville. Lucy knew he was the oracle of the
+world of fashion, and the person for whose opinion Lord Montreville
+had more deference than for any other person’s living.
+She stammered, blushed, and stood abashed.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville, however, showed no outward signs of
+annoyance; but, with a smiling countenance and easy manner,
+he said:—</p>
+
+<p>“You seem to have been very busy! Well! I dare say
+you will settle the rooms with much more taste than ever they
+were arranged before: women have ten times more tact in
+making a house look inhabited, than any man—always excepting
+my cousin Lionel. You must take him into your counsels,
+Lucy, if you wish your suite of apartments to be perfect;”
+and Lord Montreville led the way back into the boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy was comforted at Lord Montreville appearing to take
+her <i lang="fr">équippée</i> so quietly, and she in some measure recovered her
+self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>She looked exceedingly pretty in her dishevelled state, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>Lionel Delville thought his cousin, the untutored, rustic Marchioness,
+a most piquante creature. But though Lord Montreville
+himself had been originally attracted by this same
+manner, it was not the manner by which he intended that his
+wife should charm; and when Mr. Delville took his leave, the
+lecture which Lucy flattered herself had passed away, arrived
+with accumulated seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>His wrath was not disarmed by the degree in which he had
+seen Lionel pleased. He wished him to approve; but he did
+not at all wish to see him attracted. When he advised Lucy
+to take him into her counsels, it was from the fear Mr. Delville
+should read how little he wished she should do so.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy quaked at the tone in which he addressed her.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think, Lucy, I have had reason to be pleased at
+the mode in which I have been obliged to present my wife to
+the first of my relations who has seen her? Do you think
+your appearance and your occupation were calculated to make
+a favourable impression upon my family?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am so sorry, dear Lord Montreville! but I did so long
+to see those pretty things!”</p>
+
+<p>“Could you not send for the housemaid?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; to be sure I might; but I had nothing to do; and
+I only meant to take one peep, and I never thought of any
+body calling; I thought there was not a soul in London; and
+then, I know so few people—I never thought of being
+caught!”</p>
+
+<p>“You forget that I have a very large acquaintance, and
+that you are my wife; and you also forget one thing, which I
+have often tried to impress upon your mind—that a woman
+should never be unfit to be seen—that she should never be
+<em>caught</em>, as you term it, employed in any manner unsuited to
+her rank and station in life—that your pleasures should be
+such as befit the situation in which I have placed you; and
+that my wife should always act as if the eyes of the world
+were upon her. Let me hear no more of being <em>caught</em>—the
+expression is worthy of a school-miss in her teens.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy blushed rosy red. She blushed for shame; for she
+felt there was something undignified in the expression: but
+she blushed more from anger at being treated as a missish girl—at
+being, in fact, accused of vulgarity. She was on the
+point of crying, but the servant entered with the tickets for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>the play; and he put on coals, and swept up the ashes, and
+lighted the lamps, and shut the shutters. Lucy had time to
+recover herself, and Lord Montreville to reflect that he should
+not do wisely to frighten her too much; that his own annoyance
+had perhaps caused him to speak more angrily than
+the thing deserved.</p>
+
+<p>It was, therefore, in a gay and good-humoured tone, that
+he bade her make haste and dress; though, at the same time,
+he gave her a hint to be simple in her costume, as it was not
+good <i lang="fr">ton</i> to be too smart at the play.</p>
+
+<p>They dined alone; but Lionel Delville and a friend joined
+them late in the evening. If he thought her pretty in the
+morning, he thought her lovely in her present quiet, but most
+<i lang="fr">soigné</i> and fashionable attire.</p>
+
+<p>He seated himself by her side, and gave her very little opportunity
+of enjoying the drollery of the afterpiece. But he
+did not, he could not, flirt with her. There was a complete
+simplicity—a straightforward frankness in her manner,
+which rendered it impossible to know how to begin. Moreover,
+she believed herself in love with her husband; and
+besides, being dutifully and religiously devoted, she was particularly
+anxious to give him satisfaction after her errors of
+the morning; and her real thoughts and attention were on
+him and for him alone. He could not but be pleased; knowing
+women to their heart’s core, as he did, he saw the genuine
+innocence of her manner, and he felt assured that it must take
+a long apprenticeship to the world to contaminate the purity
+of her mind. He resolved to watch attentively over it.</p>
+
+<p>The kindness of his manner towards her the next day gratified
+her. He presented her with a magnificent real Cashmere;
+and the next day with a beautiful guard-ring. She
+thought him very kind, and she determined to do every thing
+to please him, which was, in fact, never to do any thing except
+to dress well, sit on the sofa buried among cushions (not bolt
+upright engaged in any employment), and especially to fling
+herself back into the corner of her carriage with an elegant
+<em>abandon</em> when she went out airing.</p>
+
+<p>Her efforts to do nothing were crowned with success: he
+thought her extremely improved; but this <i lang="fr">dolce far niente</i> to
+her was not <i lang="fr">dolce</i>, especially when they returned into the
+country, and she could not go shopping every day—an occupation
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>to which he had no objection, as her pin-money was so
+ample that she could not easily be distressed.</p>
+
+<p>He now thought he might venture to gather some of his
+own friends and relations around him, and before Christmas
+there arrived a large party, all people of the very highest
+fashion, pleasing and agreeable. They, like their host, seemed
+in their conversation to have adopted the motto of “<i lang="fr">Glissez
+mortels, mais n’appuyez pas</i>;” and though the hours might
+fly swiftly and pleasantly in their society, there was nothing
+about them sufficiently original or individual to deserve recording.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy behaved exceedingly well; she had been properly
+drilled before their arrival: she was in an interesting state,
+which, assisted by the lectures of the apothecary, and the constant
+solicitude of Lord Montreville, and the ennui occasioned
+by being headed, as a sportsman would term it, whenever she
+attempted to stir hand or foot, gave to her whole carriage and
+deportment a most excellent languor. She no longer felt any
+flutter when she made the signal after dinner, and, upon the
+whole, Lord Montreville thought the result all he could wish,
+except that he would fain have had her join a little more in
+general conversation, if he could have been quite sure of no
+exuberance of spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Was she happy in the midst of her splendour? Her husband
+exceedingly attentive, and the most agreeable society collected
+around her. No: she was bored—from morning till
+night, constantly suffering from ennui. She was grateful for
+her husband’s attentions, but they invariably prevented her
+doing the thing she wished to do; and she sometimes wondered
+how so many little chubby children were running about
+the village in health and safety, who were not heirs to titles
+and properties.</p>
+
+<p>The society of her husband’s friends did not amuse her;
+they were all the intimates of one clique; and, notwithstanding
+their habitual good-breeding, she could not help often being
+unable to understand, or, at all events, to join in their conversation.
+A slight tone of persiflage and of quizzing in their
+mode of treating all subjects, also made her feel less at her
+ease, than she would otherwise have done after ten days’ residence
+under the same roof; and she often longed for a hearty
+laugh with Bell Stopford, a long scrambling walk with Emma
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>and Mary, or a quiet chat with the dear, honest, affectionate
+Milly.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy occasionally suggested how glad she should be to see
+her parents; but the house was always filled with a succession
+of visitors. The Duke and Duchess of Altonworth announced
+their intention of taking Ashdale Park in their way to London,
+and Lord Montreville inadvertently exclaimed, “Whom shall
+we get to meet them, for this party disperses on Wednesday?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, then, now we can have papa and mamma, and Emma
+and Mary!—that will be nice!”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville’s countenance fell—he looked blank and
+dismayed. Lucy saw she was wrong, but she could not imagine
+that papa and mamma were not fit company for any duke
+or duchess in the land; so she awaited the result, blank and
+dismayed in her turn, but wholly at a loss to guess what was
+the matter. Lord Montreville soon rallied.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not think that would quite do, my dear Lucy: a
+family party is always a dull thing, and the Duchess is very
+clever, and altogether——My dear Lucy, I am sure you
+perfectly understand me.”</p>
+
+<p>This time, however, Lucy could not and would not understand.</p>
+
+<p>“But it will not be a family party to the Duchess, and I
+am sure mamma is clever too: some people call her blue.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very true, my love; but the Duchess is clever and not
+blue, and she is a person who is very exclusive; she has retired
+habits, and does not like new acquaintances; and, in
+short, we must either get somebody whom she would decidedly
+like to meet, or we had better have nobody.”</p>
+
+<p>“But we are going to town in a fortnight, and mamma has
+not been here yet,” said Lucy with more pertinacity, and even
+humour, than she had ever yet shown.</p>
+
+<p>“We shall be here again at Easter, and in the summer certainly,
+and then you shall have them all, Emma and Mary,
+and your old friend Milly too, if you like it;” and Lord
+Montreville resolved he would do it once for all, well and
+thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy acquiesced, though she did not exactly see why Ashdale
+Park should be open to so many slight acquaintances, and
+yet that a visit from her parents should be so difficult of accomplishment.
+She was also somewhat appalled at the idea
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>of this clever, exclusive Duchess, whom she should have to
+entertain herself, for no one whom Lord Montreville thought
+worthy of meeting her could be found on such short notice.
+Lucy was sure she should dislike her; she was angry with her
+for, as she thought, keeping away her own family, and she
+determined to bear patiently the infliction of her presence for
+the few days she remained, and never to seek her any more.
+She was free from the vulgar awe which simple rank inspires
+to the <i lang="fr">parvenu</i>, though she was not free from the <i lang="fr">gêne</i> which
+most people feel when in company with persons who are
+wedded to their own set, and who do not give themselves any
+trouble to please those who are not of it.</p>
+
+<p>The day arrived, and Lucy, who was not constitutionally
+shy, and had now become perfectly at her ease in the discharge
+of her every-day hostess duties, awaited with composure
+the entry of the disagreeable Duchess.</p>
+
+<p>She was rather surprised when a little, quiet, middle-aged
+woman, in a close bonnet, and a black cloak, slid into the
+room, followed by a large, gaunt, lordly-looking man. Lord
+Montreville was not present. Lucy rose to receive them; the
+Duchess introduced herself and the Duke, in a gentle, kind,
+frank manner.</p>
+
+<p>They sat down, and the Duchess being very cold drew her
+chair close to the fire, put her feet upon the fender, and
+dropped out little natural sentences, which half amused, half
+pleased Lucy, and before they went to dress for dinner she felt
+more intimate with the dreaded Duchess than with any of the
+other people who had yet been her inmates at Ashdale Park.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner Lord Montreville was in his most agreeable vein;
+the Duchess was charming, so unaffected, so straightforward,
+and, withal, there was something singular and original in her
+turn of thought, with a graceful <i lang="fr">bonhommie</i> which was peculiar
+to herself. The Duke was a sensible, hard-headed, high-minded
+man, silent in large society, but conversable enough
+in small ones. Lucy was interested and amused all the time,
+and would have talked more than she did, but that she liked
+to listen to the Duchess, and to watch the pleasing expression
+of her countenance, and the wonderful manner in which, without
+youth, features, or complexion, it lighted up into something
+more attractive than beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Upon further acquaintance she found her as good as she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>was fascinating. She spoke of her married daughters, of her
+grand-children, of her home, her garden, her son, and his wife
+and children, who lived at Altonworth, when in the country;
+of her school, of the poor people, and Lucy perceived that, in
+fact, her heart was so completely filled with the near and dear
+charities of life, that it was not strange she had no inclination
+to seek for other objects in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy’s genuine feelings thawed to her immediately; and the
+Duchess was also pleased with the innocence and simplicity of
+her young hostess. Lucy was more delighted and flattered at
+the hope of being admitted into her intimacy, than she had
+been since the ball, at which she had first met Lord Montreville,
+when he had first made her feel herself a person altogether
+superior to the common run of girls.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy and the Duchess parted with a mutual wish to meet
+again; on the part of one, amounting to a passionate desire,
+on the part of the other to a kindly inclination.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="10" style="text-decoration: none;">X.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Kingdomes are bote cares,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">State ys devoyd of staie,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Ryches are ready snares</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And hasten to decaie.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Henry <abbr title="the sixth" style="text-decoration: none;">VI.</abbr></span> <i>King of England</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>When in London, Lucy, although in perfect health, and
+peculiarly active and alert, was not permitted to go out. She
+was chained to the sofa, till she almost longed to be a little ill
+to give her some occupation. She did muster a little attack
+of nerves, and an occasional whim, which, unfortunately for
+her, served to justify Lord Montreville in the continuance of
+his precautions.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was often at the House of Lords, and as
+the season advanced he was more and more absent from home.
+Lucy thought the peers really worked very hard, and sacrificed
+a great deal of time to the good of their country. However,
+it was so right and praiseworthy to do so that she could not
+complain.</p>
+
+<p>Numberless persons left their cards with her, and she sent
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>her’s in return; but, as she was not allowed to keep late
+hours, she did not go out of an evening, and her circle of acquaintance
+did not increase as rapidly as she expected. Lord
+Montreville did not allow her to admit gentlemen of a morning,
+and he did not encourage her seeing much of Mrs. Bentley
+and her “sweet children;” so that, except the visits of the
+Duchess of Altonworth and her daughters, with whom she
+soon became intimate, and the drives into the country, which
+she sometimes took with them, nothing could exceed the monotony
+of her life.</p>
+
+<p>She heartily wished the spring over, and her confinement
+over, and another spring come, that she might revel in the
+anticipated delights of a good London season.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of time the spring was over; they returned
+to the country, and Lucy reminded Lord Montreville that he
+had promised her parents should pay them a visit. The invitation
+was despatched, and they arrived, father, mother,
+sisters, and Milly.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy’s situation afforded an excuse for not seeing much
+company, which suited Lord Montreville very well; but not so
+well Mrs. Heckfield, who had passed four days in London, on
+her way to Ashdale Park, for the purpose of providing herself
+and daughters with apparel fit for the succession of distinguished
+company which she there expected to meet.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did it suit Emma and Mary, whose hearts palpitated
+at the prospect of wearing their new wardrobe, and at
+the effect it was to produce. Vague images of barons, viscounts,
+earls, marquesses, and even dukes, were floating in
+their minds, and Mademoiselle had certainly intimated she did
+not see why if one of her young people had married so
+brilliantly, the others should not do as well, especially as
+Mademoiselle Emma played with much more execution than
+Madame la Marquise, and Mademoiselle Marie had begun
+learning German.</p>
+
+<p>One and all were wofully disappointed when day after day
+elapsed, and the family party received no addition, unless it
+might be the clergyman of the parish, Lord Montreville’s
+solicitor from the county town, once his agent from Lancashire,
+and once the Delafields.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Heckfield appeared in perfect caps from Devi’s, in the
+last new Parisian hat from Carson’s; Emma and Mary in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>crispest of white muslins, over the cleanest of white satins.
+In vain! Neither duke, marquess, earl, viscount, baron, or
+even baronet, made his appearance. A fortnight had already
+slipped away,—the time for departure was approaching, when
+Mrs. Heckfield one day said to her daughter,—</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my dear Lucy, I hope when your confinement is
+over, you will lead a gayer life. I fancied you had your house
+always full of company. Your letters constantly contained a
+list of visitors as long as my arm, and I am sure since we
+have been here, scarcely a soul has crossed your threshold.
+We have ten times as much society at Rose Hill Lodge.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Montreville takes too much care of me, and that is
+the reason we have been so dull. I was afraid Emma and
+Mary would be disappointed, but whenever I proposed asking
+people to come, Lord Montreville seemed so afraid of my being
+ill. I am sure I am well enough, if he would but think so.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my dear, it is quite right that husbands should be
+attentive, and I cannot but rejoice that your’s is so peculiarly
+so. Certainly your father never took half so much care of
+me. However, I hope the next time we pay you a visit we
+may find you well, and strong, and able to have your house
+full, and that I shall have the pleasure of seeing my Lucy the
+life of a brilliant society.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy sighed, for she had begun to understand Lord Montreville’s
+dislike to introducing her friends to his friends, and
+she feared it would be long before she had them all around
+her again. It was not that their visit gave her all the pleasure
+she had anticipated from it: she felt that her husband was
+bored; she was aware that he avoided his own set; she was
+in an agony if any of her family did any of the things which
+he thought out of the question; and her sisters, who were not
+“come out,” although they “dined down,” as they termed it,
+often made her uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>One day her mother asked a gentleman opposite if he would
+“take” some of the dish before her, and Lucy looked timidly
+towards Lord Montreville to see if he had caught the sound of
+a word which was peculiarly obnoxious to his ears. Emma,
+on another occasion, exclaimed, what a “delicious” trifle, and
+she felt a chill run through her, for she knew he had a particular
+aversion to an epithet, which to him seemed expressive
+of gluttony.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+<p>Mary (who had never dined down before) was so delighted
+with the variety of excellent dishes before her, that she was
+much inclined to go the round of the second course, and
+needed many admonitory nods and frowns from her mother.
+She also frequently tipped her chair on its two fore-legs while
+she was writing or working, and this Lucy knew was an unpardonable
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>Both girls were gay and wild, and had, as most sisters have,
+till they have been a little schooled in the world, the habit of
+talking over each other, and sometimes of interrupting the
+person speaking in their eagerness to rejoin. On such occasions
+Lord Montreville stopped short, and betook himself to a silence
+which was most painful to Lucy, although it was entirely
+unperceived by the culprits.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy occasionally attempted to give them gentle hints upon
+these subjects, but they only seemed to think she was grown
+quite fine, and very difficult to please, and they could not
+conceal their disappointment at the retirement in which she
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>The result was, that at the end of three weeks, when the
+large coach which contained them all drove from the door, a
+sensation of relief mingled itself with the sorrow she felt at
+parting from them.</p>
+
+<p>Milly remained at Ashdale Park, and Lucy looked forward
+with unmixed pleasure to the prospect of having always about
+her a person so thoroughly attached, and in whom she had
+such perfect confidence.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn the long-expected event took place,—Lord
+Montreville was made happy by the birth of a son, and Lucy
+was delighted to think she should soon be a free agent again.</p>
+
+<p>They had removed to London for the occasion. Lord
+Montreville was a great deal from home, and, as there were
+very few people in town, the time hung heavy with Lucy; for
+she was so impatient to leave her sick room and her sofa, that
+she did not find every thought and feeling wholly absorbed in
+the new-born babe. She was very young in years, and still
+more so in character: she had by no means had enough of
+youth and gaiety, and was not yet ripe for the tender affections
+and dull details of maternity. She was charmed with her
+baby, and was very unhappy if it cried, but it did not suffice
+her for amusement to watch it all day long. She wished Lord
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>Montreville would stay at home, and read to her, or would
+bring her home some news, or that somebody would come, or
+something happen.</p>
+
+<p>Milly was her comfort. She sometimes conversed with her
+for hours, and listened with sympathy to the details of her life
+in America, and with interest to her unsophisticated view of
+things in general. She thought that after all there was
+nothing half so good or so sensible as Milly, except the
+Duchess of Altonworth;—indeed, she fancied she perceived a
+considerable resemblance between their characters.</p>
+
+<p>They returned to the country. When the first excitement
+was over, of bells being rung and oxen being roasted—when
+the servants, the tenants, the neighbours, had all looked at the
+wonderful child, and pronounced it to be the very finest they
+had ever seen, Lucy relapsed into her former state of ennui.
+She began to think she must be ill.</p>
+
+<p>“Milly, I do not think I am well,” she one day promulgated
+to Milly, as she was sitting in the nursery.</p>
+
+<p>“La, my lady! I am sure you look the very picture of
+health! What ever is the matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know, exactly.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have not the headache, sure?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! my head never aches.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps, my lady, you feel tired if you walk too far.”</p>
+
+<p>“No! I do not think I ever feel tired with walking, but I
+feel very tired if I do not walk.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, my lady!—that’s comical too!”</p>
+
+<p>“I never feel merry as I used to do; and I think it must
+be my state of health that prevents my being so. I have
+thought of consulting Dr. Bolusville, only I do not know what
+to say to him. I have no symptom that I know of—only I
+ought to be so very happy. I possess every thing that a person
+can sit down and wish for, and yet I feel low. I sometimes
+think, if I had more occupation, I should be better; but
+Lord Montreville is so kind, he will not let me take any
+trouble about any thing. Now, I dare say you did not feel
+low when you were in your log hut, on the banks of your
+swampy river—did you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my lady! I never did, certainly;—when poor John
+was middling well, that is.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, yes, for you had plenty to do! that must have been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>the reason. When I was a child, I always worked harder in
+my garden than my sisters; and the old bailiff once gave me
+a silver knife, because he said I had earned it haymaking.
+How I do wish Lord Montreville would let me help him to
+manage the house, and that he would consult me, and talk
+with me; but you see he never has any thing to say to me,
+except a kind word now and then, just as he has to the child.
+I should like to go hand-in-hand with my husband, as you
+and John did, and ride about his woods, and his park, and his
+farm with him, as the Duchess of Altonworth does with the
+Duke; and I should like to have a school, and to be useful.
+But he would not let me go to the school—especially now—he
+is so afraid of my bringing back the measles, or any complaint
+to the child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my lady, the baby will soon be business enough for
+you. What a sweet fellow he grows! Look! he knows you
+already!” and Milly tried to turn her attention to the child;
+for she thought all the mischief lay in Lord Montreville’s
+being so very little like John Roberts; and as that evil was
+without a remedy, the less it was dwelt upon the better.</p>
+
+<p>The wished-for spring came, and Lucy was at once
+launched into the circle, which, to those who are not admitted,
+appears far to exceed in glory and delights Dante’s “<i lang="it">Paradiso</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville did not approve of her going out quite
+every evening, nor did he like her being seen at four or five
+parties the same night; but he allowed her a fair proportion
+of dissipation. He generally accompanied her himself; and
+without appearing to watch her, he contrived to know exactly
+what she was doing: but he did not make a point of never
+letting her stir without him: he took care to do nothing that
+should make her feel herself doubted, or that should cause
+either her or himself to appear ridiculous in the eyes of others.
+His proceedings were, as usual, dictated by the head, rather
+than by the heart; and were, as usual, framed with reference
+to the effect to be produced on the world, rather than to any
+abstract notion of right and wrong. In this instance, however,
+morality and expediency pointed out the same line of
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy was charmed with all she saw, and she was also
+delighted at finding herself considered charming; but her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>gaiety was as frank and natural as ever, although more subdued
+than in her girlish days. She ventured to talk more in
+society, and there was still enough left of the madcap Lucy to
+give a certain raciness and originality to what she uttered.
+Speeches, which in themselves were nothing, pleased from
+being so like herself.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville had now sufficient confidence in her tact
+not to fear any outbreak which could offend the most fastidious;
+and he rendered justice to the perfect innocence of her
+manner, in which there was so complete an absence of prudery
+or of coquetry, that no one presumed to pay her any marked
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>This was the happiest period of her wedded life. The
+charms of London society had not yet palled on her, and,
+although her head was not turned with it, still she could not
+be insensible to the <i lang="fr">éclat</i> of her present position. She gradually
+became quite reconciled to seeing less of Mrs. Bentley
+and her children than she had at first wished, and she was not
+so much annoyed as she thought she should have been at not
+having Emma with her at Almack’s.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess of Altonworth was most kind, and she
+passed many agreeable evenings with small parties at her
+house.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the whole, time no longer hung heavy. Lord Montreville
+now had seldom occasion to set her right on any point
+of etiquette; and when she saw him in private, he appeared
+pleased and satisfied with her. But, although she did not
+always see his name in the House of Lords, still he was frequently
+absent of an evening, except when they were engaged
+to some pleasant party, in which case he almost always accompanied
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The season drew to a close. They left London, and, to her
+great delight, removed to the Welsh castle, to pass some of
+the summer weeks among the wild beauties of nature.</p>
+
+<p>All she had heard or imagined of the awful glories of the
+castle were more than realised. It was as vast, as dark, as
+gloomy, as massive, as uncomfortable, and as ghostly as heart
+could wish; and when first she arrived with all the spirits
+which the London season had infused into her, she was enchanted
+with the small windows in the thick walls, and the
+delightful look-out into the square courtyard.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span></p>
+<p>There is no saying how long she would have found amusement
+in wandering about the oaken passages, and the winding
+stairs, and in finding likenesses for her boy among the grim
+warriors and furred judges whose portraits adorned the sides
+of the gallery; or how soon she would have longed for some
+of her friends to explore and to admire with her, for, soon
+after their arrival at Caërwhwyddwth Castle, an event occurred
+which gave a completely new current to her thoughts and
+feelings.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville, who had been out on horseback with his
+agent to inspect some improvements that were making on the
+property, was one evening brought home senseless. In descending
+a narrow footpath to examine the foundations of a
+new bridge, the horse slipped. He was precipitated down a
+considerable declivity, and a blow on the head produced a concussion
+of the brain, from which the most serious consequences
+might be apprehended.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy’s horror and grief were such as might be expected.
+The doctor from the nearest town arrived as soon as possible.
+His report of the patient’s state was most alarming, although
+he gave hopes of ultimate recovery. All the usual remedies
+of bleeding, blistering, and extreme quiet were recommended;
+and Lucy sat night and day by his bed-side, watching with
+intense anxiety for the symptoms of returning consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>The doubt had sometimes crossed her mind whether she
+did love her husband as she had wished and intended to do,
+and as Milly had loved John. But now, in his present helpless
+and suffering state, she felt herself so capable of doing
+any thing for him, of enduring any thing for him,—she felt
+that on his recovery all her future happiness so completely depended,
+that she was quite reassured as to the extent of her
+affection. She reflected with gratitude on his having selected
+her from all the world; she forgot his little particularities,
+she thought only of his kindnesses, and she nursed him with
+all the devotion and forgetfulness of self with which Milly
+could have nursed her John.</p>
+
+<p>Weeks elapsed, and he did not recover his memory, nor did
+he seem to recognise those about him.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time agents, servants, stewards,—all required
+orders and directions. There were law affairs pending. Lord
+Montreville’s letters had been carefully set aside in his study
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>till he himself might be well enough to open them, when
+Lucy received a formal epistle from the agent, informing her
+that among these letters there were some containing papers
+which it was absolutely necessary should be returned for signature.
+Lucy made up her mind that she must open the
+letters.</p>
+
+<p>Before she went to Lord Montreville’s study to proceed
+with the necessary routine, she looked into the sick room, to
+see that all was quiet and comfortable.</p>
+
+<p>She was again closing the curtains, when she was almost
+overcome with joy at hearing him utter, in feeble accents,
+“Lucy, do not leave me!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="11" style="text-decoration: none;">XI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Se a ciascuno l’interno affanno</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="it">Si leggesse in fronte scritto,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Quanti mai che invidia fanno</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="it">Ci farebbero pietà.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Metastasio.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lucy could scarcely command herself so as to answer her
+husband, without betraying a degree of emotion which might
+have been prejudicial to him in his present state of weakness.
+He thanked her for her attention to him; he told her he had
+often been aware of her presence, though he had not had the
+power to show it. She bathed his hand with tears of joy and
+gratitude; and at that moment, when he was endeared to her
+by long watching and by deep anxiety, she felt as if Milly’s
+love for John could not have exceeded her’s for her husband,
+her guide, her protector, the father of her child.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor came, and pronounced the patient convalescent;
+but prescribed the most perfect quiet, and the avoidance of
+every thing which might in any way arouse his feelings.
+Lucy told him of the letter she had received from the agent,
+and asked his opinion and advice upon the subject.</p>
+
+<p>He declared it out of the question that Lord Montreville
+should be allowed to attend to matters of business for weeks,
+nay, perhaps months.</p>
+
+<p>Under these circumstances, Lucy resumed her intention of
+opening Lord Montreville’s letters, and of acting according to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>the best of her judgment. Several were most uninteresting
+and unimportant communications, which required neither
+comment nor answer; some were letters of correspondence,
+which she laid aside as soon as she found they did not contain
+the papers of which she was in search. At length she came
+to one written in a delicate female hand, beginning, “Dearest
+Montreville,” and signed “Your Alicia Mowbray.”</p>
+
+<p>“Alicia Mowbray!” she thought; “I never heard of her,”
+and her eye glanced upon words which filled her with astonishment
+and horror: “cruel absence,” and “consuming grief,”
+“counting the moments,” and “happy meeting,” and “sad
+parting,” and “distress for money,” and “necessary expenses,”
+winding up with an urgent request for a fresh supply of a
+hundred pounds.</p>
+
+<p>Could this be intended for Lord Montreville! She looked
+again at the direction at the beginning of the letter. There
+could be no mistake: it was most assuredly addressed to her
+husband,—to the husband whom in health she had so dutifully
+studied to please,—whom in sickness she had nursed
+with such unwearied attention,—from whom, though exposed
+to all the fascinations and allurements of a London life, she
+had never for one moment allowed her thoughts to wander!
+That he, whom she had always looked upon as the appointed
+guardian of her honour and her morals, should have been
+habitually, deliberately breaking his nuptial vow, preferring to
+her pure and true affection the hired caresses of a mistress,—and,
+above all, exposing her to the eyes of the world as the
+neglected wife of an old profligate, old enough to be her
+father! The letter fell from her hand; her brain went round
+with the multitudinous thoughts that rushed almost simultaneously
+through it; but rage, indignation, and disgust superseded,
+for some moments, all more tender emotions.</p>
+
+<p>Then came pity for herself, who had thus wasted the bloom
+of her early feelings, and she wept bitter tears over her
+blighted youth, her worthless beauty; for at this moment
+she suddenly became aware that she was one of the most
+lovely and most admired of women,—admired by all around
+her, except her husband,—lovely in all eyes but his!</p>
+
+<p>Lucy had married almost from the school-room. Lord Montreville
+had drawn a veil over his own former career; he had
+studiously avoided initiating her into the frailties of fashionable
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>life; he had wished to preserve the purity he found; so
+that she still retained that freshness of mind which refuses
+itself to the conviction of the existence of vice, but which,
+when once unwillingly convinced, sees it in all its natural
+deformity.</p>
+
+<p>From long acquaintance with the world, the imagination
+becomes familiarised with what at first inspired horror; or
+from experience of the weakness of human nature, the temptations
+to which it is exposed, and the gradations by which
+one error often leads on to guilt, the charitable learn to pity
+the sinner, while they condemn the sin. But Lucy’s perceptions
+of right and wrong were not blunted by habitual intercourse
+with the faulty, nor softened by the consideration of
+their temptations or their repentance. She saw but the broad
+distinction between virtue and vice, and she looked on the
+latter with the indignant horror of youth. Charity is not the
+characteristic virtue of the young.</p>
+
+<p>While she was absorbed in such new and painful reflections,
+there came a tap at the door, and her maid informed
+her that Lord Montreville was awake, and was incessantly
+asking for her. She started at the interruption, and, quickly
+dismissing the maid, stood for a few moments paralysed.</p>
+
+<p>She had looked with loathing at the letter, till her tears
+had all retreated to their cells. She roused herself, and hastily
+pushing the other papers into an escrutoire, she stopped to pick
+up the fatal epistle.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the servant entered. She instinctively
+crammed it into her bosom, but as instantly pulled it forth
+again, as if its very touch was contamination.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was so impatient for her return, that a
+second messenger had been despatched to hasten her. She
+rushed to her own apartment, where she placed the letter under
+lock and key, and then was obliged, with what composure she
+could muster, to repair to the bedside of her husband.</p>
+
+<p>He greeted her with a pleased smile,—he extended his
+pale and emaciated hand to take her’s. “Dearest Lucy,” he
+said, “it seems an age since you left me; it does me good to
+know my kindest and best nurse is near me. I cannot bear to
+feel that what I love best is absent from me.”</p>
+
+<p>His hand lay passively in hers; her soul recoiled from him.
+She could not return the pressure of his hand, she could not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>meet his eyes. “Falsehood upon his lips,” she thought,
+“when scarcely snatched from the jaws of death, when still
+trembling on the verge of the grave.”</p>
+
+<p>She made an effort to speak, and, assuring him the doctor
+forbade all excitement or emotion, she begged him to compose
+himself to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>“You will not leave me, then?”</p>
+
+<p>She promised she would not, and she seated herself by the
+bedside. All was quiet; he gradually dozed off into a light
+slumber; and there she sat bewildered, confused, fancying all
+that had occurred must be a dream! Could he speak so
+kindly, so tenderly, and yet be false? Could he address her
+as the being he loved best, while he preferred to her this
+Alicia? Could he, with death staring him in the face, thus
+add a deliberate lie to all his other sins? Yet there existed
+the letter—the letter which expressed implicit reliance on his
+affections!</p>
+
+<p>She gazed on him as he slept, and looked back to the moment
+when he had first recognised her, and thought, was it possible
+one little hour could have worked such a wondrous revolution
+in her mind?</p>
+
+<p>The truth was, that Alicia had been a mistress of former
+days, on whom he had settled a handsome annuity at the very
+time when his absence from Lyneton had excited such surprise
+in the inhabitants of Rose Hill Lodge, and from whom he had
+then parted, as he intended for ever, but who had once more
+succeeded in getting him within her toils.</p>
+
+<p>For some time after his marriage he had neither heard nor
+seen any thing of her; but when he came to London in the
+spring, he received from her a letter, stating that she had
+been robbed of the money he allowed her—that she was
+deeply in debt, and was threatened with an execution in her
+house, and with the prospect of being sent to prison. He could
+not do otherwise than ascertain the truth of this history, and
+interfere to save her from such wretchedness. She was still
+very handsome, in deep grief, and in great agitation at again
+seeing him. He relieved her immediate wants, and occasionally
+visited her; for which visits she expressed the greatest
+gratitude, and from which she contrived to extract considerable
+additions to her allowance. He did not thoroughly believe
+in her passionate devotion to him, but he could not be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>cruel to a person who had acquired the sort of hold over him
+which is obtained by long habit.</p>
+
+<p>He did not consider that this renewal of his former acquaintance
+at all interfered with his making an excellent husband,
+for he treated his wife with all possible respect and
+attention; she had every thing that an unlimited command of
+money could procure her, and he imagined that the whole
+guilt of infidelity consisted in its coming to the knowledge,
+and consequently hurting the feelings, of the wife.</p>
+
+<p>If he had been obliged to make his election between them,
+he would not have hesitated for a moment; but there was
+nothing, to his mind, incompatible in the two connexions.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, his sentiments for Lucy had of late rather increased
+than diminished in warmth; for he could not but
+respect the singleness of heart with which she passed through
+the ordeal of a London season, so dangerous to a young and
+lovely married woman of high rank, and especially to one who
+was the fashion. As the mother of his son and heir, she had
+an additional claim on his affections that no other woman had
+ever possessed; and the attention with which she had nursed
+him had now awakened in his bosom stronger emotions of
+tenderness than he had thought himself capable of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>The expressions which fell from his lips came straight from
+his heart, although, at that moment, they appeared to Lucy
+to be an insulting refinement of deceit.</p>
+
+<p>During the hour which she passed watching his slumbers, she
+seemed to live a long life of bitter and confused thoughts, and
+she was unutterably relieved when the entrance of the physician
+enabled her to make her escape, and to lock herself
+into her room, there to meditate on the past, the present, and
+the future.</p>
+
+<p>On looking back she remembered a thousand circumstances
+which to her unsuspicious mind had seemed of no import at
+the time, but which now proved to her that this connexion
+was one of some standing. She remembered having heard
+persons allude to debates in the House of Lords, at which he
+had been obliged to confess he had not been present, although
+he had been absent from her all the evening. She remembered
+how little she had seen of him during her confinement;
+she looked at the fatal letter, and felt certain she had often
+seen notes in the same hand-writing, and she became more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>and more indignant to think she had long been a neglected, an
+injured, and a duped wife. She recollected the rigid notions
+of female propriety which he professed; she thought the care
+he had taken of her morals, the censorship which he exercised
+over the books she read, an insulting mockery. She could
+almost smile in bitterness at his having forbidden her reading
+Delphine, and made her return Adam Blair to the library,—and
+at the remark he made to some one who wondered she had
+never yet read <i lang="fr">La Nouvelle Heloise</i>—that he was surprised
+at any woman who had read the first three lines of the introduction
+owning she had read any further.</p>
+
+<p>“And I was grateful to him,” she thought, “for thus
+watching over me. I fancied it argued affection for me, and
+a love of virtue in himself, while he was thus treating me like
+a fool, and laughing at his childish dupe! No wonder he
+wished to preserve the ignorance which was so convenient to
+him. This taste for purity in which I so rejoiced, was but
+the veil to conceal his own vice. And I am bound for life to
+this man. I must drag on a weary existence, forced, Heaven
+knows how unwillingly, to break my marriage vow; for how
+can I love, how can I honour, what I despise and condemn?”</p>
+
+<p>Floods of tears came to the relief of her bursting heart and
+bursting head. She wept, till she was once more calm, and
+could look with some degree of composure upon the actual
+position in which she was placed.</p>
+
+<p>In the first instance she resolved, although she could never
+again find pleasure in the performance of her duty, that she
+would rigidly adhere to it, that she would command all outward
+expression of her emotions, and that she would continue
+to nurse Lord Montreville, if possible, with the same devotion
+as before. She made up her mind that when she had succeeded
+in finding the papers for which the lawyer had written,
+she would lock up all the letters together, and when Lord
+Montreville was well enough to attend to his own affairs again,
+she would explain the circumstances under which she had been
+obliged to search for these papers, and give him the key of
+the escrutoire without any farther remark.</p>
+
+<p>When she had despatched the papers, and safely deposited
+the letters according to her intention, she felt somewhat relieved,
+and was enabled to return once more to the sick room,
+and take her station there as usual.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
+<p>Fortunately he spoke but little, and she was spared any
+fresh ebullitions of tenderness on his part. In the evening
+she repaired to the nursery, where Milly was rapturous in her
+congratulations upon his lordship’s wonderful improvement.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my lady, your good nursing has its reward at last!
+La! when first he called you by your name, and spoke so
+kind and tender like, Mrs. Gauzelee told me she never saw
+such a moving sight. And to see you, my lady, take his hand
+and kiss it, and my lord calling you ‘his own Lucy.’ Well!
+it does my old heart good to think you have known such a
+blessed moment; for I remember, as I pushed open the bed-room
+door of our log-hut, when my poor John said, ‘Why,
+Milly, t’an’t you,’ I thought the joy of hearing my husband’s
+voice speak my name again would have quite got the better
+of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Few people like to be told they felt this or that, on such or
+such an occasion; still more disagreeable is it when, although
+they cannot disclaim the emotions attributed to them, they are
+conscious of experiencing those the most diametrically opposite.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy held her child in her arms. She contrived to bury
+her face in its little bosom, and to remain bending over it, till
+her voice and her countenance were sufficiently under control
+to venture an answer: “The doctor seems to think that, with
+perfect quiet, Lord Montreville may soon be quite himself
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>Milly was surprised at the cool and measured reply. Lucy’s
+devotion had been such, that she could not doubt the love she
+bore to her husband. Her lady looked ill. She thought,
+perhaps, she had harassed herself too much, and she entreated
+her to go to bed early. But no! she was resolved to watch
+as before.</p>
+
+<p>“My actions,” she said to herself, “shall be under command,
+though my feelings may not be so. I will do the same
+I did before,” and she took her station in his darkened room,
+where, by the glimmer of one shaded candle, she usually
+passed a great part of the night in reading.</p>
+
+<p>That night her eyes in vain glanced over the words, they
+conveyed no corresponding ideas to her mind. She imagined
+long conversations and explanations; she fancied reproaches,
+excuses, she pictured penitence and sorrow. She convinced
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>herself that, when Lord Montreville examined his letters, and
+found this one opened, he would be overwhelmed with shame
+and self-reproach, and that he would throw himself on her
+mercy. She considered how it would then be her duty to act;
+she consulted her own heart whether she should then be able
+to restore him to the same place in her affections. She tried
+to lower her standard of manly excellence; she tried to frame
+to herself a less exalted scale of morals. Alas! is not this
+but too likely an error to fall into, as the frailties and follies
+of human nature open upon the young and gentle, to whom
+it is painful to condemn and despise their fellow-creatures?</p>
+
+
+<p class="center large">END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
+<p class="center large">VOLUME THE SECOND.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="12" style="text-decoration: none;">XII.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">Les gens vertueux sont rares, mais ceux qui estiment la vertu ne le sont pas;
+d’autant moins qu’il y a mille occasions dans la vie, où l’on a absolument besoin
+des personnes qui en ont.—<cite>Marivaux.</cite></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville recovered slowly, but satisfactorily. The
+doctor, the servants, Milly, all on different occasions, and in
+different manners, conveyed to his mind an impression of
+Lucy’s unceasing attention to him during his illness. Indeed,
+the old doctor had imbibed such an enthusiastic admiration
+for Lady Montreville’s unpresuming, frank, and affectionate
+character, that he could scarcely speak of her without tears in
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville found his gratitude daily increase his
+affection; and when she brought him his child whose caresses
+and opening intelligence awoke in him emotions from as yet
+unexplored recesses of his heart, his love for his wife assumed
+a new character, and he felt for her as he had never yet felt
+for woman. He had hitherto seldom considered them in any
+light but as a mistress, a plaything, a necessary appendage to
+a large house and an establishment, or an object of conquest,
+either gained or to be gained. He had thought absence of
+harm, their highest recommendation. In Lucy he had first
+discovered that strong affections, strength of mind, patience,
+and perseverance could be perfectly compatible with almost
+childish candour, and singleness of heart.</p>
+
+<p>While this revolution had taken place in Lord Montreville’s
+feelings, what were Lucy’s? The increased tenderness
+of his manner perplexed and confounded her. At moments,
+especially when her husband was playing with her boy, and
+watching with delight his attempts to walk, marking his recognition
+of familiar objects, and listening to the first half-uttered
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>lispings of infancy, she almost yielded to her longing
+desire to be happy and affectionate, when the thought of
+Alicia Mowbray shot through her heart, and chilled the
+kindly smile on her lip, the soft expression of her eye, the
+tender intonation of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>One day the child was playing on Lord Montreville’s sofa,
+when he beckoned her to sit there likewise. He passed his
+fingers through the curls of the boy’s fair hair, and looking at
+him with tenderness remarked, “I never knew before what
+engaging creatures children were! that clear white forehead,
+and those blue eyes, with such shady eyelashes, are just like
+yours, Lucy, and I do not love him the less for that.”</p>
+
+<p>She thought how delightful such expressions would have
+been to her, could she have trusted them, and yet she felt
+almost guilty at receiving them so coldly. He passed his arm
+round her waist as he spoke. She dared not repel the caress,
+but she burst into tears, and suddenly rising, she said, “I
+must not be so foolish and nervous. I believe I want a little
+fresh air, for I have not been out these two days. I will go
+and take a turn in the park this lovely evening.”</p>
+
+<p>She hastened to quit the room, leaving Lord Montreville
+surprised, and yet pleased, for he could not attribute this
+agitation to any cause except love for himself.</p>
+
+<p>She sought the most retired part of the park. The sun was
+getting low, and lighted up the grey rough boles of the old
+oaks, while the slant beams tipped every object in the landscape
+with gold, and increased the rich variety of foliage, of
+form, and of colouring. The distant mountains were purple,
+the nearer ones adorned with every hue and tint, which
+blended most softly into the other. The young fawns were
+skipping and sporting on the smooth glades, between the tufts
+of trees, while the belling of the deer among the fern mingled
+with the hum of bees, the chirp of birds, and the summer
+sounds of evening.</p>
+
+<p>She gazed around and thought, “How lovely, how beautiful
+is nature! How calm and cheerful every thing looks! It is
+more painful to feel unhappy while every thing seems so gay
+around one, than if all was as dreary and desolate as one’s own
+heart. Oh! how I do long to be happy!” and she began to
+think that perhaps she tormented herself foolishly; that there
+might be some excuse for her husband, of which she was not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>aware; that it was impossible any one could seem so affectionate
+as Lord Montreville, without feeling what he showed: she
+yielded to the genial influence of the scene around her, and
+vaguely hoped that all would yet come right.</p>
+
+<p>“He will soon be well enough to read his letters,” she
+thought, “and as I am sure he is very fond of me now, whatever
+he may have been hitherto, he will be miserable when he
+finds the letter from that shocking woman; and he will be
+humble and penitent, and tell me the whole truth, and then
+I will forgive him, and then he must love me a great deal
+better than ever, for being so very kind.”</p>
+
+<p>With the exception perhaps of a few singular persons who
+seem to enjoy being miserable, there is so strong a desire of
+happiness in the youthful mind, and something so painful in
+a continued state of depression, that the spirits will spring up,
+unless new causes of unhappiness arise; and Lucy returned
+from her walk with an elastic step, and a sensation as if a
+weight had been taken off her mind, although nothing had
+occurred which in the slightest degree altered her situation.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was now able to bear the full light, and to
+move into the next room. He became anxious to see his letters.
+He asked for the key of the escrutoire, in which they
+were locked up. The moment was come when she had to
+impart to him that she had ventured to break the seal of some
+of them. With a beating heart, and trembling hand, she
+showed him that she had received from the agent, and told
+him how she had in consequence been obliged to open some
+of his letters, to find the papers required.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville’s colour changed. He repeated his request
+for the key, and without making any farther remark, he
+rang the bell for his own man, and taking his arm, walked
+into his morning-room. He dismissed the servant, and Lucy
+heard him lock the door, as if to preclude all chance of interruption.</p>
+
+<p>She sat with a palpitating heart, counting and calculating
+the time it would take him to read through the mass of papers
+which had accumulated, and wondering when he would rush
+to her feet to crave mercy and forgiveness. It was evident by
+the change in his countenance, by his silence, by his ringing
+for his servant, instead of asking for her supporting arm, that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>he expected letters from this woman. She remained hoping,
+doubting, fearing.</p>
+
+<p>Dinner-time arrived. Lord Montreville was not yet well
+enough to dine with her, so she ate, or rather could not eat,
+her solitary morsel.</p>
+
+<p>They generally drank tea together. She wondered whether
+she should find him in the drawing-room as usual. She wondered
+how he would receive her. She did find him there as
+usual, but with him the nurse and child.</p>
+
+<p>That evening their boy first toddled alone from the father’s
+sofa to the mother’s knee, and Lucy caught him up, and devoured
+him with kisses, in a transport of delight and pride,
+that mothers, and mothers only, can comprehend. “Oh!”
+she thought, “he will own all to me to-night, and I shall forgive
+him for the sake of that dear child.”</p>
+
+<p>The boy went to bed—the candles came—Lucy took her
+work, and sat down with her back rather turned towards
+Lord Montreville, wondering when the moment would arrive.
+“He is waiting till tea is over—the servants will be coming
+in and out.”</p>
+
+<p>Tea did come. It was generally with them a meal, as
+Lord Montreville dined at two o’clock. It was however a
+meal, to which neither of them, that evening, did justice. At
+length urn, toast, butter, bread, and cakes, were removed, and
+Lucy’s heart might almost have been heard to beat, when the
+last servant shut the door.</p>
+
+<p>“He must speak now,” she thought. But the silence continued
+unbroken, and she determined not to be the first to
+break it. She sat, imagining in what words he would open
+the subject, till the first sound of his voice made her almost
+start from her seat. He asked her to put the shade over the
+candles a little lower down. He had to repeat the request,
+before she could collect her thoughts so as to comply with it.
+“He is ashamed I should see his countenance, when he speaks
+of this disgraceful connexion,” she thought; and she remained
+again in expectation.</p>
+
+<p>Another silence succeeded. For very awkwardness Lucy
+wished to say something, but she could think of nothing that
+did not either lead away from the subject uppermost in both
+their minds, or else indirectly lead to it. Every sentence she
+planned, sounded either too formal, or too tender. At length
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>she fell back upon the never-failing resource of the bankrupt
+in conversation; and after ten minutes’ reflection and consideration,
+she promulgated “It is very hot to-night!” He
+agreed, and begged her to look at Moore’s Almanack, to see
+what weather was there predicted. He continued to say a vast
+deal upon the subject, to which she replied in absent monosyllables.</p>
+
+<p>There was no more to be extracted from this topic. Lord
+Montreville had foretold drought, and rain, wind and heat,
+storm and sunshine, and Lucy had assented to the probability
+of each in succession, when another silence ensued. She began
+to feel angry at being treated with such coldness, and such
+contempt, that he did not even deem any apology or explanation
+due to her; as if he imagined her only fit to be a nurse,
+only capable of talking about the weather. Her heart, which
+had been yearning towards the father of her child, became
+suddenly chilled and shut up.</p>
+
+<p>Her wrongs rose before her eyes in fearful array against
+him; and if he had then entered upon the subject, he would
+have found her in a very different frame of mind from that
+in which she had been at the commencement of their tête-à-tête.
+She made a variety of the most insipid common-place
+remarks, in the most dry and indifferent tone of voice. Never
+was dialogue kept up between two strangers in a more constrained
+tone, than between this couple, who really entertained
+a great affection for each other, and on the evening of the day
+on which their first child had first walked alone.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is, that Lord Montreville was thunderstruck when
+he found his letters had been opened; though, under the circumstances,
+he confessed to himself there had been no other
+course for Lucy to pursue. He was still more horrified, when
+he found the fatal letter among the number of those of which
+the seal had been broken. Even according to his own idea of
+morality, such a proceeding became wrong when it reached
+the wife’s knowledge: and his attachment to that wife had
+latterly so much increased, that he found his opinions upon
+the duties of matrimony vastly more strict than before his illness.
+The liaison which had appeared to him a matter of
+such trifling importance while he believed her ignorant of it,
+suddenly assumed, even in his eyes, the character of a sin of
+the first magnitude when he felt it known to a being so innocent,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>so conscientious as the young wife whom he had now
+learned to respect, as well as to love. He half persuaded himself
+it was impossible she could have read, or at least have
+comprehended the purport of the letter, or she could never
+have nursed him with such unremitting attention, without ever
+speaking, implying, or looking a reproach.</p>
+
+<p>He also had awaited the evening meeting with dread and
+agitation, half expecting that he must go through a scene of
+tears and explanation. As she alluded not to the subject, he
+half hoped at first that she had not read the letter. He had
+instinctively availed himself of the weather to attempt a conversation
+on indifferent subjects; but, adept as he was at
+giving what turn he pleased to conversation in society, he was
+unequal to the task now. She did not assist him, and he
+became nearly convinced by her taciturnity that she knew all,
+and then his spirit felt abashed before her’s.</p>
+
+<p>He mentally resolved to break off entirely with Alicia, and
+for the future to be the most exemplary of husbands; but he
+had not the nobleness of character to be able willingly to own
+his fault, and to throw himself on her mercy for forgiveness.
+Indeed, though he could not choose but admire her conduct,
+supposing she was acquainted with his errors, still the admiration
+he felt did not attract him. On the contrary, the consciousness
+of inferiority, from which he could not defend
+himself, <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i> of a woman, and of one whom he had raised
+from comparative obscurity, chilled the love which had been
+gradually increasing in his heart, with the growth of his
+newly-awakened parental affection. This evening, and many
+succeeding evenings and mornings, passed off in <i lang="fr">gêne</i> and
+coldness.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy’s generous impulse of forgiveness had changed to a
+feeling of disgust for his unblushing immorality, contempt for
+what she thought was hypocrisy in his tender expressions
+towards herself, and indignation at the insult offered to her as
+a wife, a mother, and a young and lovely woman. She wrapt
+herself up in cool reserve.</p>
+
+<p>If at first Lord Montreville could not work himself up to a
+full confession in all contrition and humility, still less could
+he do so, when the soft, the mild, the timid Lucy, had assumed
+a certain calm, composed, and self-possessed manner, which
+repelled, rather than invited confidence.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="13" style="text-decoration: none;">XIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">Mais ne savez-vous pas que notre âme est encore plus superbe que vertueuse,
+plus glorieuse qu’honnête, et par conséquent plus délicate sur les intérêts de sa
+vanité que sur ceux de son véritable honneur.—<cite>Marivaux.</cite></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In the mean time, Lord Montreville had completely recovered
+his health. They left Caërwhwyddwth Castle, and established
+themselves at Ashdale Park for the winter. Their
+house was soon full, and Lucy tried to drown all sense of her
+cares in the succession of company, with which she was as
+desirous as Lord Montreville could be, to keep their house constantly
+replenished. They each equally dreaded finding themselves
+alone with the other.</p>
+
+<p>The breakfast hour was late; before luncheon the excursion
+for the day was organised; after luncheon the preconcerted
+ride or drive took place; the company was constantly changing,
+and Lady Montreville’s presence was frequently required
+in the drawing-room, to speed the parting, or to greet the
+coming guest. It was only in the nursery that the face which
+in society she had learned to dress in smiles, relaxed into an
+expression of languor and joylessness, which astonished and
+distressed the faithful Milly. When the child’s gambols and
+caresses called forth a smile, it was so melancholy a one, that
+Milly’s eyes would often fill with tears as she looked upon
+her lady.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when among the foolish questions with which poor
+little children are tormented, Lucy said to him, “Charlie
+loves mamma, does not he?” He answered, “Me love papa.”
+The boy meant nothing, but the words fell on Lucy’s heart,
+as if they doomed her to utter lonelessness and lovelessness!
+as if her own child cared not for her! and she burst into a
+passionate flood of tears, which alarmed and confounded Milly.</p>
+
+<p>“La, my lady! sure you are not crying for that? Why
+you would not but have the dear babe love his own papa?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not believe any body or any thing loves me in this
+world—except you, Milly;” and Lucy’s sobs redoubled.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, my lady! how can you speak so? And to think of
+my lord, how he used to be asking and calling for you when
+he was so ill, and that’s the time when people call for them as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>they really love best; and ’twas then my lord could not bear
+you out of his sight, though may be, now he is well, he takes
+pleasure in the other gentlefolks too.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy had pride and dignity enough not to open the secrets
+of her domestic wrongs, even to Milly; and exerting all her
+self-control, she dried her tears, and tried to smile at her silly
+maternal jealousy. But Milly was not so deceived. Simple
+as she was, the warmth of her own feelings rendered her
+quick-sighted in all that regarded those of others. She was
+sure that her lady’s lowness of spirits had some deeper source
+than the child’s little speech, though she was quite at a loss to
+divine what the cause might be. She had been so well satisfied
+with Lord Montreville’s love for her, when first he recovered
+his recollection, that she did not suspect it could be
+occasioned by any unkindness on his part.</p>
+
+<p>At this period of our story, Sir Charles and Lady Selcourt
+arrived at Ashdale Park. Lucy was overjoyed to see a face
+that reminded her of the happy days of her childhood, a
+person who was bound to her by ties of blood, who distinctly
+belonged to herself. Although not perhaps the one whose
+character was most congenial to her own, still she was her
+sister; they had played the same plays, wandered about the
+same fields, studied in the same school-room, had shared the
+same parental cares, and in the present desolate state of her
+feelings, her heart went forth towards Sophy with warmth.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Selcourt was a worldly woman, and a coquette, but
+she was not a common-place coquette. She never made any
+advances towards men; she never apparently sought them;
+but she dressed herself quite beautifully, and sat still with an
+expression of conscious charms, combined with strict propriety,
+which seldom failed to bring all the men in the room hovering
+round the sofa on which she sat.</p>
+
+<p>She was not witty, or learned, or talkative, but she looked
+very soft, and occasionally very arch; and when she did speak,
+implied a great deal more than she said. All girls hated her,
+for she occupied the gentlemen, without being so openly a
+flirt, that they could console themselves by thinking “any
+body can gain the attention of men, who will go such lengths
+to obtain it,” for she went no lengths. Yet most men, and
+all women, knew it was not simply by superior charms that
+she did attract them.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span></p>
+<p>Pretty as Lucy was, pleasing as were her good-humour and
+her simplicity, much as all men admired her in speaking of
+her, it was round Lady Selcourt that they congregated; her
+dress was the subject of conversation; it was to give her their
+arm that they rushed when dinner was announced; it was
+upon her cards at <i lang="fr">écarté</i> that all were anxious to bet.</p>
+
+<p>As the sisters were sitting one day in her boudoir, Lady
+Montreville remarked to Sophy that she almost wondered Sir
+Charles should like to see so many men fluttering around his
+wife, while she appeared so much more occupied with others
+than with him. “For Sir Charles is very fond of you,
+Sophy,” she added, with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“To be sure he is, and he would not be half so fond of
+me, if others did not flutter around me, as you call it. Nothing
+keeps a man up to the mark so well, as seeing that his
+wife is valued by others. Do you not invariably see dawdling
+devoted wives, with careless indifferent husbands?”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed I am not sure that devotion is the way to fix
+one’s husband,” rejoined Lucy, in a desponding tone.</p>
+
+<p>“It only spoils the men, Lucy. Husbands are things that
+ought to be kept in hot water, if one wishes to preserve one’s
+influence over them, which every woman of sense must perceive
+is one of her first duties. And I own I should not like
+to be considered as a domestic drudge, who have fulfilled
+the end of my existence when I have provided heirs to the
+estate, can keep my husband’s shirts mended, and know precisely
+when the kettle boils. Women have souls, and they
+have hearts” (so they have! thought Lucy), “and understandings—sometimes
+the best of the two; and it always
+makes my blood boil to see them treated as beings of an inferior
+order! People do not judge for themselves. If you
+are overlooked by others, your husband thinks nothing of you;
+if others admire and seek your society, he is proud that so
+<i lang="fr">recherchée</i> a person is his wife. Of course I would not have
+any woman commit herself by word or deed. As you know,
+I would not walk across the room for any man that breathes:
+no one ever saw me do any one thing derogatory to the dignity
+of our sex; but there is no reason why one should not dress
+well, and make one’s-self agreeable. <i lang="fr">On vaut ce qu’on veut
+valoir</i>, especially in one’s husband’s eyes.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
+<p>Lucy began to think it was as much the bounden duty of
+every married woman to flirt, as to love, honour, and obey.</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” added Lucy, “very submissive wives often
+have faithless husbands.”</p>
+
+<p>“It stands to reason they should. Men have had flirtations,
+and liaisons, and love affairs of all kinds, up to the time
+they marry. They have been accustomed to excitement, and
+they can never sit down contented with a humdrum wife,
+always hemming and stitching quietly at home. Unless a
+woman has something in her, the husband will seek for amusement
+abroad.”</p>
+
+<p>“This is rather hard upon some women though, who have
+never had all these flirtations, and who do not want to flirt,
+but would fain give their whole hearts to their husbands; at
+best they can only hope to be last of many loves.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why you could never have expected to be your husband’s
+first love, my dear! Really! Lucy, you are the oddest mixture
+of romance and worldly wisdom, that ever I met with.
+One would think you had married all for love, or the world
+well lost. Yours is the most sentimental mode of making a
+good <i lang="fr">parti</i> I ever knew.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was not alluding to myself,” Lucy hastily interrupted;
+for she dreaded to have her secret annoyances laid bare to the
+eyes of any one, especially to those of Sophy.</p>
+
+<p>“Why I suppose not; for if you had wished to be your
+husband’s first love, you would have chosen a youth certainly
+not past nineteen. But sometimes you have such a melancholy,
+sentimental expression in your face, I scarcely know
+what to make of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have such spirits, Sophy! I think you have ten
+times the spirits you had when you were a girl, which is so
+odd!” and she thought of the halcyon days of donkeys and
+puppy dogs.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all odd! When one is a girl, one does not know
+what one’s fate is to be; and though one has some pleasant
+and agreeable hours, one has mortifications also; but when
+one’s fortune is made, when one has a husband who is proud
+of one, and (though it sounds vain to say so) when one feels
+that one is admired and courted by others, I do not see why
+one should not be in spirits.”</p>
+
+<p>Lady Selcourt had been gratified that morning by a noble
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>dandy’s compliance with her request to prolong his stay at
+Ashdale Park, in order to join in some charades which were
+proposed for the evening’s amusement, when he had resisted
+the general solicitations of the rest of the party. If Lucy had
+seen her at Sir Charles’s seat in Oxfordshire, with her husband
+and her children around her, in the bosom of her family,
+she would not have thought her flow of spirits so enviable.</p>
+
+<p>Arguments, the unsoundness and sophistry of which would
+be apparent enough at other times, appear conclusive and
+convincing when they are in accordance with the feelings of
+the moment. Lucy was thoroughly discontented with her
+husband, and her own manner of life; her mind was unsettled—she
+was in a state of mortification, while at the
+same time she thought more highly of her own charms than
+she had ever done before. She saw Sophy with half her personal
+beauty, but with an adoring husband (for she had succeeded
+in making Sir Charles admire, as well as fear her;
+she had enthralled him, and he dared not even struggle in his
+shackles, but appeared to look on them as precious ornaments);
+and she also saw her receiving the incense of that
+conventional complimentary manner which all women can
+command, if they choose to require it.</p>
+
+<p>If she had been happy at home, she would have despised
+and condemned such unmeaning homage; but as it was, she
+did not like to be altogether eclipsed by Sophy, and her
+manner instinctively assumed a tone which encouraged men to
+talk to her. There was a characteristic simplicity in her view
+of subjects, and in her mode of expressing herself, which
+amused, as being peculiar to herself. She ventured to be
+droll. She was pleased at success, her spirits rose, and she
+began to think that, after all, one might make oneself very
+tolerably happy without the romantic affection which Milly’s
+story had taught her to sigh after.</p>
+
+<p>Another spring arrived, and Lady Montreville went to
+London with the full intention of shining as the most attractive
+of women, and of having a train of admirers—humble
+admirers, who should be kept at a most respectful
+distance, but who might show her husband what others
+thought of her.</p>
+
+<p>She had little difficulty in succeeding in her object. With
+rank and beauty, a lively manner, and a husband so much
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>older than herself, the difficulty was to keep them off, not to
+attract them. Lionel Delville became a frequent visiter in
+<abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> James’s Square. He no longer found it impossible to pay
+her a compliment, although, as yet, he dared go no farther.
+Captain Lyon claimed acquaintance as an old friend. Although
+he had scarcely found out she was alive as the fourth
+daughter of Colonel Heckfield, he proclaimed her the most
+fascinating of her sex, as the Marchioness of Montreville.
+Indeed, he insinuated that he had been the first to discover
+these fascinations, and to point them out to Lord Montreville.
+He affected to patronise her to all his friends.</p>
+
+<p>Statesmen, warriors, poets, were to be found in her train.
+Among others, Lord Thorcaster, a deep politician, who was
+particularly strong on political economy, the bullion question,
+the poor laws, and free trade. She was quite pretty enough
+to be exceedingly agreeable to this man of deep reading and
+comprehensive mind. He did not make love—no: he talked
+politics; but her eyes were so blue, and her teeth so white,
+that he thought her political <i lang="fr">aperçus</i> astonishingly luminous;
+especially when one day that the question of free trade was
+discussed, she exclaimed in her simple manner,—</p>
+
+<p>“Why can they not let it all alone! and then every body,
+and every country, will naturally manufacture what they can
+do best, and what they are most fitted for; and everybody
+will buy where they can get the best things for the least
+money. That must be good for all parties, and there would
+be an end of all this fuss about duties on imports and
+exports.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Lady Montreville, you have in one sentence
+condensed all the arguments that it has taken the two houses
+of Parliament years to discuss. I have urged this very train
+of reasoning myself. If our legislators were but endowed
+with the clear and powerful understanding of a certain young
+and beautiful woman, it would be well for our poor country!
+But it is not every mind that can thus grapple with a subject,
+divest it of all the false colouring thrown over it by sophistry,
+and at once seize the real point at issue.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear me! have I done all this? It seemed very natural
+to say what I said.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very natural to persons of decision, who can shake themselves
+free from the trammels of prejudice.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
+<p>“But I never thought upon the subject before, so I had no
+prejudices to shake off; I merely said what struck me as
+plain and obvious.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed! astonishing you should at once seize all the
+bearings of the case.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy felt a little like M. Jourdain, when he discovered that
+he had been speaking prose all his life; and was rather elated
+at finding she was so clever. She had heard she was pretty,
+and had perceived she was attractive, and had sometimes felt
+that she amused, but she had never before been told she was
+clever.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Thorcaster was a man who stood high with a certain
+set; his suffrage was decidedly worth having, for he was
+reckoned very fastidious; and Lucy was much exalted in her
+own estimation by his opinion of her talents. She now
+listened with attention to political discussions; fancied she
+greatly preferred such subjects to the frivolous conversation of
+women; she occasionally retailed the arguments she heard
+adduced by others, and sometimes hazarded an opinion of her
+own. Lord Thorcaster was charmed; but as he was neither
+young nor handsome, the degree in which he frequented <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr>
+James’s Square gave no umbrage to Lord Montreville, nor
+ground for scandal to the world.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="14" style="text-decoration: none;">XIV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">J’ai vu une jolie femme dont la conversation passoit pour un enchantement, personne
+au monde ne s’exprimoit comme elle, c’étoit la vivacité, c’étoit la finesse
+même qui parlait: les connoisseurs n’y pouvaient tenir de plaisir. La petite vérole
+lui vint, elle en resta extrèmement marquée, quand la pauvre femme reparut,
+ce n’étoit plus qu’une babillarde incommode.—<span class="smcap">Marivaux.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Although no consequences attended Lord Thorcaster’s admiration
+of Lady Montreville, as far as he himself was concerned,
+it had a visible effect upon her manners. People are
+always more vulnerable to flattery with regard to the merit
+for which they are least remarkable, than that on which they
+themselves are not in doubt. Lord Thorcaster’s compliments
+upon the strength of her understanding caused her to set up
+for a superior woman, <i lang="fr">une tête forte</i>; and she sometimes
+astonished those who knew her best, by having a decided
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>opinion upon some subject of which women are seldom supposed
+competent judges.</p>
+
+<p>These little fits of pretension, if they did not add to her attractions,
+tended very much to increase the number of persons
+attracted. It was evident there must be vanity, when a
+new character was assumed for the purpose of shining; and
+this conviction gave courage and audacity to the herd of
+aspirers to her favour, who had hitherto been kept at bay by
+the candour and openness of her manner. The back of Lady
+Montreville’s opera box was always thronged with men. The
+door was constantly opened, and quickly shut again, by persons
+who could not find standing-room; and woe to the neighbours
+on each side, if by any chance they loved music, and
+wished to listen to the sweet sounds they had paid their
+money to hear.</p>
+
+<p>Lionel Delville, who from the first had been exceedingly
+favourable to Lucy, now found his cousin’s house the most
+agreeable in London; and took advantage of the privileges of
+relationship to be always in attendance. It seemed to be a
+settled thing, that he was her most obsequious slave. Open
+conventional gallantry, and cousinly intimacy, were so skilfully
+blended, that it was difficult to ascertain when and
+where real gallantry commenced. She was proud of the admiration
+of the oracle of statesmen, and pleased with the devotion
+of the oracle of fashion. She was the life of society;
+she became a great talker, and her spirits rose with the exertion.
+Her voice was by nature so sweetly modulated, that no
+one could be tired of hearing it; her countenance was so soft,
+that although she occasionally sported the most decided
+opinions, they did not seem <i lang="fr">tranchant</i>, when delivered by her.</p>
+
+<p>If success in the great world could constitute the whole
+happiness of any person with naturally good feelings, she
+might now have been happy. But was she so? No.</p>
+
+<p>She had not been brought up without some attention to
+religious subjects. She always went to church, and would have
+felt uneasy if she had omitted to do so; she had a general
+desire and resolution to do what was right, and a horror of
+doing what was wrong. Her own domestic discontents, Sophy’s
+arguments and example, the natural desire after happiness inherent
+in our nature, and the vanity which is lurking at the
+bottom of most hearts, had combined to lead her thus far on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>the road to wrong; but she could not be happy, unless she
+felt satisfied with herself.</p>
+
+<p>She often thought, “How cheerful the Duchess of Altonworth
+is! How placid she looks! Nothing ever worries her,
+and every thing worries me. It makes me unhappy and discontented
+with myself to see her;” and the result was, that
+she frequented her quiet and select <i lang="fr">soirées</i> less and less; for
+when not in a whirl of engagements, she invariably felt weary
+and listless. Though the constant tribute paid to her charms
+afforded her but little pleasure, she felt the want of it, if by
+any chance it was withheld. Then she became fastidious upon
+the subject. She despised the homage of common-place empty
+youngsters; she ridiculed the <i lang="fr">doux yeux</i> of old men; she was
+disgusted with fulsome compliments; but Lionel Delville knew
+how to flatter, without appearing to do so; he had learned in
+his cousin’s school, and Lord Montreville saw his own arts
+practised upon his wife.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken no notice of the tribe of general admirers, for,
+feeling himself not immaculate, he instinctively avoided what
+might lead to recrimination. He had not heeded Lord Thorcaster’s
+attentions, for he was nearly as old as himself, and
+much less good-looking;—but the increased devotion of Lionel
+Delville gave him serious uneasiness. From the beginning he
+had felt a dread of his particular friend, and had sought his
+company as little as possible, since he married. Until now,
+Lucy’s manner had been such, that she might safely have bid
+defiance to the most malicious; but the revolution which the
+last few weeks had effected in her rendered him serious and
+thoughtful. He was uncertain what line to take; and in the
+mean time he was not particularly good-humoured, and frequently
+spoke of the frivolity and the vanity of women, in a
+manner which sounded harshly in Lucy’s ears, when she thought
+of the immorality and the hypocrisy of men.</p>
+
+<p>Often would she lament having ever seen the fatal letter;
+often did she wish herself once more deceived; often did she
+look back, as to a happy time, to that when she sought only to
+please her husband. She almost wished to be again ruled,
+and thwarted in all her everyday pursuits; for she now thought
+these petty annoyances were more than compensated by the
+satisfactory sensation of fulfilling the duties of a good wife,
+and the hope of securing the affections of her husband. It
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>was with sorrow and regret that she reverted to the days when
+she did so sincerely wish to secure them. Those days were
+gone—gone, never to return!</p>
+
+<p>The respect she had felt for him, as her wedded husband,
+as her guide, her superior in understanding, and in knowledge—was
+gone, and with it the halo she had willingly thrown
+around his age. She now looked upon him as a <i lang="fr">passé</i> profligate,
+to whom in a moment of infatuation she had linked her
+youth; one whom his own inconstancy had exonerated her
+from loving, and to whom she only owed the bare duties of
+obedience and fidelity, in compliance with her marriage vow.</p>
+
+<p>She no longer felt bound to sacrifice her own tastes to his;
+and she adopted an independent tone, which was by no means
+agreeable to Lord Montreville, although, by having slacked the
+reins when first he feared his own aberrations were discovered,
+he found it somewhat difficult to again tighten them.</p>
+
+<p>He had kept his resolution of breaking off all connexion with
+his former mistress; and he began to look upon himself as the
+most exemplary of husbands, to forget Lucy’s devotion and
+forbearance, and his own errors, and to feel that the blame lay
+all on her side.</p>
+
+<p>He was seldom absent from home; and he acquired the
+habit of constantly coming in and out of the drawing-room
+during the morning, Lucy felt watched and suspected—unjustly
+suspected by him. Her spirit rebelled at the unfairness
+of mankind. Though meek, while she was anxious to please
+the husband she looked up to, the sense of injury had aroused
+in her a spirit which had heretofore lain dormant; and strong
+in the consciousness that she did nothing wrong, she did not
+alter her mode of proceeding, but continued to admit morning
+visiters, and to allow Lionel Delville to lounge away many
+an hour in <abbr title="Saint" style="text-decoration: none;">St.</abbr> James’s Square, before she went out in the
+carriage.</p>
+
+<p>He had frequently of late presented her with bouquets of
+the most rare and beautiful flowers, which he professed to
+bring with him from his sister’s villa at Roehampton; and
+Lucy had no scruple in accepting the nosegay which her
+husband’s cousin brought from the country.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened that Lord Montreville one day accompanied
+some ladies to Colville’s nursery garden, and they there admired
+a row of beautiful nosegays, which were delicately tied
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>up, and arranged in order. They wished to purchase one of
+them, when the nurseryman begged to cut some fresh flowers,
+as these were all bespoken by Lord so and so, for Mrs. so and
+so; and by Sir something somebody, for Lady such a thing;
+and by Mr. Delville, for Lady Montreville. The other names
+were all notoriously coupled together; and that his wife’s
+should be mixed up with such, was enough to irritate any
+husband. Lord Montreville changed colour, and bit his lips.
+No more passed. Fresh flowers were procured, and the party
+proceeded on their ride.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville returned home at dressing time, and came
+up-stairs in no very placid frame of mind. He knew so much
+of the vice of the world, that if roused to suspect at all, he
+suspected a great deal. While Lucy was the simple unsophisticated
+creature she once was, he rendered justice to her
+purity; but with him there could be no medium. He could
+respect perfect innocence; but the first bloom of that innocence
+passed away, he made no allowances for the foibles of human
+nature, but fancied it either already plunged, or on the point
+of plunging, into reckless vice.</p>
+
+<p>When he entered the apartment, the first sight which greeted
+his eyes, was Lionel Delville assisting Lucy to put the identical
+nosegay in water, that it might be fresh for the evening’s ball.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville could scarcely command himself. His
+blood boiled to his fingers’ ends. But, stronger than insulted
+pride, than love, than jealousy, was in the man of the world,
+the fear of appearing ridiculous in the eyes of another man of
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>To an indifferent observer, his greeting would have appeared
+perfectly calm; his manner to Lionel cordial; that to his
+wife kind; but they all three knew the world, and none was
+deceived. Lionel saw his cousin’s feelings, and was annoyed;
+for it would be vexatious to have his pleasant morning visits
+disturbed, and quite a pity that Lady Montreville’s home
+should be rendered uncomfortable. Lucy, who had learned
+more of the workings of the human mind in the last year than
+in all her previous life, also perceived Lord Montreville’s inward
+irritation; and, although she had nothing really to
+reproach herself with, her conscience led her to guess pretty
+accurately what caused the storm she saw impending.</p>
+
+<p>Lionel felt his situation as third distressing, and did not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>linger long after Lord Montreville’s entrance. He took a gay
+and sportive leave; Lucy bade him remember to get the new
+march from his military band; Lord Montreville added,
+“Mind, you dine with us to-morrow, my good fellow!”—the
+door closed.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville patiently awaited while he heard the clank
+of his boots as he hurried down the stone stairs; he waited
+till he heard the porter close the street door upon him, and
+then, turning to Lucy, he said, in a tone of choking calmness:—</p>
+
+<p>“Lady Montreville, this will not do. I must put an immediate
+stop to your present mode of life.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy could not help feeling frightened out of her wits; but
+she remembered Alicia Mowbray, and she remembered that
+Lionel Delville had never spoken a word of love to her, and
+she roused herself to the onset with a feeling of desperation,
+and of contempt for her monitor.</p>
+
+<p>“What will not do, Lord Montreville? What do you
+mean to put a stop to?”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean to say that it is not my intention that the house
+of Montreville should be disgraced while I am its head; and
+that I shall take every precaution in my power to prevent such
+being the case.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, Lord Montreville! I approve of your resolution,
+and agree with you, that all who bear so noble a name should
+be <i lang="fr">sans peur, et sans reproche</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>“Madam!” and for a moment he looked fiercely upon
+her: “Whatever you may mean by that insinuation, you
+may remember that bravery is the virtue indispensable in
+men, while in women it is—chastity; and I tell you fairly,
+that I shall not be the convenient husband of a wife who
+flirts with half London, and keeps her favoured lover tame
+about the house.”</p>
+
+<p>“Heavens! Lord Montreville, do you say such things to
+me? Do you dare say such things?” Her momentary pride
+was gone; she burst into a flood of tears, and clasping her
+hands, exclaimed: “Fool that I was, I mistook polished manners
+for real refinement, and fancied those coarse and vulgar,
+who would never have insulted as you have done!”</p>
+
+<p>“It is certainly a pity you did not choose some one more
+suited to your unambitious taste; but as you did marry me,
+and as I have the honour of being your husband, I may be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>allowed some control over your actions; and I therefore repeat
+it, I expect you will conduct yourself in such a manner,
+as is consistent with your reputation and my own.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville left the room with coolness and dignity in
+his air, but with rage and indignation in his heart. Indignant
+at having been reproached by the creature he had raised to
+her present brilliant situation, and whose conduct latterly had
+destroyed the <i lang="fr">prestige</i> which her behaviour to him in his illness
+had thrown around her.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy remained in an agony of shame and anger, such as
+had never yet overpowered her. She rushed to her own room,
+and was found by Milly, who looked in to ask if she would
+like to have the child, rocking herself backwards and forwards
+in her chair, with her face buried in her hands, and sobbing
+audibly.</p>
+
+<p>Milly exclaimed in terror, “Oh, la! my lady, whatever
+is the matter? My dear young lady, my sweet Miss Lucy,
+what has happened? Do speak, my dear Miss Lucy! what
+has happened to any of the dear family?”</p>
+
+<p>“Milly, I am miserable! I am the most miserable wretch
+in the world!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! my lady, don’t say so! I can’t bear to hear you
+talk in that way!”</p>
+
+<p>“Did I not give him my first affections? Have I not
+been as truly devoted to him, as if he had loved me with the
+fervour of youth? Did I not yield to all his old bachelor
+fancies? I ask you, Milly, could I have nursed him with
+more tenderness, if he had been as dear to me as John was
+to you? And he was almost as dear; yes, it was with my
+whole heart that I gave myself up to my attendance upon
+him. And what do you think has been the return I have
+met with? That he should prefer to me a mistress! a horrible,
+wicked, abandoned woman, whose very vice constitutes
+her charm!”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, sure, my lady, somebody has told you false tales.
+This can never be true.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is too true, Milly—I know it! Would I could have
+any doubt upon the subject! While I was shut up here, not
+allowed to enjoy myself in society, but passing long tiresome
+days of seclusion and dullness, and thinking he was attending
+to his duties, his parliamentary duties, the good of the nation,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>the welfare of his country, he was carrying on this shameful
+affair. During my confinement, when I was ill and suffering,
+he was amusing himself in the company of this woman. Oh!
+it makes me sick to think of! I have borne it all—I have
+done my duty—I have not complained—I have not reproached
+him—I have sat up with him night after night in
+his illness—I have not murmured? And now it is he who
+reproaches me, for at length trying to make myself happy
+without his affections, when he chooses to lavish them upon a
+shameless creature! He is angry with me, because everybody
+does not think me as little agreeable and as little charming as
+he does! He would wish me to be odious and ugly, to justify
+himself!”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure, my lady, nobody that knows you can think
+you odious or ugly.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not my fault, if people will think me otherwise.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly, my lady; one could not expect that gentlefolks
+should not think you a good, kind, pleasant lady, as you
+are; nor one would not wish them not to think so; but——”</p>
+
+<p>“But what, Milly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my lady, though my lord may have done what he
+should not have done, still, my lady, you are a married woman.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that, Milly; and I would rather die than ever
+be led to forget it. If I had allowed the dandies to make
+love to me—if I had given any one of them reason to imagine
+I had the least preference for him—if I had in any way deserved
+such treatment——”</p>
+
+<p>“And do you think, my lady, you would be any the
+happier if you felt you did deserve it?”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="15" style="text-decoration: none;">XV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>So as there is as much difference between the counsel that a friend giveth, and
+that a man giveth himself, as there is between the counsel of a friend and of a flatterer;
+for there is no such flatterer as a man’s self, and there is no such remedy
+against flattery of a man’s self, as the liberty of a friend.—<span class="smcap">Lord Bacon</span>’<i>s Essays</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lucy stopped short. There was something in this simple
+answer of Milly’s that overthrew all the chain of argument
+with which she was going to bewilder herself. She looked
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>back, and was obliged to confess to herself how little real enjoyment
+she had felt from all the dissipation of the last season.</p>
+
+<p>“Happiness, Milly! I have done with happiness for ever.
+All I can now look for is amusement.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, my lady, depend upon it, a good conscience is all in
+all. If any body has every blessing this world can afford, it
+is of no use, as long as their conscience tells them they have
+not done what is right; and if it so happens that they are in
+trouble, why a good conscience is the only happiness they
+have left. It is not balls, nor plays, nor such like, that can
+cure trouble. I beg your pardon, my lady, for talking so to
+you; but, indeed, I do believe that if God sees any of us
+poor frail creatures fighting against our sorrow with a pious
+heart, He will help us to bear up against it, and we shall feel
+something nearer happiness than we ever shall by amusing
+ourselves with the pleasures of the world. I am sure I ought
+to be ashamed to speak so to a lady like you; but I am an
+old woman, and I love you, Miss Lucy; I love you as if you
+were my own child!”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Milly, you are my only comfort, and I do not
+know what would become of me if I had not you, to whom
+I could open my heart. You are quite right, and I am sure
+I would not do any thing wrong that I know of.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure you would not, my lady; but I have sometimes
+thought of what you once said to me before ever you
+was married, about gentlemen talking to ladies, and ladies
+being talked of. I did not rightly understand you at the time.”</p>
+
+<p>“What can you mean, Milly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my lady, I scarce know how to tell you; but
+since you have let me make so bold as to speak to you, I did
+hear some of the servants——”</p>
+
+<p>“The servants, Milly! what on earth could the servants
+say?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why servants will talk, my lady, and there’s no use in
+thinking of hindering them; and the truth is, I heard John
+say to Thomas, ‘So my lady has taken up with a lover at
+last!’”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible! Milly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my lady, it is true enough; and Thomas made
+answer, ‘I thought how ’twould be—many ladies makes a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>show of being better than their neighbours at first, but they
+all will run their rig.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, horrid! horrid! But they did not mention any
+name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes, they did indeed; for John answered, ‘He
+supposed my lord would not mind it, as ’twas all in the
+family.’ ‘Not mind it?’ says Thomas; ‘It’s my belief my
+lord will kick Mr. Delville out of the house one of these fine
+days.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Stop! stop! Milly, I cannot bear to hear another word.
+Oh that I should live to be so spoken of by my own servants!
+I cannot bear it! I will turn them all away, the impertinent
+wretches!”</p>
+
+<p>“’Tis shocking, to be sure; but them London footmen,
+they stick at nothing. And servants will talk, my lady!
+there’s no help for it—they will talk, if there is any thing to
+talk about.”</p>
+
+<p>“But there is nothing to talk about. Oh! what shall I do?
+What shall I do? If I change suddenly, and break off with
+Lord Montreville’s cousin, it will seem so odd; it will justify
+these dreadful suspicions; and besides, he is the only person
+whose society is the least agreeable to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, la! my lady! Then I am sure it is time you
+should not have so much of his company.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Milly, he never pays me half as many compliments
+as other people do; and he never said a word like being in
+love with me; and he never spoke a word against Lord Montreville;
+and he never told me I was too young or too pretty
+for him—he never said any of the things I have been put on
+my guard against, as being the first advances of a man who
+wishes to flirt with a married woman; for I have sometimes
+watched to see whether he did, for fear he should be making
+love before I was aware.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know best, my lady; but I should think you would
+not have been on the look-out for it, if he had no such thing
+in his head.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Milly, you are as bad as all the rest of the world!
+But what shall I do? My husband says I must not go on
+as I have done; and then he has asked Mr. Delville to dinner
+to-morrow—and what can I do? What can I say? How
+am I to behave to him?”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+<p>“Sure, my lady, just be civil and pleasant.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is all I have ever been, Milly! O dear! O dear!
+If I had but married some good young man who had loved
+me truly, and whom I could have loved and respected, as I
+would fain love and respect my husband, how easy it would
+have been to do my duty, if he had been ever so poor and
+humble!”</p>
+
+<p>“Now don’t you be fretting in this way, my lady. Some
+has one trial, and some another; and people always think their
+own trial the hardest to bear. I thought mine were very hard
+to bear; but in all my troubles I had one comfort—my duty
+always lay straight before me—I always knew what I ought
+to do, though ’twas a hard matter sometimes to do it without
+murmuring.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will not go to the ball to-night! Yet perhaps Mr.
+Delville may guess why—I had better go. By the by, this
+is the Duchess of Altonworth’s evening for being at home. I
+will go there. It will not seem so odd as not going out at all,
+and Mr. Delville is very seldom at her parties. Besides, I
+shall have an opportunity of asking the Duchess if she will
+receive me early to-morrow. She is good, kind, and judicious,
+and she knows the world well, too. I will tell her what an
+uncomfortable state I am in, and she will advise me.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville dined out at a political dinner, and they
+met no more in the course of the evening.</p>
+
+<p>To the Duchess of Altonworth’s Lucy went, filled with a
+desire to do what was right, but at the same time with a
+strong conviction of her own wrongs, and in consequence a
+feeling of martyrdom.</p>
+
+<p>The first person she saw, as she entered the Duchess’s, was
+Lionel Delville. She was not prepared for this, and it annoyed
+her considerably. She was forced into his society
+before she had by any means decided on the line of conduct,
+or rather the tone of manner (for the whole question was an
+affair of manner), which she meant to adopt. He instantly
+greeted her with a serious air of tender interest and concern,
+and ventured to look in her eyes with an inquiring expression,
+as if he expected to ascertain how her <span lang="fr">tête-à-tête</span> with Lord
+Montreville had gone off. His eyes disconcerted her. She
+was distressed at meeting them. She looked in every other
+direction; but although she might avoid seeing them upon her,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>she could not avoid feeling them upon her. She made careless,
+indifferent, insipid remarks, in rather a higher pitched
+voice than was common to her.</p>
+
+<p>Lionel saw that she had been lectured, perceived that she
+was no longer at her ease, and took courage from her evident
+<i lang="fr">gêne</i>. He expressed his happiness at meeting her again “so
+soon;” said he had come to the Duchess’s because he had
+imagined it likely she might prefer a quiet party to a ball
+“that evening,” and enquired whether he might call “as
+usual.” His whole air had in it something confidential, as if
+there existed between them a mystery, which both understood,
+without any need of explanation. In vain Lucy tried to be
+easy, and to laugh—to be any thing but mysterious. She
+answered, “Oh, yes!” or “to be sure,” and “I suppose so,”
+in an affectedly loud and unconcerned tone, to all the half-whispered
+expressions of solicitude which he was pouring into
+her ear. Whatever subject she started, he contrived to throw
+a shade of sentiment over it. She thought herself safe in
+dashing into the last speech of Lord Thorcaster, and loudly
+declared her admiration of his eloquence; for she had passed
+the preceding night with her head through the ventilator of
+the House of Commons. This led to a discussion upon eloquence,
+and Lionel said “he could imagine circumstances in
+which there might be more eloquence in three short words,
+than in all the flowing sentences, the rounded periods, the
+flowers of rhetoric, employed by sages and senators since the
+world began.”</p>
+
+<p>“Eloquence in three words! What can they be?”</p>
+
+<p>He kept his face looking straight forward, but uttered, in
+a low, clear, musical voice, which reached her ear, and her’s
+alone, “What think you of the three words ‘I love you?’”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy felt hot all over; but she rejoined, with what calmness
+she could command, “I should say those three words
+conveyed an agreeable,—or, perhaps, a disagreeable fact, in
+the plainest and simplest manner, and had nothing to do with
+eloquence.”</p>
+
+<p>Lionel saw he had gone too far. “When your little boy
+first lisps, ‘Mamma, I love you!’ I think you will agree with
+me, that there can be eloquence in the words.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy felt it certainly would be delightful to hear them
+from his lips; and an air of tenderness succeeded to her confusion;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>she became conscious that to all lookers-on the appearance
+was that of a desperate flirtation. She felt her
+cheeks flush; she felt her eyes gleam with excited emotions
+of all kinds, and she was afraid to raise them from the ground.
+Lionel thought her eyelashes quite beautiful, as they almost
+swept her cheek, while they evidently only veiled the brightness
+beneath: he thought her confusion bewitching, and he
+was irresistibly attracted.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess was surprised, and grieved, at the change
+which she feared had come over Lady Montreville during the
+last few weeks. Lucy caught her eyes upon her, and read in
+them an expression of pity, and of blame. She could not
+bear that look. Jumping up from her seat, she exclaimed,
+“I have something particular to say to the Duchess; I beg
+you ten thousand pardons;” and she left him in the middle of
+a tirade, upon the folly of those who, by groundless suspicions,
+justify what they dread.</p>
+
+<p>He remained <i lang="fr">planté</i>, and bit his lips in pique and provocation.
+Lucy meantime passed her arm within the Duchess’s,
+and saying she must arrange with her some plan for seeing
+the Dulwich Gallery, she led her aside and sat down by her.
+“Do not look at me with that expression of countenance, my
+dear Duchess. I cannot bear it. I have enough to annoy
+me, and I cannot have you look so coldly and unkindly upon
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“If my looks expressed coldness or unkindness, they belied
+me. I feel any thing but indifference, I can assure you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me come to you to-morrow morning, and promise to
+listen to a long history, in which, if I am to blame, I am
+more sinned against than sinning—indeed, till to-night, I
+thought myself a pattern of discretion; but I begin to think I
+may have been a little imprudent.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, we cannot discuss that point just now,” answered
+the Duchess, smiling. “Come to-morrow morning, and I
+will not be at home to any one else.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy kept close to the Duchess the rest of the evening,
+and did not give Mr. Delville any opportunity of speaking to
+her again. The next morning she breakfasted in her dressing-room,
+and at twelve o’clock she went to the Duchess, resolved
+to tell her her whole history, to ask her advice, and, if
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>possible, to follow it. She did not feel as if there would be
+any great difficulty in giving up the attentions of others, but
+she felt she could not accomplish being the affectionate wife
+she once was, if that should be the thing required of her.</p>
+
+<p>When she found herself alone with the Duchess, she told
+her her tale of woe and injury. “Now what can I do?
+What shall I do? I am ready to confess that last night Mr.
+Delville did seem inclined to make love, though just when I
+thought it was really coming, he turned the conversation, and
+talked about my child. However, I am not at this moment
+so indignant as I was yesterday, when I thought the suspicion
+ridiculous and insulting. I am ready to do any thing that
+shall be calculated to prevent him, or any one else, flirting
+with me; but what have I done, or said, to encourage
+them?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very odd that last year, though you were as pretty as
+you are now, you had no difficulty of this kind, had you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, none at all. I went out a great deal, but no one paid
+me particular attention; and I did not feel afraid of any constructions
+put upon this thing and that thing; and yet I am
+sure I was not half so attentive to appearances, and did not
+think half as much about them.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should think, then, there must be some change in
+yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; that there is! I thought my husband loved me
+then, and my study was to please him.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is the thing! Men have such tact in finding out
+when a woman is discontented at home.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how can I be contented? That does not depend
+upon me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not exactly. But do you not think that from having
+been mortified at home, perhaps you have sought for gratification
+to your vanity abroad, that you have wished to be reassured
+concerning your own attractions?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, perhaps I may. It is so mortifying, you know, to
+be married to a man old enough to be one’s father, and then
+that he should neglect and despise one. I just did want to
+ascertain that the fault was not in me, but that it was all
+owing to his bad taste. Oh dear! why was I dazzled with
+rank and fashion, polished manners, and good breeding. I
+was at the play the other night, and I was so struck with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>those lines of Anne Boleyn’s, that I came home and learned
+them by heart.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">I swear ’tis better to be lowly born,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And range with humble livers in content,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Than to be perked up in a glistering grief</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And wear a golden sorrow.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>If I had but married an honest, true-hearted man, with ardent
+affections—one to whom I had been all the world, as he
+would have been to me—I could have buffeted cheerily through
+the storms of life, hand in hand with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how many of your acquaintance are blessed with the
+fate (which I grant you is the happiest in the world) for
+which you so frequently sigh?”</p>
+
+<p>“You are.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I am! but do not fancy I have not had my share of
+sorrow, though I am cheerful,—more than cheerful,—and
+most grateful for my very large share of happiness. But remember
+I lost a son, my first-born, in the full vigour of youth
+and intellect; one who was all that a mother’s love or pride
+could wish or dream. God grant you may be spared that
+trial, my dearest Lady Montreville!”—her voice faltered as
+she spoke. “Depend upon it all others are light in comparison.
+Not that I murmur. Heaven knows that I bow in
+submission, and acknowledge myself still a person to be envied;
+but you need not envy me so very much,”—and a tear
+glistened in her eye.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy thought of her boy, and trembled. She confessed to
+herself she had not sufficiently prized the blessing vouchsafed
+to her. She thought also that what Milly had said to her was
+very true,—“Some have one trial, some another.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will not find many more so fortunate in their marriage
+as I am,” added the Duchess.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord and Lady John Ashton.”</p>
+
+<p>“They have been married four months and a half!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well then, Mr. and Mrs. Stanton.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they are very happy now. He married her from
+pique, because my niece Jemima refused him. But it has
+turned out particularly well, and Mrs. Stanton suits him ten
+times better than Jemima would have done.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I should not like to have been married out of pique!
+Well then! those dear old souls the Hartleys. It is a pleasure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
+to see them toddling so cozily down the hill together.
+He is charming, and so fond of her!”</p>
+
+<p>“So he is! But the greater part of his youth was spent
+in devotion to other women. However, her gentleness and
+patience have their reward at last. He loves her now as she
+deserves.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! I cannot emulate her there. I cannot wish to win
+back the affections of a person I have left off respecting; but
+indeed I wish to do my duty. I have the most ardent desire
+to be a virtuous wife, if I cannot be a loving one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well now! to begin, you must constantly and invariably
+repress vanity. Vanity is the stumbling-block of most women.
+Vanity has led more women astray, than feeling, or vice, or
+any thing else. You must give up showing your husband
+you can charm others.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sophy told me that was the way in the world to keep
+one’s husband! Not that I did it exactly with the view of
+keeping him, for I had given up that point; but I did wish to
+show him what he had lost.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Lady Montreville, you have been playing a
+dangerous game. By your own confession, then, vanity has
+been the true mainspring of your actions of late!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, not quite! only a little; but, after all, what can be
+done without a little bit of vanity? As Sophy says, every
+body would sit still, and do nothing; people would not try to
+be pleasing and clever; heroes would not fight; legislators
+would not legislate; there would be no arts, or sciences, or
+improvements in the world. Sophy says vanity is as necessary
+in the economy of the mind, as fire in the economy of the
+world. That without it all things would stagnate.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very true! But like fire, if once allowed to get beyond
+your control, it rages, destroys, and devours every thing.
+Like fire, it is the best of servants, the worst of masters.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, so it is! If I could but have thought of that when
+Sophy and I have been talking! but as I could not answer
+her, I thought her arguments were unanswerable. Well, then,
+I will not give way to vanity any more. I always was taught
+that it was wrong to do so, till Sophy persuaded me one ought
+to try to be agreeable, that it was a duty one owed to society.
+Still, how shall I get through our dinner to-day? My husband
+so angry! and Mr. Delville to be one of the party!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span></p>
+<p>“Shall I tell you what to do? Go home to Lord Montreville,
+and ask him how he wishes you to behave to his
+cousin, and assure him you are ready to follow his directions
+in all respects.”</p>
+
+<p>“What! quite humble myself before him, as if I was an
+erring wife, and he an immaculate angel? Oh, my dear
+Duchess, I scarcely think I can do that! Think of Alicia!”</p>
+
+<p>“But your husband having failed in his duties, is no reason
+you should not perform yours. Your vow was not conditional.
+Your duties remain the same. Moreover, asking Lord Montreville
+how he wishes you to conduct yourself, is not expressing
+any approbation of his conduct. In short, it is the right
+thing to do; and you will find yourself happier, if you do
+what is right, simply because it is right, than you can be in
+any other way.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is just what Milly said!” exclaimed Lucy. “And
+if you and Milly both say so, it must be true. I will drive
+home as fast as I can, and catch him before he goes out.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy rang for her carriage, and kissing the Duchess with
+heartfelt gratitude for her sympathy and good advice, she
+hurried away, and went straight into Lord Montreville’s morning-room,
+without giving her pride time to rise up again within
+her bosom.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="16" style="text-decoration: none;">XVI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">When all is done and said,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">In the end, this shall you find,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">He most of all doth bathe in bliss</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">That hath a quiet mind.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Our wealth leaves us at death,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Our kinsmen at the grave;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But virtues of the mind unto</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">The Heavens with us we have.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Thomas Lord Vaux</span>, 1521.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">“Il n’y a rien qui rafraîchisse le sang comme avoir su éviter de faire une
+sottise.”—<span class="smcap">La Bruyere.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was sitting before a table, covered with
+papers and books, with a novel open before him, of which he
+had not turned over a leaf for at least thirty-six minutes. He
+was thinking how innocent Lucy had been when first he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>married her; he was lamenting the total change which he believed
+had taken place in her; he was wondering how far she
+had become acquainted with his connexion with Alicia Mowbray,
+and he confessed to himself that he could date the
+alteration which he had perceived in her, from the period
+when she had an opportunity of perceiving that fatal letter.
+That she had read it, was now evident, from her taunting allusion
+the preceding day. He was persuading himself that
+pique and jealousy might have driven her to flirtation, and he
+did not feel so chilled, so awed, so daunted, as when her measured,
+cold, though dutiful behaviour had made him painfully
+aware of his own errors, and of her merits. Neither was he
+so indignant, as when, in his anger, he attributed the whole
+change to mere indifference to himself, and love of the admiration
+of others.</p>
+
+<p>As Lucy approached him, her cheek was slightly flushed;
+her clear blue eyes looked full at him, with a gentle but determined
+expression which seemed to say, I have no thought
+which shuns the light, inquire, and my heart shall be laid
+open before you.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Montreville,” she said, “you were angry with me
+yesterday for seeing so much of your cousin, Mr. Delville.
+You have asked him to dine here to-day, and I want to know
+how you would wish me to conduct myself towards him. I
+wish to be guided by you. I wish to see those whom you
+approve, and I wish to see no more of them than you approve.
+I value my own good name as much as you can do; and although
+I yesterday felt very angry at the manner in which
+you took me to task, my anger has subsided, and I only want
+to do what is right. You will find me willing and anxious to
+follow your directions, whatever they may be.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville was taken by surprise. He could not
+look in her face and refuse to believe in the perfect candour
+and sincerity of her address to him. Her manner was neither
+humble, as if she had any thing to be forgiven; nor was it
+bold, as if she meant to brave him. The train of his own
+thoughts had rather tended to soften than to inflame him, and
+simple truth generally carries conviction with it.</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy! I own I was angry yesterday, and can you assure
+me I had no cause for being so?”</p>
+
+<p>“None that I know of.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
+<p>“Answer me honestly,—Has not Lionel Delville made love
+to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have no wish but to answer honestly. Yesterday morning
+I should have said, never; and even now I can scarcely
+say he has, though yesterday evening, when I met him at the
+Duchess’s, his manner was changed. I think that if I had
+given him any encouragement, he would have made love to
+me; and it is in consequence of finding you were so far
+justified in your suspicions, that I now come to you, and beg
+you will direct my conduct. My wish is to fulfil my duties.
+I am convinced that by so doing alone one can know happiness,—or
+rather contentment (for she felt at that moment
+that life presented but a blank and cheerless prospect to
+her)—happiness I have long ceased to look for.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy! this is not kind or flattering to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am very sorry for it, but it is the fact!” She sat down,
+half overcome by her feelings of determined duty and of self-commiseration.</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy, why should you not be happy?”</p>
+
+<p>“Can <em>you</em> ask, Lord Montreville?” and she gave him a
+glance, in which the flash of indignation was tempered by a
+reproachful tear, which swam in her eye.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Lucy! do you allude to that—that letter—which
+you so unfortunately——?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I do allude to that letter, which I so unfortunately
+saw; and to that woman, that shameless woman, whom you
+prefer to me. But I do not wish to reproach you—the time
+is gone by. I have made up my mind to being the neglected
+wife of a faithless husband. But I wish to do my duty, for
+my own sake, for the sake of my conscience. Tell me what
+to do, and I will do it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy, I never preferred that woman to you. I have
+never seen her since we left Wales, and I never will see her
+again as long as I live.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am very glad for your own sake to hear you say so.
+For whatever you and other fashionable men may think, you
+may rest assured it is a great sin—though I have latterly been
+so bewildered about right and wrong, and I have tried so to
+find excuses for those around me, that I believe, if it had not
+been for the Duchess, and for Milly, I should scarcely have
+known which was which.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
+<p>Lord Montreville, though not a strict moralist, could not
+help being struck with these few words, which so forcibly
+expressed the mode by which the most amiable become contaminated
+by bad examples. He felt he had been the cause of
+her thus trying to reconcile morality to practice, instead of
+practice to morality.</p>
+
+<p>A pause ensued. Had Lucy been in love with her husband,
+most likely her heart would have entirely softened towards
+him; and though she would have poured forth a much more
+vehement torrent of reproaches, she would have been more
+ready to restore him to his former place in her affections. As
+it was, she heard his assurance with satisfaction, but with
+calmness. It did not produce any instantaneous revulsion in
+her feelings. It did not now affect her as it would have done
+on the evening at Caërwhwyddwth Castle, when his silence
+had so seared her heart. Since then she had had leisure to
+look back upon her marriage, and to decipher what her feelings
+had then been, and to become convinced how little of real
+love there was in her preference of him. She now knew how
+easily we can deceive ourselves. The spell was broken!
+The halo her own imagination had thrown around him was
+dispersed.</p>
+
+<p>Although with a mind so naturally well disposed as hers, if
+his conduct had always been such as to ensure her respect, the
+spell would never have been broken, the halo never dispersed;
+still it was not at her option again to conjure up the one, or to
+invest him with the other. She saw him as he was; but he
+was the father of her child, and she rejoiced that the silence
+and reserve which had so long been maintained between them,
+was at length broken through. She did not wish it should
+ever be resumed, and she continued,—</p>
+
+<p>“I hope we now both wish to perform our duties, and I
+really need your instructions with respect to my behaviour to
+Mr. Delville.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment Lord Montreville felt his own errors had
+been so much more serious than hers, that he was grateful to
+her for expressing herself as if they each had something to
+forget and to forgive; and his jealous feelings had vanished
+into thin air before her candour and sincerity, in a manner
+which surprised himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Lucy,” he said, “I trust to you; there can be no deceit
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>under that open brow. I have known many women, but
+none so free from guile, so single-hearted as yourself. You
+are now aware that Lionel’s attentions to you have given me
+uneasiness, and I feel convinced you will conduct yourself as
+you ought to do. I only wish you felt the same confidence
+in me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, Lord Montreville, if you assure me you have
+broken off all connection with that woman, I implicitly believe
+what you say. But, to tell the honest truth, I cannot get
+over your having ever done any thing so wicked. I may be
+able to forgive the insult to myself, but how can I look up to
+you as I once did, when I know you have been led into such
+wickedness?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Lucy, you do not know with what free notions
+men are educated; you do not know how difficult it is for a
+man to shake off a woman who has once acquired power
+over him, and who tries to get him back into her toils, even
+although the inclination he has once felt for her has long,
+long passed away.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was not since your marriage that you first
+became acquainted with her?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. When I married, I meant never to see her again.
+It was her distress, and mere pity for her wants and miseries,
+that ever led me back to her. I did not then know what you
+really were. I thought you beautiful and gentle, but it was
+not till later that I learned to honour you as a being of a
+holier, higher nature than any I had yet met with. At the
+very time when you shut up your heart from me, mine was
+filled with admiration, respect, and affection for you. Half
+the jealousy I felt was, I believe, sorrow to see the first and
+only being in whose unsullied purity I had firmly believed,
+on the point of becoming contaminated by collision with the
+world.”</p>
+
+<p>Lucy was touched by this homage to the rectitude of her
+intentions, and she thought there would be something satisfactory
+in redeeming her whole sex in his estimation. She
+also thought if she could lead him to see the real guilt of
+those errors which he had hitherto looked upon as so venial,
+she should be promoting his welfare in this world and the
+next. With these feelings she answered smilingly, “I am
+glad you entertained such a good opinion of me, and I should
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>be very, very sorry to forfeit it. You shall continue to
+respect me.”</p>
+
+<p>“And to love you, dearest Lucy. Though I could not
+have reached the age at which I married without having been
+in love before, still, to love you as I never loved any woman
+but you——”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” answered Lucy, and she sighed to think
+that his tenderness awakened no corresponding emotion in her
+bosom; that it was forgiveness, satisfaction, kindness, that she
+felt, but no responsive love.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, the word rather chilled her; for she felt it
+impossible to return the sentiment expressed; and she hastily
+added, “Well, good by; I see your horses in the street, and
+I am going to take the child to play with the Duchess of
+Altonworth’s grandchildren.”</p>
+
+<p>They parted in kindness, and they met again before dinner
+in the same frame of mind.</p>
+
+<p>Lionel Delville, who had calculated upon finding Lucy
+alone, as Lord Montreville was apt to be late for dinner,
+entered the apartment before any of the rest of the company
+had arrived. At first he thought the old fellow must be very
+jealous to have made so unusual an exertion; but he soon
+perceived that a perfect understanding subsisted between them,
+and that Lord Montreville’s countenance no longer betrayed
+any sign of uneasiness at his approach.</p>
+
+<p>He sat, as usual, by Lady Montreville at dinner, and he
+again found the open, straightforward manner which, when
+first he met her, had so completely baffled him. The <i lang="fr">gêne</i>
+and shyness which were the consequence of feeling herself
+suspected, had completely vanished. She knew that her
+husband now had perfect confidence in her; she knew that
+he did justice to the purity of her intentions, and she mentally
+resolved he should never, never have cause to doubt
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Montreville’s knowledge of the sex, which rendered
+him jealous and umbrageous when there was any, the remotest,
+cause for being so, also enabled him to understand and
+to appreciate her behaviour on the present occasion. Lionel
+saw the game was up, and had the tact to slip back into the
+open conventional gallantry, from which he had been gradually
+advancing into serious gallantry.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
+<p>Lucy that night retired to her room satisfied with herself,
+thoroughly convinced that every effort made in the cause of
+virtue produces its own reward, resolved to be thankful for
+the blessings she possessed, and strong in the determination
+to do her duty in that state of life in which she was placed;
+while at the same time she could not deny to herself that the
+duties of those who are united to a person suited to them in
+age, disposition, and pursuits, are the most easy to fulfil.</p>
+
+<p>Lord and Lady Montreville have lived many years in comfort
+and good fellowship. Lady Montreville is the best of
+mothers, and finds in the sportive tenderness of her children,
+happiness far beyond the contentment which at one time was
+all to which she dared aspire. Yet sometimes, as she watches
+the innocent gambols of her two lovely little girls, she sighs
+to think those halcyon days of youth, which to herself were
+days of such unalloyed joyousness, cannot last for ever, and
+that the time must assuredly come when they too will think
+of love and marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Such reflections were passing through her mind, when she
+one day exclaimed to Milly, “Nurse, how sorry I shall be
+when those children grow up, and one has to go through for
+them all the agitations attendant upon lovers, and going to be
+married. Marriage is such a lottery, you know!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, well! I shall be dead and buried before ever that
+time comes; but whatever you do, my lady, be sure they
+choose gentlemen that have the fear of God before their eyes.
+Ah, bless their little hearts!” she added, as she followed their
+light, graceful forms with eyes of pride and tenderness, “they
+may grow up ever so pretty—as pretty as yourself, my lady,
+and they can’t be much prettier, but it’s a poor hold a woman
+has over a man if it’s only the hold her own beautiful face,
+sweet manners, and gentle temper can have. It is to the
+man’s good principles a woman must look, to keep her
+husband constant and true to her.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="WARENNE">WARENNE;<br>
+
+<small>OR,</small><br>
+
+THE PIPING TIMES OF PEACE.
+</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="1" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">So I, by vent’rous friendship led,</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">
+
+<hr class="tb"></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Wad fain thy dauntless valour sing,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Resistless as the tempest’s wing</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That wave on wave does dashing fling</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">Upon the shore,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Yet mild thy soul as breath of spring</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">When war is o’er.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Unpublished Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>One evening in the winter of 182—, a large party of the
+officers of the —— dragoons were dining together in the best
+room of the Green Dragon, the principal inn of ——, on the
+southern coast of Ireland. The district around was under
+military law, but though occasional outrages marked the wild
+and turbulent spirit which reigned, since their arrival in their
+present quarters no disturbances had taken place of sufficient
+magnitude to cause them serious alarm; and it appeared probable
+that, notwithstanding the efforts of the agitators to excite
+tumult, men’s passions would subside, and affairs resume
+their wonted, if not happy, current. To men under such circumstances,
+without danger to animate, or occupations to interest
+them, dinner is a meal of much importance, and the
+young cornets or captains were busily employed in dispelling
+their <i lang="fr">ennui</i> according to the received rules of social indulgence.</p>
+
+<p>Some two or three of the neighbouring gentry had been invited
+to join the mess; and as the generous wine passed quickly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>round, many a loud laugh and many a light jest told the gay
+and unconstrained merriment of the festive meeting. There
+was, however, one individual at the table, who, though he apparently
+shared in their mirth, and though no trace of uneasiness
+on his brow betrayed the working of the mind within,
+looked upon the proceedings of his young friends and their
+guests with feelings of an anxious nature. Their commanding
+officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Warenne, feared that he could
+perceive, amid the joyousness of their good-humoured revelry,
+impending discord and confusion.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne, though young in years, was a gallant and very
+distinguished officer. He had entered the army a boy, at the
+commencement of the Peninsular war, and was entirely employed
+from that time till its close. Promotion came quickly
+to the survivors in those days of perilous glory, and he had
+successively risen step after step, until he found himself in the
+spring of 1814 first major of his old regiment, the —— dragoons.
+At Waterloo his lieutenant-colonel was killed, and
+Warenne obtained the high rank he held at the moment of
+which we are writing. Thus, after several years of peace, he
+was not quite thirty-four. Daring, cool, and firm, with quick
+perception, great knowledge of his profession, and much general
+information, he was looked upon by his seniors as one
+who, if opportunity should be given him, could not fail to
+raise himself to the highest honours of his profession; kind of
+heart, and gentle in manner, he was the idol of the soldiery.
+His form and his features coincided with the character of his
+mind. Tall and muscular, but spare and active, his broad
+chest and clean limbs showed at once strength, and capability
+of continued exertion. His dark and piercing eye bespoke
+quick comprehension; while his mouth, beautifully formed,
+and expressing, as its natural characteristics, benignity, and
+perhaps humour, when through agitation it became compressed,
+bore the stamp of decision.</p>
+
+<p>On the night in question, a bystander might have detected
+somewhat of Warenne’s anxiety to keep up a tone of conversation
+throughout the party rather higher than that which
+usually graces a mess-table, but otherwise no outward signs
+denoted his anticipations. He had learnt by accident, in the
+course of the day, that one of the gentlemen, whom he had
+invited to dinner, was closely connected with the agitating
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>party; and he every instant expected to hear him break out
+into some abuse of existing powers, which might not be
+brooked at a table of his majesty’s officers. He watched therefore
+the increasing effects of the wine upon his guests with a
+melancholy foreboding, and was on the alert to put a stop to
+any discussion that seemed likely to terminate angrily. He
+turned his keen eye round on all his young subalterns in succession,
+to see if the colour was yet mounting to their cheeks,
+or if their knit brows showed symptoms of provocation. More
+especially did he observe the bearing of two at the table. For
+the first he was interested by the tie of blood; the second had
+been committed to his care, a few months previously, by one
+whom he was strongly disposed to think the handsomest and
+most charming of her sex.</p>
+
+<p>Frank Warenne was the lieutenant-colonel’s only brother,
+about six years the younger, a gay, dashing, intelligent puppy,
+very handsome, and a good deal spoilt, that is to say, as far as
+a disposition, by nature incorruptibly good, could be deteriorated
+by the admiration of women, and the good-nature of
+friends. The affectionate kindness of Colonel Warenne himself
+had perhaps contributed, as much as any other cause, to
+render Frank what he was.</p>
+
+<p>Their father, a younger son of the noble house of Warenne,
+had died when his eldest boy Gerald was only thirteen years
+old, having, shortly before his death, vested his small property
+in land. His widow had hoped to be able, with the income
+arising from this, to educate her two children well, and she
+had placed Gerald at Eton. Before a year had passed, she
+too was gathered to the tomb. Mr. Warenne had bequeathed
+the estate in fee to his wife, trusting to her to divide it between
+her two sons as she might deem best for their future
+interests.</p>
+
+<p>She died, however, without a will, and it devolved on Gerald
+as sole heir. From that moment, Gerald, with the decision
+and nobleness which formed so prominent a part of his after
+character, determined, not only to take charge of the instruction
+and support of Frank during his minority by making over
+for that purpose a portion of the allowance given him by
+Chancery, but, on his coming of age, to divide his inheritance
+equally with him; a resolution which he carried into practice,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>shortly after his return to England from the army of occupation,
+in the winter of 1815.</p>
+
+<p>He obtained for Frank a commission in the same regiment
+with himself, as soon as he was old enough to hold it; and the
+young cornet fought his first battle at Waterloo under his
+auspices.</p>
+
+<p>In this manner, under his brother’s fostering eye, Frank had
+grown up to his present age of manhood, in perfect freedom
+from care, in the enjoyment of as much money as he needed,
+with the advantages of birth, of friends (for his brother’s
+friends were his), and of personal beauty—a pleasant introduction
+into life; but not one to bring to maturity the seeds
+of good implanted by nature. The consequence of this was,
+that though Captain Warenne was an excellent officer, and a
+gay, agreeable companion, he wanted that vigour of mind and
+intellectual superiority which Colonel Warenne himself possessed.</p>
+
+<p>The other object of anxiety to Warenne, on this evening,
+Henry Marston, was a wild, thoughtless, impetuous boy, with
+high and generous feelings, undisciplined by education. When
+he joined the regiment, only a few months before, he first
+quitted the paternal roof beneath which he had been brought
+up under a private tutor, who had consulted his own ease
+more than his pupil’s advancement, and had never attempted
+to teach him the necessity of self-command, or even of concession
+to the prejudices and opinions of others. From him,
+therefore, Warenne momentarily expected some burst of temper,
+or some passionate interruption of his Irish guests, which
+must lead to a quarrel. His fears were not without reason;—by
+degrees the little softening remarks which he from time
+to time threw in were less attended to, while the agitator grew
+more violent and seditious in his language, louder in tone, and
+more offensive in his gesticulations. By degrees Henry passed
+from a state of good-humoured amusement to a feeling of
+intense provocation, which hardly permitted him to observe
+the usual courtesies of society; and the former at last venturing
+to declare in a threatening manner, that “England, if she
+chose still to continue her galling oppression of Ireland,
+should remember that Irishmen had hearts and hands, and
+that she did it at her peril,” he angrily demanded,—</p>
+
+<p>“Peril! of what?”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span></p>
+<p>“Do you ask of what?” rejoined the indignant orator.
+“Of war, war to the knife. Ireland cannot—will not—longer
+be the slave of England. We bid her, and her bloodthirsty
+myrmidons defiance.”</p>
+
+<p>In an instant more than one young officer started from his
+seat, and together with Henry, who was thoroughly exasperated,
+loudly took him to task for his ill-timed and ill-placed
+tirade against their country. At this moment the
+well-known voice of their lieutenant-colonel was heard.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Marston, Mr. Kennedy, Captain Warenne; I beg of
+you to remain quiet.”</p>
+
+<p>The clear stern tone in which these few simple words were
+uttered, permitted not any hesitation. The young soldiers
+reseated themselves, and a general silence ensued.</p>
+
+<p>“Gentlemen,” continued he, speaking slowly and calmly,
+“this for the present is my table, these gentlemen my guests.”
+Then addressing himself to the unlucky cause of the disturbance.
+“Mr. O’Neil, as the countenances of my young friends
+do not seem to promise much more agreeable conversation,
+perhaps we had better retire.”</p>
+
+<p>He rose from his chair as he concluded, and bowing, led
+the way to the door. The Irishman followed him, and they
+all left the room. Colonel Warenne quietly walked before
+them from the door to the court-yard of the inn, courteously
+showing the way; as soon, however, as he had reached a
+spot where he could not be overheard, he turned round and
+said,—</p>
+
+<p>“After what has passed, Mr. O’Neil, you must be aware
+that you and I cannot again meet as friends without some
+explanation; I must therefore wish you good night. To-morrow
+morning, perhaps, your present feelings of excitement
+will be past away, and you will be sorry for the intemperate
+language you have used. I shall be happy to find that
+such is the case, when I send my friend Major Stuart to wait
+on you.”</p>
+
+<p>O’Neil seemed struck by the collected and business-like
+tone of this address, but made no answer, and departed with
+his companions.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they were gone, Warenne sought Major Stuart’s
+apartment, and placed the matter in his hands. He then
+retraced his steps to the mess-room, revolving in his mind
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>many various schemes for preventing all inquiry, on the part
+of his young friends, into the measures he had taken, or was
+about to take, when, fortunately for him, an orderly rode
+into the yard with orders from General Unwin, who commanded
+the district, to move the regiment the next day to ——.
+With the despatch in his hand, he re-entered the
+dining-room, where, during his absence, his conduct had
+been canvassed. The younger officers were strongly disposed
+to think that he had treated the impertinent stranger with
+too much consideration; and, as he returned, Henry Marston
+was in the act of saying to Frank, that he was inclined to
+quarrel with his brother for not allowing him to kick the
+rascal out. He quickly, however, silenced their incipient
+questionings, by occupying their attention with the change of
+station to be effected on the morrow, with the line of route,
+&amp;c.: and soon afterwards, breaking up the party, dismissed
+them to their rooms in utter forgetfulness of the mischance
+which had thrown them into such disagreeable confusion.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="2" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>“When honour is a support to virtuous principles, and runs parallel with the
+laws of God and our country, it cannot be too much cherished and encouraged;
+but when the dictates of honour are contrary to those of religion and equity, they
+are the greatest depravations of human nature, by giving wrong, ambitious, and
+false ideas of what is good and laudable, and should therefore be exploded by
+every good government, and driven out as the bane and plague of human society.”</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right smcap">Addison.</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Frank Warenne alone was not deceived, and could not
+doubt that his brother would resent the insult which he had
+received. He knew too well Warenne’s delicate sense of
+honour; and, recognising in the tranquillity of his demeanour
+the settled calmness of decision, he intuitively guessed the
+truth. Want of fraternal affection was not one of Frank’s
+failings, and he sought his chamber in a state of serious disquietude.
+He saw no means by which a rencontre could be
+prevented, nor any by which he might transfer to his own
+person the danger that threatened him he loved so dearly.
+He felt that honour, according to military custom, demanded
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>from Warenne himself that he should require an apology
+from O’Neil; that in all probability O’Neil would not
+apologize; and they must therefore necessarily meet each
+other. He could not rest—he did not even attempt to lie
+down, but paced his room in restless anxiety hour after hour,
+forming a thousand different schemes to ensure his brother’s
+safety, yet unable to find one which should not compromise
+his fame. At last, about five o’clock, resolving to ascertain
+whether his fears were well founded, he stole across the
+passage to the door of Warenne’s room, and gently opened it.
+Warenne was writing, but started up at Frank’s entrance.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it you, Frank!” he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Forgive me, Gerald,” rejoined Frank, “but I am certain
+you are going to fight that scoundrel O’Neil, and I am
+wretched about it: I have passed the whole night in utter
+misery. Gerald! this may be our last meeting,” and as he
+spoke he flung himself upon his brother’s neck.</p>
+
+<p>“Do not unman me,” said Warenne; “just at this moment
+I have need of all my firmness, for I will not deny
+your conclusion with respect to O’Neil. Would that I could!
+for I abhor duelling from my soul. I cannot disguise from
+myself that it is a wicked and abominable practice, expressly
+contrary to the law of Him, in whom, notwithstanding the
+irregularities of my soldier’s life, I most sincerely trust,—if I
+may dare to say so in such an hour as this; neither can I
+forget that I am perhaps about to appear before him with the
+crime of murder, in intention at least, upon my soul. Still I
+have not the moral courage to break through custom, when
+the alternative is disgrace—but I must not think of these
+matters now. Let us talk of something else, Frank—I had
+just finished a letter to you as you came in, which I meant
+should be delivered to you in case I fell;—put it in your
+pocket, and return it to me, if all goes well—nay, do not
+read it. It contains only a few words of advice from your
+old Mentor, who would fain have you do justice to his
+instructions, and to yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>As he proceeded, Warenne regained his habitual self-command,
+and Frank, his mind unconsciously imbibing a portion
+of his brother’s calmness, became more tranquil. They talked
+on with composure, and even cheerfulness, of the future
+prospects of the latter. It was now six o’clock, and Warenne
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>begged Frank to leave him to a few minutes repose. The
+sad conviction that this might be their last interview once
+more forced itself on the mind of the latter, and he would
+have relieved his bursting heart by tears, had he not feared
+to give pain to one he loved better than himself. He
+lingered for a while on his brother’s neck, pressed him yet
+closer to his heart, then invoking every blessing upon his
+head, and receiving from him a fond but solemn benediction
+in return, he rushed to his own chamber, where he threw
+himself on his bed, and, after a few minutes, fairly sobbed
+himself to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>About a quarter before seven Stuart knocked at Warenne’s
+door, with the intelligence that O’Neil would not apologise.
+Nothing remained therefore to be done but to proceed to the
+meeting, and in a few minutes the two friends were on the
+road to a sequestered spot a short distance from the town,
+which Stuart and O’Neil’s second had selected. It is not
+necessary to relate the particulars of a duel; suffice it to say,
+that the affair was properly conducted, and that O’Neil fell at
+the first fire, severely, but not dangerously, wounded; while
+Warenne received his antagonist’s ball in the fleshy part of
+his right arm, just above the elbow. As soon as the latter
+saw the effect of his fire he ran up to O’Neil, and endeavoured
+as well as he could to raise him up, with a feeling of anguish
+he alone can estimate who finds himself with blood upon his
+hand, shed, not under excitement, nor in a moment of
+passion, but coolly and unnecessarily, in compliance with the
+customs of the world. Nor was his distress alleviated, when
+as he waited with impatience the opinion of the surgeon on
+the nature and extent of the injury he had inflicted, the
+wounded man took his hand and said—</p>
+
+<p>“If I die, I forgive you; my own folly has been the
+cause of my death.”</p>
+
+<p>He could have cursed himself for his crime. His suspense,
+however, lasted not long. The surgeon, after an accurate examination
+into the direction of the ball, pronounced that no
+vital part was injured, and that “Mr. O’Neil would be as
+sound a man as ever in three months.”</p>
+
+<p>Never did sounds of sweetest melody fall so pleasantly on
+Warenne’s ear, as the oracular dictum of his old fellow campaigner,
+Mr. Morris, the regimental Æsculapius. There
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>seemed to be a weight taken from his breast, which he felt it
+would have been impossible for him to sustain.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank Heaven!” murmured he to himself, “I am not
+a murderer!” Then turning to O’Neil, he said aloud, “We
+part friends, I hope, not the less that you are to live.”</p>
+
+<p>O’Neil smiled faintly, and once again held out his hand.
+Warenne shook it warmly, and immediately proceeded on his
+return to ——, that he might procure further assistance, and
+the means of conveyance for his former foe.</p>
+
+<p>As he turned to leave him, he laid his hand, as he supposed,
+on Stuart’s arm for support—it was Frank’s! Poor Frank
+had slept but for an instant, and on awakening, had sought
+his brother’s apartment. Finding that he was gone out, he
+had immediately ran down, through the court-yard of the inn,
+to a spot in the high road from whence he could command a
+view over the adjacent country, where catching a glimpse of
+two figures, about a mile from him, quitting the beaten track,
+he had rightly conjectured they were Stuart and his principal.
+He followed as fast as he was able, and arrived on the ground
+just in time to see O’Neil fall. He had then stolen up during
+the interval of confusion which ensued, and behind his brother
+had awaited the surgeon’s decision.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne recognised Frank, but simply pressed his arm with
+affection. His heart was too full for utterance, and the silence
+was not broken, until the latter exclaimed, “Thank God!
+Gerald, you are yet spared to us!”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank God, indeed!” replied the other. The deep but
+subdued tone of his voice expressing the sincerity with which
+he acknowledged the mercy of that Being, not only in preserving
+his life from destruction, but his conscience from a
+horrible crime.</p>
+
+<p>Stuart soon afterwards joined them. “Warenne,” said he,
+“I congratulate you on being so well out of this business;
+for the wound in your arm is a trifle. Of all life’s disagreeable
+accidents, in my opinion, there is nothing so unpleasant as a
+duel; nothing so unsatisfactory; nothing—I beg your pardon—so
+foolish.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do not beg my pardon,” replied Warenne; “all you say
+is true, and if the encounter ends in the death of either party,
+nothing so dreadful, both with regard to him who is hurried
+from the very act of sin, into the presence of his Maker, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>to him who survives, to wear out a melancholy existence in
+unavailing remorse.”</p>
+
+<p>Such weak and unstable creatures are we! Knowing the
+better line of conduct, but preferring the worse; afraid of the
+breath of our own species, who can only hurt the body, yet
+scrupling not to incur the anger of Him who can destroy both
+body and soul.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne, a man of excellent principles, of commanding
+talents, and in the habit of controlling his passions, though he
+acknowledged the heinousness of the offence he was about to
+commit, and though he avowed his obligations to obey the
+commandment, “Thou shalt not kill!” could not subdue
+his worldly pride, but shrank from the danger of disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour’s walk brought the party to their
+quarters; and Warenne, having thanked his old friend Stuart
+for the kind fulfilment of the disagreeable office which had
+devolved upon him, retired with Frank to his apartment.</p>
+
+<p>When the two brothers were again alone in that room in
+which, not much more than two hours before, they had parted
+from each other with such painful emotions, Warenne, who
+could not reconcile to his conscience the steps which he had
+taken, though he had wilfully blinded himself to their inconsistency
+with his duty as a Christian, and was, moreover, much
+agitated with his narrow escape from more serious and irretrievable
+guilt, gave way to his feelings, and hastily saying,
+“Frank, you must pray for forgiveness for me!” threw himself
+on his knees by his bedside, and earnestly entreated pardon
+of his offended Creator.</p>
+
+<p>Frank silently placed himself beside him, and for a few
+minutes both were absorbed in their devotions; those of the
+latter, perhaps, assuming the tone of grateful thanksgiving,
+rather than of anxious supplication. Warenne then rose composed
+and calm, and looking affectionately on his brother,
+whose tearful countenance betrayed the sincerity of the feeling
+in which he had prayed, bade him hasten to prepare for their
+march. How lightly, how gladly did Frank now obey him!</p>
+
+<p>In an hour the bugles sounded, and the busy scene of departure
+commenced. The street was alive with men and
+horses, as the small parties came up from their different billets,
+and respectively fell into their places. Warenne had taken
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>advantage of the interval to have his wound examined and
+dressed, and walked down the ranks to assume the command
+of his regiment with his cloak drawn over his bandaged arm,
+a little paler, perhaps, and graver than usual, but collected and
+self-possessed. A glance at his men showed him, that in the
+short time which had elapsed, the particulars of the duel had
+transpired. They were standing by their horses ready to
+mount; and as he passed along their front, one or two of the
+old veterans, who had fought through the peninsular campaigns
+with him, and considered him almost to belong to them, ventured
+to murmur reproachfully,—</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, sir, <em>you</em> need not have gone to show your courage;
+if any thing had happened to you, what would have become of
+us? It’s a’most too bad of you.” And in a second more
+Henry Marston came up with a flushed face, and asked him
+how he could think of putting his life in danger to cover his
+foolish disputes with the Irish guests.</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” said he earnestly, “did you not let some one of
+us young ones fight O’Neil?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne’s pale cheek received a slight tinge of colour, as
+he heard the affectionate remonstrances of his old soldiers;
+but he answered them only with a look of kind acknowledgment;
+to Henry, however, he replied smilingly, “Never
+mind now, Henry, I promise you that you shall shoot the
+next man who behaves ill at our mess; in the mean time I’ll
+try if I cannot occupy you more profitably.” Then hastening
+to mount his horse, he gave the signal for immediate departure.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="3" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“I think thee all that e’er was tenanted</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Of noblest worth in loveliest female form.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Joanna Baillie’s</span> “<cite>Constantine Palœologus.</cite>”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“His countenance was troubled, and his speech</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Like that of one whose tongue to light discourse</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">At fits constrained, betrays a heart disturbed.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Southey’s</span> “<cite>Roderick</cite>.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>During the whole of that winter, the —— dragoons were kept
+on constant duty in the district in which they were quartered;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>thanks, however, to the unceasing activity of their commanding
+officer, his easy and kind manners to the people; his ready
+perception of their humour; his strict observance of justice
+and open-handed generosity, which made them deem him a
+“raal” gentleman—it passed without bloodshed or disturbance.
+In the following spring the regiment was ordered to
+England, and several of the officers, of whom Henry Marston
+was one, obtained leave of absence.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne himself only waited till he should have placed his
+men in their new quarters at Calbury, to proceed to town for
+a few weeks, leaving Frank behind him, to amuse himself
+with the pleasures and occupations of a country town in the
+summer months. A few hours served to bring Henry to his
+paternal home in Charles Street, and to the arms of those he
+loved best in the world, his father and his sister.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Framlingham was a good-natured man, much attached
+to his children, devoted to politics, and almost wholly engrossed
+with the cares of an office of some importance, which
+he held under the ministry of the day. He had ever been a
+fond parent to Henry, and Henry repaid his love with true
+filial affection. His sister was his earliest friend, the sharer of
+his boyish hopes and fears; and now that he had grown to
+manhood, the object of his fraternal pride. In truth Adelaide
+Marston was a sister of whom any man might justly be proud.
+She was at the present time in her twenty-fourth year, the
+eldest of the three sisters and brothers who composed Lord
+Framlingham’s family. Tall and beautifully made, her head
+sprang from her neck, as that of a Grecian statue of old. Her
+brow was marble itself; her nose thin and sharp cut; her
+large dark lustrous eyes teemed with expression; and her
+mouth, perhaps, after all, the most remarkable feature in her
+countenance, gave a character of loveliness to the whole.
+Whether she stood before you in silent thought, with her
+raven hair quietly shading her brow, or shook back her locks
+in innocent mirth, her bright teeth positively flashing on you
+as she smiled, she was altogether as glorious an object as eye
+could look upon. The charms of her mind, though perhaps
+really as great, were not so evident as those of her person.
+Her manners were in public rather cold and reserved, and in
+the eyes of many who did not know her, bore the semblance
+of pride. Never, however, did there exist a breast in which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>pride was less an inmate. The truth was, she was shy from
+too great humility.</p>
+
+<p>She had never been a favourite with her mother, who was
+a foolish woman, and disappointed that her first-born was a
+daughter, and she had been from infancy subjected to all those
+checkings and thwartings which unwise mothers are apt to
+exercise injudiciously. She had found her sisters constantly
+preferred to her; and not the less, after they had grown up
+and made brilliant matches. These circumstances, which,
+with a disposition less innately good, would probably have
+produced a soreness of temper, and a disdainful disregard of
+the opinions of others, in her occasioned only a degree of reserve
+in general conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, with greater personal attractions than her sisters, and
+more excellent qualities of mind, she yet remained Adelaide
+Marston, while they were ennobled matrons. Could the
+world have seen beneath the surface, how differently would it
+have judged her—it would have found there strong affections,
+and kind and gentle feelings, united to a nobleness of spirit, an
+enthusiastic generosity, and a love of truth, which, while they
+caused her to render scrupulously unto every one their due,
+made her scorn to receive credit to which she did not conceive
+herself justly entitled. Shrinking and retiring on common
+occasions almost beyond feminine timidity, when called upon
+for exertion, she was frank, straightforward, decided, and uncompromising.
+She was altogether a person whom an inferior
+mind could not estimate, but whom a superior one could never
+sufficiently admire.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother was now dead, and she lived with her father,
+his sole companion. To her, therefore, Henry’s return was a
+source of more than ordinary joy, and the sister and the
+brother met as if they had been separated for years instead of
+months.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two after his return, as Henry was relating to
+Adelaide the adventures of his <i lang="fr">début</i> as a soldier, he naturally
+came to the mention of Warenne’s name.</p>
+
+<p>“Adelaide,” said he, “what a man that is! it is worth
+something to know him, if only to have the benefit of his example,
+and he has been the kindest friend to me possible. You
+do not know how much I owe you for recommending me to
+his care.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
+<p>Adelaide listened, unconsciously perhaps, with increased attention;
+and Henry, thus encouraged, gave the reins to the
+generous feelings of his warm heart, and did ample justice to
+Warenne’s merits. He detailed all he knew himself of the
+object of his praise, both with regard to his character and to
+his life; and all he had gleaned from his brother officers, and
+from the old soldiers, with whom some of Warenne’s early and
+more dashing exploits were a favourite topic of conversation;
+especially, dilating upon his conduct in the duel with O’Neil,
+which Henry was conscious he had himself principally
+provoked.</p>
+
+<p>“Your friend is a perfect <i lang="fr">heros de roman</i>,” exclaimed Adelaide,
+smiling, as he concluded. “Is he so entirely without
+fault?”</p>
+
+<p>“Without fault!” replied Henry, half angrily; “of course
+he has faults: every one has. I do not wish to make him out
+‘a faultless monster, which the world ne’er knew;’ but he
+has better qualities than any other man I ever saw. I shall
+not say person, because I think you as near perfection as he is,
+though your question is enough to provoke one; but you shall
+judge for yourself, and see whether I have said too much. He
+will be in town in a few days, and I hope my father will make
+him consider this house as a second home. He has been, I
+am sure, a brother and a father to me, since I have been with
+him. I do not believe that I should stand here alive now but
+for him. I was for ever getting into scrapes when I first
+joined, owing to my home education, which prevented my
+learning how to command my temper, and I should never have
+extricated myself from them without his assistance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, Henry, I did not mean to be provoking,” replied
+Adelaide. “I have every disposition to admire one you love
+so much; but why give yourself a bad character? Praise
+your friend, but do not abuse yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not think I deserve much commendation,” said
+Henry, smiling in his turn; “when I can fire up at an innocent
+expression from you, my actions would belie my words.”</p>
+
+<p>Had Henry been able to read Adelaide’s heart, he would
+not have suspected her of a wish to treat Warenne’s good
+qualities with lightness. She had been impressed with a very
+favourable idea of him during the three weeks she had passed
+in his society at Norton Chenies, and was sufficiently disposed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>to admire a character, in many respects congenial with her
+own. Not that she had, what is commonly called, fallen in
+love with him, but that she had been pleased with his spirit,
+his superior intelligence, and his high-minded chivalrous tone
+of sentiment. He had also appeared to appreciate her from
+the first moment of their acquaintance, and she was grateful
+to him for his discernment. When Henry left her, she could
+not help reflecting upon what had formed the principal topic
+of their conversation, and she certainly did not find her esteem
+for Warenne decreased by Henry’s commendation. She
+thought over, one by one, the little incidents which had been
+mentioned, with a secret feeling of satisfaction at his strict
+observance of her request to him; and though she did not yet
+think of love, Warenne, it may not be denied, would have been
+gratified, had he known how much his image occupied her
+mind: to him the three weeks at Norton Chenies had been
+the bright epoch of his life.</p>
+
+<p>In a few days Warenne came to town; and after notifying
+his arrival at the Horse Guards, &amp;c. &amp;c., was brought by
+Henry to his father’s. Lord Framlingham received the man
+who had been so true a friend to his son with marked consideration,
+and pressed him to come frequently to Charles
+Street—an invitation which Warenne was not the less disposed
+to accept, when Adelaide, with extended hand, and radiant
+looks, welcomed him, and thanked him for his kindness to her
+brother.</p>
+
+<p>From that time he was a constant visiter at Lord Framlingham’s.
+A club of military men possessed small attractions
+for one who sought in London a <i lang="fr">délassement</i> from military
+duty; and the cold civility of Lord Warenne, and of other
+connections of his family, did not lead him to desire a greater
+degree of intimacy with them. Thus he had leisure, as well
+as inclination, to profit by Lord Framlingham’s hospitality;
+and when the old lord himself appeared to like his society, and
+to derive pleasure from conversing with him on the interior
+policy of the country, its power, its laws, and its sources of
+wealth (subjects on which he had reflected much, and accumulated
+much information in his wanderings through the
+different garrison towns of England); when Henry seemed
+gratified by his coming; when, above all, Adelaide seemed to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>meet him with gladness; he, on some pretence or other, found
+himself almost daily in Charles Street.</p>
+
+<p>His admiration of Adelaide quickly ripened into love, pure
+and ardent love, and to hear her speak and see her smile, became
+his only wish. He could listen for hours to her sweet
+voice as she joined in conversation with her father and himself,
+or with Henry talked over the incidents of the day; and
+he knew no greater happiness than to trace the high character
+of her mind, as, in the intimacy of friendship, she gave scope
+to her generous feelings.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide, too, had learned to love, and her heart, which
+had passed unscathed through the gay dawning of her career,
+throbbed with the tumultuous impulses of imperious passion.
+She loved, and life to her was now one dream of pleasurable
+emotion, for, with a woman’s intuitive tact, she could trace
+the workings of Warenne’s heart more plainly than those of
+her own, and she saw that she there reigned undisputed
+mistress of his affections. That commanding spirit, which
+was wont to assert its mastery over the feelings, and to control
+and discipline them within the bounds of wisdom, lived on
+her every look. If he spoke, he turned to discover if she
+approved; if he did aught, he was not satisfied till he knew
+she deemed it well done. Conscious thus of her power over
+him, she for a while drank of the cup of joy which hope presented
+to her lip, and permitted it not to be embittered by
+any fear for the future.</p>
+
+<p>Her father perceived what was going on, but gave no outward
+sign that he should oppose himself to the result to which
+circumstances were apparently leading. In fact, he had not
+come to any decision on the subject, for though he was a
+worldly-minded man, and wished his daughter to make what
+is termed a good match, he was aware that, with her small
+fortune, she could not command one; and he knew from
+experience, that she would never sacrifice her feelings to the
+prospect of a brilliant establishment. He was not, therefore,
+disinclined to her marrying a person of moderate means, for
+whom she had conceived an affection. Adelaide interpreted
+silence to mean consent, and feeling complete confidence in
+Warenne’s love for her, gave him, in return, the full affection
+of her maiden heart.</p>
+
+<p>What happy and blissful hours were these, when each,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>though they had not told their love, lived but for the other.
+They lasted not long. Warenne soon awakened to the real
+difficulties of his situation, and took himself severely to task
+for the headlong impetuosity with which he had set at hazard
+his own, and, perhaps, another’s happiness. Had he a right
+to ask one who had been from childhood surrounded by every
+luxury affluence could purchase, to descend, for his sake, to
+comparative indigence? Could he request her to quit the
+brilliant circle she adorned to become the inmate of a barrack
+yard? His soul revolted at the thought. What was he, that
+he should outweigh in her estimation privations such as these?
+She would, he doubted not, if she loved him, despise all
+worldly advantages, but should he subject her to them because
+she loved him?</p>
+
+<p>For the first time in his life his want of riches galled him;
+he felt as though he were guilty of presumption in loving
+Adelaide, and he hesitated to make the avowal which for ever
+hovered upon his lips. Adelaide perceived his disquietude,
+and from some expressions he inadvertently let fall, pretty
+accurately conjectured its cause. At first she was inclined to
+be angry with him, under the false impression that he conceived
+her capable of being influenced by a regard for wealth;
+but she could not retain her anger when she overheard him
+one day say to Henry, who had been blaming an acquaintance
+of theirs for not proposing to a lady to whom he was tenderly
+attached, “Henry, you forget that Compton is a poor man.
+How can he ask Miss Thornton to leave her comfortable home
+and share his poverty?”</p>
+
+<p>There was a bitterness in the tone with which he uttered
+these words, which betrayed the secret feeling that prompted
+the reply. Then she was aware that he considered a woman
+of any refinement to be singularly misplaced in the midst of
+the quarters of a regiment, for, in the earlier days of their intimacy,
+when laughing and talking with her and her brother,
+over the <i lang="fr">agrémens</i> and <i lang="fr">desagrémens</i> of a soldier’s life, he had
+often expressed an opinion to this effect.</p>
+
+<p>She reflected on the sentiments which he evidently entertained
+on these points, and her resentment vanished. She
+might, perhaps, deem his delicacy over-strained, but she knew,
+if he left the army, that he must forfeit, not only his fair hopes
+of fame and advancement, but also a large proportion of his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>income; and she could not blame him for being unwilling to
+subject her to the discomforts of a profession which he might
+not with any degree of prudence desert. But when she had
+arrived at this better understanding of Warenne’s motives, she
+was perplexed how to act. Her affections had been given;
+they could not be recalled; she could not retrace her steps;
+yet how proceed? She was ready to submit to whatever
+sacrifices might be necessary for the sake of him she loved, but
+till he afforded her an opportunity, by first openly declaring
+his own passion, she could not acquaint him with her determination.
+She longed to bid him throw aside his scruples,
+and give her liberty to decide in her own cause; but maidenly
+reserve prevented this virtual avowal of her preference for
+him—reserve which, in her shrinking and timid nature, might
+be with difficulty overcome, even under happier circumstances.
+There remained no alternative but to wait for Warenne’s proposals,
+though when he would make them, or whether he
+would make them at all, seemed a matter of uncertainty. He
+still lingered on in town, unable to tear himself from her
+presence, yet fearing to speak; living but for her society, yet
+far from satisfied in his own mind of the propriety of his continuing
+to seek it. At length, one morning that he called in
+Charles Street, to know if he might accompany Adelaide and
+her brother in their ride, he was so depressed in spirits that
+she could not avoid asking him, with some appearance of
+anxiety, if he was unwell.</p>
+
+<p>“I am, indeed, Miss Marston,” exclaimed he, forgetting
+for a moment his resolutions of prudence in the emotions
+which the kind manner of her inquiry had conjured up; “but
+not in body; I am ill in mind, displeased and angry with
+myself, for wanting the courage, when my duty and inclinations
+clash, to sacrifice the latter to the former; but I cannot
+do so, were my life the forfeit.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke hastily and passionately; Adelaide made no reply,
+she did not even raise her eyes from the ground. Warenne
+looked at her earnestly for a moment, then feeling that as they
+were at present circumstanced, he had said either too much or
+too little, he resolved to proceed. He could not, however,
+utterly control the contradictory impulses which distracted his
+mind, and his words appeared to flow from despair, and scorn
+of his own presumption, rather than from love.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span></p>
+<p>“Tell me,” said he, “is not a man unjustifiable who
+would have another submit to sacrifices for his own welfare?”</p>
+
+<p>He paused for her answer. Adelaide pitied him from her
+soul; she felt how much mental agony he must have endured
+ere he could thus, on a point where his whole happiness was
+at stake, so frame his questions as if he wished her to decide
+against him. She therefore replied timidly and evasively,</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, Colonel Warenne, this must depend very much
+on the circumstances of the case, on the extent of injury to
+be inflicted, and the degree of advantage to be obtained.”</p>
+
+<p>“True,” rejoined he, his voice gradually losing its tone of
+bitterness, and becoming mournfully tender, “true,” said he,
+“and I cannot disguise from myself that though the benefit
+to myself would be inexpressibly great, greater far than I
+have any right to hope for, yet the injury which I should
+inflict would be certain and considerable. Would to Heaven
+I could come to a contrary conclusion, but I cannot.” He
+buried his face in his hands on the table which stood before
+him; a second afterwards, however, he looked up, with a deep
+flush crimsoning his very brow, and continued in a hurried
+manner, “I cannot, however, renounce my chance.”</p>
+
+<p>Henry’s voice at this instant was heard at the door, and
+Warenne ceased abruptly. Henry came to tell Adelaide that
+her aunt was waiting for her below in her carriage. Adelaide
+obeyed the summons, and with a lighter heart than she had
+borne for many days, ran down the stairs to her aunt. “He
+must speak out now,” thought she; “he must confess his
+love:” and in the certainty that an explanation would take
+place when next they met, she forgave Henry his interruption
+of their interview.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne departed under the influence of very different
+feelings. He was ashamed of his own irresolution, and afraid
+that he had acted dishonourably in betraying the state of his
+mind to Adelaide. Ere he reached his lodgings, however, the
+very consciousness of having committed himself relieved his
+breast of much anxiety. He had not again to weigh the value
+of the different arguments which love and honour suggested,
+for the adoption of one line of conduct or the other. Henceforth
+he had one only measure to embrace, viz. to lay his fortunes,
+such as they were, at Miss Marston’s feet. He resolved
+to try his fate on the following morning.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="4" style="text-decoration: none;">IV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">“Est-il point vray, ou si je l’ay songé,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Qu’il m’est besoin m’éloigner ou distraire</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">De votre amour, et en prendre congé?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Las! je le veux, et ne le puis faire—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Que dis-je, veux! Non, c’est tout le contraire,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Faire le puis, et ne le puis vouloir.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right">Attributed to <span class="smcap">François <abbr title="the first" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The next day accordingly at an early hour, Warenne sought
+the residence of Lord Framlingham in Charles Street, when,
+on his knocking at the door, the servant who opened it presented
+him with a note from Henry, stating, that in the
+course of the preceding night an express had reached them from
+Epworth Castle, the seat of Mrs. Honoria Epworth, who was
+Adelaide’s godmother, desiring them to set off immediately if
+they wished to find her alive, and that his sister and himself
+were in the act of commencing their journey at the moment at
+which he wrote.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Warenne, who had hoped to ascertain his future destiny
+before he again quitted Charles Street, was sadly disappointed
+at this intelligence. The evil, however, was without
+remedy, and he was obliged to retrace his steps towards home,
+there to await the hour of their return in all the misery of
+suspense. During this period he received the following letter
+from Frank:—</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>
+“<span class="smcap">My dear Brother</span>,<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>“Who do you think has just called upon me? Henry
+Marston. I never was so surprised in my life. He tells me
+that he came the night before last to Epworth Castle with his
+sister, to attend the death-bed of poor old Mrs. Honoria Epworth.
+She died a very few hours after their arrival, and has
+left every thing she possessed to Miss Marston. Henry says
+his sister will not have less than ten thousand a year, besides
+the old castle, which is beautiful;—did you see it when you
+were here?—it is not more than two miles from this town.
+What a charming godmother! I wish nevertheless that she
+had given Henry a slice of her property, for though he will
+eventually be Lord Framlingham, and rich, yet he would do
+great credit to a few thousands a year in the interim. He and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>his sister remain at the castle till after the funeral, when they
+return to London. When are we to see you again? Stuart
+rides in often from Oldham, and gives a good report of the
+two troops he has there, and I can do the same of the officers
+and men at Calbury. I command the four troops you left
+under my orders with a species of sedate authority deserving,
+though I say it, of much admiration. I have only one little
+<i lang="fr">équippée</i> to tell of, which is that I have fallen desperately in
+love, and that my love is returned; do not be frightened, Gerald,
+<i lang="fr">l’objêt</i> is a blind Irish-woman, who sells cakes and bulls-eyes
+on the sort of boulevard there is to this town. She is my
+delight, but our loves are too long, so God bless you!</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! I have forgotten the most important portion of my
+letter, which is, that I am making great preparations for the
+coming hunting season. I have sold Croppie, and bought two
+clippers, and I want you to let me be doing something in your
+stable. I should positively be a happier man if I might rescue
+your two old horses’ tails from their degraded state of switch,
+and square them a little. Once more, God bless you.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+“Your affectionate brother,<br>
+<br>
+F. W.”<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Warenne at first read over this letter from his brother with
+pleasure, and natural delight at the increased prosperity of his
+friends, but a second perusal of it filled him with anxiety and
+doubt. Was there not now an insuperable barrier raised against
+his pretensions to Adelaide? If indeed he had made known
+his passion, it were not impossible that a woman with her
+nobleness of spirit might only regard the addition to her fortune
+as a means of increasing their mutual happiness. But
+could he with honour ask her hand for the first time under
+these changed circumstances? Must he not appear to her, and
+to the world, a contemptible fortune hunter, who could live in
+her society for weeks, and find her only worthy of attention
+when she became an heiress?</p>
+
+<p>“O, Frank!” cried he aloud, as he paced his room despondingly,
+“your gay letter is a bitter one to me. I must
+learn to tread in the dust the bright visions fancy had formed;
+to crush my aspiring hopes, and with blighted prospects, and a
+broken heart, to banish myself from that sweet presence in
+which I would fain have passed my days—but better that,
+than dishonour. There is no spot as yet on my name, and I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>will not now sully it. Yes, the die is cast, I will rejoin my
+regiment.”</p>
+
+<p>Though Warenne thus briefly settled the part which it became
+him to act in this emergency, it cost him many an hour
+of bitter anguish before he could carry his resolution into
+effect. He had never really loved before, and he now loved
+with his whole soul; it seemed to him as if his love was an
+essential portion of his existence, and that to tear it from his
+breast was almost to destroy within him the principle of
+vitality. He wrote however to Frank, to say that he should
+join him in a few days; went to the Horse Guards to inquire
+if they projected any alteration in the quarters of his regiment
+(for Calbury was not a town in which troops were usually
+stationed), or had any orders for him with respect to their
+particular employment; and called on Lord Framlingham to
+inform him of his determination.</p>
+
+<p>The old Lord received him with much civility, but, as it
+appeared to Warenne, with less than his usual cordiality.
+There was also a degree of earnestness in the manner in which
+he encouraged him to quit town immediately, and assured him
+that government had received accounts of a very unpleasant
+spirit pervading the neighbourhood of Calbury.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne could not help perceiving that his absence was desired.
+In truth, Lord Framlingham, immediately upon Adelaide’s
+increase of fortune, had begun to renew the views of
+aggrandisement which he had reluctantly laid aside; and, conceiving
+that Warenne might very possibly prove an impediment
+to the success of his schemes, he sincerely wished him
+out of the way. It was not, perhaps, strictly consonant with
+the gratitude he professed towards Warenne for his kindness to
+Henry to repel attentions which he had hitherto tacitly encouraged;
+but, in his anxiety to accomplish his purposes with
+respect to Adelaide, he did not much regard her lover’s feelings,
+and certainly assumed not a delicacy which he did not
+possess.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne was intensely hurt by Lord Framlingham’s manner.
+Was he already deemed an intruder? It was indeed
+time for him to depart; he would only see Adelaide once again,
+and bid her farewell for ever.</p>
+
+<p>The travellers returned; and Henry, having heard from his
+father of Warenne’s determination to rejoin the regiment, proceeded
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>immediately to his lodgings to propose their quitting
+London together, his own leave of absence being on the point
+of expiring.</p>
+
+<p>After their first greetings were over, and Henry had had
+time for closer observation, he was much struck with an appearance
+of ill-health, and with a degree of severity of manner
+in Warenne; he loved him, however, too sincerely, and respected
+him too highly, to venture a remark on the change
+that had occurred. He at once entered upon the object of his
+visit, and soon concluded an arrangement for their travelling
+together to Calbury; then, thinking it probable Warenne in
+his present state of mind would rather be alone, he begged him
+to call in Charles Street the following morning, to see him and
+Adelaide, who was not, he said, so afflicted by the loss of her
+godmother, with whom she had never lived, as to shut the
+door upon old friends; and with an affectionate pressure of
+the hand wished him good-b’ye.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne shook the offered hand, accepted the invitation,
+stood for a moment after his departure with a bewildered air,
+then hurried forth to occupy his attention with professional
+avocations,—for he durst not give way to the feelings that invitation
+had awakened, or to reflect in solitude on the impending
+wretchedness of the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>The morrow came, and about the hour Henry had mentioned
+as that at which his sister would probably receive him Warenne
+found himself in Charles Street. Henry was alone in the
+drawing-room when he entered; but in a few minutes Adelaide
+joined them. She had scarcely recovered from the anxiety
+occasioned by the melancholy scenes she had so lately witnessed,
+and was pale and languid, but the snowy whiteness of
+her brow accorded well with the serious expression of her
+countenance, and poor Warenne thought he had never seen
+her look so lovely. She received him kindly; for, satisfied that
+he loved her, she saw no reason for controlling the natural
+impulse of her heart; and for some little time the whole party
+conversed on the events which had taken place without hesitation,
+if not with cheerfulness. After a while, Henry, who
+shrewdly suspected the state of his sister’s and of his friend’s
+affections, found some excuse for quitting the room, and requesting
+Warenne to await his return left him with Adelaide.
+The conversation flagged—presently ceased altogether—Warenne,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>firm to his purpose (but, much as that purpose had
+already cost him, knowing not until this instant the utter
+misery he was about to entail upon himself) could not bring
+himself to speak. Adelaide’s spirits had not regained their
+usually cheerful flow, and their depression was increased by
+his manifest uneasiness. The awkwardness of their situation
+each moment became greater; at length Warenne, making an
+effort, in a hurried manner uttered some common-place remark
+on an indifferent subject. Adelaide gave the necessary assent,
+and again there was silence. He made a second and a third
+attempt, but with no better success. He now grew confused,
+and spoke at random upon every topic which presented itself
+to his over-excited mind, until Adelaide, who could not but
+recollect the very different manner in which their last interview
+had concluded, knew not what to think. As she looked,
+however, on his flushed cheek and unsteady eye that would
+not meet her’s, a suspicion of the truth flashed across her
+mind. Could it be that he had formed so unworthy an
+opinion of her as to conceive that her affections could be influenced
+by her accession of fortune?—a moment’s reflection
+assured her that his generous nature would spurn the thought;
+yet how, since she knew not that her father had almost turned
+him from his door, was she to interpret his behaviour? She
+was hurt, and angry with him, and even, as by degrees she
+obtained a clearer insight into his feelings, could not altogether
+divest herself of indignation, though she pitied his sufferings.
+He might, she thought, if he really loved her, sacrifice for her
+sake his fantastic notions of honour—for so they then seemed
+to her,—and let her decide for herself whether or not she
+thought his hand worth acceptance. She became colder and
+more formal, until at length Warenne, unable to endure any
+longer her altered looks and his own excessive wretchedness,
+hastily left the room in the full conviction that he had injured
+himself in her esteem, and caused her to think ill of him by
+the very course which, at the price of his own happiness, he
+had deemed it his duty to pursue.</p>
+
+<p>A few days afterwards, Henry and Warenne quitted London
+for Calbury.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="5" style="text-decoration: none;">V.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">How fair thy vales, thy hills how beautiful!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The sun, who sheds on thee his parting smiles,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Sees not in all his wide career a scene</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Lovelier, nor more exuberantly blessed</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">By bounteous earth and heaven.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The time has been when happy was their lot,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Who had their birthright here.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey’s</span> <cite>Roderick</cite>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The state of the agricultural population around Calbury, at
+the time of the return of the two friends to their regiment,
+was by no means such, in outward appearance at least, as to
+justify the apprehensions which, according to Lord Framlingham,
+were entertained by the government. The greater demand
+for labour, and the consequent increase of wages, which
+the summer had occasioned, seemed to have extinguished the
+stormy passions kindled by cold, hunger, and compulsory
+idleness.</p>
+
+<p>The country itself looked bright and gay, and the fields
+with their rich crops of corn gave promise of plenty, comfort,
+and tranquillity. Warenne was tempted to hope that the fear
+of disturbance was ill-founded, and that the symptoms of insubordination,
+on which it was grounded, had arisen from a
+temporary pressure, which was past and would not recur. The
+first hours after their arrival were dedicated to the inspection
+of the troops, the order and discipline of which were highly
+commended, to Frank’s infinite delight.</p>
+
+<p>This necessary duty concluded, the two brothers and Henry
+retired to Warenne’s apartments, and Warenne called on
+Frank to give some account of his proceedings during the time
+he had held the command of the regiment.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I have had but a dullish <i lang="fr">séjour</i> in this place, I
+must say,” replied Frank; “my chief occupation has been to
+preserve my dignity; and, if it were not that once or twice I
+have been seduced into a smile by the earnest admiration of
+sundry blue and black eyes which encounter me in my perambulations,
+I should say I had succeeded admirably. People
+assert that the labourers in the neighbourhood are discontented;
+but I cannot say that I perceive it. I see them on a Sunday
+as happy as beer and love can make them. They are not refined,
+perhaps, in their mode of carrying on the war; and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>fastidious might think it unsentimental at least, if not indecorous,
+in the women, to wait round the doors of the public-houses,
+and take possession of the men as they come forth red
+with beer, and reeking with tobacco; but I am above such
+prejudices, and have no doubt that the rogues enjoy life
+extremely.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you observed no signs of an evil spirit abroad in
+other quarters?” interrupted Warenne.</p>
+
+<p>“Faith, none,” rejoined Frank, “unless you deem such
+the curious specimens of division of labour which have been
+displayed here lately by the beggars and trampers. In former
+times, it was thought that one man might sell, if not make,
+many bundles of matches. Now, it is no uncommon thing
+for two men to be occupied in the sale of one bundle; in the
+same way, generally speaking, there are two to hawk one boot
+lace, and always two to buy a hare skin or a rabbit skin.
+Then, again, there are always two sailors, who have been ship-wrecked
+together, and saved together, and who have preserved
+from the wreck precisely the same things, viz. a very clean
+white shirt and white pair of trowsers, and for whom therefore
+one story serves when they ask your charity. I never in
+my life saw such a number of these vagabonds as now, and
+they beg in a tone which, in a bye-place, can hardly fail to
+alarm women, if not men. Seriously speaking, Gerald, though
+it may to you sound foolish to say so, I do not know what to
+make of these fellows; I cannot understand how they all
+exist, unless they have some secret mode of obtaining a livelihood,
+different from the ostensible one. I don’t half like
+them, and I do not think my better genius, Nanny Rudd, is
+more pleased with them than I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who the devil is Nanny Rudd, Frank?” said Henry.</p>
+
+<p>“Not to know Nanny,” continued Frank, “argues yourself
+unknown. She is the most important personage in the town,
+in the eyes at least of all the little boys and girls who play
+about its public walks. She is the queen of heart-cakes, and
+bulls-eyes, <i lang="fr">et l’objet de mes plus tendres amours</i>. Do not be
+frightened, Gerald—she is a dear blind old Irish beggar-woman,
+the widow of a man of the name of Rudd, whose
+brother keeps that little ale-house, the Rose and Crown, as
+you enter the town by the London road.</p>
+
+<p>“Rudd was a private in the Guards, and went with them to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>Egypt under Abercromby, where he was wounded and died.
+She accompanied him thither, and nursed him till his death.
+She afterwards herself unfortunately caught the ophthalmia,
+and lost both her eyes. The officers and men, with whom
+she was a great favourite, brought her carefully to England,
+and by her own wish settled her in this place among her husband’s
+relations. She lives now on a small pension with her
+brother-in-law, who is very kind to her, and she ekes out her
+little modicum by the sale of her cakes.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what can a blind old woman know of the state of the
+country, or how does it happen that she is a friend of yours?”
+interrupted Henry.</p>
+
+<p>“You are so impatient, Henry,” replied Frank, “you
+would know every thing, and the reasons thereof at once; but
+I shall not spoil the story of my best adventure during your
+absence, to satisfy your impetuous curiosity. <i lang="fr">Il faut toujours
+commencer au commencement.</i> You must hear the narrative
+of our first introduction, or you close my lips for ever on the
+subject of Nanny Rudd; for if there is an action in the course
+of my military career of which I am proud, it is the deed of
+‘derring do,’ as Ivanhoe would have called it, which first won
+me her esteem.”</p>
+
+<p>“Come, be quick then,” said Henry, laughing; “when,
+how, and where did you meet with this wondrous lady?”</p>
+
+<p>“More questions! Henry? you are positively incorrigible!
+Our first acquaintance was on this wise: a parcel of
+young urchins were playing on the walk where she usually
+sits with her basket, and one of them attempted to obtain
+some of her tartlets without going through the necessary form
+of paying for them. Nanny, who hears like a mole, made a
+dash at the young rogue, just as he had his hand in the basket,
+and seizing him with a hand of iron began to thrash him
+well with her stick, reproving him at the same time for his
+misconduct with a considerable flow of military eloquence.
+The other boys came to the rescue. Nanny kept her hold,
+and brandished her stick. Their charge, however, was not to
+be resisted; they released their companion, gained possession
+of the basket, from which Nanny had wandered in the struggle,
+and were retiring triumphant, when I reached the field.</p>
+
+<p>“In an instant I flew to the succour of the discomfited
+fair, routed her insulting foes, and recovered for her her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>(empty) basket. Cæsar would have said, <i lang="la">Veni, vidi, vici!</i>
+I then led her to her old seat, and having given her half-a-crown
+was taking my departure, in order to enjoy in solitude
+the satisfaction of having exhibited both valour and
+generosity, when she said to me in her own sweet accents,—</p>
+
+<p>“‘I’ll sit a bit, your honour, and catch my wind; them
+little blackguards blowed me;—and then I’ll go home. I’ll
+never draw a halfpenny the whole day, unless I bait my basket
+with a cake.’ I asked her if I could assist her on the road.
+‘No, no; thank you all the same,’ continued she; ‘but if
+you’d just tell me who your own self is, that comed in the
+nick of time to presarve me from them childer, I’d be obliged
+to you. You are a soldier by your step—I can tell that as
+well as if I saw you; and an officer by the softness of your
+voice and the delicacy, not to say iligance, of your expressions.’
+Mark you that, Henry. I told her my name, rank, &amp;c. and
+we parted. The next day I came to inquire after her health,
+and we had a long gossip together about her own dear country,
+since which I have paid her a visit almost every day, and I
+flatter myself have entirely won her heart. ‘Captain Warenne,’
+said she to me the other day, ‘I like you; you are always very
+kind to me, and can always find time to spake a word or two
+to me, which is more than many will do to the like of me.
+You are a soldier, too. I loves a soldier. I wish you had
+been <i>fut</i>, for <i>fut’s</i> more natural to me; but all can’t be <i>fut</i>,
+and I’ll never forget you if I can do you a good turn.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Your Nanny is charming,” interrupted Henry; “and
+having heard her opinion of you, I am really anxious to know
+what she thinks of the beggars who have moved your spleen.”</p>
+
+<p>“She entertains little doubt,” answered Frank, “that they
+are the emissaries of some evil-disposed parties in the country,
+and the medium of communication between different districts
+and the metropolis; and her conclusions are drawn from the
+remarks which she has heard fall from the labourers and mechanics
+in this town, with whom her brother’s alehouse is a
+favourite place of resort.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed,” said Warenne; “and does she think that they
+are likely to produce a disturbance?”</p>
+
+<p>“She certainly does,” replied Frank; “for about three or
+four days ago, when I paid her a visit, she bade me be cautious
+not to be seen talking to her. ‘I sits,’ said she, ‘in my
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>brother’s chimney-corner of an evening, with my bit duddeen;
+and because I’m blind, folks believe I can’t hear. There’ll be
+a row after harvest, or Nanny’s a liar; but your honour shall
+know in time. A’n’t I a soldier’s widow, and bound to keep
+the peace? I’ll just reconnoitre the ground for you cleverly;
+but you must not be seen spaking to me daily, or I’ll be suspected.
+You can drop past me as you go to see your men at
+the Boot of a morning; and, if the coast is clear, say ‘Good
+morrow, Nanny;’ you would go to your men natural like, and
+then I can asy tell you if I have larnt any news, without
+putting it into men’s heads that I’m thick at head-quarters.’”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne recommended Frank to keep up his acquaintance
+with Nanny Rudd, observing that it was only by employing
+every, even the humblest means in their power of obtaining an
+insight into the actual condition of the country that they could
+hope to preserve tranquillity. His long acquaintance with a
+disturbed district had taught him that very frequently a little
+circumstance would better indicate the real spirit of a population
+than their actions, as a feather or a straw thrown into
+the air will more readily point out the direction of a current
+of wind than any more ponderous body.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne now turned his attention to the magistracy in the
+town and neighbourhood, and sought every opportunity of
+mixing in their society; in which endeavour Henry and Frank
+were both of much use to him; the former from the position
+in which he stood as brother to the heiress of Epworth and
+the latter from his having, during the summer, by his gay
+off-hand manner, and happy disposition, made himself a welcome
+guest at many houses in the vicinity. To the different
+persons of influence he suggested the advantage of arranging
+a constabulary force, upon the system of a noble lord in a
+neighbouring county, and the propriety of their previously fixing
+on some definite plan of action, in case the apprehensions
+of the government for the repose of the country should be
+realized.</p>
+
+<p>It is a very difficult thing to give advice; and all people hate
+it, unless they have decided on their line of conduct; in which
+case they have, generally speaking, no objection to prove the
+superiority of their own views on the subject to those of their
+advisers. Warenne, however, was so mild, so gentle in
+manner, so entirely free from all appearance of dictation, so
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>ready to listen, so well informed on all points, and so practical
+in his measures, that he succeeded in effecting the preparations
+he desired. By the time harvest was over his precautions
+were completed.</p>
+
+<p>At this period, Adelaide and her father were daily expected
+at Epworth, and Warenne’s heart sunk within him at the
+thought of being again thrown into her society, now that their
+relative position was so changed; but he was not permitted to
+dwell long upon this topic without interruption.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="6" style="text-decoration: none;">VI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>As there are certain hollow blasts of winds and secret swellings of seas before a
+tempest, so are there in states.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent8" lang="la">Ille etiam cæcos instare tumultus</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="la">Sæpe monet, fraudesque et operta tumescere bella.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Lord Bacon.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The head-quarters of the —— Dragoons were, as we have
+seen, at Calbury; two or three troops being stationed in the
+surrounding villages. An order now arrived from the Horse
+Guards, directing that one troop should be sent to Fisherton,
+a town about forty miles distant, near the sea-coast, and that
+a second should be placed in some situation, as nearly as possible
+midway between Fisherton and Calbury, in order to preserve
+a ready communication between these two extreme points.</p>
+
+<p>To delegate to another a duty incumbent on himself was
+not consistent with Warenne’s character. He immediately
+sent forward his servant with horses, and on the following morning
+himself started at an early hour, to ascertain the best mode
+of carrying into effect the instructions which he had received.
+His intentions were to examine the <i lang="fr">locale</i> of Fisherton, and, as
+far as he could, to discover the disposition and pursuits of the
+surrounding population, so that if any disturbance should arise
+there, he might be competent to act with decision.</p>
+
+<p>He found Fisherton a large straggling town, with some appearance
+of wealth, arising from its communication with the
+seaport of D——, by means of the river Swale, irregularly
+built, though nearly divided into four equal quarters by the
+London and coast roads, which crossed each other about its
+centre. As he entered by the former of these roads, the place
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>presented on either side an imposing row of goodly houses;
+he could perceive, however, that this fair show was limited to
+the principal streets. On looking down the smaller streets, or
+rather passages (for they were passable only by pedestrians)
+which branched off from the highway, he could distinguish
+nothing beyond the ordinary cottages of labourers and mechanics.
+On the banks of the river might be seen warehouses
+and cranes, and other signs of trade, but nowhere else: the
+rest of the town bore an ambiguous character, and it was difficult
+to determine whether its prosperity depended on commerce
+or agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne rode into the yard of the principal inn, which
+occupied one of the angles caused by the junction of the roads,
+and had large gates opening into each of them, intending to
+establish himself there for the night. Having put up his
+horses, he quickly sought an opportunity of conversing with
+the landlord, in the hope of extracting from him some information
+relative to the state of society in the immediate environs
+of Fisherton.</p>
+
+<p>The communications of the worthy Boniface were any thing
+but satisfactory. He assured Warenne that the labourers in
+the neighbourhood, for ten miles round, were a bad set at the
+best of times; many of them professional smugglers—all of
+them occasionally engaged in running goods; and that, at the
+moment in which he was speaking, they were in a state of
+great discontent and irritation from the distress incidental to
+the existing depression of wages.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure, I hope,” said mine host, sufficiently animated
+by the theme to draw one hand out of his breeches-pocket, and
+extend it in an emphatic manner, “that they won’t break out,
+for if they do, it will be an awful business. The exciseman
+what lodges at my house, tells me that they are afraid of
+nothing, and care for nothing; and then they have such means
+of letting one another know when any thing is a-foot. Lord
+bless you, sir, if there’s a smuggling vessel makes a signal off
+the coast at dusk, by twelve at night there are a thousand
+people collected near the shore to run the goods, and they
+laugh at the Preventive Service.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne was inclined to suspect, that the account given by
+his landlord of the numbers and desperation of the people
+engaged in these lawless pursuits might be exaggerated. There
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>was, however, evidently enough of truth in the report to make
+him wish to send another troop to Fisherton. But his orders
+were positive; and the officer appointed to the chief command
+of the district was one from whom he could not expect to
+obtain an alteration of them. He was a man well known in
+the army for his wrong-headed obstinacy, and pertinacious
+regard to the minutiæ of military discipline. It was also said
+of him, that having been in India during the time of the
+Peninsular war, and therefore without opportunity of distinguishing
+himself in any European campaign, he had a mean
+jealousy of those who had served in Portugal and Spain, and
+was disposed to treat them with captiousness, when they had
+the misfortune to be employed under him. Warenne determined,
+nevertheless, to write to General Mapleton a respectful
+request to be permitted to increase the force at Fisherton.</p>
+
+<p>He had been walking round the town, and was entering the
+inn-yard by the London gateway, when almost at the same
+moment a gentleman, on a remarkably neat well-bred cob, rode
+in from the coast road. As they encountered each other, the
+new visiter, who was a fresh-coloured fair man, of about his
+own age, dressed in sporting costume, looked at him earnestly.
+The countenance was familiar to him, but he could not recollect
+where he had seen it. He was in the act of having recourse
+to the landlord, for the purpose of ascertaining its owner,
+when the gentleman himself, having more quickly obtained
+his master’s address from Warenne’s servant, came up to him,
+and claimed his acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>“Warenne; how are you? You forget me, I dare say, for
+it is a long time since we last met; but I remembered you the
+moment I saw you, though I could not give you a name without
+the assistance of John there. Do you not recollect Jack
+Nicholas, at Dame Twyford’s, just over Barn’s Pool Bridge,
+at Eton?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne immediately recalled to mind a heavy, good-natured
+boy of that name, who resisted every attempt made by
+his tutor to instil into his brain any classical lore, but who was
+an expert fisherman, and not a bad foot-ball player.</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas continued, “What are you doing in this place?
+You had much better come over and dine with us. My father
+lives little more than five miles from the town, and will give
+you a hearty welcome. Do come, we can give you a bed.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>Well, certainly, I never thought of meeting you to-day. How
+lucky it was I rode over to take a look at the fish-market! I
+have got the nicest brill, too.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne replied that he really should have been happy to
+accept his invitation, but that his horses were tired with their
+day’s work, and that he was obliged to leave Fisherton at a
+very early hour on the following morning.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! I can arrange all these matters,” said Nicholas.
+“You shall have the landlord’s own nag, and a very clever one
+it is, I can tell you—few better. And if you must be off so
+early to-morrow, you can return here to-night; though if you
+would stay all night with us we should like it better, and I
+would ride over with you in the morning. I shall most probably
+come here, for to-morrow is the day when our magistrates
+hold their weekly sessions; and if I have nothing else
+to do, I usually attend to hear the news. That’s a good fellow;
+you will come, I see. I’ll call for you in ten minutes,
+as soon as I have seen that our cart takes the brill.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne, having obtained a loan of the landlord’s horse,
+was ready to join Nicholas on his return from the fish-market.
+They quitted the town by the coast road, which for rather
+more than a mile proceeded in a south-easterly direction. It
+then bent more to the southward, when they quitted it, and
+proceeded along a narrow lane, with high hedges on each side,
+keeping the same course as the portion of the road over which
+they had already travelled. There was not here much opportunity
+for observation; and Warenne, willingly diverting his
+thoughts from the disagreeable lucubrations to which his landlord’s
+discourse had given rise, entered unreservedly into conversation
+with his old schoolfellow. He answered Nicholas’s
+questions concerning his different campaigns, and in return
+sought to extract from him the history of his past and present
+life.</p>
+
+<p>“You went,” said he, “to Oxford, if I recollect rightly,
+after you left Eton?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I did,” answered Nicholas, “and I liked it much;
+it just suited me. I hardly ever attended a lecture; and I
+kept three very clever hunters in full work—but it was too
+happy a state to last. The old Dean of Christchurch, when
+I had been there little more than a year, gave me a hint which
+I might not misinterpret, that I had better see the world; and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>my father made me travel through Scotland and Ireland, which
+was all the world Buonaparte would let a man see in those
+days, unless he turned soldier and went to Spain. This was
+dull work, though every now and then I got some good fishing,
+and once or twice some capital grouse-shooting; so I returned
+home as quickly as I could, and have been living with my
+father here at the Plashetts (for that’s the name of our place)
+ever since. I have four as nice hunters as you ever saw, and
+get plenty of shooting and trout-fishing, without going a yard
+off his manors; so I make it out pretty well. If it happens
+any day that I neither hunt, fish, nor shoot, I trot over to
+Fisherton to see what fish there is in the market.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne smiled at the complacency with which Nicholas
+reviewed his useless life. “Are you not a magistrate?” inquired
+he.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” replied his friend, “they wished to make me one,
+but I have refused myself to every application on the subject.
+There is no fun in being interrupted at all hours of the day
+by a pack of greasy fellows, making complaints against each
+other for assaults in their drunken squabbles overnight; nor
+in being condemned to sit from eleven o’clock to six one day
+in every week, to hear the idle blackguards of the neighbouring
+parishes abuse their overseers. No, thank you, said I, I
+am not going to be one of your ‘glorious unpaid,’ with the
+press firing into me for every little mistake I might make, and
+never giving me credit for the sacrifice of my time and comfort;
+I know better.”</p>
+
+<p>By this time the character of the road had undergone some
+change. The hedges had disappeared, and instead of the
+narrow trough, if I may so term it, in which they had been
+travelling, wherein their view was limited to the hot sun and
+clear sky above them, they had now, on either side, a broad
+strip of waste land, beyond which to the north lay a large
+extent of wild low brushwood; while to the south there were
+some newly inclosed fields. Presently all signs of arable cultivation
+ceased, and they came out on a wide common. Just
+at this point the road bent rather more to the southward, and
+the line of brushwood going off from it nearly at right angles
+and then sweeping round to the east, till it joined some large
+trees, formed a sort of boundary to the waste.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span></p>
+<p>“Mark this corner of the brushwood,” said Nicholas, “that
+you may not miss your way as you return to-night; for we now
+leave the road, and cross the common to those trees where the
+brushwood closes in again. The Plashetts lie very nearly due
+east of Fisherton, and the carriage road is a mile round. From
+those trees there is an avenue leading directly to the house.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne took due note of the bearings of the ground, and
+they proceeded. When they had passed over a considerable
+portion of the common, the turf, which hitherto had been soft
+and swampy, became firm; and Warenne, whose powers of
+observation had been called into play by Nicholas’s late caution,
+remarked that it bore signs of having been much trodden.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you had a fair here, or races?” asked he of
+Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” was the reply; “the sheep, I believe, keep unmolested
+possession of the common from year’s end to year’s end.
+But why do you inquire?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne simply answered that the grass appeared trampled,
+and turned the conversation. They soon reached the Plashetts;
+and Nicholas, the elder, greeted his son’s friend with a hearty
+welcome. He was a cheerful, light-hearted old gentleman,
+and the evening passed pleasantly, if not gaily.</p>
+
+<p>About ten o’clock Warenne remounted his horse, and at a
+gentle pace began to retrace his road to Fisherton. The moon
+was just rising, but it was a cloudy night, and a sharp south-wester
+blew directly in his face. As he entered the avenue he
+could not help recalling to mind the state of the grass on the
+firmer part of the common; his reflections upon it caused him
+some anxiety. He had never, he thought, seen ground so
+trodden, but on places where soldiers were drilled and exercised.
+Could it be that there was truth in the report which
+he had heard, that the labourers held nightly meetings for the
+purpose of training themselves to the use of arms? As the
+idea presented itself, he hugged the trees to the southward
+more closely, so as to envelope himself completely in their
+shade. Presently he fancied that he heard in the wind the
+sounds of steps and voices. He stopped, and listened with attention,
+and soon became certain of the fact; they seemed
+however to proceed from persons at some distance. He advanced
+slowly, trusting to the wind to drown the noise of his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>horse’s hoofs. Again he stopped,—the sounds reached him
+more plainly. Using now still greater caution, he pushed forward
+towards the edge of the common, and he there beheld
+the realisation of his worst fears.</p>
+
+<p>By the light of the moon, which fell fully and clearly on the
+open space, he saw a considerable body of men, marching backwards
+and forwards, dividing and subdividing themselves, then
+reuniting again; in a word, going through a regular system of
+drill, though not perhaps with military exactness. He watched
+them for some time, endeavouring to ascertain their number,
+&amp;c. &amp;c. till he conceived it likely that they would soon disperse.</p>
+
+<p>It then became a question with him, how he himself should
+proceed. He was unwilling to return to the Plashetts, and
+alarm its inmates by acquainting them with the true reason of
+his return. He could not cross the common, for in that case
+he should have to pass through the very centre of the persons
+collected; he dared not to await the breaking up of their assemblage,
+lest some of the men should come upon him in their
+way to their cottages, which of course lay scattered about in
+every direction. He did not hesitate long; he remembered that
+a few hundred yards back he had passed three or four large
+single trees, which stood out on the broad glade between the
+two lines of elms which formed the avenue, making, as it were,
+a gate to the pass. To that point he quickly retraced his steps,
+and seizing a moment when the moon was obscured, crossed
+to the opposite side of the avenue; then forcing his horse into
+the brushwood, he made his way through it in the direction of
+the lane he had travelled in the morning, and continued his
+course, carefully avoiding too near an approach to the exterior
+of the wood which was lighted up by the moon, until he
+reached the hedge which separated it from the road. There,
+thinking himself safe, or at all events at too great a distance
+from the men at exercise to be discovered, he dragged his horse
+through the fence, and, remounting him, galloped as quickly as
+he could to Fisherton.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="7" style="text-decoration: none;">VII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Concerning the materials of sedition, it is a thing well to be considered; for
+the surest way to prevent seditions (if the times do bear it) is to take away the
+matter of them; for if there be fuel prepared, it is hard to tell whence the spark
+shall come that shall set it on fire.—<span class="smcap">Lord Bacon.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The insight which this adventure gave Colonel Warenne into
+the real state of the country induced him to alter his plans.
+Instead of setting off for Calbury at an early hour the following
+morning, he determined that it would be more advisable for
+him to remain at Fisherton for the greater part of the day, in
+order to see Nicholas, and put him on his guard, and also to
+obtain through him some acquaintance with the magistrates,
+who were about to meet there on that day, and who were those
+to whom he must look for co-operation, in the event of any
+commotion.</p>
+
+<p>About eleven o’clock the next day, Nicholas rode into
+Fisherton, and was surprised to find Warenne still at the inn.</p>
+
+<p>“What, not off yet?” said he, “you might as well have
+slept at the Plashetts; our beds are as well aired as those of
+mine host here.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne requested him to come to his room, and recounted
+to him what he had seen on the preceding night. Nicholas
+was startled, if not alarmed, at hearing of such preparations for
+tumult in his own immediate vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>“What is to be done?” said he, “it is extremely disagreeable!
+My poor sisters will be frightened out of their
+wits. Cannot some means be found to put a stop to such
+proceedings?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne doubted whether an attempt to prevent the meetings
+would not have the effect of setting the people on their
+guard, without deterring them from their purpose, and was
+rather inclined to watch them, so as in some measure to discover
+their intentions, when it might be easy to baffle them.</p>
+
+<p>“If, indeed,” said he, “we knew what grievances pressed
+most heavily upon the labourers, we might, by relieving them,
+be able to repress the disposition to riot, and escape the necessity
+of having recourse to coercion.”</p>
+
+<p>“One need not go far to find their grievances,” interrupted
+Nicholas; “the poor fellows are not half paid; the farmers
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>only give them wages enough to keep body and soul together,
+and whatsoever else they require for the maintenance of their
+families, is made up to them by the parish, in proportion to the
+number of their children. Thus they are, every one of them,
+made paupers; and the consequence is they work as paupers.
+The farmers quarrel with them for their idleness, and the
+overseers devise schemes for making them earn, as they term
+it, the pittance they allow them. About a fortnight ago, as I
+passed through Oathampstead, I saw a man marching fifteen or
+twenty others up and down the village; and on my inquiring
+the reason of this proceeding, I was told that the men were
+out of regular employ, and that the overseer, resolving that
+they should do something for their money, had given one of
+them, who was a militia man, a pot of beer to act as corporal
+over the rest, and drill them. They will have enough of the
+drilling system now, I reckon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Could you put an end to such fatal mistakes as these,”
+Warenne resumed, “you would do more to quell the turbulent
+spirit, of which I fear we shall soon see some melancholy
+indications, than if you were to quarter a regiment of
+soldiers in each village. But now you must give me some information
+on another point. What magistrate had I better
+apply to in case of a disturbance in this neighbourhood? Who
+will be most disposed to act in concert with me, and assist me
+in repressing it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I know who is the best man for you,” answered
+Nicholas—“at least in my opinion; Charley Seaforth: but
+you shall judge for yourself, if you will wait a quarter of an
+hour. The magistrates meet in the old ball-room of the inn
+here at twelve; we will get our friend the landlord to admit
+us first into the gallery, where the musicians sit when there is
+a ball, and make our observations; after which we can descend,
+and I will introduce you to any or all of the bench, as
+you please.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne gladly acceded to his friend’s proposal, and they
+were soon seated in the orchestra Nicholas had described,
+which, though at the opposite end of the room to that at which
+the magistrates sat, was yet sufficiently near to them to enable
+its inmates to hear all that was going on. The magistrates
+recognised Nicholas as one of the intruders upon their deliberations,
+and did not attempt to drive him from the position
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>he had taken up. The business of the day speedily commenced,
+to which Warenne gave his most earnest attention. As occasions
+arose he whispered the result of his observations to
+Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>“I like your chairman,” said he; “he is a clear-headed,
+sensible man; but I fear he is too old to take an active part in
+putting down a riot.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is not a better magistrate or man in England,”
+whispered Nicholas in return; “but, as you say, he is past
+fast work, to say nothing of the gout to which he is a martyr.
+Make him but fifty again, and he would be with you, I warrant,
+go where you will, or do what you will; he is out of the
+question now. You must choose between three I will point
+out to you: that fellow, the tall, athletic, handsome man with
+grey hair, a hook nose, and a sharpish eye, with his chin
+thrust out so as to give him what he considers to be a look of
+decision.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mark him,” interrupted Warenne, “but I do not much
+fancy him; for he always differs from the chairman in a
+pompous sort of way, and when asked, cannot assign any
+reasons for his differing, but shakes his head importantly,
+puts on an air of wisdom, and then coincides with him at last,
+though so as to make it appear that he is certain he himself is
+right, and that he yields only for the sake of peace.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have not judged your man amiss, Colonel,” replied
+Nicholas; “Mr. Fownall, for that is his name, is a mighty
+man in his own conceit. You should see him at a county
+meeting: he will begin his speech with such graces; he will
+raise himself up, and put on a solemn look of wisdom that
+would deceive any man who is not aware that he is no conjurer;
+and then, in very strong language, accuse the government
+of profligacy, extravagance, and corruption, taking care
+to select, when he comes to his proofs, the only parts of their
+conduct which are defensible. Oh! he is a bother-headed
+one.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne thought his companion also a better judge of men
+and their capacities than he had imagined him to be; he had
+not done Nicholas justice, who, though uneducated, was by
+no means without natural shrewdness, especially on points on
+which he was excited, as on country politics, in which he was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>forced to mix, from the position held by his father in the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Fownall will not do for me,” said Warenne, “if I
+can get another magistrate. Now for your next man,—which
+is Mr. Seaforth?”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall show our Charley last,” replied Nicholas. “My
+second subject for your choice is that round fat little man to
+the right.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is a sharp fellow, is he not?” inquired Warenne;
+“I have seen the chairman refer to him several times.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sharp enough,” continued Nicholas; “he is a retired
+lawyer. He has the law at his fingers’ ends; but he will not
+suit you, I think.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, is he not firm and resolute?”</p>
+
+<p>“Too firm, too resolute by half; the truth is, he has lived
+in town the greater part of his life, and he does not know how
+to manage the poor at all. Though an excellent, well-meaning
+man, he is hard in his words and in his ways, and the poor do
+not like him. He would not conciliate enough for you,
+though in other respects he would do admirably.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bar equitation!” said Warenne, smiling. “He can
+never ride with those round fat legs; and if any tumult does
+occur, we shall require a magistrate capable of quick locomotion.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, Mr. Raymond is no rider,” rejoined Nicholas;
+“but now for my friend Charley. Do you see that very
+quiet looking, middle-aged, rather pale man, with a remarkably
+intelligent eye, sitting behind the chairman?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is rather a silent one, is he not?” observed Warenne.</p>
+
+<p>“Silent or not silent,” said Nicholas, roused to eagerness
+in behalf of his favourite, “he is the best magistrate on the
+bench next to the chairman, and knows as much sessions law
+as Raymond. If he has not spoken lately, it is because he
+agrees in opinion with the chairman. He would speak fast
+enough if he differed from him.” Just at that moment the
+chairman leant back to ask Mr. Seaforth a question. “You
+see, he is ready enough with his answer, when it is wanted.
+Then he is beloved by all the poor; he is so kind-hearted, and
+so kindly spoken to them. The very men he sends to prison
+say they would rather be convicted and condemned by him,
+than only tried before another person. He always treats the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>labourers as <em>fellow men</em> in a different station of life, and that is
+what they like. If you seem by your manner to consider
+them as an inferior race, they are annoyed and sore at it; but
+talk to them as man and man, and they will willingly pay you
+the deference due to your superior rank in life, and listen to
+you into the bargain. Again, if you want a fellow who can
+ride, I will match Seaforth against any man you can bring
+from Melton for the season through, for a hundred.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne smiled at Nicholas’s animated description of his
+friend; but he saw so much natural shrewdness in him, that
+he was inclined to place confidence in his opinion.</p>
+
+<p>“Then as for firmness and nerves,” continued Nicholas,
+“you should see him <em>make</em> a young horse, though, that,
+perhaps, has not much to do with the matter in question—it
+is beautiful to see him put a young, raw, five-years-old, at a
+fence; seriously speaking, he is the boldest and coolest fellow
+you ever saw, though you are a soldier. I may say this of
+him, for he has been tried. Last year there was a dreadful
+fight between the preventive service men and the smugglers,
+in which the former were driven off, and one or two of them
+killed. Seaforth, who was the nearest magistrate, took it up,
+and never rested till he had apprehended the murderers,
+though he had to go into places where half the men in
+England would not venture to set foot, and to fight his way
+through some desperate scuffles. He got Jem Emlett, who
+has been ringleader in every row, robbery, or smuggling
+transaction for the last twenty years, and his whole gang; and
+though Jem broke out of prison the night before the assizes,
+that was not his fault. Besides, Charley is bred to be a good
+one. There have been wild ones of his blood, perhaps, but
+never any that wanted game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Seaforth is the man for me,” said Warenne; “get
+your friend out of court, and introduce me to him.”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas had not overrated Seaforth. Warenne found him
+a person of great intelligence, and peculiar animation of character,
+far more so, indeed, than he had anticipated. The unassuming
+demeanour of Seaforth amongst his brother magistrates
+had led Warenne to consider him a sensible, and Nicholas’s
+panegyric to believe him a brave, man; but neither the
+one nor the other had prepared him for meeting an eager,
+impetuous spirit, ready to devote his whole powers to what he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>conceived to be his duty, and in whom mind so far predominated
+over body as to cause alarm, lest by its restless activity
+it should undermine and exhaust the physical strength. But
+a few minutes had elapsed from the time of their introduction,
+before Warenne was perfectly satisfied with the choice he had
+made of a coadjutor.</p>
+
+<p>He recounted to Seaforth what he had seen; and they were
+soon in deep consultation. It seemed evident to them that
+the nightly meetings originated in an organised combination to
+resist the law,—a combination extending far beyond the immediate
+neighbourhood of Fisherton.</p>
+
+<p>The agricultural labourers were not persons likely, without
+some strong external excitement, to sacrifice a night’s rest
+to an employment they hated so sincerely as learning the
+manœuvres of soldiers; neither were the smugglers, though
+they were doubtless to a man engaged in the business; and the
+conclusion to which Warenne and Seaforth came was, that
+agents from London and Manchester must have lighted up
+this strong flame of disaffection.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, was to be done? Could they in any way
+suppress the meetings? Seaforth proposed to be present at
+one of them, and to try the effect of expostulation; but this
+course, though one in which <em>he</em>, if anybody, would have succeeded,
+from the affection borne him by his poorer neighbours,
+was too dangerous and imprudent to be listened to for an
+instant, at a time when the smugglers were peculiarly irritated
+against him for the apprehension, and consequent execution, of
+some of their comrades only a few months before.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared useless, on the other hand, to attempt to control
+the meetings by military or constabulary force; for there
+could be little doubt that the proceedings of both magistrates
+and soldiers would be watched, and information so conveyed
+to the parties assembling, that by the time either of them
+could reach the ground there would not be a soul to be seen.
+All that it seemed possible to do was to adopt an intermediate
+mode of action, viz. to collect a greater number of troops in
+the neighbourhood, to hold them in readiness, and to take advantage
+of any opportunity of acting which might be afforded
+by the indiscretion of the conspirators; while in order, if possible,
+to deter the misguided men from plunging hastily into
+violence, and to prevent unnecessary shedding of blood, Seaforth
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>undertook to watch the conduct of some particular men
+whom he suspected, and with whom he imagined himself to
+have some influence. They would thus, it is true, set the rioters
+more on their guard, but then, even if they failed in their
+endeavours to put an end to the chance of disturbance by
+gentle means, they would escape the responsibility of having
+tacitly encouraged disaffection up to a certain point that they
+might more severely and effectually quell it afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>It was arranged, therefore, that Warenne should endeavour
+to obtain permission from General Mapleton to send another
+troop to Fisherton, and that Seaforth should try the effect of
+private conciliation, either party keeping up a constant communication
+with the other, and both with Nicholas, who readily
+promised to give them every assistance in his power. This
+settled, they separated, and Warenne retook the road to
+Calbury.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="8" style="text-decoration: none;">VIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">Tristes pensamientos,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">De alegres memorias.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Spanish Romance.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The prospect of a protracted stay at Calbury gave Colonel
+Warenne no promise of a return to tranquillity of mind. The
+apprehension of danger past, the routine of military duties
+usual in country quarters alone demanding his attention, his
+thoughts naturally recurred to his blighted hopes, and the distressing
+situation in which fortune had placed him.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide was at Epworth—only two short miles separated
+them. Henry and Frank were living more at Epworth than
+at Calbury. It was necessary, unless he determined to set at
+defiance the common rules of civility, that he himself should
+visit those with whom he had so lately lived in intimacy. He
+must again undergo the torture of meeting her he loved with
+the degree of coldness consistent with his ideas of duty, and
+her father’s more than hinted opinion of his supposed pretensions.
+There was no alternative; in ordinary courtesy he was
+bound to make the attempt, even at the expense of increased
+wretchedness.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span></p>
+<p>After a delay of some days, during which Warenne persuaded
+himself that he was detained in Calbury by business,
+he rode over to Epworth, with a tolerably calm exterior, though
+with a beating heart. His visit seemed to have been foreseen
+by Lord Framlingham; for as the servant ushered Warenne
+into the drawing-room, he entered it by another door; and as
+his lordship appeared to have correctly calculated the precise
+moment of Warenne’s calling, so did he seem to have determined
+to ascertain the exact duration of his stay beneath his
+daughter’s roof, for he did not quit the drawing-room until
+Warenne had departed.</p>
+
+<p>This behaviour on the part of Lord Framlingham, though
+it rather irritated Warenne at the time, yet served to render
+his visit less painful than he had expected to find it. There
+was no temptation in the presence of a third person, directly
+opposed to his wishes, to lay aside the measured friendliness of
+manner which he had adopted.</p>
+
+<p>A second, and a third time, that Warenne called at Epworth,
+Lord Framlingham observed a similar system of precaution;
+but at last, either bored with playing the part of a Duenna, or
+becoming satisfied with Warenne’s conduct, he relaxed in his
+vigilance; and one day that the latter had ridden over to Epworth
+with Frank and Henry, who wished to arrange some
+shooting excursion with the gamekeepers, he found himself
+once again alone with Adelaide. He felt his hour of trial to
+be at last come. He was now to show his self-command, to
+keep down the tumultuous and passionate thoughts to which
+he burnt to give utterance. His love had not diminished
+through the obstacles which fortune had thrown in his path to
+happiness; on the contrary, it burnt with a stronger and a
+steadier flame than when he had, without interruption, enjoyed
+the pleasure of her society in London.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide, though possessed of every requisite to grace the
+most refined circles, appeared yet more lovely in the calmer
+occupations of the country. In the easy intercourse of her
+immediate friends her shyness forsook her, and she did justice
+to the beauty of her character. All he had seen of her, all he
+had heard of her since she came to Epworth, tended to foster
+his luckless passion. The poor had already learnt to bless her
+name. With her wonted enthusiasm she had commenced
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>plans for their improvement; and though her schemes might
+perhaps be a little visionary, Warenne was not inclined to quarrel
+with their want of practicability, while they developed the
+benevolent spirit of their author.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide also had reasons for feeling distressed at the interview.
+She had perceived her father’s manner to Warenne,
+and became satisfied that Warenne could not honourably have
+pursued any other line than that he had chosen; but her conviction
+on this point, while it took from her the little anger
+she had conceived against him, made it difficult for her to preserve
+the coldness of manner which she had latterly assumed;
+thus both parties felt awkwardly situated. It is true, that one
+word might have produced a right understanding between
+them; but that word, Adelaide could not, and Warenne would
+not, speak. Still the visit could not be passed in silence;—at
+least so thought Warenne, and acting upon this supposition,
+in a shy and constrained manner, he asked,</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ridden much, Miss Marston, since your return
+to the country? I am informed there are beautiful rides in
+this neighbourhood.”</p>
+
+<p>“No! not much; my father is not able to ride far, and
+Henry is always out shooting. He has promised, however, to
+ride with me in a day or two.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must make him keep his promise quickly, or the
+leaves will be off the trees, and they will have lost their autumnal
+beauty.”</p>
+
+<p>“I fear so.”</p>
+
+<p>How gladly would Warenne have offered her his escort, had
+he dared! how gladly would Adelaide have accepted it! But
+this might not be; and to check the vivid workings of his
+imagination, he hastily changed the subject.</p>
+
+<p>“I hear we are to have a gay neighbourhood this winter;
+Frank, who, I believe, has an instinctive knowledge of a ball,
+as a vulture of a horse that drops in the desert, tells me that
+the Merivales and Dashworths each mean to have one in the
+course of the next month.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not the pleasure of knowing them,” observed Adelaide,
+coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course they will call upon you, as an act of civility towards
+a person newly come into the county.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
+<p>“Perhaps so; but they have not visited me yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide’s manner did not contribute to restore poor Warenne
+to serenity of mind.</p>
+
+<p>I know, thought he, that I have chosen a very stupid subject
+for conversation, although perhaps a safe one; but what
+can I do? If I speak on more interesting topics I shall
+betray the state of my affections, and exactly do that which in
+honour I am bound not to do. He blundered on: “My
+brother tells me, that Miss Merivale is extremely pretty and
+dances beautifully.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does she?” was the reply; “I shall like to see her, if
+they ask me to their parties.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne could proceed no further with the tiresome subject;
+he turned therefore to another upon which, though more
+attractive to both parties than the former, he thought he might
+yet converse without emotion. “You are devising, I believe,
+schemes for the improvement of the condition of your poor.”</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide’s eye brightened.</p>
+
+<p>“If it is not too great a liberty, I should like much to hear
+what you intend to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! I fear,” said Adelaide, smiling, “that my views are
+not quite so practical as they might be. I have not long had
+the power of playing the Lady Bountiful, but I will tell them
+to you, and you shall give me your opinion. You have, I
+know, turned your attention to such matters more than soldiers
+generally do.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne thought there could be no harm in her explaining
+to him her plans, or in his assisting her with his advice upon
+them; and in a few moments they were busily discussing the
+merit of Penny Banks, Savings’ Banks, &amp;c.; but after a while
+he found his thoughts wandering from the charities to the
+founder of them, and that he was on dangerous ground.</p>
+
+<p>As Adelaide gave herself up, with the full warmth of her
+kind heart, to the development of her benevolent intentions,
+and spoke to him again with the freedom of former intimacy
+(perhaps glad in her inmost soul to have a legitimate reason
+for resuming it, and perhaps even not without a hope of leading
+him in turn to throw off restraint), he became conscious,
+that should he attempt to speak, his voice would falter, and
+that his eyes were but too ready to tell the forbidden tale of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>constant unvarying affection. He dared not trust himself
+further to temptation; making therefore a violent mental
+effort, and putting even more than his former coldness into his
+tone, he hastily concluded the conversation by remarking that
+her goodness in thus considering the welfare of her poor
+fellow-creatures was above all praise. Adelaide looked up,
+almost with astonishment, at this formal approbation of her
+virtue, but said nothing. He coloured, as he felt her eye
+glance upon him, yet firm to his purpose, would not recur to
+the subject of the charities again. He sat silent and confused;
+turned over the leaves of a book lying upon the table, hoping
+to extract from thence matter for the continuance of their
+conversation, but in vain; his eyes could neither follow the
+lines, nor his brain take in their purport. In despair he returned
+again to the beauty of the country and the weather, and
+once more there was a sound of voices. Badly, however, as
+they had succeeded in conversing before their hearts had in
+some measure opened to each other, now their attempt was ten
+times worse, and it was a positive relief to both parties when
+Lord Framlingham accidentally came in. Had he arrived a
+quarter of an hour sooner, he might not have been satisfied
+with the aspect of affairs, which was decidedly inauspicious to
+his schemes; as it was, they seemed to prosper, and he was
+pleased. He spoke to Warenne with more kindness than
+usual. This filled the cup of poor Warenne’s misery. He
+had looked to Lord Framlingham’s marked repulsiveness of
+manner towards him, as the one circumstance that could give
+Adelaide a favourable explanation of his own conduct towards
+her. Muttering, therefore, something about seeking his brother
+and Henry, he hurried away from Epworth, with the determination
+of never revisiting a spot where he had endured such
+utter wretchedness.</p>
+
+<p>Whether he would or could have executed this resolution
+it is impossible to say, for the position in which he was
+placed was doomed to undergo a change.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="9" style="text-decoration: none;">IX.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Libels and licentious discourses against the state, when they are frequent and
+open; and in like sort false news often running up and down to the disadvantage
+of the state, and hastily embraced, are among the signs of troubles.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="right smcap">Lord Bacon.</span><br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is now necessary to relate the march of events up to this
+period. General Mapleton, in reply to the letter which
+Warenne had addressed him on his return from Fisherton,
+requesting that he might be allowed to send an increased force
+to that place, returned a most dry and positive negative. His
+answer was to the effect,—that he was very sorry to receive
+from Colonel Warenne such a proof of the disaffected spirit
+which prevailed in the district to the command of which he had
+been appointed by his majesty, but that being responsible for
+the employment of the troops under his orders, he must be
+permitted to station them in such manner, and in such
+numbers, as in his own judgment he considered best for the
+interests of the country; and that he must desire Colonel
+Warenne would on no account detach from himself a larger
+force than that which he had authorised. It was his wish
+that Colonel Warenne should send one troop to Fisherton
+and another to Charnstead, or some place midway between
+Fisherton and Calbury, and that at the expiration of every
+month the Fisherton troop should return to head quarters of
+the regiment, and the Charnstead troop move on to Fisherton.
+“In conclusion,” wrote the general, “I must particularly request
+that Colonel Warenne will on no account alter these
+arrangements, nor absent himself from the quarters of his
+regiment without leave.”</p>
+
+<p>The soreness and readiness to take umbrage evident throughout
+this letter gave much disturbance to Warenne, who had
+written to the general in the fullness of his heart, and with the
+sincere wish of setting him on his guard against times of
+peril; but he was too sensible a man, and too zealous an
+officer, to suffer his uneasiness to be seen even by his most
+intimate associates. He resolved diligently to conform to the
+orders he had received, and was really anxious that they
+might prove effectual. In truth, the general, though the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>principal motive for his refusal had been a low jealousy of
+Warenne’s European honours, was not without reasons for
+the negative which he had sent. Much about this time reports
+came in almost daily from the surrounding villages that
+the labourers were using threatening language to the farmers,
+insisting upon an increase of wages, and upon the demolition
+of their threshing machines; that they threatened to pull
+down and burn the machines of those who would not comply
+with the demands; and that the farmers in consequence were
+in a state of great alarm. Some had yielded to the demands
+of the rioters, partly from fear, and partly also from an idea
+that they might make their sufferings a plea for a diminution
+of rent and tithes—others again had resisted them; but the
+cunning or cowardice of the former had added exasperation to
+the anger of the peasantry against the latter, so as to put an
+end to all feeling of security with regard to life and property.
+It was said, also, that there were assemblages every evening
+round the alehouse-doors, where orators in clouted shoes and
+smock frocks held forth upon the rights of men; while there
+were not wanting persons who came from “no one knew
+where,” to inculcate the same doctrines with more force and
+greater dexterity—men, who from their education were enabled
+to make the worse appear the better reason, and heighten
+the evil passions that were abroad. Thanks, however, to the
+vigilance of the magistrates, who were not afraid to employ
+the civil power, now that they were backed by a military
+force, all these evil signs ended without disturbance. There
+might be a drunken riot or so; but the mobs uniformly dispersed,
+as the effect of the intoxicating liquors by which they
+were excited wore off, or, as Nanny Rudd expressed herself to
+Frank, “as the beer died in them.”</p>
+
+<p>About this time also occurred an event, which, though not
+of immediate importance to the story, is interesting as characteristic
+of the period. The two brothers and Henry were
+engaged to dine at Epworth. Dinner was served, but Frank
+and Henry did not make their appearance. At last, but not
+before the party assembled had become exceedingly anxious
+for their arrival, they came in, heated and agitated.</p>
+
+<p>“What can make you so late?” asked Adelaide; “you
+must have finished shooting several hours ago.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span></p>
+<p>Henry did not answer; but Frank said, “We must, I
+suppose, confess—we have had a row with some poachers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good heavens! you are neither of you hurt, I hope,”
+asked Adelaide again, in alarm.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no,” replied Frank, laughing, “not in person, at all
+events, though in honour.”</p>
+
+<p>“What has happened is this,” interrupted Henry. “We
+had been shooting in that large wood of yours which adjoins
+the road leading to Charnstead, and having given our guns to
+the keepers, were on our return home; that is to say, were
+walking back through the wood to the Dolphin to get our
+horses. We had left our game in one of the rides through
+which we had to pass; when we arrived at the spot we found
+a party of men quietly filling a light cart with it. For a
+moment we thought they might be some of our beaters, but
+finding our mistake, we called to them, and ran up to arrest
+their proceedings; in an instant we were surrounded, thrown
+to the ground, and kept there until they had finished packing
+the cart, when, politely thanking us for our good-nature in
+shooting for them, off they all went into the high road.”</p>
+
+<p>“In short,” said Frank, “never did two officers in his
+majesty’s service suffer a worse defeat or greater disgrace.”</p>
+
+<p>This incident alarmed not only Adelaide and Lord Framlingham,
+but also the surrounding neighbours. So gross and
+deliberate an outrage destroyed all feeling of security, and
+though every attempt was made to trace its perpetrators, they
+could not be discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne argued that it had been committed by some of the
+people who were endeavouring but too successfully to excite
+disturbances in the country; for that their calmness in the
+execution of their scheme betrayed consciousness of power.
+“If they had thrashed you,” said he to Frank, “and left you
+half dead, I should have considered the whole as the action of
+common poachers, determined not to be taken nor detected.”</p>
+
+<p>Frank was thankful that “his friends,” as he termed them,
+were such a superior style of men, considering the disadvantage
+at which they had Henry and himself,—though
+doubtless it would have been better for the nation, had it been
+otherwise. By no party, however, was light ever thrown upon
+the transaction.</p>
+
+<p>These various signs of the prevailing disaffection among the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>peasantry occupied much of Warenne’s time and attention, and
+his anxiety was increased by his receiving from Seaforth a
+fearful account of the state of the neighbourhood of Fisherton.
+Seaforth had attempted, in conformity to the proposal previously
+made by him, to converse with those individuals whom
+he suspected to be implicated in the conspiracy which evidently
+existed; but they had refused to listen to him, and had
+even insulted him, giving him to understand that his every
+movement was closely watched.</p>
+
+<p>Under these circumstances Warenne again petitioned for an
+increase of force at Fisherton. Again General Mapleton returned
+him an answer in the negative—if possible, couched
+in yet more peremptory language than he had hitherto used.
+Still no actual riot took place either at the one place or the
+other, and Warenne began to hope that the winter would pass
+over without further disturbance. These fallacious expectations
+lasted but for a day or two. All at once, on every wall
+throughout Calbury, and the neighbouring villages, appeared
+chalked up—“Bread or blood,”—“Liberty or death,” and
+similar short expositions of the popular feelings.</p>
+
+<p>Nanny Rudd also warned Frank that some project was on
+foot, though she could not yet discover the particulars of it.
+Warenne patiently waited for further information, which at
+last he obtained through the means of his brother’s faithful
+ally.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain, dear,” said Nanny to Frank, as he passed her one
+morning on his way to the stables, “you may just bid your
+men stand at ease, if you mean to stay at Calbury; there will
+be no row here. It’s the coast you must look to! Last night
+some strangers came into my brother’s with two of the Rusbrook
+men, who fit agen the ’Stabulary t’other day, and they
+were talking how they had managed finely, and frightened you
+all so, that you dare not move a foot from home. Dare not!
+the blackguards! As if they knew the soul of a jintleman
+soldier. And then they cast up, that they should have it all
+their own way where they were going, for that the whole
+county was ready to join them,—let alone quite a raal army
+of smugglers. Them’s a bad set, my dear captain,—particular
+bad,—they wouldn’t drink none, but seemed to think
+only of killing and plundering; and when my brother came in,
+they was as hush! They’d talk afore me, a poor old blind
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>body, as they thought couldn’t move off my settle without
+help, but they wouldn’t open their ’tato traps afore him.
+Publicans must look to their licence, says they! you’ll see that
+afore long there will be an outbreak towards the coast. One
+rascal said roundly, ‘We’ll give ’em some bonfires before the
+fifth of November this year.’”</p>
+
+<p>These indications of the popular feeling were further
+accompanied by acts of incendiarism. There were frequent
+alarms of fire at night, which increased in number as the end
+of the month approached. With regard to these, however,
+Warenne remarked, that though some had been caused by the
+private malice of individuals, yet that, generally speaking, it
+was an haulm stack, or a parcel of straw, or a rick, which lay
+far from any farm buildings that was set fire to; from whence
+he was the rather inclined to give credit to Nanny Rudd’s
+conjectures, that the demonstrations in the neighbourhood of
+Calbury were solely with the view of occupying the attention
+of the military, and diverting it from the real point of
+danger.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="10" style="text-decoration: none;">X.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Give good hearing to those that give the first information in business, and
+rather direct them in the beginning, than interrupt them in the continuance of
+their speeches; for he that is put out of his own order will go forward and backward,
+and be more tedious while he waits upon his memory, than he could have
+been if he had gone on his own course—<span class="smcap">Lord Bacon.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Affairs remained in this unpleasant state until the evening
+of the 30th of October, when between seven and eight o’clock
+a man on a jaded horse, and covered with mud, galloped up
+to the door of Warenne’s lodging. He hastily ascertained
+from the servant that his master was within; threw the rein
+to him, and dashed up the stairs. It was Nicholas.</p>
+
+<p>“Warenne,” cried he, as soon as he entered the room,
+“you must be off, and quickly, if you wish to save Fisherton.
+It will be attacked to-morrow night by a large body of men,
+and sacked and burnt, if you are not there to prevent it.”</p>
+
+<p>“When?” asked Warenne; “to-morrow night? for
+heaven’s sake tell me what you have heard.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span></p>
+<p>“I will,” replied Nicholas, “all in order; but the upshot is
+this,—that Fisherton will be plundered to-morrow night, and
+that there are more smugglers engaged in the business than
+are sufficient to set your one troop at defiance.”</p>
+
+<p>He then proceeded to state that he had been shooting that
+very morning on some property of his father’s between the
+Plashetts and the coast, when a woman in great distress had
+run up to him, and begged him to come and speak with her
+husband, who was dying. “He wished,” she said, “to speak
+to some clergyman, or magistrate, or to Mr. Nicholas.”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas accordingly accompanied her to her cottage, where
+he found a poor fellow, to whom his father had behaved with
+much kindness the previous winter, lying with both his legs
+broken, and his back severely injured, from a fall of ground in
+a chalk-pit. Clarke, for that was his name, was in great
+agony, and evidently could not live many hours. On seeing
+Nicholas, and receiving his condolences, he said, “My body
+is bad enough, to be sure, but it is nothing to my mind. I
+could not die easy till I had seen you, Mr. John. Tell the
+women to leave the room, sir. I must speak to you; if I die
+before I make a clean breast, I can never find no mercy.
+Why don’t the women leave the room?” repeated he fiercely.
+“Now, then, they are gone, and no one is here but ourselves.
+Come nearer to me, if you please, sir. You know, sir, about
+our nightly meetings. I have been one as has regularly
+attended them. God forgive me, I wish I had never heard of
+them. Last night, sir, last night,” as he repeated the word
+he raised himself in his bed, casting his eyes inquiringly about
+the room, as if he dreaded a witness to his disclosure, and
+sank his voice to a whisper, “it was agreed that we should
+make an attack on Fisherton as to-morrow night. The troops
+are changed to-morrow: the one as is at Fisherton goes to
+Calbury, and the Charnstead one comes into Fisherton; and
+we reckoned that the new men would not know the ground,
+and having just marched in, would be tired, and off their
+guard. So we settled to collect together at certain places
+after dusk, and then, in company with the smugglers, who
+were to join us there, to enter the town, and set fire to it in
+several parts, and plunder it in the confusion. That ever I
+should have agreed to such wickedness! I never should,
+Mr. John—I never should, if I had not been fool enough to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>listen to those villains, who persuaded us that we were all
+deprived of our rights by the rich, and that it was appointed
+that we should all share and share alike. I see it all quite
+different now. Do you think, sir, I shall ever be forgiven?”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas, shocked and alarmed, tried to soothe the wretched
+man—“That is a question I can hardly answer, for I am no
+divine; but I should think you might be, if you are really
+sorry for what you were going to do. One thing I am sure
+of, the best way of making amends for your crime is to
+confess all you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know no more,” replied the poor fellow. “Our leaders
+never told us any more than I have just said, that we were to
+attack the place to-morrow between nine and ten o’clock, by
+which time we thought people would be beginning to go
+to bed.”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas having thus ascertained all that could be extracted
+from the wounded man, considered that between the present
+hour and the morrow’s night there was but little time for
+communication with Warenne, on whom the safety of the
+town depended, and he became anxious to depart; but Clarke,
+seizing his hand, exclaimed—</p>
+
+<p>“Pray, sir, don’t leave! I am no ways prepared for
+death.”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas observed to him, “Clarke, if I do not go, I
+cannot prevent the attack, and your confession will do no
+good.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no!” replied Clarke, withdrawing his grasp, “nor
+me no good neither. I had forgot that—go sir, go—but
+no—stay one moment. Oh, sir, when I am gone, don’t give
+me up—don’t let people know as I ever split; they would
+murder my wife and children. And do you, Martha—pray,
+sir, call my wife—Martha, I say, I charge you never, as you
+value your life, tell a soul as Mr. John has been here to-day.”
+The poor frightened woman promised acquiescence. “Now
+then go, sir,” said he; “God bless you! I will try and
+pray.”</p>
+
+<p>Nicholas immediately made the best of his way to the
+Plashetts, sent off an express to Seaforth, and himself started
+for Calbury on the best horse in his stable.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne listened patiently to Nicholas’s story, for he
+knew well that the quickest mode of obtaining the truth from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>any man is to let him speak what he has to say in his own
+manner. At its close he seemed for a moment to be lost in
+thought, then, turning to Nicholas, he asked him if he had
+seen a magistrate, or could say that he was sent by any
+magistrate to ask the assistance of the soldiery. Nicholas
+replied in the negative, and Warenne began to pace up and
+down the room in deep thought, and apparently under much
+anxiety. At last he stopped, and exclaimed, “Well, then, I
+must take the responsibility on myself. Communication with
+head-quarters is impossible. I must disobey orders, and abide
+the consequences: I cannot, for any hazard to myself, suffer
+a town to be burnt, and its inhabitants to be massacred.”</p>
+
+<p>He rang the bell; and bade his servant send Captain Harris
+to him, and also his brother; and he resumed his meditative
+walk, until it flashed across him that he was treating Nicholas
+with great inhospitality.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon, Nicholas,” said he, “I make you but
+an ill return for your kindness in bringing me this news yourself
+in person; but the truth is, I am so awkwardly placed, that
+I am forced to employ all my wits in considering what will be
+my best line of conduct.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh never mind me,” answered the good-natured fellow;
+“I shall go and hunt out your cook, and take care of myself.
+You have plenty on your hands, without attending to the
+wants of a hungry man.”</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes brought Captain Harris to his colonel’s
+apartment. “Captain Harris,” said Warenne, “you will
+immediately call out your troop, and proceed with it in the
+direction of Charnstead, so as to reach that place to-morrow
+morning before eight o’clock. Rest there until Captain Paulet
+moves his troop to Fisherton, and do you then accompany
+him. You will meet the Fisherton troop between that place
+and Charnstead; take them back with you. As soon as you
+arrive at Fisherton, if I am not with you, notify your arrival
+to Major Stuart. He will probably have quarters ready for
+you; but whether you see him or not, do not unbridle, and
+keep your men standing by their horses.”</p>
+
+<p>Captain Harris, who had received many similar orders the
+previous winter in Ireland, merely bowed and left the room,
+and in twenty minutes was with his troop in march on the
+Charnstead road.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span></p>
+<p>Frank came in as Captain Harris left the room. Warenne
+briefly explained to him how matters stood. “And now,
+Frank,” said he, “I shall leave you with the remaining
+troops to take care of this neighbourhood. No (seeing Frank
+about to interrupt him), I cannot take you with me. On the
+contrary, I must leave you here. I must have some one on
+this ground who will value my honour as his own, and I look
+to you as the person I can best trust on earth. Should a disturbance
+take place here, and get to a head while I am absent,
+I am a ruined man. If you love me, you will stay here.”</p>
+
+<p>Frank <em>did</em> dearly love his brother: he was flattered too by
+the unlimited confidence reposed in him. He therefore said
+not a word about going, but simply asked for his orders.</p>
+
+<p>“You are almost as good a soldier as I am,” said Warenne,
+“and must be guided by circumstances. I hardly think that
+you will be called on to take any very serious measures. It
+will be well, however, to keep a watchful eye on all that is
+going forward, and to make as much parade as you can with
+your soldiers. Never mind harassing them a little, for a day
+or two; but multiply their numbers as much as possible, by
+showing them in different parts of the town. Make your one
+hundred and fifty men appear five hundred if you can. Should
+you be required to act, be decisive.”</p>
+
+<p>The two brothers then proceeded to arrange some minor
+details, when a knock was heard at the door, and a voice saying,
+in rather a tone of authority, “Colonel, I must come in.”</p>
+
+<p>“By all that is sacred, it is Nanny Rudd!” exclaimed
+Frank, “what can she want here at this hour?” He ran to
+the door and opened it. “Come in, Nanny; what are your
+commands to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Warenne,” answered Nanny, “ye’ll give that
+girl, as come with me, and brought me here, a crown. I promised
+her the same; and whiles you are taking it out of your
+purse, I’ll spake a word with your brother. I have business
+with him.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne came forward, and laying hold of her hand,
+inquired what she had to say to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Is the captain,” asked Nanny, with emphasis, “giving
+the girl the crown?”</p>
+
+<p>Frank knew Nanny’s ways, and guessed that she wished
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>him to get the girl out of the room. “Here, my good girl,”
+said Frank, stepping into an adjoining room, “here is not a
+crown, but a guinea for you. You are a kind-hearted lass to
+lead about a poor blind old woman, who is neither kith nor
+kin to you.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl was delighted both with the guinea and with
+Frank, and immediately began telling him how she came to
+accompany the old lady to Warenne’s lodgings.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Nanny bade Warenne close the door.
+“I don’t want,” said she, “that poor lass to hear what I am
+saying. She has nothing of the soldier about her, and don’t
+comprehend the necessity of keeping an asy tongue on all occasions,
+and she might tell tales, and get herself and others into
+trouble. Colonel,” continued she, when she ascertained that
+the door was shut, “I could not rest on my settle till I got to
+you to-night. How should I, when I receives the King’s
+money as I do? There’s going to be a row somewhere on
+the coast. I should guess to-morrow night, but I didn’t hear
+particulars.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, Nanny,” said Warenne, “what have you heard?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll tell your honour,” answered Nanny. “There’s a
+man been staying at my brother’s house these last ten days; a
+pretty bad one, I reckon. I couldn’t make out why he kept
+staying on so. Well, to-night, just about six o’clock, he
+comes into the kitchen,—with Will Sharpe, whom you’ve
+heard speak of, I dare say, in this town, as a big thief and
+vagabond,—as I suppose ready-dressed for travelling; for
+Will says to him,—</p>
+
+<p>“‘Then you’re off now?’ ‘Yes,’ says he, ‘in less than
+five minutes; my job is done, and well done. We’ve flammed
+the beaks (that’s the magistrates, you know) finely. I was to
+stay here till the latest moment I could this evening, to ascertain
+that the bloody redcoats—them was his words, a nasty
+blackguard!—was quiet, and nothing suspected, and then to
+get down, you know where, in time to make the necessary
+arrangements for to-morrow.’ ‘You’ll be there,’ says Will,
+‘early to-morrow morning?’ ‘I’ll be on the Plashetts
+Green by twelve to-night,’ answers t’other, ‘or I’ll know the
+rights on it.’ With that he jumped into his gig or light cart,
+and went away like a madman. Will Sharpe came back into
+the kitchen, and had some beer, and I did not dare to move
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>till he was gone; but at last he went, and I stole out into the
+back-yard, and got my brother’s girl to lead me here.”</p>
+
+<p>“About six did the man set off?” asked Warenne.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” answered she, “and I would have been here an
+hour ago if that prying divil of his companion had gone away
+at first, as he ought. I hate a man to sit and drink by himself;
+it is not neighbourly.”</p>
+
+<p>He was off, then, thought Warenne, before the troops had
+started; so far, so good. Nicholas, too, came the cross-road,
+so he did not meet him.</p>
+
+<p>“But now, Colonel,” said Nanny, interrupting his calculations,
+“I must go, or the girl will get into a scrape at home.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne asked her if she wanted anything for herself.</p>
+
+<p>“If you mean pay, for doing my duty as a soldier’s widow
+ought,” said Nanny, “I’m above it; but you didn’t mean
+that, I reckon; for I am told you’re quite the gentleman, thof
+I do think an officer in his Majesty’s infantry would have
+had more delicacy; but no, no, I want nothing; we’ll talk of
+that some other day. Where’s the wench? Betsy! Betsy!”</p>
+
+<p>Betsy returned with a radiant face at having had nonsense
+talked to her for a quarter of an hour by a very handsome
+captain of dragoons.</p>
+
+<p>“Betsy, where are you?” muttered the old woman; “I
+didn’t do right to send that captain out with you. I heard
+him give you a guinea, too. They are all alike, them captains.
+I hope he has not turned your head; that would be but a bad
+return for your coming along with me this night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lawk, Nanny!” said Betsy, laughing, “do you think I
+don’t know the value of an officer’s talk, and they quartered
+here for three months?”</p>
+
+<p>“You are a giddy child, Betsy,” answered Nanny; “but
+I’ll hope for the best.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne informed Frank of the confirmation given to
+Nicholas’s story by Nanny’s intelligence. “We shall be a
+match for them yet, I trust,” continued he; “but now I
+must to work. I must send off an express to head-quarters—tell
+the adjutant to have one ready for me. The general will
+not thank me for the step I am about to take; so I must e’en
+write him as conciliatory a letter as I can. Good night.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne composed his letter with the greatest care; stated
+his extreme reluctance to disobey the orders which he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>received; hoped that, under the circumstances of the case, he
+should merely anticipate his general’s wishes by the arrangements
+which he had made to prevent the loss of life and
+destruction of property, which could not fail to be consequent
+on the execution of a plot such as he developed; and added
+the informations of Nicholas and Nanny Rudd.</p>
+
+<p>This done, for the first time since Nicholas’s arrival, he
+ventured to turn his mind wholly to the difficulties of his
+situation. To the charge of disobedience, to the risk of
+disgrace, when so important an object was in view, he had
+reconciled himself without a struggle; but now that he had
+leisure to reflect, there was much to appal him in the enterprise
+which he had undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>He was about to stake his military character on a single
+cast; to disobey the strict orders of his general, to act upon
+his own responsibility; wherefore, if he failed, he must expect
+to be dismissed from the service. He doubted for a moment
+whether it would not have been wiser to adopt the safe line—obey
+orders, and avoid danger of every sort—but it was only
+for a moment; the next, his generous nature spurned the
+thought. His self-devotion, however, was tasked to the
+utmost when he contemplated the effect that might be produced
+on Adelaide’s mind by his being disgraced.</p>
+
+<p>Hope, spite of reason, had hitherto remained an inmate of
+his breast; and had whispered that a day might come when he
+could venture to declare to her his passion; but can this, he
+asked himself, ever take place if I am dishonoured? Can I,
+with a tarnished reputation, ever ask her to wed me? or can
+she ever believe my vows, when I now leave this spot, where
+danger is supposed to threaten, and trust her to the protection
+of any arm but my own?</p>
+
+<p>These ideas, in every variety of form, for a time pressed upon
+Warenne’s heated imagination; but wrestling with the rebellious
+feelings of his heart, he would not suffer his love to
+unman him. His only hope was in success—a poor hope,
+perhaps; for even success might not rescue him from censure
+for presumption and disregard of discipline. Still it was his
+only hope; he would not, therefore, willingly throw it away,
+by yielding to thoughts which, at the best, could but enervate
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He forced his mind from the reflections which he had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>allowed to bewilder him, and tried to compose himself for the
+night—how well, let those declare who have endured the
+torments of uncertainty. Certainty, even of the worst, may
+be borne; the condemned criminal sleeps, who is to rise to
+execution; but while hope has power to frame visions for the
+future, which fear shall the next moment dissipate, sleep is
+chased from the eyelids of the unfortunate, and forgetfulness
+is a boon which they are not permitted to enjoy.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="11" style="text-decoration: none;">XI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">A voi parlo, in cui fanno</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Si concorde armonia</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Onesta, senno, onor, bellezza, e gloria;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">A voi spiego il mio affanno</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">E della pena mia</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Narro, e’n parte piangendo, acerba istoria.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Tasso.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Before day-break on the following morning Warenne arose.
+In his midnight meditations he had persuaded himself that
+before he started for Fisherton, he should do well to communicate
+with Lord Framlingham, who possibly might be able to
+befriend him, should his character be aspersed; who, at all
+events, would thus have it in his power to inform Adelaide of
+the truth, and explain to her the difficulties of his position.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly he bent his course to Epworth, and on being
+admitted to Lord Framlingham, he frankly laid before him the
+circumstances of his case.</p>
+
+<p>The old diplomatist heard Warenne with much attention,
+praised his zeal, approved his measures, and promised that they
+should be represented to ministers in their right light; but, the
+moment afterwards, proceeded to qualify his praise, and explain
+away his promises, with the true refinement of his
+profession.</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Warenne must be aware, that he spoke only as an
+individual; that he must not be considered as authorising
+Colonel W—— in his undertaking, for that his official power
+was limited to its peculiar sphere; neither could he hope to
+influence in any way the opinion which the commander-in-chief
+might be pleased to form upon the subject.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span></p>
+<p>Warenne smiled within himself at the wiliness of the politician,
+and at his own folly in believing that he could induce
+him to interest himself about one who, according to the rules
+of probability, might not hereafter be of use to him. Preserving,
+however, his external gravity of demeanour, he
+respectfully bade the noble lord good morning, and resolved
+for the future to depend solely on his own resources.</p>
+
+<p>He was passing through the hall, in order to leave the
+house, when he met Adelaide. The temptation of once again
+speaking to her, while yet he remained a <i lang="fr">chevalier sans reproche</i>,
+was not to be resisted. He followed her into the
+drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>She looked upon his care-worn countenance with surprise.
+“Has anything,” she asked hesitatingly, “occurred to harass
+you? You look fatigued and full of anxiety, as though you
+had been called out in the night to take measures against some
+rioters.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are not far wrong in your conjectures,” answered
+Warenne; “change but the time, and instead of supposing me
+to have been engaged with them the past night, think me about
+to meet them to-night, and you will be right?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are the thoughts, then, of a rural campaign,” demanded
+Adelaide, more gaily, “sufficient to cloud Colonel Warenne’s
+brow? I thought the spirit of so renowned a warrior would
+have risen at the approach of danger.”</p>
+
+<p>“You would scarcely jest, Miss Marston,” replied Warenne,
+gravely, “if you knew the extent of the danger which I apprehend.
+Houses burnt, lives lost, and a town sacked, are not
+matter of merriment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Heavens! no,” said Adelaide; “but how could I dream
+of such horrors as these? I thought but of some bloodless
+disturbance, of the same nature with those we have lately witnessed.
+Tell me, if I may know, what makes you anticipate
+such dreadful events?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne thought that he violated no duty if he seized this
+chance of placing his character in its proper light before Adelaide;
+he therefore simply related to her the occurrences which
+had taken place, and the measures which he had determined to
+adopt.</p>
+
+<p>“I leave,” said he, as soon as he had finished his explanation,
+“three troops still behind me at Calbury, under
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>the command of Frank, so that you will not be destitute of
+protection.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I am not afraid for myself,” answered Adelaide;
+“but have you told me all? I beg your pardon, if I have
+asked an impertinent question; do not answer it if I have;
+but there is a tone of desperation in your manner which
+alarms me.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment it flashed upon Adelaide’s mind that
+Warenne’s feelings might in some way have reference to herself;
+she therefore hastily added, “Forgive me. I am too
+inquisitive.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know not,” replied Warenne, “why I should withhold
+from you the causes of my uneasiness. You will perceive,
+that in my present position I am forced to act upon my own
+responsibility, in opposition to the express and repeated orders
+of my commanding officer. Whether I succeed in my undertaking,
+or whether I fail, I make myself liable to be brought
+to a court-martial for a breach of military discipline; and I
+confess that I have not that confidence in General Mapleton,
+which encourages me to hope that he will overlook an opportunity
+of establishing his authority over an officer whom he
+considers, though God knows without reason, as inclined to
+treat him with impertinence. I can hardly look forward to
+anything but disgrace in this affair, view it which way I will.
+This is not a pleasing reflection, nor one that reconciles me to
+the prospect of a bloody affray with some of my misguided
+fellow-countrymen. I have little enough to boast of; but if of
+any thing, it is my fair fame as a soldier—that lost, I am
+poor indeed;—but forgive me, Miss Marston, I have no right
+to talk thus of myself to you. There is no limit, it would
+seem, to my presumption,—yet, as I have said thus much,
+let me beg you not to condemn me hastily;—when the world
+points its finger of scorn at me, and when I am a dishonoured
+and ruined man, think of the difficulties in which I have been
+placed, and do not, I beseech you—do not cast me from your
+remembrance as utterly unworthy of all esteem. I can bear
+anything but <em>that</em>—<em>that</em> (as he spoke he pressed his hands
+violently upon his eyes, as if to shut out some object of horror),
+I could not bear. You know not what value—but why do I
+speak thus to you? I am a fool, a madman! Pardon me—forget
+that I have dared to express the wild and presumptuous
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>feelings of my heart. I have been wrong in giving utterance
+to them; but I can assure you, that I meant not to have
+spoken, that I did not seek this interview. I will not again
+betray my folly before you. Whatever I may feel, I will bury
+it in silence. God’s mercy protect you!”</p>
+
+<p>Having rapidly and passionately poured forth these broken
+sentences, Warenne rushed from the room, long before Adelaide,
+who, from the tone which had prevailed in their recent
+meetings, had been little prepared for such an avowal, had time
+to compose herself sufficiently to answer him. Ere she had
+regained her presence of mind, he had mounted his horse, and
+was on his road to Charnstead.</p>
+
+<p>At first Adelaide gave herself up to the happy consciousness
+of being beloved by him to whom she had surrendered the first
+affections of her heart. In spite of all his proud resolutions,
+he had avowed it; and though she knew not when her hopes
+might be realised, she pictured to herself future years of happiness.
+After a while these bright visions faded from her
+mind, and she was tempted to despond. Warenne would not
+have looked so gloomily upon the case, had he not had reason
+so to do. Even success, she had been told, could hardly
+justify disobedience in military matters; and she herself saw,
+that no general could be responsible for the operations of an
+army, if each subaltern under his command claimed the right
+to dispose of his own immediate force as he pleased. Then
+she dreaded the effect of disgrace upon Warenne’s mind—proud
+and gallant as he was, he was sensitive on the score of
+honour, to a degree which his military education alone could
+explain.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees she drew herself again from this train of thought;
+fixed her mind upon his unhesitating sacrifice of himself in
+the fulfilment of his duty; recollected his gallant actions in
+the Peninsula, which had won him his high name; thought
+of his calm courage in the hour of danger, and the almost instinctive
+sagacity with which he was wont to meet it; repeated
+to herself the many stories to his credit, which Henry and
+Frank had gleaned from the old soldiers of the regiment; and
+comforted herself in the hope of his happy return amid the
+blessings of his rescued fellow-countrymen. His military
+fault would be pardoned for the zeal he would show, and for
+the ability with which he would counteract the designs of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>conspirators. She would see him return, crowned with fresh
+laurels, more beloved, more admired, more honoured than
+before.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="12" style="text-decoration: none;">XII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent26">There may be joys</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Which to the strange o’erwhelming of the soul</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Visit the lover’s breast beyond all others;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">E’en now, how dearly do I feel there may!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But what of them? they are not made for me,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The hasty flashes of contending steel</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Must serve instead of glances of my love.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Joanna Baillie’s</span> <cite>Basil</cite>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>While Adelaide thus soothed her perturbed spirit, Warenne’s
+rose as he approached the scene of danger. His dark eye
+sparkled, and his noble brow expanded, when he again looked
+upon his old comrades, with whom he had passed triumphantly
+through so many fields; he turned his mind from
+the busy reminiscences of love, and with that power of abstraction,
+which practical men possess, fixed it on the probable
+events of the coming evening. Adelaide’s form, perhaps,
+sometimes met his mental eye, when it should have fallen upon
+the serried ranks of armed warriors; but he did not suffer even
+her form to occupy him to the prejudice of his duty. Its only
+effect was to stimulate him to a desire of fresh honours, that,
+whether he stood or fell, he might be deserving of her good
+opinion. He arrived at Charnstead about three o’clock, and
+found there the troop he had sent forward, and the Charnstead
+troop, neither of them having yet started on their route
+to Fisherton. An express had arrived in the morning from
+Major Stuart, stating that in consequence of information he
+had received, he should only send the Fisherton troop as far as
+Swalesford, a place about five miles from Fisherton, and
+begging Captain Paulet to join them there, in time for them to
+enter Fisherton in a body shortly after dusk. Warenne immediately
+proceeded forward with the two troops, and picked
+up the Fisherton troop at Swalesford; when about a mile from
+the town, he galloped forward by himself, in order to communicate
+with Stuart about the disposition of the troops. He
+found that officer, and Mr. Seaforth, occupying his old quarters
+at the inn.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span></p>
+<p>“I thought,” said his friend Stuart, holding out his hand,
+“that yours would be the first soldier’s face we should see to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you would rather have seen any other,” answered
+Warenne laughing. “A senior officer is a sad bore on occasions
+like this. But what shall we have to do?”</p>
+
+<p>Stuart laid before him the intelligence he had been able to
+collect since the alarm given by Nicholas, and Seaforth the
+result of his observations and inquiries, which he had unceasingly
+continued since their last interview. Both reports
+agreed in confirming the account of the intended attack upon
+the town, and stated the force of the insurgent peasantry at
+from seven to eight hundred, which was to be joined, shortly
+before entering the place, by a body of smugglers, mounted
+and well-armed, in number from one hundred and fifty, to
+two hundred. To assist in the defence of the town, Seaforth
+had sworn in as special constables all the most respectable inhabitants,
+and such of the working classes as could be trusted.
+Warenne, in turn, informed them of the troops he brought
+with him, and of the disposition of them which he contemplated.
+They soon completed their arrangements. The soldiers
+were to be concentrated in the yard of the Cross Keys inn,
+which, as has been said, commanded both the entrances into
+the town. The by-streets, which were not practicable for
+cavalry, were consigned to the care of the constables, of whom
+a party was ordered to remove the women and children from
+the houses most open to attack. Arrangements were made to
+receive these poor outcasts in the dwellings of the wealthier
+townspeople, and in the parish church. Some of the neighbouring
+gentry who had come in, volunteered to act as scouts,
+and to give notice of the approach of the enemy. These measures
+being taken, Warenne placed himself under Seaforth’s
+orders.</p>
+
+<p>“I will not, you may depend upon it, call upon you unnecessarily,”
+said Seaforth in return. “Till the work of devastation
+is commenced, or is so evidently on the point of
+commencement as not to be prevented by other means, I would
+not have you stir. I shall ride to meet the fellows, as soon as
+we hear of their approach, and try to deter them from their
+enterprise; if I fail, I must have recourse to you.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
+<p>“You will fail,” said Warenne, “and you will incur great
+danger in meeting them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very likely,” replied his spirited companion, “but it must
+be done.”</p>
+
+<p>During this time the three troops had arrived, and Warenne
+placed them for the present in some large farm stables and
+barns which were at the back of the inn. The horses remained
+bridled, and the men by them, ready to act on a moment’s
+notice. He and Stuart then walked all over the town, and
+carefully examined each street, in order to be certain that no
+barricades were erected in any part, nor preparations made to
+embarrass the soldiery.</p>
+
+<p>It was now past seven o’clock—the constables had brought
+in the inhabitants of the houses which they expected to be
+fired, and all was ready for the reception of the rioters. Eight
+o’clock struck—nine—ten, and Warenne and Seaforth were
+beginning to doubt whether the night for the attack had not
+been changed, when one of their most advanced scouts returned
+with the intelligence that all the labouring population,
+between Fisherton and the coast, seemed to be collecting on the
+coast road, about three miles from the town.</p>
+
+<p>Soon another and another scout came with similar reports;
+and lastly Nicholas, who had returned from Calbury to the
+Plashetts at an early hour, and had ridden in to be of service
+to his friends, brought an account that a large body of mounted
+men had come up, and that they were marching together on
+the town. Warenne immediately drew his men out in front
+of the inn. Seaforth rode gently forward to meet the insurgents.
+They had halted to drill their ranks, and their leaders
+were ordering their variously armed forces to their respective
+places, having brought forward to the front the mounted
+smugglers, who were all armed with pistols and a cutlass.</p>
+
+<p>Seaforth, with one or two of his friends, cantered up to
+them. He pulled up short, when within about two horse-lengths
+of the leading rank, and with a loud voice demanded
+the meaning of the present tumultuous assembly, and the
+cause of their entering Fisherton at such an hour of night.</p>
+
+<p>“I warn you,” said he, “that you are breaking the king’s
+peace, and acting contrary to the laws. I am a magistrate,
+and I charge you in the king’s name to disperse immediately.”</p>
+
+<p>“We know you well enough, Mr. Seaforth,” said a rough
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>voice beside him, which he had heard before in his life, and
+which recalled unpleasant recollections; “I have reason to
+know you; take yourself off, or perhaps I shall give you
+reason to know me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Emlett?” exclaimed Seaforth. “Nay then, I fear I
+shall do little good, if you are at the head of this business; I
+know of old that you are not easily shaken from your purpose.
+Nevertheless, some of these poor misguided men may listen to
+me;” and raising his voice to the highest pitch, again he
+warned them to retire, repeating the words of the Riot Act.</p>
+
+<p>“Beware,” said Emlett, “we are not to be trifled with,”
+then adding a tremendous execration, he bade Seaforth
+“begone, or he would settle old scores with him there as he
+stood.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will do as you please,” answered the gallant magistrate.
+“Disperse, I pray you, my men; we are prepared to
+receive you—we have a strong body of dragoons just arrived.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take this, then, you prattling fool,” growled Emlett, exasperated
+at his undaunted defiance of his threats, and alarmed
+lest his address should shake his followers; and he fired his
+pistol at his head. Happily for all who knew, and what was
+the same thing, valued Seaforth, he missed his aim, and the
+voice of his intrepid antagonist was again heard—</p>
+
+<p>“Even now, deluded men—” but it was soon drowned in
+the savage exclamations of Emlett, who, with the most horrible
+curses at himself for his awkwardness, called out to his
+comrades—</p>
+
+<p>“Cut him down, kill him, stop his tongue any way you
+can,” at the same time spurring his horse at him, and raising
+his cutlass to strike him. Seaforth just wheeled his horse
+round upon his haunches in time to save himself, and galloped
+back at speed into the town. Emlett and his men pursued
+him a little way, and then returned to the main body. The
+first person he met was Warenne, who had advanced a short
+distance in front of his men.</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Warenne,” said he, “I believe I must call on
+you,—yet wait one moment.” The rioters were now within
+the street.</p>
+
+<p>“Firemen,” cried Emlett, “to your work, and do you, my
+men,” speaking to the peasantry, “get possession of the by-streets;
+we’ll manage the soldiers.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
+<p>It had been his plan, as was afterwards ascertained, to have
+entered the town before the inhabitants were aware of his
+approach; and having surrounded with his men the different
+public-houses at which the soldiers were billeted, to have disarmed
+them, or at least prevented their assembling; and then
+taking possession of the streets, to have systematically plundered
+the town from one end to the other. Finding the
+townspeople on their guard, and hearing from Seaforth that
+the troops were prepared to receive his attack, he gave up the
+former part of his design. But not believing that any increase
+of force had arrived, and calculating that the troop which in
+the common course of events would have replaced that previously
+quartered at Fisherton, would not know the ground,
+and therefore would be unable to act with decision;—being
+also himself an outlaw—being recognised by Seaforth—with
+all to gain, and nothing to lose, he now determined to fall
+vigorously on the soldiers with his band of smugglers, who he
+knew would stand by him to the last gasp.</p>
+
+<p>“Comrades!” shouted he, “it is not the first time we’ve
+had a brush with the red-coats—forward!” and spurring
+his horse, with the whole body of his associates at his heels,
+he galloped up the town. At the same moment a glare of
+light burst from three or four neighbouring houses, and discovered
+a party of constables retiring in confusion from the
+post they had been directed to occupy.</p>
+
+<p>“The police! down with them, cut them down!” was
+heard at once from an hundred voices; and in an instant the
+wretched special constables were knocked down, and ridden
+over by their fierce pursuers.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, Colonel Warenne,” said Seaforth—before he could
+finish his sentence, Warenne was at the head of his men.</p>
+
+<p>“Stuart, keep one troop in reserve, the other two come on
+with me—steady, my men—forwards, charge.” The two
+bodies of cavalry clashed together. The soldiers had not had
+time nor space to get to their full speed; their charge therefore
+lost the effect it would have had, if the order had been received
+a minute sooner. It was sufficient to check the advance
+of the rioters, and no more. They had still to conquer their
+antagonists, who in this sort of encounter, hand to hand, and
+man to man, were opponents not to be despised. For some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>minutes the conflict was savagely and equally maintained on
+both sides. The smugglers fought desperately, as men with
+halters around their necks. After a while the better horsemanship
+and swordsmanship of the dragoons began to prevail,
+rendered doubly effective by the consciousness of superiority,
+which habitual use gives a man in the practice of his profession.
+At first, by the light of the blazing houses, the soldiers,
+easily distinguished by their bright shakos from the smugglers,
+who had fur caps on their heads, seemed completely outnumbered.
+They clung, however, closely together, and amid all
+the flashing of swords, and firing of pistols, moved steadily
+on, a compact, well-disciplined body; by degrees they appeared
+more adequate to the other party in point of numbers,
+and to be pressing their adversaries back; still the conflict
+raged—the smugglers rallied—for a moment even turned the
+tide of war in their favour. It was their last effort. Presently
+one, and then another of them withdrew himself from
+the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>, and, with frocks stained with gore, galloped out
+of the town. Soon two or three small parties from the same
+side fled hastily in a similar direction.</p>
+
+<p>On this the soldiers, perceiving their advantage, redoubled
+their efforts, and fairly established their superiority, though
+some of the most desperate of the smugglers, Emlett among
+the number, with his head uncovered, and streaming with
+blood, fought on, without receding an inch. At last he, and
+his more immediate followers falling, the remainder seemed to
+give up all hope at once; and turning their horses’ heads,
+endeavoured to save themselves by the rapidity of their flight.
+The dragoons pursued them without mercy to the end of the
+street, both parties dashing through the mob of peasantry,
+who were coming forward to the support of their friends.
+There, having received orders from Warenne on no account
+to venture into the open country, the dragoons wheeled round,
+and returned to clear the town of the foot people. But these
+last, as soon as they discovered the result of the fight, did not
+wait to be dispersed. Throwing away their weapons, and
+plunging into the by-streets, they made the best of their way
+to the fields, and to darkness.</p>
+
+<p>After the lapse of about an hour from the time that Emlett
+had fired at Seaforth, the town was restored to comparative
+quiet, except where the inhabitants were busily engaged in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>quenching the flames of the burning houses, and where the
+groans of the dying and wounded fell sadly upon the ear.</p>
+
+<p>Above thirty of the smugglers had been killed, and four or
+five soldiers. The wounded of the two parties were in an
+inverse proportion, there being several of the dragoons who
+had received severe injuries, and not above half-a-dozen of the
+smugglers, and these so dreadfully hurt, as to forbid all hope
+of their living beyond a few hours; all those who had sufficient
+strength to do so, had dragged themselves out of the
+town.</p>
+
+<p>Emlett was not quite dead when Warenne and Seaforth
+went over the field of battle. He survived to throw one look
+of stern defiance on the latter, and to strike out his arm against
+him with impotent fury; then with a half-uttered imprecation,
+he turned his face to the ground, and died. In a few
+hours more the flames were all suppressed; the wounded removed
+to a place where they might receive proper attendance;
+and the soldiery, with the exception of one troop retained on
+duty for the protection of the town, established in comfortable
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>The night passed without disturbance. The following
+morning Warenne went round the town with Seaforth, took
+minutes of the devastation it had suffered, inspected the
+wounded men, gathered from the smugglers yet alive what
+information they were inclined to give, and forwarded an exact
+and detailed account of the whole transaction to head-quarters.
+After which, leaving the Charnstead and Fisherton troops
+under Stuart to guard the town, escort prisoners, &amp;c., and directing
+the other to return as quickly as possible to its former
+station, he himself hastened back to Calbury, in order that he
+might be absent as short a time as possible from his command.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="13" style="text-decoration: none;">XIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">A soldier’s reputation is too fine</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To be exposed, e’en to the smallest cloud.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Joanna Baillie’s</span> <cite>Basil</cite>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that Warenne, before he left Calbury,
+had written to General Mapleton a detailed account of the
+reasons which induced him to break through the repeated
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>orders he had received. Seaforth had also sent to him, as
+general of the district, a formal request for assistance, as soon
+as he had been apprised of the outrages in contemplation.
+Through some error of the messenger, this last letter did not
+reach General Mapleton till the day after the riot had taken
+place, or it is possible that he might have pursued a different
+line of conduct. As it was, the receipt of Warenne’s letter,
+unaccompanied by the explanation which that of Seaforth
+would have given to it, irritated him beyond all power of
+endurance.</p>
+
+<p>He was not only thoroughly exasperated at what he deemed
+Warenne’s presumption, but most unjustly imagined that he
+could trace throughout his proceedings an intention of putting
+a personal indignity upon him, and of accusing him indirectly
+of incapacity in his command.</p>
+
+<p>Under this impression, he wrote to the Horse Guards in
+the strongest possible terms, desiring that Warenne might be
+immediately brought to a court-martial; and requesting, in
+case of refusal, that he might be allowed to retire from
+his appointment. Colonel Warenne’s conduct, he observed,
+was the most inexcusable and wanton act of disobedience he
+had ever witnessed in the service. At the very moment when
+he had, in consequence of particular information received,
+commanded that officer to concentrate his forces in Calbury,
+he had chosen, without any requisition from a magistrate, on
+the evidence of a frightened country gentleman, and a foolish
+old woman, to leave his post, and set at hazard the safety of
+the important town which had been entrusted to his protection.
+He wrote, he said, before ill success could aggravate or good
+success justify the steps which Colonel Warenne had taken;
+looking merely to the necessity of enforcing obedience in inferior
+officers, if their superiors were to be made responsible
+for the execution of the duties they superintended. He added,
+that in anticipation of the orders of the commander-in-chief,
+he had directed that Colonel Warenne should be placed under
+arrest the moment he returned to Calbury. In fact, the
+orderly who had conveyed Warenne’s despatch to head-quarters
+brought back the order for his arrest; and Frank,
+in the exercise of the temporary command which had devolved
+on him, was constrained to execute that order upon his brother.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne arrived late at night. Frank was waiting to receive
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>him. The first few minutes of their interview were
+occupied with the relation of the transactions at Fisherton;
+but the time soon arrived, when it was necessary that the
+latter should fulfil his melancholy task. His brother demanded
+the general’s answer. Frank held it out to him in mournful
+silence. Warenne read it.</p>
+
+<p>“Arrest!” said he; “does he put me under arrest?
+This is a strong measure, indeed; he might have heard me,
+surely, before he took so decided a step; it is, of course, preparatory
+to a court-martial. Well, Frank, there’s my sword;
+I would sooner yield it up to you than to any other living
+being:” poor Frank burst into tears. “Nay, do not weep, I
+would not for worlds have done otherwise than I have done;
+and though disgrace is hard to bear, it is much less so, when
+not deserved. I suppose they will hardly put me on my trial
+for desertion of my post, for that charge will affect life.
+General Mapleton will be satisfied with less than that. Come
+what come may, they will not make me out a coward; <i lang="fr">au reste</i>,
+I must take a soldier’s chance.”</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Warenne’s arrest became generally
+known; and Henry, anxious that his sister should not be informed
+of it by an indifferent person, rode over to Epworth
+with the news. He found her pale and agitated (for since
+her last interview with Warenne, she had given fuller indulgence
+to her feelings, legitimatised, as it were, by his avowal
+of his love for her), eager to learn the success of the troops
+at Fisherton, and scarcely allowing herself to doubt of its
+being such as to call forth approbation upon him who had
+commanded them; yet dreading, she knew not why, some
+harsh measure from General Mapleton. Hope had predominated
+over fear, and she was bitterly disappointed by Henry’s
+intelligence. For a moment she gave way to grief; but recovering
+herself—</p>
+
+<p>“Henry,” said she, “thank you, thank you for coming to
+me at this moment. I need not now tell you how truly you have
+read my heart; but I must not be selfish. Think no more of
+me, but of him on whom the whole weight of the blow has
+fallen; it will crush him, I fear, he is so sensitive to even the
+semblance of dishonour.” Henry strove to comfort his sister.
+“His friends must support him,” added she; “they must not
+let that gallant spirit sink.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span></p>
+<p>Her brother promised to do his best. He assured her that
+she viewed matters too despondingly; that a man was not
+disgraced by being put on his trial, but only by the condemnation
+of the court; that he would see Warenne on his return,
+and endeavour to speak comfort to him, though he must confess,
+that as yet his ideas on that head threatened to concentrate
+themselves in the simple Americanism, “G—d pretty
+particularly d—n” General Mapleton.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide smiled amid her tears at Henry’s projected mode
+of consolation; and he, glad to find that his nonsense had
+succeeded in calling forth a smile, went off with a lightened
+heart to fulfil his commission; a commission, as he then
+thought, easy of execution, but which appeared to him in a
+very different light, when he became aware of the irritated
+state of Warenne’s mind, and his almost morbid apprehensiveness
+of disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>The interval which elapsed between the arrest and the sitting
+of the court-martial was not long. The commander-in-chief,
+from a recollection of Warenne’s services and character,
+had acceded to General Mapleton’s request with much reluctance,
+which was increased when he received the despatches
+from Fisherton, most punctiliously forwarded to the Horse
+Guards by the general, who though a weak was an honourable
+man. To mitigate the severity of the proceeding, he
+expedited the necessary arrangements as much as possible.
+He forthwith sent officers to form a court, and desired General
+Mapleton to deliver in his charges. It is unnecessary to record
+the forms, &amp;c. of the court; suffice it to say that General
+Mapleton made his accusation, limiting it to the act of disobedience,
+without cause; and that Warenne in his defence,
+admitting the act of disobedience, rested his claim to an acquittal
+upon the impossibility, under the circumstances of the
+case, of his acting otherwise, with a due regard to his majesty’s
+service. He produced at the same time a letter of thanks from
+the inhabitants of Fisherton, and the testimony of Seaforth
+and Nicholas, as to the necessity of the line of conduct which
+he had adopted. The question lay within a small compass,
+and the court soon finished its sittings. The result, however,
+of its inquiries was not declared. Warenne was doomed to
+undergo a period of agonising uncertainty.</p>
+
+<p>It is not for a civilian to impugn the policy of military
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>arrangements, but one may perhaps be allowed to say, that
+unless some strong reason can be adduced for the suspense,
+which an officer awaiting the sentence of a court-martial is
+forced to suffer, the infliction of it is a needless piece of
+cruelty. Why should not the sentence of a court-martial be
+confirmed, or annulled, and in either case declared, as soon as
+time had been given for its consideration at the Horse Guards?
+In the present case, weeks intervened before Warenne’s fate
+was decided, during which his feelings were outraged and
+lacerated in a manner totally inconsistent with real justice.
+Not only had he to combat with his own over-excited susceptibility
+on the score of dishonour, and his dread of appearing
+disgraced in the eyes of Adelaide, but with the abuse and
+calumnies of the public press, or rather that part of the public
+press which is ever ready to support the cause of the rebellious
+and licentious against the control of the powers that be.</p>
+
+<p>The radical papers failed not to paint the affair at Fisherton
+in such colours as to make it seem an infringement of the
+liberty of the subject, and a massacre which called aloud for
+vengeance. In vain did the juster newspapers point out that
+night was not a proper time for people to meet in great numbers,
+nor arms the proper accompaniment of such assemblages.
+In vain did they tell of the attempt on the life of Seaforth, and
+of houses in flames before a sword had been drawn. In vain
+did they argue that the poor inhabitants of Fisherton had
+rights—a right to dwell in security; a right to enjoy their
+little property without molestation; a right to protection from
+the government of their country. These truths would not help
+the editors of the * * and * * * to sell their papers; they
+therefore refused to listen to them; and, on the contrary,
+filled their columns with reports of what they called the profligate
+waste of human life by the soldiery, and vehemently
+expressed hopes, that Colonel Warenne might meet with immediate
+and condign punishment. This was a species of torment
+to which Warenne had not looked forward. It had
+been pain to him to hear his actions arraigned in a court of
+justice; but his defence followed close upon the accusation,
+and he had been enabled to bear it with fortitude. To be
+represented to the people of England as a monster thirsting
+for the blood of his fellow-countrymen, and deserving of universal
+execration, was almost more than he could endure.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span></p>
+<p>Henry and Frank were unremitting in their endeavours to
+comfort him; yet no words, or arguments they could use,
+availed to remove from him a sensation of despair. He acquiesced
+in all they said, but as one who heard them not,—except
+indeed when they pressed him to go with them to
+Epworth; then he spoke readily and positively. “I will not
+show myself to Miss Marston a dishonoured man.” In vain
+did they urge that he was not, could not be disgraced, until
+condemned by the sentence of the court, which had sat in judgment
+on his conduct. He would answer,—“I will admit that
+I am not disgraced by the word of authority, but do you
+think it nothing to have one’s name called in question? to be
+made the sport of the papers—no, not their sport, but their
+execration? Venal they may be—wicked they may be; still
+they are read by many—believed by many.” If they argued,
+that no one who knew him would credit any report injurious to
+his character upon the assumptions of a newspaper, he would
+thank them for their kind opinions, but refused to be persuaded
+that he could ever resume the place he had formerly
+held in public estimation, or that his character could ever be
+restored to its primitive purity.</p>
+
+<p>One only circumstance seemed to alleviate the anguish of
+his wounded feelings, and this was the conduct of the soldiers
+of his regiment. On the return of the troop which had
+been engaged at Fisherton, the men had naturally expatiated
+on their colonel’s activity and gallantry before their comrades;
+consequently, when his arrest was made known, and the recompense
+he received was seen in immediate and strong contrast
+with the services he had rendered, one feeling of indignation
+and resentment pervaded the whole regiment; threatening
+for a moment to manifest itself in some mode inconsistent with
+military discipline.</p>
+
+<p>Luckily for their reputation and for his, Frank’s bawman,
+an old campaigner, gave his master some intimation of their
+intentions, and Frank desired him to tell his friends that they
+would best show their regard for his brother, and most effectually
+gratify him, if they proved the high state of discipline to which
+they had been brought under his command, by performing their
+several duties, with, if possible, increased zeal and patience,
+during his temporary suspension from authority. The soldiers
+listened readily to advice emanating from such a source, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>the consequence was, that never, from Warenne’s first joining
+the regiment, had there existed so little room for censure, or
+such cheerful and exact compliance with every order, as from
+the time of his arrest to the promulgation of the sentence of
+the court-martial. This proof of the affection of his soldiers
+was to Warenne a real comfort and support.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="14" style="text-decoration: none;">XIV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent12">There’s a thanklessness</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">In our fallen nature that too lightly holds</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The good too lightly won. Fortune’s minion,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Whose pamper’d sense the luscious banquet courts,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Ere he can say, “I hunger,” coldly thanks</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The bounteous Giver for his daily bread;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And hearts that have not unrequited, loved,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Feel not the bliss of loving, loved again.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">’Tis Cupid’s wanton fashion still to vex</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">His dearest vot’ries, that they may exalt</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">His tyrant godhead by a truer worship,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">More pure, more holy, sober, strong, and lasting.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Unedited Poem.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>About a month after the termination of the court-martial,
+Henry, finding that all endeavours were fruitless to restore
+Warenne to cheerfulness, and that his unceasing anxiety was
+wearing out at once his body and mind, determined again to
+communicate with Adelaide. He rode over to Epworth, and
+told her his firm conviction, that unless some means were
+discovered of diverting Warenne’s thoughts from the channel
+in which they were running, his life or his reason would be
+endangered. He had besought him to come to Epworth, but
+he would not hear of it.</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide was not wholly unprepared for this intelligence;
+she so thoroughly understood Warenne’s character, that in
+some measure she expected it, and she felt that the time was
+come when she must herself make an effort, or permit the
+happiness of both parties to be sacrificed. She asked Henry
+if he thought Warenne would come to Epworth at <em>her</em> request.
+Her brother said, that with her permission he would make the
+trial. She authorised him to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Henry departed. Not a word fell from her lips to stay him,
+for she wished not to unsay that which she had spoken. Yet
+when he was gone, she remained transfixed to the spot where
+he had left her, alarmed at her own boldness; confounded at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>the change one short moment had made in her fortunes. The
+tramp of Henry’s horse galloping down the avenue recalled
+her to self-possession, and she soon taught herself to rejoice in
+the step she had taken. The world, thought the generous girl,
+might blame me, if it knew of my request; but he will not,—for
+he loves me. Love will plead my cause, if I have been
+too forward,—love, which I should ill deserve, did I permit
+a fear of the world, or my own false pride to close my lips,
+when, as I believe, and trust, and hope, one word from them
+can cheer his gallant spirit, and win him back to happiness.</p>
+
+<p>Henry found Warenne brooding over his misfortunes, sad
+and dispirited as usual; but his dark eye lighted up, and the
+blood crimsoned his cheek, as he listened to Adelaide’s message.</p>
+
+<p>“Your sister wish me to go to Epworth? Impossible!”
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>Henry assured him of the fact. A request from her was
+not to be refused, and though Warenne had determined not to
+quit his apartment while yet a cloud should remain upon his
+reputation, he at once made ready to depart.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes before, and he would instinctively have
+shrunk from the broad glare of day; but now he passed unheeding
+beneath the sun’s meridian splendour, for his heart
+was full of feelings he could not utterly suppress, and his
+head busied with surmises as to Adelaide’s motives in urging
+her request. Could it be that she was interested in his fate?
+he dared not cherish the hope. Yet why should she wish
+to see him? Alas, Henry had informed her of his wretchedness,
+and in the kindness of her nature, and because she felt
+that her kindness would not now be misinterpreted, she sought
+to amuse him, and divert him from his sorrows. This latter
+idea predominated when he reached Epworth.</p>
+
+<p>He found Adelaide alone. She was prepared for the task
+she had imposed upon herself, and though her heart beat
+quickly as she heard his well known step, she advanced to
+welcome him with an unfaltering voice and apparent composure.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you pardon me, Colonel Warenne,” said she, “for
+the liberty I have taken in requesting you to come and see me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Marston need not ask Colonel Warenne’s pardon for
+her kindness to him,” was his formal and measured reply;
+for he feared to be thought capable of presuming upon the
+kindness which he thus acknowledged.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
+<p>Adelaide hesitated before she spoke again; the melancholy
+tone of his voice unnerved her; forcing herself however to
+proceed, after a pause she resumed,—</p>
+
+<p>“My brother tells me that you will not listen to reason,
+but torment yourself with visions of disgrace impending over
+you from this court-martial. Will you let me chide you for
+your folly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Folly!” ejaculated Warenne, keeping his eyes on the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” repeated Adelaide, “folly; you cannot think it
+wisdom to imagine disaster, and suffer under its pressure, when
+in all probability the evil you anticipate will never reach you,
+and even if it should arrive, cannot injure you in the manner
+you apprehend. Whatever may be the sentence of the court,
+every fair, every humane person must approve of your conduct.”</p>
+
+<p>“Heaven bless you for these words of kindness!” replied
+Warenne, despondingly; “but you say what you wish
+me to believe, rather than what you believe yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Adelaide, with much animation, “I speak as
+I think—as I feel.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne raised his eyes from the ground, and looking
+sadly on her, continued, “I once told you, in a moment of
+forgetfulness, which I trust you have pardoned, that there is
+no person whose good opinion I so much ambition. I am
+deeply sensible of your goodness.”</p>
+
+<p>“When you first spoke the words you have just repeated,”
+said Adelaide, reproachfully, “you did not speak with the
+cold formality you now do.”</p>
+
+<p>The colour rushed to Warenne’s face, but he restrained his
+feelings. “I spoke in passion then,” said he, “and I speak
+coldly now, because I dare not trust myself to use the language
+my heart would dictate; besides I am not what I was. I
+had then an unsullied character.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must I repeat,” rejoined Adelaide, “that in my estimation
+your character stands as high as ever?—but”—she
+paused for an instant, and then continued, “you must pardon
+my boldness,—but I cannot help doubting, whether your
+grief is solely caused by your apprehension of disgrace.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne would not deny the truth, and he could not acknowledge
+it, without in some measure trespassing, as he conceived,
+upon the kindness of one who, to soothe his sorrows,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>had perhaps overstepped the strict bounds of prudence; he
+preserved therefore silence, and she proceeded:—</p>
+
+<p>“Your hesitation confirms me in my opinion, and now I
+recall to mind (as she spoke, her heart beat almost audibly,
+and the eloquent blood mantled her very brows, at the outrage
+she forced herself to inflict upon her maiden modesty),
+that some weeks ago, long before this present business occupied
+your thoughts, when I asked you if you were ill, you
+replied, that you were ‘ill in mind, and harassed, because you
+could not determine to pursue a certain line of conduct you
+were anxious to adopt, lest in the attempt to acquire your
+own individual happiness, which you confessed to be at stake,
+you should injure another person;’—perhaps you are still
+undecided?”</p>
+
+<p>Again she paused, but not as before, overpowered by the
+struggle within her breast. The Rubicon was passed, and—she
+sat before Warenne, calm and pale, with her head proudly
+thrown back, and her dark eye glancing with the consciousness
+of single-minded innocence, as though she dared the world to
+look into her heart, or question its purity.</p>
+
+<p>He turned a wondering and admiring gaze upon the beautiful
+being who thus questioned him, as it were with authority,
+and answered slowly, “No, I have no indecision
+now to torture me; my path is clear before me, and a joyless
+one it is.”</p>
+
+<p>“I had guessed as much,” resumed Adelaide, “from your
+compressed lips, and sterner manner, even had you not acknowledged
+it. Am I equally right in my further surmise
+that you have decided against yourself, and that, not because
+you are convinced of its being your duty so to do under the
+circumstances of the case, but because the circumstances
+themselves have changed—because, though the benefit to
+yourself, in the world’s opinion at least, may be greater, you
+consider that you have less right to ask it of the person?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne interposed. “Miss Marston, you cannot know—you
+cannot understand—yet you assuredly speak the
+truth.”</p>
+
+<p>Adelaide continued. “Have you forgotten your conversation
+with me the last time we met? Might not that help me
+to read the riddle of your thoughts? and now (a deep blush
+again resuming the empire of her cheek, as she in a clear low
+tone, but with rapid utterance, made the demand)—that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>person, is it not myself?—that purpose, was it not to ask
+my hand?”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne flung himself at her feet. “Pardon, pardon my
+presumption,” said he, “I had, indeed, such aspiring hopes,
+before fortune raised you far above me, and before your father
+by his manner implied his disapprobation of my pretensions;
+but I have endeavoured to check and conceal them, as in
+honour I felt bound to do, and since this late unhappy affair,
+more than ever. You now force me to speak. You must,
+therefore, hear me, though the next moment you drive me
+from your presence. I have loved you almost from the first
+hour that we met. I love you now, fervently, fondly, passionately.
+I honour you as one of the noblest of living beings.
+I would peril every earthly thing I possess, to know that I
+hold a place in your affections. As I hope for mercy, the
+bitterness of my present sorrows arises, I will not say, solely,
+for honour is ever the soldier’s idol, but, principally, from the
+consciousness that henceforth I may not dare to think of you;
+pardon my presumptuous words, you have wrung them from
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will pardon you, now that you have spoken,” replied
+Adelaide, with a faltering voice, and relapsing into her wonted
+timidity of manner, “though, perhaps, had you remained
+silent (a sweet smile of reproach strove with the tears which
+trembled in her dark eyelashes), I should not have forgiven
+you. You do not deserve forgiveness, for you would have
+sacrificed”—she hesitated—“your happiness to your
+vanity.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne seized the hand she tremblingly held out to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you then listen to me?” asked he impetuously;
+“but no, I dream—it cannot be!”</p>
+
+<p>“Must all the assurances come from me?” rejoined
+Adelaide, fixing her tearful eyes upon the ground.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, pardon me, the transition from despair to hope is so
+sudden that I can scarce believe it—but,” said he inquiringly,
+“you said you would listen to me. Will you—can you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not actually said so,” replied Adelaide timidly,
+“but I can—I will.”</p>
+
+<p>Warenne doubted no longer, but gave himself up to the
+full certainty of his happiness, while again and again he told
+Adelaide the tale she knew full well, but was nothing loth to
+hear.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p>
+<p>From that moment fortune seemed to smile on Warenne.
+He had hardly reached his quarters when a letter arrived from
+the secretary to the commander-in-chief, informing him, that
+the king’s decision was forwarded to the commanding officer
+of the regiment; and that he hoped Colonel Warenne would
+be gratified with its purport. It was to the effect, that,
+though the act of disobedience was proved, (as, indeed, it had
+been admitted by Colonel Warenne himself,) yet, in consideration
+of the peculiar circumstances of the case, and the great
+zeal and ability manifested by Colonel Warenne, his majesty
+deemed it right (carefully guarding against such a construction
+of his sentence as might tend to the commission of similar
+breaches of discipline for the future,) to omit the penalty by
+course of law devolving upon him for the act of disobedience;
+and further ordered, that his thanks might be publicly expressed
+to him, by the officer in present command of the regiment,
+in proof of his approbation of Colonel Warenne’s endeavours
+to preserve the peace of his subjects.</p>
+
+<p>Warenne’s heart bounded lightly as he read the welcome
+note:—“Thank Heaven!” he exclaimed, “I can now
+honourably ask Adelaide to be mine;” and hastily inclosing
+it to her, with a few lines expressive of his own happy feelings,
+he despatched it without delay to Epworth.</p>
+
+<p>The night was passed in a state of bewildered excitement,
+amid the congratulations of friends and delightful anticipations
+of the future. On the morrow the regiment was formed
+in square in the market-place. Thousands of people soon
+collected around the soldiery, and every window and house-roof
+that overlooked the scene became thronged; for Warenne’s
+activity in the protection of the people of Fisherton,
+and mild conduct in command of his regiment at Calbury,
+had interested all hearts in his favour.</p>
+
+<p>Frank, as the officer in command, came forward with his
+brother into the centre of the square. Instantly the hum of
+the voices around was hushed, and a silence pervaded the
+whole assembly,—so still, and perfect, that every syllable of
+the despatches, which Frank immediately proceeded to read, in
+a clear though occasionally faltering voice, was distinctly
+heard by the surrounding multitudes. At the former part of
+them, wherein it was recited that Colonel Warenne was proved
+guilty of an act of disobedience, there appeared a look of anxiety
+upon the countenances of some of the bystanders, who feared
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>lest they had been misinformed as to the true purport of the
+sentence; but by degrees all brows cleared. Frank declared
+his Majesty’s approval of his brother’s conduct, and restored
+to him his sword. Then (but not till then) was the attention
+of the assembly interrupted. The blacksmith of the regiment,
+who was the father of the corps, and its pride for his various
+exploits, was seen to raise his hand, and in an instant there
+arose one loud, heart-given cheer from every soldier in the
+regiment. This was too much for Warenne—he burst into
+tears; he soon, however, recovered his self-possession, and
+thanked his brother officers, and brother soldiers, for the kind
+interest they had taken in his fate; then resuming his command
+of the regiment, he hastened to dismiss it, that he might fly
+on the wings of love to Epworth. At his door he found Lord
+Framlingham’s carriage; in his lodgings Lord Framlingham
+and Adelaide. Her fond and faithful eye had witnessed his
+restoration to honour.</p>
+
+<p>It need hardly be said, that Lord Framlingham’s consent
+was not withheld, when he found that Adelaide’s affections
+were fixed on Warenne, nor that their marriage took place in
+the proper course of time. No accident occurred to prevent
+their happiness, and they are now continuing to enjoy it in as
+great, or perhaps greater, perfection than when they were first
+united. Warenne has resigned the lieutenant-colonelcy of his
+regiment, though he is ready to take the field, should war again
+break out. Stuart has succeeded to the lieutenant-colonelcy;
+Frank to the majority vacant by Stuart’s promotion. Henry
+is in parliament,—a liberal politician, but abstaining from the
+full expression of his sentiments from regard to his father, who
+is opposed to every sort of change. Seaforth and Warenne are
+become intimate friends, and Nicholas not unfrequently drops
+in at Epworth, when the best preserves are shot, or favourite
+fox-coverts drawn in the neighbourhood, or when a severe
+south-wester prevents the usual supply of fish at Fisherton
+market; while last, but we trust not least in the affection of
+our reader, Nanny Rudd is—not united to Frank, as might be
+presumed from the long flirtation which existed between them,
+but quietly established in the lodge at Epworth, with Betsy to
+wait on her—her greatest pleasure to talk a little soldiering
+with Warenne, Frank, or Henry, whenever they can listen to
+her, and to explain to them the superiority of (Ruddicè) “the
+<i>fut</i> over the <i>os</i>;” (Anglicè) of the infantry over the cavalry.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_OLD_TALE">AN OLD TALE,<br>
+
+AND OFTEN TOLD.
+</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="1" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Amor che a null’ amato, amar perdona</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Mi prese del costui piacer si forte,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Che, come vedi, ancor non m’abandona.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Dante.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Of late years education has become a subject of general care
+and attention. But there may be excess even in so amiable a
+feeling as the devotion of a parent to a child; that very devotion
+may be productive of mischief to its object. No pains
+are spared in cultivating talents, in giving grace, accomplishments,
+useful information, deep learning; but it may be a
+question whether the wholesome training of the feelings is as
+judiciously attended to as that of the understanding. May
+not the very importance attached to all concerning the young,
+lead them to think too much of themselves? Unless they are
+early taught to consider the feelings of others, is not one strong
+motive for controlling their own (that most difficult and most
+necessary of all lessons) utterly neglected? May not the
+excessive care taken to preserve the purity of the weaker sex
+sometimes lead to consequences the most opposite?</p>
+
+<p>When the follies, the frailties, the weaknesses, of their
+nature are so carefully concealed from them, how can they
+acquire the habit of regulating feelings, the very existence of
+which they have never learned, and against the errors of
+which, therefore, they can never have been cautioned?</p>
+
+<p>“’Tis an old tale, and often told;” yet, perhaps, the frequent
+occurrence of such events as are related in the following
+story may induce one to look back to the possible causes of
+their frequency.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Fitz-Eustace was a person peculiarly calculated to
+inspire an enthusiastic passion to a warm-hearted and devoted
+girl. He was a soldier, and had but lately returned from the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>seat of war. The fame of his exploits had preceded his arrival,
+and in the social circle to which the young Eleanor
+Morton was admitted, as she emerged from girlhood to womanhood,
+he was received as one of the brave defenders of his
+native land, to whom England owed her eminent position in
+the scale of nations.</p>
+
+<p>Although military glory is in itself almost a passport to the
+female heart, its effect is certainly enhanced when the outward
+appearance is correspondingly heroic—and Colonel Fitz-Eustace
+looked like a hero. The commanding step, the lofty
+brow, the dark flashing eye, which might almost gaze on the
+sun without being dazzled; the deep, clear, sonorous voice, the
+rapid yet distinct utterance, which seemed as if it could make
+its commands heard and obeyed, through the roar of cannon
+and the din of battle, combined to form the <i lang="fr">beau ideal</i> of a
+warrior. And if that flashing eye should invariably beam
+with every softer expression, when it dwelt on one favoured
+object,—if that clear deep voice should suddenly become modulated
+to the low thrilling tone of tenderness when it addressed
+one person, what marvel if the bewildered girl yielded
+up her whole soul to the new and engrossing feeling which
+stole upon her, under the mask of admiration and gratitude!</p>
+
+<p>If ever love, fervent, pure, intense, found its shrine in the
+heart of woman, it did in that of Eleanor Moreton. But Colonel
+Fitz-Eustace was poor, and it was not till after many years of
+constancy on both sides that her parents consented to their
+union. She had passed long months of absence, long days of
+sickening hope, long nights of watching when, by the death of
+a distant relation, Colonel Fitz-Eustace became heir presumptive
+to the earldom of Sotheron, and in the mean time
+the possession of a competency which enabled their marriage
+to take place.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! it was not for Eleanor to know unmixed happiness.
+Climate and severe service had undermined her husband’s
+constitution; and although they both fancied that the life of
+untroubled serenity they had before them would restore him
+to health, she had the mortification to see him daily become
+weaker, paler, thinner. She could not blind herself to his illness;
+but she fancied in the autumn that the clear fresh air of
+winter would brace his feeble frame; in the winter, that the
+mildness of spring would give him renewed vigour; in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>spring, that more settled weather would confirm his health;
+in summer, that autumn would bring the desired change.</p>
+
+<p>When, however, that autumn came, she had really to sit by
+his sick bed, to smooth his pillow, to watch his waning
+strength, and at length to hear him, in distinct audible words,
+speak of their approaching separation. She had never, even
+in her imagination, admitted such an idea, far less ever embodied
+it in actual language. When first he spoke she tried
+to smile,—a faint incredulous smile. But no! She looked on
+his haggard cheek, and the appalling truth was there too visibly
+written. She sat motionless, speechless. Nor did tears come
+to her relief till he alluded to the prospect of her becoming a
+mother—then the floodgates were opened—she sobbed convulsively,
+she covered his emaciated hand with kisses—she
+hid her head.</p>
+
+<p>From that moment she never left his room; she scarcely
+ever took her eyes off him. She would not allow any of her
+family to be summoned; for she seemed to dread the participation
+of another in her attendance; she would have been
+jealous of his receiving attention or service from any hand
+but her own. She wished to catch every sound of his voice,
+to hoard up each word, each look, in her memory, as a treasure
+for after years. The moment came,—he died, and she
+survived.</p>
+
+<p>Three months afterwards she became the widowed mother
+of a boy. That moment of rapture, when a mother’s eyes are
+blessed with a sight of her first-born, was to her a moment of
+agony. Then her loss seemed to burst upon her with redoubled
+force. She thought of the happiness she had anticipated,
+of the tenderness with which her husband would have
+hailed the intelligence of her safety, of the pride with which
+he would have looked upon his boy; and she almost turned
+away in anguish.</p>
+
+<p>This was but a passing feeling. The next instant she
+clasped the infant to her bosom; she felt as if the beloved of
+her soul was not wholly torn from her: she had something
+still to live for, something to which her existence was necessary;
+and the whole affections of that loving and blighted
+heart were poured forth upon the unconscious infant. She
+recovered slowly, but she did recover.</p>
+
+<p>Time wore away. She was still young, and might have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>hoped for happiness in a second marriage—but her’s was no
+common love. It had taken root in early life,—it had been
+nurtured in sorrow, almost in hopelessness,—it had for many
+long years been her thought by day, her dream by night,—it
+was so interwoven with her existence, that it could not be
+destroyed but with herself. Devotion to her child, to <em>his</em>
+child, alone afforded relief to her sorrow and her love. She
+remembered all the treasured words of him who was gone;
+she thought over all the plans they had together formed for
+her little Walter’s education, and she considered no sacrifice
+too great that might by possibility be conducive to his health
+or to his advantage. Alas! by so doing, perhaps, she only
+fostered feelings which, in after life, led to most unfortunate
+results.</p>
+
+<p>In the common acceptation of the word, she did not spoil
+her boy. She never gave him the plaything he cried for;
+she never yielded to his entreaties in allowing him what she
+imagined could be hurtful either to his body or his mind; but
+every action of her own, and of every one belonging to her,
+had reference to him alone.</p>
+
+<p>The best room in the house was his sleeping-apartment, as
+being the most airy and wholesome; the largest sitting-room
+was appointed for his playing nursery; if he looked pale, an
+air of consternation pervaded the whole household; if he was
+naughty, the wretchedness of his mother was reflected in the
+serious faces of his attendants; if he was good, every one appeared
+revived; and rewards and pleasures were provided, however
+inconvenient it might be to gratify his fancy of the moment.</p>
+
+<p>Those who were interested for his mother, and wished to
+gratify her feelings, knew that she was only accessible to
+pleasurable emotions through her boy, and they vied with each
+other in attentions and kindness to him.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more natural, more amiable, than the
+widowed mother’s devotion to her only child; and she fancied
+that she was training his mind to all that was right and virtuous;
+for these indulgences were rewards for good behaviour.
+Alas! in her anxious tenderness one great lesson was neglected.
+She forgot to impress upon his mind that he was only one of
+many creatures, all equal in the sight of their Creator. Walter
+necessarily felt that the universe was formed for him alone,
+and that every thing ought to be subservient to his welfare.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
+<p>He was a beautiful and an intelligent boy, with all his
+mother’s depth and tenderness of feeling; with all his father’s
+energy in accomplishing his purpose; but being accustomed
+to find those vehement feelings, those energies, the ruling
+principle of the little world around him, he early learned to
+rule over that little world with the most despotic sway. He
+loved his mother; but he loved her as tyrants love that which
+ministers to their pleasure. She did not dive so deeply into
+his little heart, satisfied with feeling herself necessary to his
+happiness. Her gentle and habitually melancholy countenance
+could be lighted up with joy at any proof of affection on his
+part; and she looked round with proud exultation when he
+cried, and wept aloud, at the prospect of her leaving him to
+pass a few days with a friend. She did not leave him. She
+yielded to this passionate expression of his ungoverned feelings,
+and by so doing confirmed him in the habitual indulgence
+of them.</p>
+
+<p>The period came when it was deemed proper that he should
+go to school. This was a severe trial; but here her duty was
+plain before her. She knew that it would be sacrificing her
+boy’s welfare to her own gratification if she persisted in keeping
+him at home.</p>
+
+<p>At ten years old he went to Eton; and here his natural
+talents, and his animated disposition, soon made him a
+favourite with his master and with his companions. Now,
+for almost the first time, Eleanor tasted unalloyed happiness.
+She was proud of her son; she heard him praised by his
+superiors; she knew he was loved by his comrades; and
+when he returned for the holidays, she looked on him with a
+thrill of rapture, such as she had never expected to feel again.
+Of course no indulgence could be too great for her good, her
+clever boy. Every wish was gratified, every request forestalled.
+For some years she was comparatively a happy
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>Walter increased in health and strength, and beauty and
+talents. He was impetuous, but that was natural in youth;
+he could not bear to be thwarted, but then his wishes were
+generally the offspring of some amiable feeling. If he saw
+distress, his was the open hand to relieve it. Though he
+might perhaps give a guinea to a ragged impostor, and have
+not a sixpence left to bestow on a starving and industrious
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>family, this was only the excess of a generous impulse. How
+could he be blamed for yielding to it?</p>
+
+<p>He left Eton with the character of an excellent scholar,
+and of a fine fellow. He passed through his career at Oxford
+with more than common credit, and his friends augured that
+he might one day make a figure in public life. His future
+prospects were brilliant, and he was in possession of a fortune
+which rendered him independent of any profession, but which
+was not sufficient to stand in lieu of a profession. A large
+landed property, well attended to, and well administered, is
+occupation in itself, and affords scope for great utility; but
+there is a certain medium which prevents exertion, and
+enables a person to pass a life of most complete idleness.</p>
+
+<p>Such was Walter Fitz-Eustace’s situation, when at twenty-one
+he plunged into the vortex of London dissipation, with
+an ardent imagination, impetuous temper, amiable, but ill-regulated
+feelings, and a strong determined will, which had
+never been controlled, and would never brook control. These
+were faults which might lead to much mischief, but which
+could not make him less beloved by a doting mother. This
+was a disposition to make him fearfully the slave of love,
+should it once gain dominion over him. However, he returned
+to his adoring mother in the summer with heart as
+light, and eyes as gay and careless, as when he left her. She
+was overjoyed to have him once more by her side; once more
+to lean on his arm when she took her evening stroll, and to
+look up in his beaming face, and trace in those noble features,
+the forms, the expression of his father’s; to listen to his
+animated accounts of debates in Parliament; to see his cheek
+glow, and his eye flash fire as he talked of liberty, of justice;
+and to anticipate the moment when the talents, of which there
+seemed to be so rich a promise, might excite admiration in the
+senate.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="2" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p lang="fr">Nous, qui sommes bornées en tout, comment le sommes nous si peu quand il
+s’agit de souffrir?—<span class="smcap">Marivaux.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The following spring Fitz-Eustace again passed the season in
+London. He had been disappointed in his hopes of being
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>returned for a borough; the scenes of dissipation which had
+completely occupied him the first year had lost their power
+to interest; and his animated nature was beginning to feel the
+want of some fresh excitement, when he became acquainted
+with Lady Ellersville.</p>
+
+<p>She had been married about three years to a dull, proud,
+cold, handsome man, whom she neither liked nor disliked.
+Let it not be imagined that her character was therefore necessarily
+cold and heartless. She had been brought up in the
+seclusion of her school-room. She had not been allowed to
+associate with other girls, for fear of contamination; she had
+read no books, that had not been previously perused with care
+by her mother or her governess. Her time had been divided
+between her masters and the proper exercise for her health;
+but in these walks she had never visited the cottages of the
+poor, lest she might be exposed to infection, or hear tales of
+woe that might be injurious to the innocence of her pure
+unsullied mind.</p>
+
+<p>The school-room was apart from the rest of the house, and
+she had never been permitted to leave it except at stated and
+appointed times. Nor were any visitors admitted within the
+sacred precincts to interrupt the course of her studies. When
+with her parents, she was treated with all kindness and affection,
+but she had nothing in common with them. She knew
+not their objects of interest; their friends were almost unknown
+to her except by sight; she could not enter into the
+subjects of their conversation; and when she came forth into
+the world, she had learned as many languages, read as much
+history, acquired as many accomplishments as any young lady
+of her age, and had reflected as little upon any subject that
+has to do with real life. She imagined, as many girls do, that
+marriage was as much the object of being brought out, as
+dancing is the object of going to a ball, and looking well, the
+object of dressing for that ball.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, Lord Ellersville proposed to her, and was
+considered by her parents as an unexceptionable <i lang="fr">parti</i>, young,
+handsome, rich, she accepted him calmly, dutifully, and without
+hesitation. She meant to love him, knowing it was right
+so to do, and she persuaded herself that she really did like him
+very much. In high life, romance is not the besetting sin
+of very young ladies. Their characters do not unfold, like
+Ondine; they do not find out they have a soul until it is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>sometimes too late. Matches, apparently the most worldly
+and heartless, are occasionally formed by those, in the recesses
+of whose hearts the warmest affections, the most disinterested
+feelings, are lying dormant. Often, very often, their minds
+are well regulated, their principles strong, and these affections,
+if they cannot find vent in love for their husbands, concentrate
+themselves on their children. But alas! too often also they
+lead to the most lamentable results.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Ellersville unfortunately was not formed to attach
+such a woman as Maria. He was devoted to field sports. In
+August he repaired to the moors to shoot grouse, from whence
+he only returned when partridge shooting commenced, and
+later in the season he went to Melton with a perfect stud of
+horses. This was not flattering to a young and lovely woman.
+Her vanity was mortified. In the spring he attended the
+House of Lords regularly, although he never spoke, and his
+vote merely served to strengthen the government majorities.
+Women are alive to fame of all kinds, and if her husband had
+distinguished himself, Lady Ellersville was one of those who
+would have lived upon his glories; for there was a fund of
+loftiness in her nature which would have enabled her to make
+pride in her husband supply the place of love for him. When
+with her, he was careless and indifferent; for having married
+at the instigation of his mother, in order that the honours of
+Ellersville might not become extinct, her principal claim upon
+his affection, or rather his consideration, ceased, when the young
+heir was snatched by death from its doting mother.</p>
+
+<p>There is something in maternity that opens the heart to all
+kindly emotions of every sort, and it was not till she lost her
+child, that Lady Ellersville first felt what a blank and cheerless
+existence was that of the unloved wife of an unloved
+husband. She then first owned to herself that she did not,
+could not, love the man to whom her fate was united, but
+that there did exist within her warm and ardent feelings
+which now must never be called forth.</p>
+
+<p>A fearful barrier is broken down when such a confession is
+made in the secret soul. Pride, however, was one ruling principle
+in her nature, and she resolved that no one should perceive
+that she imagined herself neglected, or that she felt mortified.
+She mixed in the world. She wished to show her husband
+that she had charms for others, and she gloried in the train of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>admirers that the fascination of her person and manners attracted
+around her. She thought pride must ever secure her
+against any weakness. Alas! pride is a poor substitute for
+principle. Walter had heard of her as the admired Lady
+Ellersville, who piqued herself upon her indifference, and
+upon her powers of attracting, without courting, the homage
+of the other sex.</p>
+
+<p>He soon became one of her train, and almost as soon, tired
+of being only one among many, on whom she lavished the
+varied charms of her conversation. He could not endure to
+be thus confounded among the crowd. He wished to ascertain
+that she considered him as superior to the common herd
+of empty young men, and to do so he naturally put forth all
+his powers of pleasing. His eye was more animated, his jest
+more pointed, his political opinions expressed with more eloquence,
+when she was present.</p>
+
+<p>Had any one said to him, you are leading a virtuous woman
+from the path of duty, he would have denied the imputation
+with horror. Yet such was indeed the fact. Scarcely a day
+elapsed in which they did not see each other, though without
+any preconcerted plan on either side; and the ball, the assembly,
+seemed dull and insipid at which he did not meet the
+lively, the agreeable, the lovely Lady Ellersville. He began
+to feel indignant that the man who was united to such a
+woman should appear so little aware of the treasure he possessed.
+He then wondered whether she had ever loved him,
+whether she had ever preferred anybody; whether, if circumstances
+had not prevented her indulging such a feeling, she
+could ever have liked him.</p>
+
+<p>His thoughts became wholly engrossed by her; when she
+was present he had no eyes, no ears for any one else; and
+although he never breathed a word which could alarm the
+most rigid virtue, the tact with which all human beings are
+endowed upon that subject, gave her heart the delightful consciousness
+of being loved, though nothing was said which
+forced such a conviction upon her understanding.</p>
+
+<p>The refinements of polished life threw a halo round the
+first approaches of vice—of vice, which if it appeared in its
+own form would be recognised as such, and avoided with
+loathing; but it assumes the mask of all that is harmless and
+engaging—innocent conversation, gay sociability—and does
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>not throw off the disguise, till it has already made deep inroads
+on the peace and on the morals.</p>
+
+<p>To the fallen and degraded, whom distress, misfortune,
+friendlessness may have driven to a life from which their conscience
+and their feelings often revolt, how wilfully, how
+wantonly criminal must the pampered minion of luxury appear,
+who errs in the midst of plenty, pleasure, honour!
+Alas! it is that very profusion which gives leisure for the
+heart and the imagination to go astray. The lowly know not
+the dangers to which the great are exposed. Still less can the
+great estimate the temptations to which the poor and friendless
+are liable. Let each be lenient to their erring sisters!
+Nor let those who, united to the object of their choice, are
+happy in the interchange of mutual affection, exult too proudly
+in their irreproachable character and untarnished reputation.
+Rather let them thankfully and humbly acknowledge the
+mercy that has cast their lot where their inclination and their
+duty coincide; which has spared them the misery of warm
+feelings sent back upon the ardent heart which gave them
+birth, and the temptation of meeting with kindness, where it
+would be sinful to indulge the emotions such kindness is calculated
+to excite.</p>
+
+<p>Why should I trace the progress of events unfortunately of
+too common occurrence? Walter was the first whose eyes
+were opened to the nature of his own feelings; but Lady
+Ellersville, whose heart, under her guarded exterior, was
+teeming with all the affections which are doomed to form the
+joy and respectability, or the misery and degradation of woman,
+at length made the fatal confession to herself. She would
+have avoided him, and sought safety in flight; but Walter was
+too little in the habit of self-denial quietly to relinquish the
+society he found necessary to his happiness. Had Mrs. Fitz-Eustace
+been aware what were the dangers to which her son’s
+morals and his welfare were exposed, how little would she
+have rejoiced in his accession to the earldom of Sotheron, an
+event which occurred about this period, and which promised
+to afford scope for those talents which were his mother’s pride.
+She had scarcely allowed her heart to dilate with the pleasurable
+emotions from which even her chastened spirit could not
+defend itself, when she was doomed to a new and unlooked-for
+sorrow.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span></p>
+<p>The assumed coldness of Lady Ellersville only excited and
+increased the ardour of Walter’s passion; for he loved her with
+the uncontrolled vehemence which characterised all his feelings.</p>
+
+<p>The sequel may easily be guessed. The moment came
+when the confession locked in the secret bosom of each, was
+made to the other. Lord Ellersville at length became jealous
+and umbrageous. Her proud spirit could not endure to quail
+under the glance of a man she despised. To avoid suspicion
+she plunged into actual guilt.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! if those who headlong follow their own impulses
+could pause to contemplate the misery they inflict! What
+were the past sorrows of Eleanor Fitz-Eustace to the agony
+she now endured, when her son, the consolation of her widowhood,
+the pride of heart, to whose future career she looked
+forward with high aspirations after fame and honour, whose
+name, when it was mentioned, made her faded countenance
+light up with a gleam of exultation, became a degraded and
+sinful man; that name avoided by her acquaintance, and only
+mentioned by her friends in a low, subdued, mysterious
+voice!</p>
+
+<p>Those only who have felt the delightful, trembling hopes
+of a parent, who have witnessed the gradual unfolding of the
+infant mind, watched the ripening intellect, revelled in the
+anticipation of future excellence, can estimate the full measure
+of wretchedness which now overwhelmed the unfortunate
+Eleanor.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile were the erring pair happy? No; after the
+first wild tumult of mingled emotions had subsided, Lord
+Sotheron attempted to write to his mother. But many days
+elapsed before he could bring himself to finish a letter which
+he felt it possible to send to his virtuous, his devoted, his
+broken-hearted parent. From that moment began the punishment
+of their misconduct. He was not accustomed to conceal
+his feelings in order to spare those of another. Restless and
+agitated himself, he tore the unfinished scrawls to pieces; he
+paced the apartment with hasty strides, not remembering that
+every sign of uneasiness in him was a severe pang through
+Maria’s heart.</p>
+
+<p>Fearful of being recognised, shrinking from the eye of
+her very menials, Lady Ellersville experienced all the tortures
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>that persons naturally proud and susceptible, yes, and naturally
+virtuous, must endure, when conscious that every one has a
+right to look down upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Under a feigned name they resided at an obscure watering-place,
+anxiously expecting the moment when the divorce should
+pass, and hoping that she might at least become the wife of Lord
+Sotheron before the birth of a child, whose illegitimacy would
+be a lasting reproach to them. Unfortunately, by some unlooked-for
+circumstances, the divorce did not pass till the following
+session, and a boy was born, in whose unconscious face
+its mother could not look without a feeling of guilt towards the
+innocent child.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron meanwhile was listless and unoccupied. He
+was never unkind; but his mode of life was little suited to an
+animated young man in the very flower of manhood, and he
+could not, indeed he did not often attempt, to veil his ennui.
+She was bowed down with humiliation; she could not exert
+herself. Where were all her brilliancy, her wit, the variety,
+the grace of her conversation, which had so enchanted all
+around? She felt she was dull, and that he on whom her every
+hope depended would be driven to other society for amusement.
+She strove to be entertaining; but how different was
+that forced pleasantry from the gaiety of a mind at ease, inspired
+by the consciousness of success and admiration. He
+guessed her motive, and for a moment exerted himself to
+appear amused. But how different also was that forced
+laugh from the admiring glance which once beamed applause
+at her every word, which unconsciously followed her every
+movement!</p>
+
+<p>In wedded life there are a thousand common subjects of
+interest, little domestic concerns to be discussed; preparation
+for the reception of friends to be arranged; there are a thousand
+pleasing recollections of past scenes of enjoyment, and
+anticipations of the prospects of their children, which prevent
+the <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> from wearying those whose characters and tempers
+are really in unison. But Walter and Lady Ellersville
+had no friends to prepare for, none to talk of, in all the unrestrained
+confidence of intimacy; they could not revert to
+past scenes without recalling those from whom she was for
+ever divided; they could not retrace the first dawnings of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>their mutual affection without reviving the recollection of errors
+over which they would gladly draw a veil; and then—they
+dared not allude to the future lot of their child, for that
+was a subject of unmingled pain to both.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="3" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">And is this eye, with tears o’erfraught,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">To thine no longer known?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">This eye that read the tender thought</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Erewhile soft trembling in thine own;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">By thee, alas! to weep since taught,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And all its lustre flown?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Unpublished Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>At length the divorce passed, and Maria became the wife of
+him whom she loved with increasing tenderness; for all she
+had given up for his sake only endeared him the more to
+her. Man, on the contrary, though he may feel kindness,
+pity, gratitude, to woman, for the sacrifices she has made to
+him, considers her as in some measure responsible for those
+he has made to her.</p>
+
+<p>Maria was now for the first time to see Lord Sotheron’s
+mother. Mrs. Fitz-Eustace, though bowed down by this last
+heavy affliction, was too gentle to be soured by it. She
+promised to receive her, when once she was really her daughter-in-law.
+She only wished to contribute, as far as in her lay,
+to the welfare or the comfort of the beloved son, who, though
+no longer the pride and joy of her heart, was still to her the
+most precious thing on earth.</p>
+
+<p>What were Maria’s feelings as she drew near the abode of
+that devoted mother, whose fate, already sad, she had so
+utterly blasted? When she thought of presenting to her a
+grandchild who might not bear the name to which the eldest
+son of Lord Sotheron ought to have been entitled? No village
+bells were ringing to greet their arrival, no old and faithful
+servants crowding the door to welcome their master’s bride.
+She thought of her reception at Ellersville Castle. The approach
+was thronged with villagers, the air resounded with
+the chimes of the neighbouring parishes, the castle terrace was
+surrounded with the tenantry, the great steps were lined with
+servants, all eager to show attention to their new lady. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>was then happy, thoughtless, innocent; she could then look
+back into herself without remorse or shame, and she felt, as
+the carriage drew up at Mrs. Fitz-Eustace’s door, and as they
+waited till the servant answered the bell, that not all the
+fervour and depth of her devotion to Walter could compensate,
+even in this world, for the loss of self-esteem, and of respectability
+in the eyes of others.</p>
+
+<p>They were ushered into the drawing-room by a grey-headed
+man, who greeted Walter with respectful but serious affection.
+He said he would let his mistress know. They heard doors
+open and shut rapidly, hurried steps in the passage, the
+whispering of subdued female voices, still Mrs. Fitz-Eustace
+did not appear; and they felt that his mother had need to
+summon all her courage for the dreaded interview. At length
+she entered, and her subdued, mild, broken-hearted countenance,
+went more to Maria’s heart than all she had hitherto
+experienced.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fitz-Eustace embraced her son with the tenderest
+affection; she kissed Maria, she took her grandchild in her
+arms, she did every thing that kindness could prompt; but
+they saw the quivering lip, they heard the unsteady voice, and
+Maria’s shame and remorse nearly overpowered her. Mrs.
+Fitz-Eustace asked some indifferent questions about the weather
+and the journey, and Maria answered it was hot or cold,
+the journey long or short, without knowing what she uttered.
+Lord Sotheron, anxious to escape from a position that was so
+unpleasant to him, left the room, and they remained alone.
+A few more attempts were made to keep up a languishing
+conversation; Maria longed to throw herself at the feet of
+Walter’s mother, and there to breathe forth all her agony of
+self-accusation, and to implore her pardon for the sorrow she
+had brought upon her grey hairs, but there was a gentle reserve
+about the grief of Eleanor that awed, while it touched,
+that repressed all outpourings of the heart, while it deeply
+interested; and Maria took refuge in busying herself over
+the baby till Mrs. Fitz-Eustace proposed to show her her
+room.</p>
+
+<p>When Maria at length found herself alone, she gave way
+to tears that were perhaps more bitter than any she had
+hitherto shed. She had wept for herself, she had wept her
+fault, she had wept her degradation, but never did she feel
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>that degradation so acutely as at this moment. Her sorrows
+appeared to her such guilty ones, that they revolted her; while
+Eleanor’s, on the contrary, wore a character of holiness, of
+sanctity. And that she should have filled the measure of her
+bitter cup,—that she should have crushed the broken spirit!
+oh! it was almost too much for endurance.</p>
+
+<p>The dressing-bell rang. It is wonderful how much those
+who have lived in the world, and whose feelings may be
+least under the salutary control of principle, mechanically
+submit to that of <i lang="fr">les convenances</i> of society. She repressed
+her tears, she calmed her sobs, dressed herself, and went down
+to dinner with a composed voice and tranquil manner. The
+dinner was as uncomfortable as one might expect it to be,
+under the existing circumstances. The succeeding days were
+passed in the same restraint. The moment never came in
+which they alluded to past events, and although they all felt
+kindly towards each other, there was not the free interchange
+of thought which alone renders a domestic circle truly happy.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till they had resided for some months under the
+same roof that the barrier of reserve between them was broken
+down.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the birth of a second boy, Maria was lying on
+her sofa, while the young Edward was playing on the floor.
+Eleanor caught the expression of anguish with which Maria
+gazed on the eldest; their eyes met, and that glance revealed
+to each all that was passing in the mind of the other. At
+that moment all coldness, all reserve, was broken through.
+Throwing herself at the feet of her mother-in-law, and hiding
+her face in her hands, Maria sobbed out, “Forgive me! oh,
+forgive me! pardon the ruin I have brought on your son, the
+disgrace I have brought on your grandchild! No—no! it
+is impossible! kind and gentle as you are, you must—you
+must hate me, as well as despise me.”</p>
+
+<p>Touched and alarmed at this agony, Mrs. Fitz-Eustace
+raised her, soothed her, bade her be composed. But having
+once opened upon the subject, she poured forth all the pent-up
+feelings of remorse and shame that had so long been consuming
+her. They mingled their tears, and Eleanor’s gentle
+words of compassion and forgiveness restored her to something
+like composure.</p>
+
+<p>From this time there was no thought of her soul hidden
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>from her mother-in-law, and Mrs. Fitz-Eustace’s maternal
+partiality saw, in the irresistible attractions of her son, an
+excuse for Maria’s fault, which made pity almost usurp the
+place of blame. It became the mother’s task to console her
+who had blighted all the prospects of that beloved son; for
+Maria saw and felt too well that the life of aimless, listless
+idleness that Lord Sotheron led, was affecting his spirits, his
+temper, and his character; she knew and felt to her heart’s
+core that her eldest boy would always have to struggle against
+the flaw in his birth.</p>
+
+<p>By Eleanor’s advice they resolved to pass some time on the
+continent, till the painful notoriety at present attached to their
+name had in some measure subsided, and it was not till after
+the lapse of two or three years that they took possession of
+their magnificent mansion of Stonebury.</p>
+
+<p>Many were the family discussions to which the arrival of
+Lord and Lady Sotheron gave rise. The gay wished to participate
+in the society which they thought would probably be
+assembled at Stonebury; the easy and good-natured understood
+that Lady Sotheron had conducted herself with the
+greatest propriety since her present marriage, and were inclined
+to forget any past misconduct; the vulgar enjoyed the
+opportunity of protecting a person of rank and fortune. On
+the other hand, the rigid urged the unanswerable argument,
+that unless a decided line be drawn between virtue and vice,
+there must be an utter end of all morality in the land. They
+naturally were shocked that the woman who had abandoned
+all her duties should be at the head of society, enjoying rank,
+fortune, and even respectability.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! if they could have read the heart of her whose
+worldly prosperity thus excited their virtuous indignation,
+they would have found her as much an object of pity as those
+who have erred should ever be, to those who need not shrink
+from the reproaches of conscience or the judgment of their
+fellow creatures. Not one of these visits passed without some
+occurrence, which to a sensitive mind gave exquisite pain.</p>
+
+<p>Children are usually a great resource during the formal
+quarter of an hour which precedes a dinner in the country,
+and on one of these occasions a young lady, in talking to the
+eldest boy, called him Lord Stonebury. This touched Maria
+where she was most vulnerable, when the young lady’s mother
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>immediately addressing the younger boy by the title of Lord
+Stonebury, covered her with tenfold confusion. It proved
+that her story was all known, and all remembered; and she,
+who was once the high-bred, the self-possessed Lady Ellersville,
+whose manner of receiving her company had been the
+admiration of the most polished society, was awkward, hurried;
+she addressed people by wrong names, did not hear
+when she was spoken to; there was a restlessness in her eye,
+and a rapidity in her utterance, very unlike the careless grace
+with which, without appearing to do anything, she once contrived
+to put every one at their ease. She feared she was not
+civil enough, and a sensation of humility prompted her to
+change her seat for the purpose of addressing some one to
+whom she had not already spoken,—then a movement of pride
+made her spirit rebel at so courting vulgar people, who would
+once have thought themselves honoured by a passing acknowledgment
+from her. This gave her manner an air of constraint.
+There was something out of keeping, and many
+wondered where was the charm of address which had been
+reckoned so bewitching.</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion the conversation happened to turn on
+the comparative beauty of the Lady D——s. One person
+remarked, that she “had always thought poor Lady Anne’s
+countenance the most attractive of all.” “I never saw her,”
+observed another, who had lately taken a place in the neighbourhood.
+“Oh, no! She married unfortunately, poor
+thing! and ran away with Captain B——. It was a sad
+business.”</p>
+
+<p>Maria’s burning face betrayed her confusion. The lady
+had scarcely uttered the unfortunate words, when she recollected
+before whom she was speaking. She stopped short, and
+a dead silence prevailed. She tried hastily to speak on some
+other subject, but every one felt awkward, and her unassisted
+efforts again subsided into silence. Lady Sotheron, distressed
+at the allusion, was confounded at its being seized by others,
+and the whole evening was to her one of painful endurance.
+At other times she suffered almost equally from the studious
+avoidance of topics that might in any way be applicable to
+herself. In solitude her reflections were all bitter, and in
+society something constantly occurred which brought her
+situation more painfully to her recollection.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span></p>
+<p>Walter meantime found his home disagreeable. He was
+beset by people not of his own selection, and who were not in
+any way suited to him. He determined to repair to London,
+to attend the House of Lords, and to seek interest and excitement
+in the line which he had often been told he was
+formed to pursue with success. Maria was delighted at this
+resolution. She felt that if he could fulfil an honourable
+political career, she should not be so guilty of having blasted
+his fate; his mother might once more be proud of her only
+child, instead of mourning in secret over his blighted prospects.</p>
+
+<p>They went to London, and Lord Sotheron again mixed in
+the society he at once liked and adorned. His spirits revived,
+his eager temper was on fire, and he gave himself up to politics
+with an ardour the more vehement from the state of indolent
+vacuity in which he had latterly passed his time. She was
+rejoiced to see those eyes again beam with animation, to perceive
+energy in every movement, instead of the listless languor
+she had so often deplored. She scarcely remarked that she
+passed hours, days, alone, so engrossed was she in his interests;
+and when he made a brilliant and successful maiden speech,
+she felt proud, nay, almost happy, and wrote to his mother
+with more confidence than she had ever done before.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron soon became a person of some importance,
+and he was invited to all the political dinners of the party to
+which he had attached himself. He thought it necessary to
+give dinners in return—and now arose discussions which
+made Maria’s situation more galling to her than ever. The
+wives of these great personages did not visit her, and how
+awkward to preside at one of these grand entertainments with
+no ladies to support her, except the two or three, who from
+family connections associated with her, but who were in no
+wise connected with the persons whom Walter wished to cultivate!
+Her sensitive mind recoiled from the whole discussion.</p>
+
+<p>She entreated him to give only men dinners, not to struggle
+after that which they could not accomplish; and she assured
+him she had rather remain in her own room, than go through
+the mortifications and difficulties that must attend her making
+one of the party. He but faintly opposed her resolution, for
+in fact, ambition had taken possession of his soul, and he
+blindly followed its impulses. His time was completely occupied
+with debates, committees, dinners, which became more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>and more frequent, and Maria sat in her boudoir, eating her
+solitary morsel, and hearing the bustle of the servants waiting
+upon the party feasting below. Still she would not let herself
+repine at his having at length found scope for his talents.
+She would not wish it otherwise, but she could not help feeling
+miserable.</p>
+
+<p>She attended still more to her children. They were always
+with her, and in their infantine prattle she often found pleasure;
+but even from that source she occasionally drank the
+bitter draught of shame. One day they had just returned
+from a walk in the square, where they had been playing with
+some young companions, when Edward said to her, “Mamma,
+why don’t they call me lord? That little boy in blue says,
+he is called lord, because he is the eldest. Now, I am the
+eldest, and yet Charles and Emily are called lord and lady,
+and I am not.”</p>
+
+<p>This was more than she could endure. She tried to
+murmur something, but her lips refused to move, her tongue
+to utter. She blushed, she quailed under the innocent enquiring
+eye of her child. She hid her face in his curly locks,
+she drew him closer to her, she smothered him with kisses,
+she wept over him, she sobbed, till the child, frightened at
+the violent emotions he had so unconsciously excited, felt
+there was a mystery, and ever after avoided the subject with
+that precocious tact which children so often evince.</p>
+
+<p>Another time he was reading a childish History of England,
+and when he came to a passage that treated of hereditary
+succession, he said, “Yes—the kingdom descends to the
+king’s eldest son, as papa’s land will descend to me;” anxious,
+as children always are, to illustrate by some familiar example.
+She thrilled through every nerve; but she thought it would be
+too cruel to bring him up in this error, from which he must
+one day be painfully undeceived. She summoned up all her
+courage, and without daring to reflect on what might be his
+next question, she forced herself to utter. “My dear! you
+will not inherit your father’s lands.” There was a constrained
+solemnity in the tone which awed the boy. He felt he was
+on forbidden ground, and he said no more.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="4" style="text-decoration: none;">IV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">For I have drunk the cup of bitterness,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And having drunk therein of heavenly grace,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">I must not put away the cup of shame.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Years rolled on. Lord Sotheron was more and more engrossed
+in public affairs, and the time at length arrived when
+Maria regretted those days when he was unknown, and unnoticed,
+but when she at least enjoyed the society of him for
+whom she had sacrificed every thing.</p>
+
+<p>Her boys went to a public school. It was not till they had
+been there for some time, that Maria remarked there was a
+great change in Edward. His spirits, which had been constantly
+and exuberantly gay, were now only occasionally elevated.
+His temper, formerly mild and even, was now sometimes
+stern and morose; if his brother thwarted him, he
+yielded immediately, but it was with a sort of proud humility.
+Instead of asking the servants to mend any of the implements
+of his boyish amusements, and applying to them for all the
+various little services so often asked, and so willingly performed,
+he would pass whole days mending his own tools;
+he would walk off to the village to get his knife sharpened,
+and scrupulously pay for it; in short, there seemed to pervade
+every action, a desire not to be beholden to any one.
+He was tender to his mother, fond of his sister, kind to his
+brother; still there was something unsatisfactory in his manner.</p>
+
+<p>His pursuits were solitary; he did not want the companionship
+of his brother; and Charles, in his turn, would say,
+“Oh! Edward goes his own way, so I shall go mine.” It
+sometimes occurred that both could not ride, or that both
+could not shoot, or that there was only one place in the carriage
+on some excursion of pleasure. On such occasions,
+Edward invariably said he preferred staying at home. At
+length the feeling that was rankling in the bosom of the elder
+boy was inadvertently betrayed.</p>
+
+<p>Edward had seated himself next to his mother at dinner,
+when Charles said, laughingly, “This is too bad, Edward;
+you sat by mamma yesterday; it is not fair play. Come,
+turn out!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span></p>
+<p>With a flushed cheek, and an angry eye, the colour mounting
+to his very temples, he exclaimed in a tone but little justified
+by the occasion:—</p>
+
+<p>“I won’t! I have as good a right as you to sit by my mother
+at least. From <em>this</em> place you shall not turn me out.”</p>
+
+<p>Charles answered, “Why, Edward, you are grown so
+crabbed, I don’t know what is come to you; however, I shall
+have merrier playfellows than you, when I get back to
+school.”</p>
+
+<p>Maria more than suspected that Edward had learned the
+history of his own birth; and she also perceived that the indignant
+sense of honour, and the independent spirit, which if
+properly directed, might lead to all that is most brilliant and
+admirable, were likely, in Edward’s unfortunate circumstances,
+to spoil a disposition naturally amiable and noble.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! how painfully did it then strike her, that her fault
+was thus visited upon her children! She saw the probability
+of disunion between the brothers, and it was only by true
+and cordial affection that their relative situations could be
+sweetened to either of them. She reflected deeply and bitterly
+upon the subject. Profiting perhaps by the errors in her own
+education, she had long come to the conclusion that the best
+mode of fitting human creatures for the world in which they
+are to live, and the station they are to fill in that world, is to
+tell them the truth upon all subjects, and to make them acquainted
+with the feelings and interests of their parents.</p>
+
+<p>On all other topics she had done so, as much as possible;
+but in this instance, could she herself be the person to lay
+bare her own and their father’s errors? And yet, if Edward
+already knew the fact of his illegitimacy, it were better he
+should learn to view his mother with pity, than with contempt;
+better he should know how truly she repented her
+fault, than imagine she was hardened in guilt; better that
+Charles should learn his own superior prospects in a manner
+that should open and soften his heart towards his brother.
+And then her daughter Emily! Would it not be cruel to
+leave her in ignorance of her mother’s situation till she came
+out into the world, when the painful truth must be forced
+upon her in the most humiliating manner, by a thousand inevitable
+circumstances?</p>
+
+<p>She confided her mental struggles to Mrs. Fitz-Eustace, who
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>almost constantly resided at Stonebury, and from whom she
+had now no hidden thought.</p>
+
+<p>Eleanor kindly offered to spare her the painful task; but
+she recalled to her the restraint that had chilled their intercourse,
+while the one subject of strong and mutual interest
+had been avoided; and she also reminded her, how, from the
+moment they had poured out their hearts to each other, all
+coldness, all reserve, had vanished for ever.</p>
+
+<p>“How necessary is it, then, that I, and my children,
+should understand each other’s hearts! Yes, whatever it may
+cost me, I will tell them all; and if by suffering, guilt may
+be atoned, I shall thus, in some degree, expiate my offence, for
+Heaven alone can judge how keenly I shall suffer?”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron had been for some time absent, nor was he
+likely to return. His party had lately come into power, and
+he was eagerly desirous of a public situation of trust, for
+which his talents particularly fitted him. His absences were
+become so frequent, and of such long duration, that Maria had
+lost the habit of referring her every action to him.</p>
+
+<p>Emily was thirteen, and Edward fifteen; when Maria one
+morning summoned them all three to her dressing-room. Her
+cheek was pale, her eye, though sad, was resolved. She called
+each to her side, and she imprinted upon each smooth open
+brow, a fervent kiss. Then clasping her hands, she uttered:—</p>
+
+<p>“May God bless you, my children, and strengthen you and
+preserve you in that innocence which is the only thing to be
+truly and earnestly prayed for! May He in his mercy bless
+you! My children, the blessing of a mother is good for the
+souls of her children, let that mother’s errors be what they
+may. Come nearer, dears. Let me hold your hands; and
+you must promise you will still love me. I am going to confess
+to you, my children, the error;—yes, I will utter the
+word—the crime of my youth. I was a married woman
+when I first knew your father. But he to whom I was married
+did not care for me; perhaps it was my fault he did
+not—I will not throw any blame on him. My heart was
+desolate! Your father saw me unhappy, and he pitied me—he
+loved me. I forgot my duties, forgot the vow I had
+breathed at the altar, in the sight of God; I left the husband
+I had sworn to love, and gave the love which was his due to
+another. This is a dreadful, a heinous sin, my children, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>this sin did your mother commit! But you have been early
+taught to read your Bible, and you have there learned that
+there is more joy in Heaven over one repentant sinner, than
+over ninety and nine just men who need no repentance. Oh,
+blessed words! How many thousand thousand times have I
+read, and re-read ye! Ye alone have preserved me from sinking
+under the load of my guilt. Yes, my children, I have
+repented; deeply, earnestly, bitterly, unceasingly. I may
+truly say, my sin is ever before me. Oh! if repentance can
+find mercy at the throne of Heaven, let it find mercy at your
+hands, my children! Pardon, pardon your erring mother!”
+and worked up beyond her powers of endurance, she threw
+herself on her knees at their feet.</p>
+
+<p>They rushed to her, they kissed her, they raised her to the
+sofa, they soothed her, they wept over her, they lavished on
+her every most touching expression of affection, they assured
+her of their love, their respect, their veneration.</p>
+
+<p>“Stop! stop! beloved ones. Do not let your tenderness
+to me blind you to the reality of my sin. Love me! Yes,
+love me still, but I must not let that love confound in your
+young minds the distinctions between virtue and vice. I am
+not yet come to the end. I have to tell you how the errors of
+the fathers are visited upon the children.</p>
+
+<p>“Even you, my Emily, know that unless parents are solemnly
+married according to the law of the land, the children
+do not inherit their name or their property, and alas! alas!
+you, Edward, came into this weary world, before my former
+marriage was cancelled. Upon your head are my sins visited.
+Yes: and upon yours Charles, and yours Emily, for you
+have a mother, whom you must not honour, for whom you
+must blush before the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, mamma, mamma,” they cried at once, “we love
+you, we honour you! Oh! that we could prove how much
+we love you,—better than ever!”</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks, thanks! my own dear, innocent, good children!
+And would you really do all you can to sooth my anguish, to
+lessen the keenness of my remorse?”</p>
+
+<p>Edward exclaimed, “Oh, mother, don’t talk so—any
+thing—every thing!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then listen, Edward! I have remarked your altered
+manner. I felt certain that at school you had heard some of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>the circumstances of your birth, and I resolved that from my
+lips you should all learn the truth, the whole truth. It was,
+if possible, more painful to imagine you hearing your mother
+scornfully spoken of, than to be my own accuser. Oh! my
+boy! if you knew the agony of self-accusation that racked
+me, when I saw you thus reserved and melancholy, you would
+have thrown off your gloom. I know you would! Oh! Edward,
+in pity to your penitent parent, be once more your gay,
+ingenuous self. You know how dear you are to every one in
+this house. You need not wrap yourself up in solitary pride.
+If my children should not love each other, then am I punished
+indeed!” And she pressed her hands tight over her eyes, as if
+to shut out the horrid picture.</p>
+
+<p>Edward burst into tears, threw his arms round Charles, and
+gave him a warm, and heart-felt fraternal kiss.</p>
+
+<p>“And you, Charles, who have bright prospects before you,
+as far as worldly prosperity tends to happiness, think whose
+fault deprives your brother of these advantages, and for my
+sake love him, Charles, more dearly than brother ever loved
+brother.”</p>
+
+<p>“That I will indeed, mamma,” cried Charles.</p>
+
+<p>“My Emily! If you would honour your mother, prove
+to the world that she could guide your mind to the strictest
+virtue. Let your conduct be such as in some measure to redeem
+my fame!”</p>
+
+<p>The effect of this scene upon her children was such as to
+repay Maria for all it had cost her. The brothers were
+inseparable. Edward became cheerful, and he willingly accepted
+all the little kindnesses that Charles omitted no opportunity
+of offering him. In Charles, there was a tone of
+deference to his elder brother, which was very winning, and
+which went straight to the generous heart of Edward.</p>
+
+<p>One fine winter’s morning Mrs. Fitz-Eustace and Maria
+were watching the two noble boys, as with keepers, dogs, and
+guns, they were before the windows preparing for a shooting
+expedition. They were talking and laughing joyously with
+each other, and Maria turning to Mrs. Fitz-Eustace with tearful,
+but beaming eyes, exclaimed, “I was right, dearest mother,
+was I not, to tell them every thing? Painful as it was, it has
+had the desired effect. Oh! how can parents who have
+nothing to blush for, maintain a causeless and mysterious
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>reserve towards their children! Perhaps many a prodigal
+might have been prudent and thoughtful, if he had known
+how, for his sake, his parents were struggling to keep up a
+decent appearance in the world. Confidence produces confidence,
+and children would have the habit of communicating
+each feeling as it arose, and while it was yet capable of being
+checked, or guided aright.” And as she spoke, she thought
+if she had felt that tender, fearless, confidence in her parents,
+perhaps her mother might have read the guilty secret of her
+heart, and have guarded her against its fatal consequences.</p>
+
+<p>The office which Lord Sotheron had so eagerly sought was
+given to another, and there appeared in the papers a paragraph
+alluding to the disappointed hopes of a certain noble earl, and
+the necessity that morality should be upheld by the private, as
+well as the public, character of those in high official situations.</p>
+
+<p>This paragraph met the eye of the two persons to whom it
+could give the most acute pain. It crushed, it humbled Maria
+to the very dust. She felt she was, in truth, a blight upon
+her husband’s prospects, and she sunk under the painful conviction.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron returned to his home, humbled also, but
+soured and embittered. He was angry with himself for
+having condescended to solicit, indignant with ministers for
+having refused, and estranged from Maria, whom he looked
+upon as the clog which must ever prevent his rising in the
+career for which he felt himself formed. Hitherto, although
+neglectful, he had never been unkind; indeed, on any occasion
+of illness or distress, he had been attentive and devoted; she
+had flattered herself that, although often dormant, his affection
+for her was still all there. But ambition, like the love of
+gambling, when once it possesses the mind, gradually swallows
+up all other feelings, and he was now captious, sullen, he
+spoke sharply to her, seemed bored with what she said, and
+occasionally implied that she could know nothing of what was
+going on in the world. She suffered in silence. This was
+not a case in which open communication would be of any avail.
+When did a discussion ever call back to life extinct affection?
+Affection once extinct, what material had she to work upon?
+There were moments when she thought it hard <em>he</em> should be
+the person, in manner, if not in words, to reproach her for her
+error. At least that error was mutual, and she remembered
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>the arguments, the entreaties, the vows, the oaths he had employed
+to lead her to the very step for which he now despised
+her. But oftener, far oftener, she found excuses for him in
+that heart where he was so dearly cherished; she reflected how
+galling it must be to a proud and eager temper to have sued
+in vain; she looked back with tenderness and gratitude to the
+many proofs of affection he had given her in former times,
+and she pitied rather than resented his present irritation.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fitz-Eustace remarked with sorrow the altered temper
+of her son, but her health, which had been of late declining,
+had in some measure communicated its languor to her mind.
+She was gradually fading away, but so gradually, that it was
+not till she was very near her end, that her son began to take
+alarm.</p>
+
+<p>Extreme in every thing, he was angry with her for not
+having warned him of the state of her health. He reproached
+her for having allowed her sickness to creep on without calling
+their attention to the alarming symptoms of which she was
+herself aware. She gently smiled, and told him death had no
+terrors for one, for whom life had no charms.</p>
+
+<p>“If I had seen you happy—” she added, “but as it is, I
+look forward almost with impatience to the moment of re-union
+with him from whom my heart has never for one moment been
+severed.”</p>
+
+<p>As Walter and Maria knelt by their mother’s death-bed, as
+she blessed them both with her faint sweet voice, their hearts
+once more opened to each other, and they mingled tears of
+sorrow which to Maria were not wholly devoid of sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>As she gazed on the marble brow and the closed lids of
+that placid countenance, she envied the spirit that was at rest,
+the heart that was not torn by a thousand conflicting feelings,
+and she longed to be laid in the quiet grave beside her. Alas!
+she had not yet exhausted the varied sufferings awaiting one</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Who, loving virtue, but by passion driven</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To worst extremes, must never, never more</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Honour herself——”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Yet Maria had been more fortunate than many under the
+same circumstances. She had not been deserted by him for
+whom she had sacrificed every thing; on the contrary, he had
+made every reparation in his power. She had been kindly received
+by his family, she enjoyed rank and riches, her children
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>were dutiful and affectionate, no adventitious circumstances
+aggravated her wretchedness.</p>
+
+<p>The miseries described in the preceding narrative are simply
+those to which every erring woman is liable.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="5" style="text-decoration: none;">V.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent26">“But guilt,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And all our sufferings?” said the Count.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The Goth replied, “Repentance taketh sin away,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Death remedies the rest.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Emily was nearly eighteen, and she was to appear in the
+world as became the daughter of Lord Sotheron. They went
+to London. Maria made up her mind never to accompany
+her daughter, even to the few places where she might be
+kindly received. She thought there was more dignity in
+voluntarily retiring than in appearing occasionally at some
+houses, and consequently proving that she was not seen elsewhere
+because she would not be admitted.</p>
+
+<p>Invitations for Lord Sotheron and Lady Emily Fitz-Eustace
+flocked to the house, and Maria received the cards
+from the porter’s hand with a tightness of heart, a difficulty
+of breathing, at which she was herself surprised. “Can I,”
+she thought, “who have endured such real sorrow, be so
+moved by a contemptible invitation to a foolish ball?” But
+she blushed crimson, as she felt her daughter’s eye glance over
+the card on which her mother’s name was omitted.</p>
+
+<p>However, she rejoiced that Emily knew the truth; that she
+had not now to learn it. The evening came, when the lovely
+Lady Emily Fitz-Eustace was to make her <i lang="fr">début</i> in the great
+world. Her mother presided at her toilet. She smoothed
+every curl, she arranged every fold. Her hands trembled, her
+eye was haggard, her voice was unsteady, but she fought hard
+not to allow her emotion to be visible. She would not cloud
+the innocent young creature’s anticipated joys.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron was waiting below, and before they entered
+the carriage Maria wished to know if he approved of his
+daughter’s dress and appearance. As she held a candle that
+he might examine some ornaments he had just given her, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>was forcibly struck by the contrast between the glowing cheek;
+the sparkling eye, the fresh <i lang="fr">parure</i> of the blooming young girl,
+and the neglected dress, the homely morning cap, and, above
+all, the fearful expression of countenance of the mother. A
+pang of remorse shot through him, and he inquired if she felt
+ill, in a tone of unusual tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>“I am quite well,” she answered, hurriedly, and they went
+down stairs. She remained suspended till she heard their
+carriage drive away, when her over-strung nerves gave way,
+and she flung herself on the sofa, in an agony of tears. She
+could not go to bed. She felt it impossible to try to sleep
+while thus constrained to desert the natural duty of a mother.
+Sick at heart, she sat expecting her daughter’s return, and
+listening to the eternal carriages rolling in endless succession to
+scenes where she could not be admitted to watch over her child.</p>
+
+<p>At length she heard the growing sound of approaching
+wheels, and the clatter of the horses’ feet stopping at the door.
+Emily was surprised to find her still up, but was hastening to
+describe all the brilliant scene she had witnessed, when her
+attention was arrested by the woe-worn countenance, and
+swollen eyes of her mother.</p>
+
+<p>“Mamma,” she said, “I will never go out again. I see
+it makes you unhappy. These foolish flowers, these fine
+necklaces—how you must have suffered while you were
+decking me out in them! And I! giddy thing, only thought
+of the unknown wonders I was going to see. Oh, mamma!
+how cruel, how unfeeling of me!”</p>
+
+<p>“My child, my child,” interrupted Maria; “it is true I
+have acutely felt seeing you launched on the dangerous and
+stormy sea of life without my watchful eye to guard you. I
+should deceive you if I attempted to disguise my pangs of
+mortified affection, of mortified pride; but believe me, I
+should suffer far, far more, if I thought my fault condemned
+my innocent child to a life of seclusion; if I thought she
+was to be cut out from all society, because I have forfeited my
+own place in it. I am not so selfish! Mix with the world,
+dearest Emily, and trust me, that to see you and your brothers
+good and happy, can now alone give this aching heart one
+throb of pleasure;” and she pressed her hand to her left side,
+where she had of late felt considerable pain and uneasiness;
+“and now, good night, my love, I do not feel quite well.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span></p>
+<p>Habit did not deaden the keenness of her mortification.
+Every night when Emily returned home, Maria underwent
+the same ever new sufferings. To her sensitive feelings which
+were morbidly alive to every the most indifferent circumstance,
+scarcely a day or an hour passed in which something did not
+occur which wounded them.</p>
+
+<p>If in ordering a dress for Emily, the milliner made use of
+those expressions so common in the mouth of every <i lang="fr">marchande
+de modes</i>. “<span lang="fr">On ne le porte plus.</span>”—“<span lang="fr">C’est la mode passée</span>;”
+she shrunk into herself, and thought “Even the milliner is
+aware I am excluded from society, and thinks I can know
+nothing that is going forward in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>One morning a young friend of Emily’s called on her at
+the moment when Lord Sotheron was leaving London to pass
+a few days in the country, and she thoughtlessly exclaimed,</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! what will you do, Lady Emily? You must go to the
+Spanish ambassador’s ball to-morrow night, and who can you
+get to chaperon you?”</p>
+
+<p>Maria could scarcely command sufficient composure to remain
+in the room, and to appear engrossed with the book which
+she had been reading.</p>
+
+<p>It often happened that in some morning excursion, Emily
+was joined by one or two of the young men with whom she
+had become acquainted. On such occasions the duty of introducing
+them to her mother devolved on Emily, and she
+performed the necessary little ceremony with grace and modesty,
+but with a certain air of shyness and distress. Maria
+felt that in her case the usual order of things was reversed.
+She felt that Emily’s acquaintance would look her over with
+curiosity; she felt that if any one was a serious admirer, his
+intentions towards the daughter might be influenced, by the
+disgrace of the mother being thus forced upon his recollection;
+she felt that Emily was shy, and she fancied she must feel
+ashamed of her.</p>
+
+<p>In this manner all the mortifications of the first years after
+her divorce were renewed with tenfold bitterness. Perhaps
+the constant state of painful excitement in which she lived,
+combined with late hours (for she invariably sat up till Emily’s
+return), might have aggravated a disorder that soon after assumed
+a more serious character. Before the London season
+was over, she became so ill that Emily could no longer be induced
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>to mix in society, but devoted herself to soothing her
+mother’s hours of sickness. She had a constant difficulty of
+respiration, a gasping for breath, a palpitation at the heart,
+for which the physicians recommended quiet of mind and
+body. When they had left her one day after a long consultation,
+she smiled, and looking up at Emily, said,</p>
+
+<p>“They cannot minister to a mind diseased. It is here, my
+child, here!” pressing her hand to her heart. “The canker
+has long been consuming me, and now it will soon have done
+its work. I wish your brothers were in London, for my end
+may perhaps be sudden, and I would not pass away without
+giving them my blessing.” Poor Emily communicated her
+mother’s wish to Lord Sotheron, and Charles and Edward
+were summoned from college.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Sotheron was constant in his attentions, and spared no
+pains to soften and alleviate Maria’s sufferings. He had once
+truly loved her; and when he felt assured he was about to
+lose this devoted being, she rose before his imagination, beautiful,
+and brilliant, the cynosure of all hearts and eyes, as
+when he had first known her, and his conscience told him he
+had himself blasted all he had so passionately admired.</p>
+
+<p>One day Maria was much exhausted by a more than usually
+severe attack of palpitation, and they had moved her towards
+an open window. They were all anxiously attending upon
+her, and she gazed round upon the group with tenderness and
+thankfulness.</p>
+
+<p>“I am better now,” she said, “so do not look so much
+frightened, dear children. It is going off for this time. Still
+there is no use in our deceiving ourselves and each other. I
+have long felt pain and oppression, which I thought would
+one day prove fatal. But I bless a merciful Providence who
+has granted me time for repentance and for preparation, and
+now I bless that Providence who will soon release me from my
+life of penance.</p>
+
+<p>“I trust that the time allowed me has not been allowed
+me in vain. Each bitter pang that I have endured, I have
+considered as part of my atonement, and I have offered it up
+to offended Heaven. There is one pain I have been spared!
+one joy I have tasted! you have been all a mother’s heart
+could wish—continue as you are. Be good, my blessed
+children—be good, and trust to Providence for the rest.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>Walter, in virtue alone there is true happiness! Is it not so!
+Dearly as I have loved you, and how dearly even you yourself
+can scarcely know,—Heaven alone, who knows how I have
+wrestled with my love, can know—dearly, devotedly as I
+have loved you, not for one moment, even when you seemed
+to love me with affection equal to my own, have I known
+happiness—happiness—that is only for the guiltless.”</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Seemed</em> to love you, Maria!” whispered Lord Sotheron
+in a half reproachful tone.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not mean to say that, dearest Walter. Thank you
+for your past affection, thank you for your present tenderness.
+Oh! it is all here, Walter! that love of many years, is all
+here, in this breaking, this bursting heart, but I hope sanctified
+by our long union. If it is sinful to feel it on the
+threshold of the grave, Heaven be merciful to me!” and she
+clasped her hands. “Pray for me, my children, now, and
+pray for me when I am gone. Your innocent prayers will
+win me mercy! Pray for me! pray for me!” and she sank
+back exhausted. The state of excitement into which her
+feelings had been worked, brought on a fresh attack of palpitation
+more severe than the former, which was followed by a
+fainting fit. From this time she spoke but little, and before
+the close of the following day, her spirit, we will hope her
+purified spirit, passed from its earthly tenement.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center large">END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
+<p class="center large">VOLUME THE THIRD.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="ELLEN_WAREHAM">ELLEN WAREHAM.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Calantha.</i>—Away, away, call not such passion love!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">A man so loves his horse, his hound, his hawk,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For that these things to’s pleasure minister;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">He’s proud to boast such peerless beauty his—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Does gloat upon it—would have others gaze,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And pine with envy. What’s this but self-love?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Now mark, Antenor! He who loves indeed,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">With his whole soul! His study but to honour</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">His lady’s name an hundred thousand ways!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">His sole joy, her contentment; and sole sorrow,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Her disquiet. He with true devotion</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Approaches her, as something pure and holy,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">His bright incentive to high deeds. The beacon</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To light his path to virtue and to fame!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><cite>Old Manuscript Play.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="1" style="text-decoration: none;">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">Ten amor el arco quedo.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">Que soy niña y tengo miedo.—<cite>Spanish Romance.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>In a small but neat drawing-room, in the principal town of
+——shire, Captain Wareham and his family were assembled
+at breakfast. Captain Wareham himself was sitting with the
+newspaper in his hand, his back half turned to the breakfast-table,
+and his feet resting on the fender; Caroline, his eldest
+daughter, was presiding over the tea-pot; Ellen, the second,
+was patiently waiting till the tea <em>had brewed</em>; the two elder
+boys were kicking at each other’s legs under the table; the
+youngest daughter was strumming away at a most unmusical
+piano-forte; and the youngest boy was amusing himself by
+adorning the slate, on which he was supposed to be doing a
+sum, with specimens of the graphic art, in the shape of
+helmeted knights and galloping war-horses.</p>
+
+<p>“Caroline,” said Captain Wareham, “do not give me
+water bewitched, by way of tea, this morning, I entreat!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span></p>
+<p>“I hope it will be good, papa: the water does boil
+to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham took his tea, and having added the
+cream and sugar, tasted it.</p>
+
+<p>“Caroline, you have let the tea stand too long! You know
+I hate it when it gets that rough disagreeable taste.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I put in a little water, papa? It is very easy to
+make it weaker.”</p>
+
+<p>“No! there is no use in doing that. If the tea is once
+too strong, you cannot make it right by adding water. Give
+me the toast.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen handed him the toast.</p>
+
+<p>“It is all cold and tough. I cannot eat it!”</p>
+
+<p>“It has been here so long, dear papa; but you were so
+busy with the newspaper, I did not like to interrupt you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know I hate cold toast!”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I ring, and ask for some more?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ask for more! I never can teach any of my children
+that people who are poor must conform to their means. One
+would think I was made of gold, to hear the wasteful manner
+in which you talk!”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I toast it afresh, papa?” interrupted Ellen; “that
+will make it almost as good as ever again.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no! be quiet, child. How you pester me! Do you
+not see I am reading the newspaper? There is no possibility
+of understanding a word one reads, you all keep up such a
+clatter!”</p>
+
+<p>George, who all this time had continued his attempts to
+reach Henry’s feet, as they sat at opposite ends of the table,
+at length gave it a tremendous shake.</p>
+
+<p>“Do be quiet, boys!” exclaimed Captain Wareham, in a
+voice of thunder; “and do stop that eternal strumming at
+the piano-forte—give one some peace, Matilda!”</p>
+
+<p>Matilda, delighted to be released, jumped up from her
+half-finished tune, and ran to assist James in his labours at
+the slate.</p>
+
+<p>“Caroline, why do you set Matilda to practise just at
+breakfast-time?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, papa, you said Miss Patterson was to come at ten
+o’clock for the future; and you said Matilda should practise
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>an hour before she came; so I did not very well know how
+to help it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense! You always contrive to do the disagreeable
+thing.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned round, and was again absorbed in the important
+intelligence contained in the newspaper; for at that time
+Buonaparte had just returned from Egypt, and the proceedings
+in France were watched by all Europe with intense
+anxiety and interest. The second dish of tea remained by
+his side untasted.</p>
+
+<p>After about a quarter of an hour he turned angrily to
+Caroline, saying—</p>
+
+<p>“Why on earth do you not send away the breakfast things?
+Nothing shortens the day so much as letting the breakfast
+remain late upon the table—this is another thing I can never
+teach you!”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you might wish to drink your tea, papa,”
+answered Caroline, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not want any more; it is so horribly bad!” he
+replied. “And now, I suppose, we must have the weekly
+bills, and I must give you some money!”</p>
+
+<p>Caroline’s spirit sank within her. The first Monday in
+every month was to her a weary day; and she anticipated
+that this would indeed be black Monday, as papa did not
+seem to be quite well.</p>
+
+<p>The apparatus for the morning repast was removed. Caroline
+brought the household book and the bills, and presented
+them one by one to her father, who was horrified at the
+amount of each.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, here is beef again!—there is no occasion to feed
+the whole family on beef! If the servants have their beef on
+Sunday, surely that is enough. You know, Caroline, I can
+scarcely afford to live as I do, and yet it seems you become
+every day more expensive in your housekeeping.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am very sorry, papa, but you told me to have some
+luncheon in case the Jenkinsons called last Wednesday; and
+you have often said you hated cold mutton, and that it was
+painful to you that any one should imagine you were inhospitable;
+and I thought it did not make much difference,
+and there would be the cold beef, which always looks
+handsome.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></p>
+<p>“So, I suppose you mean to imply it is my fault that the
+bills are high. I am sure no man can spend less upon himself
+than I do! I wish you would tell me where to get the
+money, that is all!”</p>
+
+<p>The entrance of Miss Patterson, a prim, middle-aged lady,
+who came for a few hours every day to superintend Matilda’s
+education, put an end to the discussion. Captain Wareham
+paid the money without another word, took his hat and stick,
+and sallied forth to avoid the infliction of Miss Patterson, the
+music, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham was a half-pay officer, with a broken
+constitution, and a very limited income. He had taken up
+his abode in the county town, that his eldest daughter might
+have the advantage of going to the winter balls; his second,
+that of receiving some finishing lessons in singing from the
+organist of the cathedral; his third, that of having a day-governess;
+and his youngest boy that of attending an excellent
+school, as a day scholar.</p>
+
+<p>He was a dignified-looking man, very tall and thin, with a
+high pale forehead, light eyes and hair, and there was altogether
+something melancholy and gentlemanly in his appearance.
+His connections were good, his conduct irreproachable,
+and he maintained an uncomplaining reserve upon the subject
+of his pecuniary embarrassments, which gained him the respect
+and consideration of the surrounding squirearchy.
+Whether his difficulties on the score of money might not be
+the true cause of the captious temper which rendered his
+home any thing but a happy one, either to himself or to his
+family, is another question. In society he was courteous and
+polished, his daughters were gentle and dutiful, and although
+among the gossip of a country town an unauthenticated rumour
+now and then prevailed that Captain Wareham was a tyrant
+at home, he upon the whole bore the character of an
+exemplary man.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Wareham had died just as her eldest daughter had
+attained the age of womanhood, and upon her death the care
+of the younger children devolved upon Caroline. Caroline
+was by nature indolent and sweet-tempered. It was to her a
+most wearisome duty to inspect the bills, and to see that the
+lessons were prepared by the time the day governess arrived.
+She was pretty, and her very indolence gave her something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>fashionable in manner,—at least, it prevented any thing
+approaching a bustling fussiness, which is in itself essentially
+vulgar. She was much admired by the beaux of the neighbourhood,
+though there is a vast difference between admiring
+and proposing to a pretty pennyless girl.</p>
+
+<p>As she considered marriage the one and only means of
+escaping from a home and mode of life exceedingly distasteful
+to her, she did not discourage the admiration of those
+who paid her any attention. Several had appeared to be
+deeply smitten, but still the magic words upon which her
+future fate rested had never passed their lips, and she was
+gradually becoming hopeless and distrustful. Her second
+sister, Ellen, was now seventeen, and was to make her
+appearance at the next county ball.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning after our opening scene, Captain Wareham
+was returning from his usual stroll, when, as he mounted the
+steps, a neat little damsel, with a milliner’s wicker basket on
+her arm, tripped lightly down them, dropping a graceful,
+coquettish curtsey as she passed. Captain Wareham wore a
+discontented aspect as he entered the drawing-room. “Caroline,
+was not that Miss Simperkin’s girl whom I met at the
+door?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, papa, she has been trying on Ellen’s ball-dress for
+to-morrow night.”</p>
+
+<p>“And so you run me up bills at the milliner’s, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“This is Ellen’s first ball, papa,” answered Caroline in a
+deprecating tone, “and you know you are always annoyed if
+I do not look as nice as other girls, and so I thought you
+would wish Ellen to make a favourable impression at first. I
+have the beautiful gauze my aunt gave me, and I felt sure
+you would not like to see Ellen less well-dressed than me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, well, I suppose it cannot be helped. I do not wish
+people to pity you for being shabbily dressed. I hate to be
+pitied.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a carriage and four drove up to the door.
+Ellen ran to the window.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Caroline! it is Lady Besville and her daughters; run
+and take off that black apron. Dear me! the room is all in
+confusion with Matilda’s lesson-books. There, put away the
+slate and the backboard.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span></p>
+<p>Ellen inherited something of her father’s sensitiveness to
+the <i lang="fr">qu’en dira-t-on</i> of the world.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish it was summer,” whispered Caroline, “or that
+papa could afford us two fires.”</p>
+
+<p>The room was rendered tolerably tidy for the reception of
+Lady Besville, who always paid an annual visit to the Wareham
+family, although she was not in the habit of visiting the
+other country town gentry. It was a sort of tribute to the
+respectability of their conduct and of their connexions.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Besville was duly astonished at Matilda’s growth, she
+admired the stoutness of James, asked Ellen if she enjoyed
+the thoughts of her first ball, and said all the sweet little
+nothings, which are civilities and attentions, from the great to
+the little.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham pressed some luncheon upon her ladyship;
+she owned she was very hungry, having had a long
+drive. Captain Wareham rang the bell with a vigorous pull,
+as if he felt assured a sumptuous repast only waited to be sent
+for, and in an easy and confident tone desired the one footman
+(who, if it had not been for his plush breeches and white
+stockings, would have been a footboy) to bring the luncheon.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline knew the servants had just devoured the last
+morsel of cold meat; she saw the look of blank dismay with
+which her father’s order was received by John, and she sat
+uneasily in her chair, wondering what would happen. She
+could not leave the room, it would look so odd; and she
+scarcely knew whether to rejoice, or to grieve, when she saw
+her father depart, ostensibly in search of a pamphlet on the
+times, which he particularly recommended to Lord Besville’s
+perusal, but in fact, as Caroline believed, to take some energetic
+measures upon the subject of luncheon. She dreaded his
+coming to the knowledge of the unprovided state of the larder,
+and, on the other hand, she equally dreaded having her housekeeping
+brought to utter shame before strangers. Poor Caroline!
+she was not by nature a manager. She was meek and
+gentle, and, perhaps, if she had not been frightened, might
+have succeeded as well as her neighbours, but she always felt
+she should do wrong, and never ventured to do right. There
+is a certain portion of decision necessary even in the ordering
+of dinner, and choosing between a leg of mutton and a
+shoulder.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></p>
+<p>Captain Wareham, after a small delay, returned with the
+pamphlet, and he conversed with fluency and eagerness upon
+its contents. Ellen, meanwhile, had become tolerably intimate
+with Lady Harriet, who was also to make her first appearance
+at the approaching ball; and Caroline listened with a face expressive
+of much interest to the discussion upon the fates of
+nations, while she secretly revolved in her mind what would
+be the cook’s resource in this unforeseen exigency. The half-hour
+which thus elapsed seemed to her interminable; she
+thought Lady Besville would be quite tired of waiting, and
+she saw her begin to fidget on her chair, and to look towards
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>At this critical juncture Caroline heard the jingle of one
+glass against another, as John mounted the stairs. This
+delightful promise of a forthcoming repast of some sort or another,
+was to her ears as the horn of a German post-boy, when
+he approaches the town, to the benighted traveller, or as the
+tinkling of the camel-bells of a caravan to a solitary pilgrim in
+the desert.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened—the tray entered—Caroline cast a
+trembling, furtive glance: to her delight and astonishment,
+she beheld a tongue, a fowl, a dish of puffs, some cakes, some
+fruit, and wine. She breathed more freely, and performed
+her part of hostess with ease and quietness. The Besvilles
+did ample justice to the meal, and departed impressed with the
+comfortable and respectable manner in which Captain Wareham
+lived, the good-breeding of Caroline, and the good-humour
+and liveliness of her father.</p>
+
+<p>But Caroline’s troubles were to come. Captain Wareham
+reproached her for having no cold meat, and told her how he
+had been obliged to send, in one direction to the eating-house
+to buy a cold fowl at twice its value—to the pastry-cook for
+some puffs—to the fruiterers for some fruit, to conceal her
+bad housekeeping. “You would not have people go away
+from one’s house hungry, would you? Though I am poor, I
+cannot submit to that.”</p>
+
+<p>Caroline knew that to remind him of what he had said the
+day before would only increase his wrath, and she bore it in
+unreplying meekness, while she secretly wondered whether
+Mr. Weston was likely to be more serious in his attentions
+than Major Barton had proved.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span></p>
+<p>The momentous evening arrived: Captain Wareham looked
+with paternal pride at his two daughters, as he led them into
+the ball-room—the fair and delicate Caroline, with her small
+but beautifully rounded form, her regular features, and her
+alabaster skin, and the tall and sylph-like Ellen, whose beauty
+was of a loftier character. Her straight and clearly-defined
+eyebrows, her broad white forehead, and her noble cast of
+countenance, were softened and subdued by a pensive grace
+which rendered her appearance as interesting as it was striking.
+The full white eyelids were fringed with long and black eyelashes
+which almost swept her cheeks; and when she raised
+those eyes, there was a liquid lustre in the depth of their dark
+blue, which might have found its way to the coldest heart.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cresford, a young and wealthy London merchant, was
+not one whose coldness rendered him proof against these same
+eyes. On the contrary, he was an impassioned and impetuous
+youth, who fell in love with Ellen at first sight, danced with
+her all night, sat by her at supper, and never left her side till
+he had handed her to her carriage.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning the sisters were preparing to take their
+accustomed exercise, and Ellen had put on her common straw
+bonnet, when Caroline remonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite fine, you may just as well wear your Sunday
+bonnet to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“This will do very well for the garden. I promised Will
+Pollard to help him to pot the geraniums for the winter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, Ellen, you are not going to poke about in our
+little confined garden. Do let us walk into the town. There
+are all the people we met at the ball last night; we shall be
+sure to see some of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I promised the gardener to help him. You know
+papa cannot afford to have him more than three days in the
+week, and if we do not assist him a little, the garden can never
+look nice.”</p>
+
+<p>“Any other day will do just as well for your gardening.
+Now do, dear Ellen, let us take a good long walk, it will
+refresh us after the ball. I never knew you unwilling to
+oblige anybody before. Besides, I must go to the shop to buy
+some things for George, before he returns to school; and I
+want you to help me. It is so difficult to give poor papa
+satisfaction. I am sure I do my very best, but I do get so
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>wearied, and so worried at home, what with the housekeeping,
+and the lessons, and having to keep the boys’ things in order,
+and never being able to do any thing right, that I want a
+little relaxation.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen yielded, for she often pitied Caroline, who was decidedly
+not made for the lot which had befallen her. She put
+on her best bonnet, and the three sisters sallied forth. From
+the shop they walked along the river-side, under the shade of
+some spreading elms, which made this terrace the favourite
+resort of the inhabitants of ——. They had not long been
+there before Mr. Cresford joined them.</p>
+
+<p>He walked by Ellen’s side, and any acute observer might
+have perceived, by the obsequious air, the flushed cheek, and
+the agitation of his whole demeanour, that his was not a
+common-place flirtation to kill an idle morning, but that his
+feelings were deeply interested. Ellen was shy and reserved,
+but her reserve only increased the ardour of the passion which
+had so suddenly been awakened in his breast.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Ellen could not be persuaded to extend their
+walk beyond their own garden.</p>
+
+<p>“When Mr. Cresford is gone away, Caroline, we will walk
+wherever you please, but I do not like appearing to seek him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you dislike him? He is evidently smitten with
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not dislike him particularly, but I think I am more
+comfortable and happy gardening with Will Pollard; and if I
+liked to meet him ever so much, I had rather die than appear
+to seek him, or any body else.”</p>
+
+<p>“So would I, Ellen!” cried little Matilda; “when I grow
+up, I will be so proud! it shall never be said that I care for
+anybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure I should be sorry to do any thing forward,”
+answered Caroline, “only one must take the air sometimes.
+Perhaps, however, you are both right, and I am sure I would
+not have any girl care for any man, till she is quite sure of
+him, and it is very difficult to know when they are in earnest.”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="2" style="text-decoration: none;">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Cleanthes.</i>—She’ll be a castaway—my life upon ’t.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Hermione.</i>—Man argues from his fiercer will, nor knows</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">True virtue’s quality in woman’s breast.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">My daughter, sir, is virtuous, and virtue</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Will to herself subdue e’en rebel Nature.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Had she been linked in love with one her choice,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">She had been all soul, following her wedded lord</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Through life’s worst perils, frankly, fearlessly;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">But matched, ere yet her young heart spoke, with one</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">She cannot love, she’ll give her love to duty,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">And cheerful, although passionless, perform it</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Calmly, contentedly, nor ever dream</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Of joys she must not know, and so pass on</div>
+ <div class="verse indent6">Into the quiet grave.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Old Manuscript Play.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Cresford soon found some excuse for calling upon
+Captain Wareham, and in the course of his visit contrived to
+give himself a commission to execute, which justified another
+visit, another and another.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham thought the symptoms were auspicious,
+and entertained some hope of honourably disposing of one
+daughter in marriage, but Caroline, profiting by her own experience,
+warned Ellen not to place any reliance on these signs
+of preference.</p>
+
+<p>“You do not know the world yet, Ellen,” she said; “you
+do not know how often the same sort of thing has happened to
+me. Remember Major Barton last winter, and poor Mr.
+Astell—however, I do think he would have proposed if he had
+lived. Talk to Mr. Cresford as much as you please, for, as
+my aunt says, ‘nothing can come of nothing,’ but do not let
+yourself like him, till he has actually proposed. Remember
+what I have already told you, a woman cannot guess whether
+a man is in earnest or not, till he does propose.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen thought her sister was very prudent and sensible, and
+she resolved to follow her advice. Nor did she find the task a
+difficult one.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cresford, although handsome, was not pleasing, and the
+very vehemence of his love rather alarmed and confused the
+young Ellen. This was the season of gaity at ——, and
+there were frequent dinners and parties among the canons and
+prebends. Caroline regularly asked Ellen every night, whether
+Mr. Cresford had proposed, and for ten days Ellen answered,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>“No, not quite.” Caroline continued her warnings, and Ellen
+her watch over her heart.</p>
+
+<p>At length Mr. Cresford waited one morning upon Captain
+Wareham, and in good set terms asked him for his daughter’s
+hand. Captain Wareham accepted his proposal, and informed
+Ellen of the event.</p>
+
+<p>There did not seem to exist a doubt in any of their minds
+as to what her answer would be. The whole question had
+been from the beginning, whether or not he would come to the
+point, and the lady’s privilege of saying no, seemed in that
+family to be utterly forgotten. Ellen was too young and too
+timid to discover it for herself, and she found herself the
+affianced wife of a man, whom a fortnight before she had never
+seen, and whom, during that fortnight, she had been taking
+care not to prefer.</p>
+
+<p>The affair was decided. The lover was all rapture—Captain
+Wareham all satisfaction—Caroline all surprise that Mr.
+Cresford should have behaved in so gentlemanlike a manner,
+not keeping her sister in any uncertainty, but setting her mind
+at ease at once. She was too good-natured and too affectionate,
+to feel any thing like envy, but she wished Captain Barton
+had behaved in the same noble manner to her.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was surprised not to find herself happier on so quickly
+arriving at that result, which had been the object of her
+sister’s wishes for six years and a half. But she was afraid of
+Mr. Cresford. He was easily hurt, easily offended; he was
+expecting, and jealous; he would not allow her to go to any
+more of the balls; he scarcely liked to see her acknowledge,
+much less shake hands with, any of her former acquaintance.
+Ellen was subdued, rather than elated, by her approaching
+nuptials. Caroline one day remarked upon her unusual
+seriousness, and asked her if she and Mr. Cresford had not had
+a lovers’ quarrel.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no,” replied Ellen; “but it is difficult, you know,
+sister, to love a person all at once, particularly when one has
+been trying not to like him at all. However, I dare say I
+shall soon, when I am more accustomed to him. It is not
+easy to do just right; for a girl is not to like a man till he proposes,
+and then she ought to love him very much as soon as
+ever she is going to be married to him.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cresford was the only son of wealthy parents, and was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span>accustomed to find his wishes laws to those around him. His
+father had died when he was barely twenty-one, and had left
+him at the head of a thriving mercantile house.</p>
+
+<p>He fell in love with Ellen at first sight,—he proposed at
+once, had been accepted, and, following the course of his own
+impetuous passions, was now eager that the wedding-day should
+be fixed. Captain Wareham had no wish to postpone it, and
+in three weeks more Ellen left the paternal roof as the wife of
+Mr. Cresford.</p>
+
+<p>She was astounded and confused at the whole thing; she
+had not been allowed time to become attached to him, even if
+he had been all a maiden’s imagination could picture in its
+happiest day-dream. But there was a want of refinement in
+the headlong course of his love, a want of consideration; in
+fact, there was a selfishness, which did not win its way to the
+heart of a very modest, very young, and very sensitive girl.</p>
+
+<p>In London she found herself surrounded by all the luxuries
+of life. She had an excellent house, a handsome equipage.
+He showered presents upon her—jewels and trinkets without
+number,—each new ornament daily invented to satisfy the
+caprice of the idle and the wealthy. His delight was to see
+his lovely bride’s beauty set off to the utmost advantage. But
+she must be decked out for him alone; he was annoyed if any
+other eyes seemed to dwell with gratification upon the loveliness
+which he had taken such pleasure in adorning.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford had a large circle of acquaintance, not, perhaps, in
+the first style of fashion, but among gentlemanlike and agreeable
+people; persons with intellects as well cultivated, minds
+as refined, manners as essentially well-bred, as can be found in
+the highest coteries, though perhaps one of the initiated might
+perceive the want of that nameless grace which more than
+compensates for a certain coldness frequently pervading the
+most select <i lang="fr">réunions</i>. The very fashionable are exceedingly
+afraid of each other. They may sometimes have been accused
+of insolence towards those whom they consider in a grade
+below themselves, but their worst enemies cannot say they do
+not stand in awe of each other. There was in Ellen a gentle
+dignity, which, combined with her extraordinary beauty,
+would have caused her to be distinguished in any society: of
+course, therefore, in this she could not but excite notice and
+admiration. Yet proud as Cresford was of her, anxious as he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>was to show to the world how lovely was the bride he had
+chosen for himself, he never returned from a party or an assembly
+without a cloud on his brow, and something restless
+and suspicious in his manner.</p>
+
+<p>She began to fear he was constitutionally jealous. Others
+came to the same conclusion. Young men in all ranks of life
+find peculiar pleasure in tormenting a jealous husband; and
+not all the shrinking modesty of Ellen’s manners could prevent
+their openly showing the admiration they felt. She hoped, by
+the extreme quietness of her behaviour, to give him no cause
+for disquiet; but though she might avoid affording him any
+opportunity of blaming her, she could not prevent his being
+irritable and violent whenever they had mixed in any society.</p>
+
+<p>She would gladly have led a very retired life, she would
+fain have dressed herself in a homely and unpretending style,—her
+whole object was to escape notice; but such was the
+nature of his love for her, that he was not satisfied unless her
+charms were set off by every ornament; and his fear of being
+laughed at was such, that he would not give occasion for saying
+he shut up his beautiful wife. Ellen was consequently obliged
+to mix in the world, and she learned to set a strict watch over
+her very looks, and to be tremblingly alive to the <i lang="fr">on dits</i> of
+society. She, as well as her sister Caroline, was timid in her
+nature; she was, moreover, shy and reserved upon all subjects
+connected with the feelings, and she dreaded lest his jealous
+fancies should ever openly burst forth, and bring blame or
+ridicule on either of them. She had at times stood in awe of
+her father, but the fear she felt of her husband was more constant
+and unceasing.</p>
+
+<p>Still she had been accustomed to humour and to yield to a
+captious temper, and she considered that it was the lot of
+women to bear with the caprices of men. She frequently reminded
+herself of the gratitude she was bound to feel towards
+him, for having taken her portionless from her father, and for
+the unbounded command of money which he allowed her. She
+excused his jealousy on account of the passionate love he
+evinced for her, and she concluded the two feelings were necessarily
+inseparable.</p>
+
+<p>His generosity on the subject of money afforded her one
+great pleasure, that of making various presents to her sisters,
+and of assisting her family in divers manners. He took her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>eldest brother into his mercantile establishment, and she rejoiced
+in having thus been the means of relieving her father
+from one care which pressed most heavily upon his mind.</p>
+
+<p>They had been married about four years, and Ellen was the
+mother of two lovely children, when the peace concluded between
+France and England, at the period when Buonaparte
+was First Consul, enabled the English to flock abroad. To
+Mr. Cresford it was a matter of great importance to conclude
+some arrangement with foreign merchants. For this purpose
+he made up his mind to leave his wife for a month or two.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, most unwillingly that he tore himself
+away: it seemed as if some presentiment warned him not to
+depart. He postponed his journey from day to day, from
+week to week. At length his correspondents became impatient,
+and the day was fixed. He took Ellen and his children
+to reside with Captain Wareham during his absence, and she
+willingly promised to live in the strictest seclusion till his
+return; but it was with a melancholy foreboding that he bade
+her adieu, and he returned again and again to take one more
+last lingering look at her beautiful face, as though he felt he
+might never again thus gaze on it.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="3" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent10">——Love’s sooner felt than seen:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oft in a voice he creeps down through the ear;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Oft from a blushing cheek he lights his fire;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oft shrouds his golden flame in likest hair;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Oft in a soft, smooth cheek doth close retire;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Oft in a smile, oft in a silent tear;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And if all fail, yet virtue’s self will lure!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Phineas Fletcher.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Caroline was now seven-and-twenty, and she had many
+histories to pour into Ellen’s ear of the deceitful conduct of
+sundry naval or military heroes, and briefless barristers. One
+old nabob had laid his fortune at her feet, but he was too
+disagreeable, and she preferred even the eternal household
+bills, and the last finish of Matilda’s education, and the increased
+peevishness of her father’s temper to being the wife of
+Mr. Pierson.</p>
+
+<p>But there was a person—a most amiable man—a clergyman,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>who had long appeared to prefer her—who did not pay
+her compliments, but who often visited them in their quiet
+home, and who admired her for qualities which had never
+attracted the notice of the captains nor the majors—her
+patience, her sweet temper, and her absence of selfishness.
+She owned to Ellen that, if circumstances ever enabled him to
+come forward, she should rejoice in the chances which had
+prevented her marrying earlier.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of a short time Ellen had an opportunity of
+becoming personally acquainted with Mr. Allenham, and she
+thought her sister would indeed be a fortunate woman if she
+should ever become his wife.</p>
+
+<p>To Ellen his intentions seemed manifest; but Caroline,
+who had so often been deceived, scarcely ventured to believe
+what she so much wished: all pleasure in the society of
+others was, however, completely gone, and she sighed to fix
+the affections which had so long been without a resting-place
+upon a person for whom she could feel entire respect, and in
+whom she could place complete reliance. Caroline was now
+as little inclined to mix in the world as Ellen, and Mr. Cresford
+would have been satisfied, if he could have witnessed the
+retirement in which they lived.</p>
+
+<p>He had not been gone more than a month, when the sudden
+renewal of hostilities gave rise to the greatest alarm among
+those who had friends upon the Continent. Still, no one was
+prepared for that gross violation of all the usual courtesies
+between civilised nations, of all the charities of human life,
+which astounded the European world, when Buonaparte detained
+the harmless traveller, the peaceable merchant, and
+doomed them to drag out the best years of their lives in
+weary, unprofitable imprisonment at Verdun, or in the fortress
+of La Bitche.</p>
+
+<p>At first no one could believe that this would last; they all
+looked to a speedy termination of their captivity. Ellen
+received letters from her husband, who was among the <i lang="fr">detenus</i>
+at Verdun, which filled her with pity and alarm. His
+jealousy, which could not be completely lulled when his
+virtuous and modest wife was constantly under his own eye,
+now raged like a devouring flame. He threatened to commit
+some crime which could only be atoned by his life, rather
+than endure the living death which consumed him. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>braved the authorities—he would not accept his parole—he
+would not preclude himself from attempting every means in
+his power to again see the wife whom he adored. His letters
+were written in a state of mind bordering on distraction. In
+vain Ellen described to him her quiet mode of existence,
+entreated him to wait with patience till he could return in
+health and safety to his family, and promised faithfully to
+continue in the seclusion which he had prescribed. She communicated
+to him her intention of taking a cottage near her
+father and sisters, where the children might have the benefit
+of country air, and where she might be in some measure
+under the protection of her father without joining in the
+society of the town.</p>
+
+<p>The other partners in Mr. Cresford’s house were now
+obliged to transact the business. All that could be done was
+to await the events which time might bring forth, and meanwhile
+to take every opportunity of transmitting to him funds
+which might enable him to exist in such comfort as might be
+found within the walls of a prison.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen never deviated from the line of conduct which she
+had marked out for herself. She felt perfectly confident that
+her husband would soon return, and she so dreaded what
+might be his anger if he heard of her having joined in any
+the most innocent amusement, that she never left her home
+except to visit her father, and she never received any one
+except her own immediate relations. She shrank from the
+appearance, or the suspicion, of the slightest impropriety with
+as much sensitive horror as many would from any actual
+breach of decorum.</p>
+
+<p>The even tenor of Ellen’s monotonous life was one day
+most agreeably broken in upon by the entrance of Caroline,
+who, with a face of joyous mystery, made her appearance at
+her sister’s cottage immediately after breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>“I have such news for you, Ellen. You have been right
+all along, and Mr. Allenham has proposed. He came to
+dinner yesterday, and told papa that his uncle’s friend, Lord
+Coverdale, had presented him to the living of Longbury, and
+that he might now look forward to possessing a competency,
+and that he had long been attached to me; and then he says
+that the house is a very nice one, and that he is to remove to
+it from his curacy in about six months.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span></p>
+<p>“But you do not tell me what answer you have given him,”
+replied Ellen, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Ellen, do not laugh at me; it would be affectation
+in me to pretend I am not very, very happy at the prospect
+before me. You know well enough that I have long preferred
+him to any one, but you cannot guess how ardently I wish I
+had never before fancied myself in love. All that has gone
+before seems to me now like a dream. My former likings
+have been nothing compared to this. Still I would give the
+world that my heart was quite, quite fresh and pure; that I
+could have given it to him wholly and solely. I envy you,
+Ellen, having married so early that your feelings had never
+been tampered with, as mine have been.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was surprised at the warmth with which Caroline
+spoke, and thought in her heart that she had never felt all
+this for Mr. Cresford. Caroline resumed—</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder how a being so good, so superior, so excellent
+as Mr. Allenham can have ever found any thing to please
+him, in such a poor, weak, frivolous creature as I am! I do
+feel so grateful to him! And I am sure if the devotion of
+my life can render me worthy of him, I may deserve him in
+that manner, though I can in no other.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was astonished at this burst of feeling in her sister.
+She had seen her, as she believed, in love before, that is to
+say, she had seen her pleased and flattered by the attentions
+of men; she had seen her ardently desiring to get away from
+her home, and she had seen her unhappy when a flirtation
+ended in nothing; but she had never before seen her love
+with all the devotion of which an affectionate heart is capable.
+A real true attachment exalts and refines the mind, and Mr.
+Allenham was a person with whom no one could associate
+without becoming better.</p>
+
+<p>The meekness and forbearance with which Caroline bore
+the eternal worry of her father’s temper, the asperity of which
+had increased with years, first attracted him; he admired her
+beauty (for a woman of seven-and-twenty, provided she enjoys
+good health, is as pretty as ever she was), and her evident
+pleasure in his preference, which, when it is accompanied with
+modesty, proves an almost irresistible charm to most men,
+combined to fix his affections. Her kind manner to all inferiors,
+and her gentle attention to any of the poor with whom
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>she was brought in contact, satisfied his reason that she would
+make the best of wives for a clergyman. Nor was he mistaken
+in this expectation.</p>
+
+<p>But Captain Wareham, whose disposition inclined him to
+look on the dark side of every picture, now felt somewhat
+unhappy at the thoughts of losing the daughter who had been
+so long accustomed to his ways; although he had often been
+bitterly disappointed at Caroline’s failing to make a good
+establishment; a disappointment which he had been at no
+pains to conceal, and which did not contribute to make her
+own fall more lightly upon the poor girl.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you must marry Mr. Allenham, Caroline; but
+what is to become of me?” he one day said, in a desponding
+tone. “How can a man see to all the details of a household,
+and the boys, and everything?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, papa, you always said I was but a bad housekeeper,”
+replied Caroline, who, in her new-born happiness and
+brightened prospects, had found a certain degree of courage,
+and sometimes ventured to reply half playfully to her father’s
+lamentations; “you will do all the better without me, I dare
+say.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no! I shan’t! You have been a good girl, Caroline,
+and I shall not be able to do at all well without you. You
+will all marry, and I shall be left alone in my old age.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, papa,” interrupted Matilda, “I have heard you
+regret a hundred times that Caroline did not marry, and say
+that it preyed upon your mind to think that we were unprovided
+for; and that if we were but married, you should be
+quite happy.”</p>
+
+<p>“In the meantime, my dear papa,” said Caroline, “Matilda
+can take my place. She is seventeen now, and I was not
+older when my poor mother died.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! but she is not so steady as you were. I cannot
+manage you, Matilda, as I can Caroline,” answered Captain
+Wareham, in whose estimation Caroline had risen wonderfully,
+now he was going to lose her.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, then, I will manage you, papa, and that will be
+much best,” replied the blunt and light-hearted Matilda, who
+was not easily either daunted or vexed. “I am so glad Caroline
+is going to marry that dear, good Mr. Allenham, that I
+shall not mind casting up those abominable bills. But I will
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>tell you what, papa, you must not scold me as you do Caroline;
+I shall never bear it as she has done.”</p>
+
+<p>Caroline looked at Matilda, and tried to silence her, but
+without effect. And, strange to say, Captain Wareham would
+bear from Matilda jokes, and even lectures, which he would
+never have endured from her elder sisters. The fact was, that
+Matilda had a high spirit. She meant no harm; she did not
+mind a sharp word; and she gradually obtained a sort of
+mastery over her father.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage was not to take place till Mr. Allenham was
+settled at Longbury, but all things proceeded placidly and
+cheerfully with the Wareham family, except that the letters
+which Ellen received from Mr. Cresford were more and more
+distressing. They were written in a state of dreadfully low
+spirits. He complained of mental and bodily miseries. Still
+she was little prepared for the shock which awaited her, when
+one morning she read in the papers an official return from the
+depôt at Verdun, and among the deaths she saw the name of
+Charles Cresford, Esq.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="4" style="text-decoration: none;">IV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">And such the colouring fancy gave</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To a young, warm, and dauntless chief,—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And as a lover hails the dawn</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Of a first smile, so welcomed he</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The sparkle of the first sword drawn</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">For vengeance and for liberty.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Lalla Rookh.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Buscas en Roma a Roma o peregrino</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="it">Y en Roma misma a Roma no la hallas,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="it">Cadaver son las que ostentò murallas</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="it">Y tumba de sì propio el Aventino.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it"><cite>Sonata de Quevedo.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The shriek which Ellen involuntarily uttered brought her
+maid to her assistance. Her father and sister were sent for,
+and soon arrived to support and to console her.</p>
+
+<p>Though she had never been able to return the passionate
+love which her husband had evinced for her, though she had
+never loved him as she was capable of loving, still she was
+dutifully attached to him, and she mourned for him with
+sincerity and truth. She expected to receive some parting
+word, some last injunctions, from one who had been so
+fervently devoted to her. But nothing of the kind ever
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>reached her. She had no friends among the <i lang="fr">detenus</i> to whom
+she could write, and she was obliged to rest contented with
+no farther details of the melancholy event than the report of
+Colonel Eversham, who had been one of those who followed
+his remains to the grave, and who had, soon afterwards,
+effected his own return to England. He told her that Cresford
+had made various and desperate attempts to escape, which
+had all failed, and that his friends attributed his illness to
+mental agitation, as he did not seem to labour under any particular
+or positive complaint.</p>
+
+<p>She heard with some satisfaction that his remains had been
+decently deposited in the Protestant burying-ground without
+the town, and that a considerable number of the most respectable
+of his fellow prisoners had attended his funeral. She
+grieved sincerely for his untimely fate, and she felt it the
+more from the belief that his passion for her, and the jealous
+feelings which he could not master, had, in all probability,
+hastened his end.</p>
+
+<p>By her marriage settlements she was entitled to a handsome
+jointure, for poor Cresford was noble and generous with
+regard to money, and did not dole out the jointure of the wife
+according to the fortune she brought, but proportioned it to
+his capabilities of providing for her. The partners preserved
+a share in the business for her son, and her daughter was
+also amply portioned.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen continued to live in the pretty cottage in which she
+had for some time resided. After a short delay the marriage
+of Caroline and Mr. Allenham took place, and all things
+resumed the even tenor of their course. Ellen found pleasure
+in the society of her children, whose opening intelligence rendered
+them each day more capable of becoming her companions,
+and she devoted herself to the pleasing task of leading
+their young hearts and minds in the right way.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the first six months of her widowhood she
+paid a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Allenham, and it was a cordial to
+her heart to see poor Caroline, who had always been frightened
+and subdued at home, the joyous creature she now was. Her
+adoration of her husband knew no bounds; she thought him
+the best, the cleverest, the wisest of human beings. Her
+loving heart had at length found its proper resting-place, and
+her humble service and devotion would have made any man,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>except Mr. Allenham, appear in the light of a tyrant.
+But he was so gentle and so kind, he smiled so gratefully at
+the little attentions which she incessantly paid him, he so
+habitually preserved towards her the sort of polished deference
+with which a man should always treat a woman (in manner,
+at least, though he need not the more yield to her in deeds and
+actions), that Ellen began to think it was possible for matrimony
+to be a much happier state than she had found it.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long after her arrival at Longbury, that she was
+one day walking with her sister and her children in a retired
+green lane, which was nearly bowered over by the trees on
+each side, when a gentleman on horseback approached. A
+widow in her weeds is always an object of some interest, and
+the horseman was wondering who that graceful creature could
+be,—he was watching the sportive boundings of her children,
+without attending to his own path, when a bough knocked off
+his hat just as he was about to pass, and was trying to ascertain
+whether the face corresponded with the form he admired.
+The little boy ran to pick it up, and advanced fearlessly
+towards the horse. Ellen turned round, half alarmed for her
+child. The stranger leaped to the ground to receive the hat,
+saying at the same time, “Thank you, my fine fellow; you
+are a brave boy.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen looked up with a pleased smile at the commendation
+of her darling George, and the stranger thought he had never
+in his life seen so beautiful a vision as that of the young widow
+with her close cap, her marble forehead, her straight-marked
+eyebrows, and those lustrous eyes, which gleamed so softly
+from beneath the hanging crape of her widow’s bonnet. He
+bowed with profound respect, remounted his horse, and
+rode on.</p>
+
+<p>He longed to look back, but there was something so
+serenely pure and holy in the expression of her countenance,
+that he felt it would be almost sacrilege to betray even common
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline, whose career as a country town beauty had made
+her somewhat alive to the glances of passers by, could not
+help saying to Ellen, “That gentleman seemed quite struck
+when you turned round; I saw him give a start of surprise,
+and the colour came into his face.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Caroline, how can you talk in that manner? there is
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>something horrid in the notion of a widow exciting any feeling
+but pity.” Ellen’s delicacy shrank from such an idea, and
+they proceeded on their way in silence.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger was a visitor at Lord Coverdale’s, and at
+dinner he mentioned having seen this lovely widow in the
+green lane. “Oh, it must have been Mrs. Cresford,” said
+Lady Coverdale; “she is our clergyman’s sister-in-law, and
+they say she is very handsome. I am dying to see her, but
+she never appears when I call on Mrs. Allenham. Her
+husband was one of the <i lang="fr">detenus</i>, and the poor man died six or
+seven months ago in France.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton left Coverdale Park the next day, but</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Those eyes of deep and most expressive blue,”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>came between him and his midnight dreams</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Oftener than any other eyes he ever knew.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ellen returned to her cottage, where she still continued to
+reside, devoting great part of her liberal jointure to the assistance
+of her father, and to the advancement of her brothers in
+their various professions. The eldest was active and industrious,
+and was, through her means, enabled to become a
+partner, though but to a small amount, in the concern.</p>
+
+<p>The first year of Ellen’s widowhood had more than expired,
+and she again visited her sister and Mr. Allenham. She had
+changed her mourning, and etiquette no longer required that
+she should persevere in her seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>She now accompanied the Allenhams when they dined at
+Coverdale Park, and all who met her were struck by her
+beauty and attracted by her manners. Though her countenance
+still retained its habitually pensive expression, a smile
+would now occasionally light up her features, and he must
+have been a cold critic who could perceive any fault in the
+perfection of her loveliness.</p>
+
+<p>One day when they arrived at Coverdale Park, Ellen found
+herself greeted with a bow of profound respect, and a smile of
+recognition, by a tall, distinguished looking man, of whom she
+had not the slightest recollection. She acknowledged his
+salutation in the polite, half-doubting manner which is usual
+on such an occasion. Lady Coverdale immediately introduced
+him as Mr. Hamilton, and added that he had returned from a
+solitary ride last year, quite enchanted with her noble boy, who
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>had so fearlessly brought him his hat, under the very feet of
+his horse.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen remembered the circumstance, and the name of
+Hamilton fell on her ear as being connected with a romantic
+history, not common in these unchivalrous days.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton, when scarcely twenty, had taken his only
+sister to Naples for the recovery of her health. After having
+watched her gradual decline with tender and almost feminine
+attention, he had committed to the grave the remains of his
+only near relation, and found himself, without any tie, alone
+in a foreign land, at the moment when Buonaparte’s invasion
+of Italy had awakened the love of liberty, which though
+slumbering, was not totally extinguished in the souls of a few
+of her sons. With the true English spirit which considers as
+brethren those engaged in the struggle for freedom, he felt
+warmly for that lovely land—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Italia a cui feo la sorte</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">Dono infelice di beltà!</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>On several occasions he fought as a volunteer among the
+Italians, whom, in the enthusiasm of youth, he venerated as the
+descendants of the ancient Romans, passing over in his imagination
+the many centuries during which the national character
+had been degraded by submission to foreign powers. He forgot
+that the natives of the soil had for ages past allowed themselves
+to be mastered and controlled by hireling troops of
+strangers, and hoped that if once restored to independence, they
+would rise regenerate from their ashes.</p>
+
+<p>He had formed an ardent friendship with a young Italian,
+Count Adolfo Melandrini, who was in command of a small
+squadron of troops. He acted as a sort of aide-de-camp to his
+friend, and fought by his side with all the generous impetuosity
+of his character. The star of Buonaparte, however, was in
+the ascendant: neither Melandrini’s nor young Hamilton’s
+heroism could do more than rouse the spirit of those immediately
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>Many of the states had been compelled to purchase an
+armistice by the sacrifice of their treasures of art. Melandrini’s
+indignation knew no bounds. His national pride was touched in
+the tenderest point, and in a skirmish which occurred shortly
+afterwards between his squadron and the advanced-guard of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>the French, in which his dispirited men were on the point of
+yielding, he dashed with headlong desperation into the midst
+of the enemy’s troops.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton, who loved his friend with passionate devotion,
+and regarded him as the one being in whom the spirit of the
+olden time still survived, watched over his safety with almost
+religious veneration.</p>
+
+<p>They both performed prodigies of valour; but at length
+Melandrini sank covered with wounds, and faint from the loss
+of blood. Hamilton stood over the body of his friend, defending
+it with the energy of despair, and firmly resolved that
+while he retained life, it should never fall into the hands of
+the foe. The troops in the mean time rallied, and, returning
+to the charge, drove back the enemy. Hamilton was found
+still protecting the almost lifeless form of the Italian chief,
+which he never quitted for a moment, but bore in his own arms
+back to the entrenchments. His efforts to save his friend
+were, however, unavailing: Melandrini had found the death
+he sought, and only survived long enough to express his gratitude
+to Hamilton, whose gallant feat was soon noised abroad,
+and reached the ears of many who were not personally acquainted
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>The surrender of Mantua put an end to all idea of further
+resistance. Italy allowed herself quietly to be plundered of
+all her most precious and holy ornaments, even including the
+famous image of our Lady of Loretto, and Hamilton, in disgust
+abandoning the wretched land, returned to his own free
+and happy country. His paternal estates were considerable, and
+he resolved to devote himself in private to the welfare of those
+who were dependant upon him, and in public to the preservation
+of that liberty which he believed to be the basis of all that
+ennobles man. He distinguished himself in parliament, at
+first, perhaps, by too great vehemence, on the liberal side; but
+his own clear head and maturer judgment soon tempered what
+might have been extravagant in his enthusiasm, and at the age
+of nine-and-twenty he was as practically useful a member of
+society, as he had originally been a romantic advocate of
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen, who long ago had accidentally heard the history of
+his achievements, looked on him with a certain degree of respect,
+as the hero who, to her girlish imagination, had realised
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>the stories of Paladins of old. It was with pleasure, therefore,
+that she found herself seated by him at dinner.</p>
+
+<p>His appearance and his address did not disappoint her. His
+flashing eye seemed formed “to threaten and command;” his
+athletic form might well, single-handed, have kept at bay a
+host of common men; while she could imagine that from
+those expressive lips might flow streams of eloquence to sway
+the listening senate. Still he was peculiarly simple and
+straight-forward: with all his fame about him he had a frank
+manner, as though what was said by him, carried with it no
+more weight than if it had been uttered by the most undistinguished
+individual in the room. Yet every thing he said was
+well said; all showed reflection, reading, sound judgment, and
+refined taste. He was, in all respects, so superior to any one
+with whom Ellen had ever yet been thrown, that he appeared
+to her a being of another order.</p>
+
+<p>The enthusiasm which we have described as being a leading
+feature of his character, although tempered by judgment in
+political matters, was still all there; and the impression produced
+by the first sight of Ellen in her weeds, was not weakened
+by further acquaintance. The lightning of her smile,
+when usurping the place of her usually pensive expression,
+reminded him of the days of youthful romance, when he and
+his friend Melandrini used to study Petrarch together, and
+reading of the “lampeggiar del angelico riso,” would picture
+to themselves what must have been that Laura, who could
+render the poet,</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent10" lang="it">Si da se stesso diviso</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="it">E fatto singolar da l’altra gente.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>He now thought, if she had resembled Ellen, there was nothing
+to marvel at in the poets’s long and hopeless devotion.</p>
+
+<p>During the two years which she had passed in retirement,
+she had read a great deal; and the education which she had
+thus given herself had tended more to cultivate her mind than
+all the accomplishments with which governesses cram the
+common run of young ladies. The more he saw of her, the
+more he became convinced that the qualities of her head and
+heart fully corresponded with the loveliness of her person.</p>
+
+<p>Lord and Lady Coverdale found their most agreeable friend,
+Mr. Hamilton, vastly more willing to prolong his visit than
+usual. He seemed much struck with the excellence of Mr.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span>Allenham’s opinions upon the subject of the poor laws, and
+he frequently walked to the parsonage, to discuss the subject
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>The eagerness with which Mr. Hamilton accepted their
+invitation to repeat his visit made them begin to suspect that
+the youthful widow had more to say to the attractions of the
+parsonage than Mr. Allenham and the poor laws. Still,
+though he evidently admired Mrs. Cresford, there was nothing
+which could justify any reports. He was so afraid of alarming
+her by any indiscreet avowal of his preference, that he
+continued merely to seek the society of the family in general.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline, however, who was not so very delicate upon such
+subjects as her sister, could refrain no longer.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Ellen! I suppose, now you have been seven months
+out of your weeds, I may venture to say that Mr. Hamilton
+admires you? and it is my belief, though I am not apt to
+place much reliance on men in general, it is my belief he intends
+to propose to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, Caroline! he has never said any thing like it.”
+But Ellen’s heart beat quicker, and the colour mounted in her
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes! you think so too! You are blushing ten times
+more than when poor Mr. Cresford proposed.” (Caroline always
+disliked Mr. Cresford, for she was exceedingly afraid of him.)</p>
+
+<p>“Hush, Caroline! Do not speak so of my poor husband!
+He was very fond of me; and nothing in the world should
+ever induce me to do any thing that was the least disrespectful
+towards his memory.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, but you are not bound to remain a widow, from
+the age of three-and-twenty, for evermore!”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not out of mourning yet, Caroline.”</p>
+
+<p>No more passed; but this conversation made Ellen appear
+more conscious, and less at her ease in Mr. Hamilton’s presence,
+than she had previously done. From this sign he
+gathered hope.</p>
+
+<p>The remarks of friends, the quizzing of acquaintances, the
+reports of the world, greatly accelerate matters when there
+already exists a real preference, though they often completely
+nip a slight one in its bud. There is a particular moment at
+which they fan the flame, and a previous one at which they
+blow it out.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="5" style="text-decoration: none;">V.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">What voice is this, thou evening gale,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That mingles with thy rising wail,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And as it passes sadly seems</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The faint return of youthful dreams.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Joanna Baillie.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton’s manner became more and more marked, and
+before the expiration of his second visit to Lord Coverdale’s,
+be one day took courage and spoke his sentiments to Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>She received his avowal with all the confusion of a girl
+who, for the first time, hears expressions of love addressed to
+her. It was that now, for the first time, she felt the passion
+herself. She could not deny her preference, and he was made
+happy by hearing from her own lips that she esteemed him,
+that she believed she could be happy as his wife.</p>
+
+<p>But she persisted in a resolution to see him no more till the
+two years of her widowhood had expired, and till then not
+even to correspond with him. He thought her delicacy rather
+over-strained—he thought her almost prudish—but a man
+does not love or value a woman the less for erring on the side
+of decorum, especially when he is confident he has undivided
+possession of her heart; and the speaking eyes, the trembling
+hand, the faltering voice, all assured him that such was the
+case.</p>
+
+<p>She made him promise to confide to no one their engagement,
+and he tore himself away, to get through the four
+months which intervened as best he might. He almost repented
+having spoken to her at all, and at moments doubted
+whether the delightful certainty of being loved quite compensated
+for the loss of her society.</p>
+
+<p>She, on her part, half repented of her decision in banishing
+him, and quite repented of her prohibition to correspond. Her
+affection for him increased rapidly in absence. This is frequently
+the case with women. When in the presence of the
+person they love, reserve and modesty prevent their freely
+giving way to what they feel, but in absence they dwell
+without fear on every word and look, and the imagination
+supplies food to the feelings.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen consulted with herself whether she should impart what
+had occurred to her sister, and, upon the whole, she thought
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>it best to do so. It seemed unkind to conceal such an important
+circumstance from one who took so tender an interest
+in all that concerned her, and, moreover, she should have some
+one to whom she could expatiate upon the perfections of Mr.
+Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline was half angry at not having been at once let into
+the secret, but she was so pleased at the prospect of her sister’s
+enjoying such happiness as she now knew, that she soon got
+over her little vexation.</p>
+
+<p>As Ellen expected, she proved an invaluable confidante in
+one respect; she listened with delight to any tale of love;
+but in another respect she rendered the task she had imposed
+upon herself more difficult, as she was constantly arguing with
+Ellen upon the over-strained delicacy of sending Mr. Hamilton
+away for the next few months. But the more Ellen longed
+to break it, the more firmly she adhered to her determination.
+She accused herself of ingratitude towards him who was the
+father of her children, in feeling so very happy as she did,
+and she resolved to pay this tribute of respect to his memory.</p>
+
+<p>The four months elapsed. Ellen had remained all this
+time with her sister, and it was to Longbury that Mr. Hamilton
+returned when the time of his probation was over.</p>
+
+<p>If Ellen’s passion had increased in absence, Mr. Hamilton’s
+had not cooled, and never were two people more thoroughly
+attached, more romantically in love, and what, in the long
+run, conduces still more to lasting happiness, more entirely
+suited in disposition, than Ellen and her future husband.</p>
+
+<p>Their approaching marriage was now declared, and Lady
+Coverdale rallied Mr. Hamilton upon his thirst for information
+concerning the poor laws.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham, who was an affectionate father, although
+an irritable man, rejoiced in the bright prospects of his
+daughter, and he was much gratified by the connection. Mr.
+Hamilton’s situation in life was such as to render his alliance
+eligible to any one, in however high a station; and to a man
+who had been reduced by poverty below his original position
+in the scale of society, it was peculiarly satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage was to take place at Longbury, and after the
+delays necessary for settlements, &amp;c. the day was fixed. Mr.
+Allenham performed the ceremony. Her father gave her
+away. There was no pomp; Ellen wished to have the whole
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>quiet and unostentatious. Deeply as she was attached to Mr.
+Hamilton—confident as she was in his love for her—much as
+her reason, as well as her heart, approved of the step she was
+about to take,—a vague dread came over her as the day approached.
+Sounds as of other days were ringing in her ears.
+At times she almost fancied she heard the cathedral bells of
+her native place, the chime of the Minster clock striking the
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>Who has not, without any concatenation of ideas which
+he can trace, when dropping asleep perhaps, or when plunged
+in a dreamy reverie, felt as it were the vibration of well-known
+sounds, and with effort roused himself to the recollection
+that he was far away from the home which was thus
+brought to his mind?</p>
+
+<p>On the eventful morning, the full deep swell of the cathedral
+bells, which rang out so sonorously on the morning of her first
+marriage, seemed to make themselves heard through the
+merry peal of the three or four tinkling bells which were all
+the boast of Longbury church.</p>
+
+<p>As Mr. Allenham pronounced the words, “Those whom
+God hath joined together, let no man put asunder,” that sound
+again rang in her ears—a mist came over her eyes—she
+fancied it was Mr. Cresford’s hand in which her’s was placed,
+and she fainted in her husband’s arms.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="6" style="text-decoration: none;">VI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">For contemplation he, and valour formed;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For softness she, and sweet attractive grace;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">He for God only, she for God in him.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Milton.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The last few words of the ceremony were quickly hurried
+over. Ellen was supported into the vestry, where she quickly
+recovered; and the circumstance of a bride’s fainting was not
+an event of such rare occurrence as to excite much surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton’s place was situated in a lovely country on
+the borders of Sussex and Surrey. Hanging woods, extensive
+oak copses mixed with birch, sandy lanes, hedges which
+are enlivened by large hollies with their glossy leaves and
+their red berries—wild patches of heath, studded with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>juniper bushes—fern and innumerable wild flowers in the
+shaws and dingles—banks blue with violets, and dells yellow
+with primroses, are the characteristics of that most enjoyable
+part of England.</p>
+
+<p>Belhanger, which was the name of his place, was in the
+Elizabethan style. A spacious hall, in which was an immense
+fire-place, surmounted by the antlers of some patriarchal stag,
+communicated with a large, low, oak dining-room, and through
+some smaller apartments to a drawing-room, which was hung
+with tapestry, and adorned with beautiful oak carving; the
+crossings of the beams in the ceiling were ornamented with
+wooden rosettes, in the most antique taste, while the rest of
+the room was provided with all the essentials requisite for
+modern comfort. A broad and massive staircase of black oak
+led, as is usual with buildings of that period, to a gallery on
+the upper floor, which extended the whole length of the south
+front, and which, with its two fire-places, and its innumerable
+windows of all shapes and sizes, admitting every ray of sun,
+was one of the most delightful winter apartments imaginable.</p>
+
+<p>The exterior of the mansion was as irregular as the most
+ardent lover of the picturesque could desire. It was built of
+grey-stone, and composed of gable-ends of every possible
+angle. As its name indicated, it was built upon the side of a
+hill, which had originally been covered with hanging woods.
+The woods had been partially cleared away near the house,
+and a sloping lawn led down to the small but romantic deer-park
+in the valley.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen thought Belhanger the very <i lang="fr">beau ideal</i> of an English
+manorial house, and, if she had not been too much in
+love, and too happy in the affections of such a man as Mr.
+Hamilton, to find room in her heart for emotions that were
+not connected with him, she would have thought the possession
+of such a place as Belhanger an additional pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>The poor people, too, were a more primæval race than those
+who have not lived in that part of the world would expect to
+find at so short a distance from the metropolis. The bright
+blue smock-frocks which are there the common dress of the
+men, and the red cloaks which the women still wear, gave a
+picturesque appearance to the peasant congregation as they
+trooped out of church, and wound down the steep road, by
+the beech-crowned knoll.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span></p>
+<p>Ellen was charmed with all she saw, but, perhaps, she
+would have been equally charmed had her home been less perfect
+in itself, for she had that within which would have made
+a cottage appear to her a palace—a desert a paradise.</p>
+
+<p>The judicious kindness of Mr. Hamilton to her children,
+the eldest of whom was now six years old, gave him still
+another claim on her affections and her gratitude. He counselled
+with her on the best course of education, the proper
+method of training a boy’s mind, and entered into the subject
+with all a father’s eagerness and anxiety. Ellen rejoiced that
+she had given her son such a protector, and looked forward to
+his making, under such guidance, a useful and an exemplary
+member of society.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton found in Ellen new charms, new virtues,
+each succeeding day. She was one of those shrinking and
+sensitive creatures who cannot put forth half their powers of
+pleasing except in the intimacy of domestic life, and under
+the fostering hand of kindness. Before her first marriage she
+had been but a child, a timid frightened child—while the
+wife of Mr. Cresford, although adored by himself, he had
+been so fearful of her appearing too attractive in the eyes of
+others, that she had acquired the habit of trying to glide
+through life unobserved, in order to avoid any ebullitions of
+jealousy on his part, rather than of attempting to shine as an
+agreeable person. She was astonished and delighted when
+she saw her husband’s expressive eyes follow her as she spoke,
+and gleam on her with kindly pride when others seemed to
+admire her.</p>
+
+<p>Life was to her a new state of existence: not that she had
+hitherto been an unhappy person; she had always repeated
+to herself how much cause she had for gratitude: but the
+inward dancing of the heart she had never before experienced,
+and she often said to her husband, “Algernon, you make me
+too happy. This cannot last; something must happen: I do
+not deserve to be so blessed above the rest of womankind.”</p>
+
+<p>He would reply with a smile, “Do you fancy, Ellen, you
+are the only woman whose husband loves her?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but I am the only woman in the world who am
+loved by you. Am I not?” she added, with a playful glance
+of entire confidence in his devotion.</p>
+
+<p>When parliament met, they repaired to London, and she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>then moved in a sphere vastly more elevated than that to
+which she had been introduced as Mrs. Cresford. But she
+had so much native grace and dignity, that she did not appear
+to be transplanted into a new soil, but rather to be now restored
+to that which was natural and congenial to her.</p>
+
+<p>She had the rapture of hearing her husband spoken of with
+respect, and of seeing him treated with deference, by every
+one. By his own party he was looked up to as one of its
+most influential members, more from the weight of his personal
+character than from that of his property and situation,
+although they also were of considerable importance. By his
+opponents he was considered as the one fair man, who, though
+decided in his own opinions, was ready to render justice to
+the uprightness of those who differed from him. There can
+be no condition of life happier than that of Ellen at this moment,
+none more respectable in the scale of human beings,
+than that of the wife of an Englishman of unblemished reputation,
+who holds a distinguished position in the senate of that
+nation whose laws and constitution have been the admiration,
+and the model, of nearly every civilised country in both hemispheres.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen again became a mother, and the birth of a little girl,
+if possible, cemented more strongly the bond of union between
+herself, her husband, and her children.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly two years had now elapsed since she had become
+the happy wife of Mr. Hamilton; and he had for nearly two
+years enjoyed the society of the lovely and devoted woman for
+whom his affection daily increased, as her valuable qualities
+continually opened upon him. She was adored by all around.
+The poor showered blessings upon her name whenever it was
+mentioned,—their richer neighbours had nothing but acts
+and words of kindness to record of her. Her eldest brother
+took every opportunity that his avocations allowed him, to
+run down to Belhanger. Her father, when with Mr. Hamilton,
+seemed to lose his captiousness; for there is a magic in
+very high breeding which renders any ebullition of temper
+almost impracticable. Matilda, who was become a fine showy
+girl, often passed some time with her sister Ellen, and had
+profited much by her example and advice.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Allenham were at this moment in the house;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>Lord and Lady Coverdale, and their daughter, had just arrived,
+and some other persons, political friends of Mr. Hamilton’s.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Coverdale had been telling Ellen she thought her the
+most fortunate woman in the world; she had been speaking
+of Mr. Hamilton, whom she had known from his infancy, in
+terms which even Ellen thought worthy of the theme, and
+had been saying how happy she should esteem herself if she
+could ever see her daughter blessed with such a husband, and
+possessed of such a home; Algernon’s friends had been gaily
+complimenting him upon his good taste, and his good fortune,
+and declaring they had sufficient discrimination to appreciate
+such a woman, if they could only have the good fortune to
+meet with any one at all resembling Mrs. Hamilton, when one
+morning at breakfast Ellen received a letter from her brother,
+enclosing one directed to her as Mrs. Cresford, and addressed
+to the house in London which she had formerly inhabited.</p>
+
+<p>The post-mark was foreign, and there was something in a
+letter addressed to her by that name, which struck her as
+being so strange that she did not open it, but folding it again
+in her brother’s envelope, she waited till she could retire to
+peruse its contents. She continued to perform her part of
+hostess at the breakfast-table, and told herself it must be a
+begging letter, from some one, perhaps, who had known Mr.
+Cresford at Verdun.</p>
+
+<p>Still the letter haunted her, and she could scarcely smile at
+the gay jests which passed round the breakfast-table, or listen
+to the news and gossip contained in the correspondence of the
+other members of the society. The outside was so covered
+with post-marks, and various directions, that she had not remarked
+in what sort of hand the name was written, and she
+quietly took it out of the envelope, just to see if it did look
+like a begging letter. Her former name always made her
+shudder, she could not tell why, and she had often reproached
+herself for the feeling, as an unkind and ungrateful one towards
+the memory of him who was gone. It was that strange
+instinct which had made her so quickly put this letter aside,
+and it was with an unaccountable trepidation that she again
+drew it forth to examine the hand-writing. She looked and
+looked again, till her eyes swam. It was very like the writing
+which was only too familiar to her. It was,—it must be his
+writing,—she could not be mistaken; only it was impossible.—quite
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>impossible. Yet it might contain his last behests,
+which had, from some cause, never been delivered before.
+She could not open it. She hastily concealed it, and turning
+deadly pale, she sat, scarcely conscious of what passed
+around her, till the last person had been helped to his last cup
+of tea.</p>
+
+<p>She longed to know the contents, but there came a sickness
+over her heart, which made her postpone the dreaded moment.
+At length the company rose one by one, and straggled towards
+the windows. She summoned all her might, and walked
+steadily to the door—she sought her own boudoir, and seating
+herself upon the sofa, she again unfolded the envelope, she
+again gazed on the outside—she had not yet courage to break
+the seal.</p>
+
+<p>There was something dreadful in thus receiving the dying
+injunctions of one husband, one who had loved her, too, so
+passionately, in reading the ebullitions of his vehement affection,
+when she was the adoring wife of another. She felt as
+though he were about to speak to her from the grave.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at the post-marks. There were upon it, in
+various coloured inks, Gratz, Vienna, Dresden, Magdeburg,
+Hamburgh. No Verdun post-mark! How strange! Wonder,
+terror, conquered all other feelings—she tore open the seal—it
+was indeed his own hand-writing!—the date, Gratz, June
+1808—What could it mean? She looked at the end—it
+was his own, very own name!—it was addressed to her! It
+began, “My beloved wife, my own Ellen!” She could read
+no more; the letter dropped from her hand, and she fainted
+on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>She was in this state, when Mr. Hamilton, alarmed by her
+paleness at breakfast, sought her in her boudoir. He raised
+her from the ground, and calling her maid, soon succeeded in
+restoring her to herself—To herself? No! She could never
+again be what she had been!</p>
+
+<p>She gazed around with wild and haggard eyes; then motioning
+the maid to leave the room, and watching with agonized
+fear till the double doors were both closed, she screamed rather
+than said,—</p>
+
+<p>“He is alive! he is alive! I am not your wife, Algernon!
+I am not yours!” and she threw herself into his arms, she
+clung to him, she clasped her arms around his neck, with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>desperate energy, as if she thought thus to rivet the tie she
+felt was severed.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen! dearest Ellen! my own gentle Ellen, are you
+raving? You must be ill! What is the matter? You really
+frighten me!” he added, attempting to smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Look there, Algernon! there it lies! I have only read
+the first line, and would to heaven I had died! Oh! if I
+could but die now, with my head on your bosom,—your arms
+around me,—my eyes fixed on yours! Dearest, dearest
+Algernon! I love you better than any thing else in the whole
+world—better, ten thousand times better than myself!
+Words cannot express the thousandth part of the agonizing
+love I feel for you! and it is all a crime! Look there! read
+that!” and she pressed her hands against her eyeballs, as if
+to exclude light and consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>This burst of passion was so unlike his retiring Ellen,
+whose affection, though evinced by every action of her life,
+implied by all she said, had still seemed frightened back into
+her heart, if in any moment of tenderness she was called upon
+to couch it into actual language, that Mr. Hamilton was lost
+in astonishment! In dread and wonder he took the letter in
+his hand—he saw the beginning—he looked at the date—he
+staggered to a chair, and exclaiming, “Merciful Heaven!”
+he too remained stupified, unable to utter, and scarcely to
+think, or to comprehend the extent of the misfortune which
+had befallen them.</p>
+
+<p>At length reason in some measure resumed its sway, and
+he suggested, “May it not be a forgery? Are you sure it is
+his hand?” A momentary light flashed athwart her mind;
+she seized the paper, and they sat down together to the perusal
+of that letter, on which their fates so completely hung!</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="7" style="text-decoration: none;">VII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">Son ilusion mis dichas</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="es">Son realidad mis penas.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was with difficulty that Algernon and Ellen could fix their
+eyes upon the paper; every thing swam before them. They
+read in silence the following letter—with what feelings may
+be better imagined than described.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>
+“My beloved Wife, my own Ellen,<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>“You must have been astonished at not hearing from
+me the result of the desperate attempt to escape from Verdun,
+of which I informed you. It succeeded! so far, at least, as
+getting safe out of that horrible dungeon, disguised as one of
+the mourners at my own funeral, according to the plan I
+hinted at in my letter by Maitland, and which he promised to
+describe to you more fully when he reached England. I made
+my way across the Rhine into Germany; but I found the
+examinations so very strict, and the officers at the custom-houses
+so exceedingly suspicious, that I fancied I should be
+safer if I advanced farther into Germany, and tried to work
+my way to Hamburgh.</p>
+
+<p>“I was, however, almost immediately seized as a spy. My
+ignorance of the language was supposed to be a feint, and I
+was passed on, from authority to authority, from governor to
+governor, till I believe they began to think me a person of
+great importance.</p>
+
+<p>“I was at length cast into a prison at this place; and here
+I have now languished more than four years.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not venture to write to you while wandering in
+France. All letters being opened, they might have led to my
+being traced and identified; and from the moment I was in
+the power of the Germans, I was not allowed the use of pen
+and paper, lest there might be some hidden meaning in any
+thing I might despatch to England.</p>
+
+<p>“I have now endured four years of mental anguish, such
+as man has seldom survived. There hangs a mist over some
+of the horrible years spent in this abode of misery. The
+wretches who drove me to desperation, treated me as a madman
+for resenting their cruelty, and I found myself at one
+time pinioned in a straight waistcoat!</p>
+
+<p>“Was it not enough to madden a cooler head than mine,
+to gall a calmer heart than mine, to be thus severed from the
+creature one adores, to know one’s lovely wife, left lonely and
+unprotected, in the bloom of youth, amid all the temptations
+of this corrupt world? Oh, Ellen! I shall go mad if I think
+of that! But you are virtuous, Ellen!—Yes, yes—if there
+is virtue in woman it is in you. And yet—five long years of
+absence! Oh! you will have forgotten me. You cannot
+have loved me, and me alone, in all these years! Oh God!
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>if you should have loved another! My brain goes round!
+Be faithful to me, Ellen, as you value my reason, and your
+own welfare, here and hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>“But I am altered, fearfully altered. I am grown grey;
+I am twenty years older than when we parted. But I love
+you, Ellen—I love you with more ardour, more burning, maddening
+fervour, than when I first bore you in your maiden
+bloom from the home of your childhood.</p>
+
+<p>“Write to me, my love, my wife, my own, own blessed
+wife! Your letter will reach me in safety if you inclose it to
+the new governor, who is a kind-hearted man, and has given
+me permission to bid you do so. He pities me. He will
+stand my friend. He promises to forward a petition which I
+am now drawing up, direct to the Emperor, and a ray of hope
+has dawned upon me. I may yet return to you, my Ellen,
+and to my children—</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+“In life and in death,<br>
+<br>
+“Your adoring husband,<br>
+<br>
+“<span class="smcap">Charles Cresford</span>.”<br>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ellen and Algernon spoke not—moved not. They sat
+transfixed—they did not venture to raise their eyes to each
+other. Neither could entertain any doubt of the authenticity
+of the letter. It would be folly, worse than folly, to utter
+what neither could believe. They who had been all the
+world to each other—they whose love had been so pure that
+angels might have looked down from heaven and smiled upon
+it—what were they now? They dared not think.</p>
+
+<p>At length Ellen murmured in a low and almost choked
+voice—</p>
+
+<p>“Is he my husband, Algernon? Does the law say he is
+my husband?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen, do not make me speak my own doom.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is enough,” she said, “and my child is—” she paused
+for a moment, and after a short struggle, continued,—“is
+illegitimate!”</p>
+
+<p>He was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, merciful Heaven!” she screamed, “it cannot be
+true,” and she started from her seat with a wild look of hope.
+“It is a dream! Tell me so, Algernon, my own Algernon,
+my husband, tell me so. Speak to me!” and she threw herself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>on her knees at his feet, with clasped hands, and beseeching
+eyes, looking up in his face.</p>
+
+<p>He lifted her from the ground, and whispered,—“We can
+fly, Ellen. There are other lands than this. There are
+countries where we may be beyond the reach of British laws,
+where we may have the clear blue sky of heaven above us,
+where Nature pours forth her treasures to man with a bounteous
+hand; where we may live in freedom from the trammels of
+human institutions, but bound by the most sacred ties—our
+own vows of eternal constancy, which surely have been registered
+above.”</p>
+
+<p>“Live with you, as your mistress! No, never, Algernon!”
+and she drew up her slender form to its full height, and stood
+the very personification of female purity and dignity. “Never,
+Algernon! Any thing would be more tolerable than to have
+you cease to respect me.”</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to have regained her self-command. An almost
+supernatural strength for a moment inspired her.</p>
+
+<p>“Now what is to be done? What is it our duty to do?
+But oh! the shame, the dreadful shame, of being exposed to
+the world as having lived for two years in sin.”</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the voices of the children were heard in
+the passage; they flung open the door, and came bounding
+joyously into the room with the wild flowers they had gathered
+in their walk. The sight of them softened and overcame the
+mother,—she burst into a flood of tears.</p>
+
+<p>“They are his children,” she exclaimed, “and he will take
+them from me. I know he will—whichever way I turn fresh
+horrors surround me!”</p>
+
+<p>The poor little things, astonished at their reception, stood
+aghast. Mr. Hamilton hastily bade them leave their mother,
+told them she was not well, and hurried them out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen, dearest Ellen,” he said, and approached her. He
+took her hand, when she started away.</p>
+
+<p>“You must not touch me, Algernon! It is a crime. You
+say yourself I am his wife, and he is coming home. Algernon,”
+she said, in a clear, low, sepulchral voice, speaking
+very slowly, “I cannot be forced to live with him again. No
+law can compel me to do that. Tell me the law,—let me
+know the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot say exactly; we will inquire. Compose yourself;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>let us do nothing rashly. Perhaps he may never return,—perhaps
+he may not live to return; we do not know.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am not your wife?”</p>
+
+<p>“This letter may still be a forgery.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, it is too true! and I am not your wife,” she repeated,
+with the accent of utter hopelessness.</p>
+
+<p>He stood in silence; he could not say she was. He endured
+agony equal to her’s, except that he did not feel the
+guilt and the remorse which were added to all her other sufferings.
+They remained silent till she could endure it no
+longer. “Algernon, no law can be so cruel as to separate
+us: it is impossible. After all, we were lawfully married in
+a church: no one forbade the banns,—no one answered the
+awful adjuration, ‘Let him now speak, or ever after hold his
+peace.’ Yes, we must be lawfully married. We are, are we
+not? Say so, my own Algernon, my husband?” and she
+wound herself round him, and looked up in his face with all
+the winning tenderness she could put into those melting eyes.
+“I am your wife, your wedded wife, am I not, dearest?”
+and she tried to smile, a sweet, sad, heart-rending smile.</p>
+
+<p>This was too much for poor Hamilton. He took her in his
+arms, he pressed her to his bosom. “You are my own Ellen,
+my life, my love, the joy of my heart; without you life would
+be intolerable.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am your wife, dearest; say so,—in pity say so!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes, you are! In spite of ordinances, human and
+divine, you are; you shall be my wife!”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said, slowly shaking her head—“no! if you
+speak so, then I am not your wife.”</p>
+
+<p>She gradually relaxed her hold, her arms dropped by her
+side, and she sank into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>He looked on her for a few moments with a fixed gaze of
+despair, then striking his forehead he rushed out of the room,
+darted down the stairs, out of the house, and plunged into the
+most retired part of the park, where he wildly paced the
+ground, beating his bosom, and almost dashing his head against
+the trees.</p>
+
+<p>When Ellen saw him hurry from her presence she gave
+one shriek.</p>
+
+<p>“He is gone!” she cried; “gone—I have lost him for
+ever!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span></p>
+<p>In the mean time, the maid, who had heard her master
+quit the apartment, came to inquire how her mistress felt after
+her attack of faintness. She was terrified when she saw her
+countenance. However, her entrance had in some measure
+the effect of forcing Ellen to rouse herself. She begged her
+maid to leave her, assuring her she was quite recovered. She
+rose, and staggered to the window to prevent meeting the
+eyes of the faithful Stanmore, who had lived with her from
+the time she first married.</p>
+
+<p>Stanmore respectfully retired, but she was so much alarmed
+at the state in which she found her mistress, that she went to
+Mrs. Allenham’s room, to tell her that she feared Mrs. Hamilton
+was seriously indisposed.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline hastened to her sister, and found her dissolved in
+tears, which at length flowed copiously. To all Caroline’s
+questions she answered only by continued weeping, and sobs
+which succeeded each other so quickly that she could not
+have uttered, if she had wished to do so.</p>
+
+<p>The fresh air had in some measure restored Mr. Hamilton.
+He had recovered the powers of his mind. He had reflected
+that many unforeseen accidents might still prevent the return
+of Mr. Cresford; that the idea of his being alive, if once noised
+abroad, would throw a shade over their future lives, even
+should it eventually prove an unfounded notion. He persuaded
+himself once more it might be a trick for the purpose
+of extorting money upon the supposition that he would attempt
+to bribe the first husband to silence. He was not acquainted
+with Mr. Cresford’s hand-writing, and his hopes revived. At
+all events, the report once circulated could not be crushed, and
+he hastened back to the house, if possible, to calm Ellen, and
+to bind her to secrecy.</p>
+
+<p>He entered her boudoir just as Mrs. Allenham was trying
+to extract from her the cause of her distress, when Ellen,
+springing from her seat, rushed into Algernon’s arms, exclaiming,</p>
+
+<p>“You are not gone for ever. Thank God, I see you
+again!”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Allenham looked on in surprise. Could it be that
+Ellen and her husband had quarrelled? They whose conjugal
+felicity had become almost proverbial? Such scenes never
+occurred between herself and Mr. Allenham! Ellen was as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>good-tempered as she was; and though Mr. Hamilton was a
+more high-flown romantic sort of man than Mr. Allenham—not
+so religious perhaps—not so much in the habit of regulating
+his feelings by the exact measure of duty, still he was
+an excellent man, and a good-tempered man. What could it
+all mean?</p>
+
+<p>However, she felt she could be of little service, and that as
+Ellen had some one with her who would take care of her,
+should she again feel unwell, she left them together.</p>
+
+<p>“Compose yourself, dearest Ellen,” Mr. Hamilton said, in
+a soothing tone; “I have much to say, and you must listen
+attentively to my arguments.”</p>
+
+<p>“Any thing to hear your voice—to still look upon you,”
+and she seated herself opposite to him, and fixed her eyes
+upon him, as if she would drink in every word which fell from
+his lips, and indelibly fix in her mind every lineament of that
+face which she was soon no more to see.</p>
+
+<p>“Listen to me. There is a possibility that this letter may
+not be authentic.”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head sorrowfully. He continued,</p>
+
+<p>“All things are possible. Then there is more than a possibility,
+that, if alive, he whose name I cannot bring myself
+to speak, may never reach England. His health seems to be
+impaired,—he may sink under his sufferings. If he should
+never return, why should we have wilfully proclaimed to the
+world our disgrace?—for disgrace it will be in the eyes of the
+world, though no guilt is ours.”</p>
+
+<p>“But we should be guilty now, knowing what we do know.”</p>
+
+<p>“We are not quite sure: let us wait for confirmation before
+we breathe one word concerning this letter to any living
+being. Remember, that if we were to learn the next day that
+the poor prisoner had fallen a victim to his miseries, that he
+was at rest, though we might then be lawfully united, our
+child, our innocent child, would, by our own imprudence, be
+proved illegitimate.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen’s countenance changed: she listened with a persuaded
+air. Mr. Hamilton resumed,</p>
+
+<p>“We must, for her sake, hide for the present all we feel;
+we must, if possible, assume a calm exterior, and trust to
+Providence for the issue.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I knew what was right. And yet what you tell
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>me must be so. But I cannot,—I cannot show my face to-day;
+I am sure if I did, I should betray all.” After a pause,
+she added, “I will tell you what you must do, Algernon,
+though it breaks my heart to say so:—you must either allow
+me to pay my father a visit, or you must yourself go away for
+a time,—make a tour,—visit the lakes,—go to Scotland.
+We must not live together, till this dreadful mystery is cleared
+up, till our fate is ascertained one way or another.”</p>
+
+<p>“What! leave the company we have staying in the house?
+Impossible, without exciting such observations.”</p>
+
+<p>“They will be gone in three days, and then—then—Yes,
+it is better to be miserable only, than to be miserable and
+guilty also!”</p>
+
+<p>“If it is your wish, Ellen, I will leave you. It is best I
+should be the one to go: if you were to quit this roof it would
+feel more like a real and final separation.”</p>
+
+<p>“My fainting fit will be an excuse for my not appearing
+to-day. Indeed I do feel so ill. I could not bear my part in
+society. To-morrow I will try to do as you wish. I will
+strive, for the sake of my poor little Agnes.”</p>
+
+<p>The whole of that day was spent by the wretched Ellen in a
+state of stupefaction. The misfortune which had befallen her
+was too great and too overwhelming to be completely comprehended.
+Her overstrained nerves could bear no more, and
+she sat in a state of comparative calmness. She expressed no
+wish to see her children, no desire for any thing, and Mrs.
+Allenham bade the maid remain in the adjoining apartment.</p>
+
+<p>She returned to the company herself, and informed them of
+her sister’s sudden indisposition. She tried, with all the tact
+of which she was mistress, to extract from Lady Coverdale
+whether Mr. Hamilton had ever been subject to starts of temper,
+but she elicited nothing from her, but a recapitulation of his
+virtues.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="8" style="text-decoration: none;">VIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">We that did nothing study but the way</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To love each other, with which thoughts the day</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Rose with delight to us, and with them set,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Must learn the cruel art how to forget.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent20">——Like turtle doves</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Dislodged from their haunts, we must in tears</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Unwind a love knit up in many years.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Now turn we each from each—so fare our hearts,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">As the divorced soul from its body parts.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>The Surrender.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton had half succeeded in persuading himself the
+whole thing was a cunning forgery. The story seemed so
+improbable. No letter had ever arrived from Cresford—no
+Maitland had ever brought any intelligence of this attempt to
+escape. Colonel Eversham had seen him carried to the grave—the
+funeral had taken place at night, by Mr. Cresford’s
+dying request, he said. How unlikely, whatever might subsequently
+have been the difficulties of his situation, that if
+alive, he should really have allowed so much time to elapse
+without writing to the wife with whom he was so madly in
+love! These reflections all presented themselves to his mind,
+and by dinner-time he was able to take his accustomed seat,
+and to do the honours of his table with tolerable self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening Mrs. Allenham was alarmed by a recurrence
+of Ellen’s faintness: it was immediately after her children had
+been brought in to wish her good night.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Allenham was urgent that a physician should be sent
+for. Ellen appeared to revive, to express her vehement desire
+that no one should be summoned. She only wished that her
+maid should sleep on a sofa in her room, in case she should
+be worse in the night. Mrs. Allenham thought Mr. Hamilton
+rather remiss in not sending for medical advice.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Allenham,” she thought, “though he does not make
+such a fuss about his love for me, would never let me be as ill
+as Ellen is, without sending for all the doctors in the neighbourhood;
+but different men have different ways, and one
+must take people as one finds them.”</p>
+
+<p>One thing, however, she resolved upon, that if Ellen was
+not better the next morning, she would speak her mind openly
+to Mr. Hamilton, and insist on his having the very best advice.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was no sooner in her bed than she dropped into a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>profound slumber, from which she awoke early the next
+morning, refreshed in body, and with only a vague recollection
+of the tremendous change which had taken place in her
+fate. By degrees her actual situation opened upon her.</p>
+
+<p>How dreadful is the waking from a real sound sleep of
+forgetfulness, after any severe misfortune has befallen us!
+The temporary oblivion of our sorrows scarcely compensates
+for the agony of recollection.</p>
+
+<p>She was, however, aware of the necessity of concealing
+what she felt, if she wished to preserve the illegitimacy of her
+child from becoming public, while there was yet a hope of its
+remaining unknown. She passed some time in humble prayer,
+imploring guidance from above, judgment to know what was
+right, and strength to execute it.</p>
+
+<p>She rose from prayer in a calmer frame of mind—she felt
+herself fortified for the task before her— she thought that if
+Algernon left her at Belhanger alone, there could be no crime
+in delaying the promulgation of the dreadful secret, for the
+chance of saving herself and her child from unmerited disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>She went down to breakfast, and she made an attempt to
+smile in return to the salutations and inquiries of her friends.
+She was in the act of assuring them she was quite well, when
+Mr. Hamilton entered the apartment. She started as she heard
+his well-known turn of the lock, she faltered in her speech as
+he entered, her paleness was replaced by a vivid glow, which
+overspread her face, but she turned not her eyes upon him;
+she studiously avoided meeting his; the first sound of his
+voice thrilled through her very being.</p>
+
+<p>She took her station at the breakfast-table, upon the same
+spot where yesterday she had received that fatal intelligence
+which had so completely broken up her happiness. She took
+her station as mistress of the mansion to which she had no
+longer any right. She felt she was an impostor.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hamilton, who had the preceding day buoyed himself
+up with something more of hope than she had done, had
+passed a night of anxious restlessness. Sleep had not for one
+moment weighed down his eyelids; and when at length
+Ellen ventured almost by stealth to take one look at that beloved
+countenance, her heart was pierced to see it so wan, so
+haggard.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span></p>
+<p>Their object was to avoid exciting remark. A plan was
+proposed, and acceded to, of driving to see a fine castle in the
+neighbourhood, in which was a collection of pictures. Ellen
+accompanied the ladies in an open carriage, and Mr. Hamilton
+took the gentlemen across the country on horseback.</p>
+
+<p>While others were engaged in admiring some of the masterpieces
+of art, Ellen found herself near Mr. Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>“Algernon, you look very ill,” she said: “it breaks my
+heart to see you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Can it be otherwise, Ellen? Even you can scarcely know
+the tortures I endure.”</p>
+
+<p>“We must not speak to each other. I shall lose the self-command
+I have so struggled to obtain. But I have behaved
+well, Algernon. I have conducted myself according to your
+wishes?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes! yes! May God bless you, dearest and best! I
+cannot trust myself to say another word.”</p>
+
+<p>He hastened away, and went to the stables, as though to see
+for the horses and the barouche. Ellen busied herself in examining
+a picture, of which she did not see one form, and
+drove back her bursting tears, and stilled the tumult of her soul.</p>
+
+<p>On their way home, Lady Coverdale was eloquent on the
+beauties of this part of the world, on the charms of Belhanger,
+and discussed with much interest the plan for the
+flower-garden which Ellen was making along the terrace in
+front of the house.</p>
+
+<p>“When your shrubs have grown, and the creepers cover
+that bowered walk to the left, it will be quite beautiful. Are
+you not always very impatient at the slow growth of plants?
+One has to wait so long before one sees any result produced.
+I think it is a great objection to gardening. However, you are
+very young, and you may look forward to many years of enjoying
+your improvements.”</p>
+
+<p>These simple words shot like daggers through Ellen’s heart.
+She could not reply, and notwithstanding all her efforts to
+appear at her ease, the conversation flagged. Caroline had
+seen Ellen speak in a low voice to Mr. Hamilton, while others
+were engaged with the paintings; she had seen him suddenly
+leave the room, and perceiving how oppressed Ellen’s spirits
+were, became thoroughly convinced some serious disagreement
+had occurred.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span></p>
+<p>“Well,” she thought, “I suppose it will all come right
+again. Everybody cannot go on so smoothly as dear Mr.
+Allenham and I do!”</p>
+
+<p>When they returned from their excursion, Ellen retired
+to her room. She had not the heart, as usual, to repair to
+the nursery or the school-room. The sight of her two elder
+children harrowed her soul, from the fear that she possessed
+them only for a time, that they would be torn from her just
+when their opening intelligence, their amiable dispositions, had
+superadded to the instinctive love of a mother, the affection
+produced by their own good qualities. The sight of her little
+girl was scarcely less agonising, from the conviction that she
+must soon be a nameless outcast!</p>
+
+<p>She had again recourse to prayer, and she again rose from
+her devotions strengthened and resigned.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment a gentle tap at the door was heard, and
+Algernon entered.</p>
+
+<p>“I must see you, I must speak to you, Ellen! Human
+nature cannot endure this continued state of effort. Let us
+unbend for a few short moments. Tell me you love me, and
+that, let our fate be what it may, your heart, your whole heart,
+is mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Algernon! I have just been praying for strength
+and resignation, and I thought I had obtained my prayer.
+Do not speak to me in those tender tones. They melt away
+my whole soul, and I will, I will be firm. I must no longer
+allow myself to use such expressions; but I cannot even try
+not to feel all and more than I ever felt before. Spare my
+weakness, Algernon, and remember that dearly as I prize your
+love, I prize your good opinion still more. That is the one
+thought which enables me to exist, I believe.”</p>
+
+<p>He looked on her with admiration, almost amounting to awe.</p>
+
+<p>“My good opinion! You are as much superior to me, or to
+any other living being, as the angels of heaven are to the
+common run of mortals. I adore you, I venerate you, as one
+of them.” He knelt at her feet. “Speak, and I will obey you.
+I place myself under your guidance. I will regulate my actions
+by what you deem calculated to ensure your own peace
+of mind. I will prove to you that I can equal you at least in
+self-devotion; though my heart may break, I will not yield to
+you in that!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span></p>
+<p>“Get up, Algernon. Do not kneel at my feet. I cannot
+bear to hear you speak in such a manner. These scenes must
+not recur. We only agonize each other, and render ourselves
+unfit for our task. Leave me, dearest; leave me to compose
+myself!”</p>
+
+<p>“You bid me leave you, and I will do so. But will you
+not give me your hand?—that dear hand which, after all, was
+pledged to me at the altar!” He took her unresisting hand.
+“It was I who placed that ring upon your finger, Ellen;
+you then swore to me eternal fidelity, you swore to love me
+‘till death us did part.’ Can any thing cancel that vow?”
+And he drew her gently towards him.</p>
+
+<p>“O God! nothing, nothing!” She dashed his hand from
+her, and rushed to the opposite corner of the room. She
+glared wildly upon him. “Nothing, nothing can cancel that
+first dreadful vow! Oh! do not remind me of those words.
+It was then the vision came over me! He, whom you tell me
+is my husband, seemed to rise up between us, Algernon! It
+was a forewarning of what was to happen! I ought to have
+obeyed the warning—I should have stopped before”—her
+voice faltered, but she continued in a tone of unutterable
+sweetness—“before those words made me the happiest woman
+in the whole world!” She hid her face with her hands, and
+burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless you for what you have just said, my own Ellen!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do not call me your own Ellen; I am not—can never
+be! In mercy leave me—this agony is not to be endured!”</p>
+
+<p>Slowly and reluctantly he withdrew: he stood for a few
+moments at the door, and then he closed it, and she remained
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>She had prayed for strength, and she found it. She did
+not weep, but meekly sat, patient and uncomplaining. The hour
+for dressing arrived, and she mechanically proceeded with her
+toilet. Her maid had prepared the dress, the ornaments she
+thought she would wear. Mechanically she sate before the
+looking-glass, mechanically she arranged her ringlets round
+her face; she placed in her hair the ornamental comb her
+maid presented to her, fastened her ear-rings, held out her arm
+to have her bracelets clasped, and, when she was dressed,
+wondered at herself for having tricked herself out in all these
+gewgaws.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span></p>
+<p>“How strange,” she thought, “that I should have been
+able thus to deck this wretched form!” But such is the
+force of habit: it does not come into any body’s head to leave
+off the feathers, the diamonds, the flowers with which they
+are in the habit of adorning themselves, though the heart beneath
+may be breaking—and yet it seems a mockery!</p>
+
+<p>Before dinner Lady Coverdale begged that the children
+might be sent for, and little Agnes appeared in a beautiful
+cap which Miss Coverdale had embroidered for her. The
+beauty of the child’s eyes was discussed.</p>
+
+<p>“If Agnes grows up according to this promise, Mrs.
+Hamilton”—(Ellen started at the name)—“you will have
+a pleasant task in acting as her chaperon.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen almost sank at the prospect which was thus brought
+before her. She could not answer, but, hastily turning away,
+stirred the fire with great energy, at the same time exclaiming,
+“How hot it is!”</p>
+
+<p>They went to dinner; she was seated at the head of the
+table, opposite to Mr. Hamilton. She felt a sort of melancholy
+pleasure in being, as it were, forced to appear as his wife; but
+never did two such bursting hearts pass calmly through an
+evening of society.</p>
+
+<p>Another day succeeded, and it was spent in the same
+struggle. On the third the Coverdales departed, thinking that,
+for so happy a couple, they were the most fashionably cool
+they had ever seen; the Allenhams, fearing that Mr. Hamilton,
+charming as he was, must have an odd corner of temper, for,
+as to Ellen, they knew her too well to imagine for a moment
+that she could be in fault.</p>
+
+<p>They all drove from the door, and the wretched couple
+were left alone with their love and their misery.</p>
+
+<p>“And now <em>you</em> must leave me, Algernon; we must not
+remain here alone, and I even doubt whether I ought to remain
+under your roof.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Ellen! one would think you wished to believe we
+were severed, for ever severed! There is still hope.”</p>
+
+<p>“None for me! I know that hand-writing too well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must I go to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>“To-day, if you value my peace, and the little remnant of
+honour I may yet hope to preserve.”</p>
+
+<p>“This is hard, this is cruel; but you shall have an approving
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>conscience, my own Ellen; and if your conscience will
+be easier when I am gone, I will not linger: I will order
+every thing for my journey, and I will go at dusk to-night.
+Till then, you will let me be with you; till then, I may look
+on your face—I may listen to your voice—I may breathe the
+same air with you!”</p>
+
+<p>He flew to order his departure, and in another instant was
+by her side.</p>
+
+<p>There was a melancholy satisfaction in being together, and
+yet, when they were so, they could not speak: what could
+they say that was not fraught with wretchedness?</p>
+
+<p>“I must see our children, Ellen.”</p>
+
+<p>He had been in the habit of calling all the children “our;”
+but the little word, which from the force of habit escaped him,
+struck daggers to the hearts of both. The two elder were his
+children who might soon be at home to claim them.</p>
+
+<p>They all three came, and poor Hamilton devoured them
+with kisses. The little Agnes was just old enough to know
+him, and to hold out her arms to him with a smile of joy.
+They could neither of them endure this long; they could not
+talk to the children—they could not play with them—they
+could not listen to their prattle, and they were soon sent
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Strange to say, these last few hours, whose flight they so
+much dreaded, hung heavy. They wished to arrest the course
+of time, and yet they knew not how to pass it. They strolled
+into the garden: every thing there spoke of hope and promise;
+every thing within their own bosoms boded unheard-of
+wretchedness.</p>
+
+<p>They had several times paced in silence round the sheltered
+parterre, when Ellen turned deadly pale, and stopped for a few
+moments.</p>
+
+<p>“You must lean on me, Ellen! You must take my
+arm.”</p>
+
+<p>Her feebleness compelled her to do so, and once more he
+had the happiness of feeling that lovely form rest on him for
+support.</p>
+
+<p>Neither spoke again. Both hearts were too full for utterance.
+In silence they bent their course homeward. They
+again returned to the drawing-room. They once more sat
+down there together. They could not bring themselves to quit
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>each other for a moment,—to lose one instant of these few
+precious hours; and yet to each, the presence of the other was
+oppressive. This state of misery and <i lang="fr">gêne</i> was worse than that
+occasioned by the presence of others.</p>
+
+<p>They could not, at such a moment, speak on indifferent subjects;
+and if they alluded to their own situation, it must lead
+to passionate bursts of feeling, which she considered as criminal,
+and which he also dreaded for her sake.</p>
+
+<p>At length the hour of departure came. The carriage was
+announced—and he went up-stairs alone once more to give
+his parting blessing to the children. He returned to her.</p>
+
+<p>“I think we may correspond,” she said, “there can be
+nothing wrong in that, till our fate is quite decided.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, yes; you must write every day,” he replied.
+“I shall find out some retired spot in Wales, and I shall remain
+there in utter seclusion till your mind is made easy by
+hearing no more. In three months you will conclude it was
+only a forgery?”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “I know the writing.”</p>
+
+<p>“In six months? In a year, you will—name some time—set
+some term to my banishment!”</p>
+
+<p>“We will write—I am not capable of knowing or understanding
+what is right in your presence. You must leave me,
+Algernon, or I think I shall die, now, at your feet!”</p>
+
+<p>“And are we to part thus?”</p>
+
+<p>She stood like a marble statue, as cold, as pale, as motionless.</p>
+
+<p>“Are we to part thus? Impossible!” and he snatched
+her to his bosom, and imprinted on her lips one kiss of deep,
+fervent, unalterable love.</p>
+
+<p>He tore himself away, and plunging into the carriage, in a
+few moments was borne far from the scene of all his happiness.</p>
+
+<p>When she heard the sound of the wheels, she made a desperate
+rush to the window, and remained fixed there to listen
+for their sound, and to fancy she still heard it, long after it
+was possible to do so.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="9" style="text-decoration: none;">IX.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">From our own paths, our love’s attesting bowers,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">I am not gone,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">In the deep hush of midnight’s whispering hours</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">Thou art not lone!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Not lone when by the haunted stream thou weepest,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">That stream whose tone</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Murmurs of thoughts the holiest and the deepest</div>
+ <div class="verse indent12">We two have known.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Hemans.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>He was gone—quite gone—and slowly and wearily she
+dragged herself back to the sofa, and gave free vent to all the
+agony which had been eating away her very being.</p>
+
+<p>She was thus drowned in tears, when the footman entered
+the room, upon some pretence of closing the shutters, or of
+making up the fire. The servants could not but perceive that
+something unusual was going on, and their curiosity was excited
+by the mysterious looks of their master and mistress,
+and by the sudden departure of the former. Ellen, to avoid
+the inquiring gaze of the footman, hastily retired to her
+boudoir, whither she had no sooner retreated than her anxious
+maid peeped in to see if she might want any thing.</p>
+
+<p>Pleading a violent head-ache, she bade her say she should
+not require any dinner, and assured her that nothing but
+entire quiet could relieve the pain under which she was suffering.
+The faithful creature would prescribe all the nostrums
+that ever were invented for head-aches, and poor Ellen
+thought she never should be allowed to weep in peace. At
+length she was relieved from the troublesome attentions both
+of the inquisitive and of the kind-hearted, and was left to her
+own sad thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>She accused herself of not having sufficiently valued the
+one last morning she had passed with him. She remembered
+a thousand things she meant to say—a thousand things she
+ought to have said. She thought she had been cold, she
+thought she had been unkind, and yet she reproached herself
+for having allowed him to take that one farewell kiss; for
+she felt and knew she was not his wife. She could not deceive
+herself into a momentary belief that the letter was an imposture.
+She knew that her lawful husband was alive, and that
+every feeling of her soul was therefore criminal. Still, though
+she scarcely indulged a hope of ever being re-united to Algernon,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>she had not the courage to declare the truth. She
+wished, if possible, to preserve her reputation, and her child’s
+position in the world.</p>
+
+<p>She now had leisure to reflect upon the line of conduct it
+behoved her to adopt, and she came to the conclusion, that,
+provided she received no further communication from Mr.
+Cresford, and that there seemed no fear of open exposure,
+the only mode of preserving her fair name, and her virtue at
+the same time, was to induce Mr. Hamilton to consent to an
+amicable separation on the score of incompatibility of temper.</p>
+
+<p>This was her best hope! How dreadful the other alternative!
+to be claimed by the indignant Cresford, to be held
+up to the eyes of the world as a base culprit, guilty of the
+crime of bigamy! It was almost too degrading to contemplate.</p>
+
+<p>Some days had now elapsed; she had every morning received
+the letters with a sickening dread which almost paralysed
+her. With fear and horror she had hastily turned
+over the exterior of every letter, and, with inexpressible relief,
+she had found none that bore the dreaded foreign post-mark.
+Each morning brought a long epistle from Algernon, written
+in the spirit of the highest, purest, most devoted affection.</p>
+
+<p>These were some balm to her heart. These were treasured
+up and perused over and over again. But she was an altered
+creature—all around wondered at the change. The children
+found that mamma could only kiss them, and weep over them,
+and they became thoughtful and subdued in her presence.
+The poor people wondered their bounteous lady no longer
+came among them. She could not do so. She dreaded the
+eyes of her fellow-creatures—their very blessings were painful
+to her—she felt as if she had obtained them under false
+pretences. All that had given her pleasure in this lovely place,
+this delightful country, now only filled her with regret, when
+she thought that the next day might find her an exile from
+this Paradise. Every walk, every tree, every view, every spot
+she visited, reminded her of him whom she no longer ventured
+to call husband, and with whom she had no hope of ever
+seeing them again.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three weeks had now slowly dragged their weary
+length away, and no fresh intelligence had arrived. It was
+nearly a month since she had received the first, and she almost
+began to think he found it impossible to make his escape.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>The friendly governor might be removed. The mental aberration
+might, from over-excitement, have returned. She felt
+wicked in, for a moment, anticipating such a circumstance
+with any thing approaching to satisfaction; and yet the horror
+of another, and still more appalling, solution of the difficulty,
+that he had succeeded in his petition, and that he was on his
+way home, filled her with dismay, which almost bewildered
+her senses.</p>
+
+<p>One morning when she, as usual, received with trembling
+hands the packet of letters, she perceived one from her brother
+with an enclosure. With dizzy eyes she tore open the cover,
+and within found another, with the same dreaded post-mark
+of Gratz. Despair gave her courage to open it. It was indeed
+from Cresford, and be there told her the governor had
+proved his kindest friend; that the Emperor had listened
+favourably to his petition, and that he had every prospect of
+being able to commence his journey to England in a few days,—that
+as the time approached he felt ten thousand fears pass
+through his bosom. How much might have happened since
+he left his home. His Ellen, to whom he was now writing
+in the fulness of his heart, might possibly be gathered to the
+dead. His children! were they still in existence? “Oh,
+my dearest wife,” he continued, “you can form no conception
+of the distracted and confused state of my mind when I think
+of the changes that may have taken place among you. Of one
+thing I believe I may rest assured, though my own wayward
+disposition has sometimes been prone to unreasonable bursts
+of—jealousy, shall I say?—no, rather sensitiveness,—for
+you will do me the justice to confess I never was jealous of
+any individual,—of one thing I may rest assured, that I shall
+find you pure, true, and virtuous as I left you. The knowledge
+of your virtue has been my only consolation,—that conviction
+alone has supported me through all my misfortunes.
+In one short month I shall be at home, my Ellen, never, never
+again to part from you.”</p>
+
+<p>This confirmation of what she most dreaded came upon
+her with almost as great a shock as the first announcement of
+her misery. Yet she felt ungrateful at making such a return
+for all the affection expressed by Cresford, affection which had
+stood the test of time, which had been his guiding principle in
+absence, imprisonment, even in madness.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span></p>
+<p>The next moment she fancied that by such emotions she
+wronged Algernon, her own adored Algernon, who was for
+ever torn from her, and doomed to sufferings equal to her
+own.</p>
+
+<p>In another month Cresford said he should be at home.
+The time had nearly elapsed: he might arrive any day. There
+was not a moment to be lost!</p>
+
+<p>In her distraction she almost forgot to open the daily letter
+of Mr. Hamilton. It breathed of hope! He had always
+been more sanguine than herself, and in this he pleaded
+strongly to be allowed to return. He argued that the protracted
+silence almost proved, beyond a doubt, that the whole
+had been a false alarm.</p>
+
+<p>She placed the dear letter next her heart, and, hastily
+gathering together the rest of her correspondence which had
+been cast aside, was preparing to arrange all things for her
+instant departure, when her attention was arrested by a second
+epistle from her brother Henry. She knew the worst; she
+had no more to fear, and she perused it with a desperate
+calmness.</p>
+
+<p>Henry began by saying that he, and all the other partners,
+had been much distressed by a communication they had received
+of so strange a character that he scarcely liked to disturb
+her mind by reporting it; that yet, as he had forwarded
+to her by the same post a letter which appeared to come from
+the same quarter as the one they had received, and as, if he
+mistook not, he had some time ago sent her another with a
+similar direction and post-mark, perhaps she might be prepared
+for what he was going to tell her.</p>
+
+<p>The fact was they had received a letter purporting to come
+from Mr. Cresford, and full of incomprehensible allusions to
+an escape from Verdun, and to a mock funeral; that they
+scarcely knew whether to consider it a forgery or not; that
+he grieved to say those who were most conversant with his
+hand-writing seemed most persuaded of its authenticity; that
+they were all in the greatest perplexity, but, upon the whole,
+agreed it was best to keep the circumstance secret for the
+present.</p>
+
+<p>He dreaded to think what her feelings must be; that for
+himself, he was firmly convinced it was an imposture from
+first to last,—that he remembered how circumstantial had been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>Colonel Eversham’s account of the funeral of poor Cresford,
+performed by torch-light, according to his own particular request,
+and attended by Colonel Eversham himself, by Captain
+Morton, and several more of the <i lang="fr">détenus</i> who were on parole.
+“And do you not remember his dwelling upon the awful circumstance,
+that in one short week from the time Captain
+Morton had acted as chief mourner at Cresford’s interment,
+he was himself committed to the grave? Do not worry
+yourself, therefore, my dearest sister. Depend upon it, it is
+a trick, with the view of extorting money; but I thought it
+would not be right to leave you in ignorance of the unpleasant
+doubt.</p>
+
+<p>“I should have been myself the bearer of this strange
+despatch, but I am unavoidably detained in town to-day by
+business. I will be with you soon after you receive this.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is all true,” she thought to herself, “and it is all
+known. It must now be published abroad; there is no
+escape!” and she looked wildly around her. This was no
+moment for deliberation or indecision.</p>
+
+<p>She commanded post horses to be instantly sent for; she
+summoned her maid; she desired the nurses, the children,
+the <i lang="fr">bonne</i>, to prepare instantly for a sudden journey, and she
+sat down to write the appalling news to Algernon, to dash
+all the hopes which he had fostered, to doom him also to a
+future as blank and cheerless as her own.</p>
+
+<p>She began, “I have scarcely the power to write what I am
+now compelled to impart to you. In a few more hours I
+shall have left this beloved home; in a few more hours I
+shall be an outcast from this blessed place, where I have lived
+as your most happy, and your honoured wife. Thank you,
+Algernon, for the unutterable happiness I have for two years
+enjoyed: thank you for all your love, all your tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>“I am going to my father. Poor man! he little knows
+the shame and misery which await the decline of his life; he
+who so valued the opinion of the world! Oh, Algernon, I
+am doomed to bring a curse on all who are connected with
+me! I shall bring his grey hairs with sorrow to the grave;
+I have cast a blight over the dignified and prosperous career
+which awaited you; I have been the bane of that unhappy
+man whose ungoverned, ill-fated love for me led him to
+practise the deceit which has worked us all so much woe.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>My name will be a lasting disgrace to my children,—all of
+them!</p>
+
+<p>“Algernon! when I think of you, my heart is near breaking;
+when I think of your return to your desolate home,
+when I know how you will miss me,—for I judge too well
+from my own, what your feelings will be,—when I think
+how you will miss the children, too! Heavens, I have just
+ordered the nurse to prepare herself and Agnes for our sad
+journey!—But what right have I to do so? She is your
+child, Algernon, and shall I deprive you of that one consolation?
+Shall I deprive her of an honourable station to drag
+her with me into shame and degradation? No! my wretchedness
+can scarcely know increase, and you shall be greeted on
+your return by her smiles, her out-stretched arms, her lovely
+attempts to prattle. I leave you that precious legacy. She
+will remind you of her who loves you still with tenfold fervour,
+though it is now a crime to do so.</p>
+
+<p>“There is a sort of pleasure in sacrificing something to
+you: you shall keep her and cherish her. I expect my
+brother every moment: he and the other members of the
+house have likewise received communications from Gratz.
+I cannot add another word—I cannot sign myself,—for,
+oh! what name do I now bear?”</p>
+
+<p>She hastily sealed her letter, and, without giving herself
+time to retract, she flew up-stairs, and told the nurse that she
+and Agnes were to remain at Belhanger—that only George
+and Caroline were to accompany her. The nurse was astonished
+at the sudden change; but her mistress looked so
+ghastly and so wild, she did not venture any question or any
+remark. Ellen snatched her child to her heart—kissed it
+with such vehemence that the terrified creature screamed—then,
+almost thrusting it again into the nurse’s arms, she
+rushed out of the room, not daring to trust herself another
+moment in its sight.</p>
+
+<p>She now hastened into her own apartments, and, without
+allowing herself time for tender emotions or reminiscences,
+she began to pack up her papers, her letters, a few favourite
+books of devotion, some of the many tokens of affection she
+had received from Algernon, and above all, his picture—that
+picture which she gazed upon every day, ten times every day,
+during his absence.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span></p>
+<p>While thus employed, she saw her maid arranging her
+diamonds, and other jewels, for the journey.</p>
+
+<p>“Do not put up those,” she said in a clear, calm voice;
+“they must be left here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear ma’am, we always take them with us wherever we
+go; I always think they are safest when they are under my
+own eye.”</p>
+
+<p>“They must remain, Stanmore,” answered Ellen almost
+sternly.</p>
+
+<p>“Just as you please, ma’am, certainly,” replied the abigail,
+whose feelings on the subject of the diamonds were so
+acute that she could not look with indifference upon any thing
+that concerned them, although she saw something had certainly
+happened which greatly discomposed her mistress, and
+was really tenderly attached to her.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you please to leave all the trinkets, ma’am?”
+she added with rather a mortified, injured accent.</p>
+
+<p>“No, Stanmore; I must take these rings, these bracelets,
+all these things—they were all given to me by dear friends.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure, ma’am, I should have thought you might
+have wished what Mr. Hamilton had given you to go along
+with us.”</p>
+
+<p>“Say no more, Stanmore; I cannot bear it.—Only make
+haste,—all possible haste!—I must go to my father to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear me! I beg your pardon, ma’am; but is Captain
+Wareham ill?”</p>
+
+<p>“No—Yes—I am not sure—I believe he is pretty well.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen left the room, having secured the few articles she
+much valued; and having told Stanmore to carry the diamonds
+to the housekeeper, and bid her give them to Mr.
+Hamilton when he returned.</p>
+
+<p>“How strange!” said Mrs. Stanmore to herself. “Master
+and mistress must have quarrelled desperately, somehow or
+another. And to think how loving they did seem to be till
+just at last! Well, they say such violent love is too hot to
+hold. I shall think of that when next Mr. Perkins says a
+civil word to me, and give him a civil word in return, for all
+he is not the man of my heart; for it’s my belief all the love
+should be on the man’s side. How well my poor mistress and
+Mr. Cresford went on, though he was so queer; and now she
+has got a husband she loves, this is the end of it all! Ah!
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span>it does not do to make too much of the men. If one has a
+man one does not care for, one has one’s wits about one, to
+know how to manage him.”</p>
+
+<p>While Mrs. Stanmore was making these sage reflections
+(in which there is much deserving attention from the young
+and inexperienced), Ellen, who could not sit still, and who
+was afraid to trust herself with her child, wandered like an
+unquiet spirit about the house, longing to visit every well-known
+room, and to bid each a sad adieu; but she met servants
+in every direction carrying trunks and imperials in all
+the bustle of departure.</p>
+
+<p>She took refuge in her boudoir, from which the few things
+she meant to carry with her were already removed. She
+looked round in silence and in calmness. There was not an
+object which did not remind her of some act of kindness of
+Algernon’s. A tap at the door startled her from the abstraction
+in which she stood.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Topham, the stately housekeeper, made her appearance.</p>
+
+<p>“If you please, ma’am, I come for orders during your
+absence. If you thought, ma’am, you should be away some
+little time, the furniture in the chintz-room wants washing
+sadly, and perhaps, ma’am, it would be a good opportunity to
+get it calendered.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do just as you please, Mrs. Topham. I cannot attend
+to those things at this moment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly, ma’am, I would not trouble you for the world;
+but Miss Mason wished to know whether you would have
+them go on with master’s neckcloths, or whether you wished
+the table-linen to be put in hand immediately at the school.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, Mrs. Topham.”</p>
+
+<p>“What, the table-linen? or the neckcloths, did you mean,
+ma’am?”</p>
+
+<p>“Either: it matters little! Mr. Hamilton will be at home
+in a few days, and he will tell you. I am very ill, Mrs. Topham.
+I cannot—I cannot answer you.” And tears for the
+first time that morning flowed from her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing so strange as the causes which open the
+flood-gates of woe. The vexation of being troubled with
+these trifles, and the feeling that she had no longer a right to
+regulate them, that it would no longer be her care to see to all
+these little household details, melted her to tears, when all
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span>the deep and overwhelming bearings of the case had not produced
+an inclination to weep.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Topham departed, surprised, grieved, and a little
+offended.</p>
+
+<p>“She never knew her mistress in such a way before. She
+had always behaved so considerate to her, and spoken in such
+a kind and feeling way, she was sure there was something
+wrong, and that her mistress had something upon her mind.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen now thought she would once more see his study. She
+should there be safe from intrusion, and she would look at
+every thing, and fix it so firmly in her memory, that it should
+serve as a sort of picture to which her mind’s eye might at
+any time recur. She marked every chair and table, the very
+pattern of the cornice, the mouldings on the book-cases, the
+carving of the chimney-piece. She touched all the papers,
+the parliamentary reports which crowded the table, and which
+might have been touched by him.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a chaise drove up to the door, and her
+brother Henry leaped out of it. In another moment Ellen
+was in his arms, and clinging to him in the full abandonment
+of long pent-up sorrow, which at length is allowed free vent.
+There was a degree of relief in the presence of one to whom
+she might unburthen her whole soul, from whom she need
+have no secrets, and with whom she need be under no restraint.</p>
+
+<p>This weakness, however, was not of long duration. She
+quickly shook it off, and rousing herself, she uttered in a firm,
+though hurrying, manner:—</p>
+
+<p>“We must be gone directly, Henry. You will take me
+to my father’s; you will go with me, dear brother, will you
+not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is Hamilton?” he answered.</p>
+
+<p>“He has not been here since I received the first packet
+you enclosed me. We parted then!” She pressed her hand
+for a moment tightly upon her eye-balls.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you then consider the case so hopeless, my poor dear
+sister?”</p>
+
+<p>“Alas! I have from the very first, although he would
+scarcely believe me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, dreadful! dreadful! What is to be done?”</p>
+
+<p>“I must go to my father, and I must leave the rest to
+Providence. I have not wittingly done wrong, so I hope
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span>God will assist me to bear that with which it is pleasure to
+visit me!”</p>
+
+<p>“My poor, poor Ellen!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do not pity me, Henry! I have prayed for strength,
+and hitherto I have been mercifully supported. Do not pity
+me, or I shall not be able to go through what must be done
+this day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen! By Heavens you are the most high-minded,
+courageous, and noble, as well as the gentlest and loveliest
+creature I ever saw! Whatever the result may be, you are
+certainly doing what is right. I am ready to accompany you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Every thing is prepared, Henry. I have only one task
+left, that of bidding adieu to my baby—my little Agnes!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you leave her behind you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot rob Algernon of that which will remind him of
+me, and yet give him pleasure, instead of pain. Neither will
+I heap more shame and disgrace on my child’s head than is
+unavoidable.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen left him, and with a slow and heavy step she for the
+last time mounted the oak staircase. She went to the nursery,
+and solemnly taking the child away, she carried it into the
+room which was her own. Bolting all the doors, she knelt as
+she held the infant in her arms, and offered up for it prayers
+as fervent and as pure as ever ascended to the throne of grace.
+Then kissing its eyes, its forehead, its lips,</p>
+
+<p>“May the God of mercy bless thee, my babe! may He
+bless thee with virtue, principle, rectitude! whatever may be
+thy fate in this world, may He bring thee to that place where
+the wicked cease from troubling, where the weary are at rest!”</p>
+
+<p>She rose from her knees, and carried the child back to the
+nurse. In a calm and steady voice, she bade her, as she
+valued her peace of mind here and hereafter, to do her duty
+by the infant; and begging God to bless them both, she
+steadily went down the stairs, and without looking to the
+right or to the left, passed through the hall. When she
+reached the door, she paused, and turning round, she saw the
+servants who, half wonder, half sympathy, had collected at
+the different doors, and were pressing forward. She tried to
+speak—her voice failed her; she made another effort, and at
+length uttered,—</p>
+
+<p>“You have all done your duties by me, and may God
+reward you for it!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span></p>
+<p>A burst of tears and sobs, they scarcely themselves knew
+wherefore, was all the answer they could make.</p>
+
+<p>Henry supported her into the carriage. Her elder children
+and their attendants entered the other, and she was rapidly
+conveyed from a spot where she had endured the two extremes,
+of mortal bliss and mortal woe.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="10" style="text-decoration: none;">X.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">En songe, souhaid, et pensée,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Vous voye chacun jour de sepmaine</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Combien qu’estes de moi loingtaine</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Belle très loyaument amée.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Du tout vous ay m’amour donnée;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Vous en povez être certaine,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Ma seule dame souveraine,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">De mon las cœur moult desirée</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">En songe, souhaid, et pensée.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Charles Duc d’Orleans</span>, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1446.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>How did poor Hamilton meanwhile pass the time of his
+weary exile? It would have been wretchedness to him to
+have been recognised, to have been obliged to answer the usual
+inquiries after his wife and children, with which a married
+man is invariably greeted; to endure all the common courtesies
+of life. Yet his acquaintance was so general, his name so well
+known, from having on many occasions borne a prominent
+part in politics, and from having lived much in the world,
+that he could scarcely find a spot where he would not be exposed
+to them.</p>
+
+<p>He therefore, under an assumed name, retired to the most
+desolate fishing village he could find in the neighbourhood of
+M——, and passed his days wandering upon the shore, and
+mixing with none but the fishers, who plied their dangerous
+trade upon the wild Welsh coast.</p>
+
+<p>Every morning he walked into the town, and claimed his
+letters at the post-office, then hurried to the shore, there to
+feast upon the lines traced by his beloved Ellen’s hand. The
+enthusiastic turn of mind, which we at first described him as
+possessing, enabled him, better perhaps than another man, to
+endure the life of abnegation of self, which he here led. His
+passion was of so pure, so refined a character, that in sober
+truth, he had rather sit alone on a sea-girt rock, and think of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span>her whom he worshipped with so holy a love, than be in the
+society of any other living being, however lovely, however
+fascinating.</p>
+
+<p>Weeks however elapsed, and even his highly wrought nature
+was beginning to tire of this protracted uncertainty. He
+formed a thousand desperate plans; he nearly convinced himself
+that they were both sacrificing their happiness to a frivolous
+punctilio; that Mr. Cresford never would return—that
+if he did, still in the eye of Heaven she was his, not Cresford’s
+wife, and that there would be no guilt in their flying
+to the uttermost parts of the earth, and there existing for each
+other alone.</p>
+
+<p>But although he might think such thoughts, he never ventured
+to commit them to paper when writing to her. He never
+again proposed their living together, if their union was not
+sanctioned by the laws. There was a spotless lofty purity
+about her that he dared not outrage by word, or look. He
+knew also, that even supposing he should succeed in persuading
+her to fly with him, still, that with her disposition,
+her religious principles, she could never find happiness in his
+devotion, if remorse was an inmate of her bosom. He had
+courage to endure all ills, rather than to meet her reproachful
+eye;—to feel he had caused that innocent heart to know the
+pangs of a wounded conscience;—to feel that her religion,
+which was now her only source of consolation, had, through
+his means, been converted into a source of terror. The romantic
+adventures and feelings of his own early life did not
+lead to his experiencing the same orthodox scruples himself,
+but the enthusiastic devotedness of his disposition made him
+respect them, even while he thought them over-strained.</p>
+
+<p>His despair, therefore, when he received Ellen’s last communication,
+knew no bounds. It destroyed his only hope.
+He paced the shore. It was a stormy morning, as if in accordance
+with his feelings: the sea-gull, with its wide-spread
+wings, gleaming white against the lead-coloured clouds,
+screamed as it passed over his head. The surf was wildly
+beating against the beach. The fisher vessels which had been
+out all night were striving to regain the land, before the
+threatening storm burst upon them. He looked upon the
+little boats as they neared the shore with an emotion of
+envy.—“Perhaps,” he thought, “perhaps the next few
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>waves may swallow up the brave fellows, who are there exerting
+themselves to preserve life. They know not for what a
+miserable possession they are struggling. They know not what
+may await them if they escape the present danger! Blighted
+affections, ruined hopes, the torture of losing those they love,
+or of seeing them exist in wretchedness, may bring them to
+regret they had not now sunk, secure from experiencing any
+more of the sufferings human nature is heir to. Would I were
+in one of those boats! It would be no sin of mine if the
+waves were to close over it.”</p>
+
+<p>The wives and mothers of the fishermen, who were inured
+to the venturous life of their relatives, proceeded with their
+ordinary toil. They had so often seen them weather a storm
+in safety, that they felt little alarm at what would have struck
+others as awful. One young woman, however, stole forth
+alone; her loose cloak shivered in the wind; the wild gust
+brought with it the spray and dashed it in her face, but still
+her eyes were strained to catch a glimpse of one frail bark.
+She knew not that her bonnet was blown back, that her
+dishevelled hair streamed upon the blast. She gradually drew
+nearer to the spot where Algernon stood in his desperate
+musing.</p>
+
+<p>She was a stranger: a girl from the midland counties, who
+had married one of the hardy young fishermen of this secluded
+village, and she was not yet accustomed to let the blast
+howl unheeded round her dwelling, while he she loved was on
+the wide salt sea.</p>
+
+<p>She approached Algernon. In her loneliness she felt safer
+when near a fellow-creature.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think there is any danger, sir?” she said in a
+hesitating voice.</p>
+
+<p>“The storm seems to be gathering,” he answered; “but
+most likely you have more experience than I have.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have not been here long,” she said, “and those great
+waves, with foamy tops, always terrify me sadly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you anxious for any one at sea, my good girl?”</p>
+
+<p>“My husband, sir, is in one of those boats.”</p>
+
+<p>“And does he love you? Do you love him, and are you
+lawfully married?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, sir! to be sure we are!” and she drew back abashed,
+and half angry.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span></p>
+<p>“Then—then you are not to be pitied. In life or in
+death you are his. You are bound together by the ties of love
+and of duty, of religion and of law! He will return to you,
+my girl. See, the boats are getting nearer every moment:
+they will beat the storm—you will be reunited. You need
+not weep.”</p>
+
+<p>He darted away among the rocks, and sought the little
+room in the single ale-house, which had been his home for
+the last month.</p>
+
+<p>His first impulse was to return to Belhanger—to revisit
+the spot which breathed of her, and having once more beheld
+the precious child which she had left there as a pledge of her
+affection for him, to send her with the nurse to rejoin her
+mother at Captain Wareham’s. His resolution was no sooner
+taken than it was executed.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen and her brother had ere this arrived at the end of
+their journey. They reached Captain Wareham’s just as he,
+Matilda, and the Allenhams, who were at this moment paying
+him their annual visit, were seated at their dessert. They
+were surprised at hearing an unusual bustle in the house, and
+still more so when Ellen, leaning on her brother, entered the
+apartment. They all pressed round to greet her. Matilda,
+with youthful delight at this agreeable surprise, Caroline and
+her husband with kindness, Captain Wareham with some kindness
+but more annoyance, which annoyance was, however, in
+some degree tempered by the respect he had felt for Ellen, ever
+since she had made so good a marriage as he considered that
+to Mr. Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my dear Ellen, this is really very good of you to
+take us so by surprise, but you certainly do take us by surprise.
+I do not know how in the world we are to lodge you, and the
+dinner is just gone. And you too, Henry?” (annoyance was
+rapidly preponderating) “I do not know what we can do with
+you. And I suppose Hamilton is of the party; you might
+have given one a line. I should have thought, Ellen, you
+must have remembered how inconvenient this kind of thing is
+in a small establishment.”</p>
+
+<p>By this time Ellen had sunk in a chair, and Caroline
+began to be alarmed at her paleness, and at the altered expression
+of her countenance. The children had just landed
+from their vehicle, and their voices were heard in the passage.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span></p>
+<p>“Mercy on us! and the children, too!” exclaimed poor
+Captain Wareham, in a tone of despair, annoyance having
+thoroughly mastered the vague respect inspired by the superior
+style of all which surrounded the Hamiltons. “Well, this
+certainly is rather inconsiderate, Ellen; but when people
+make great matches they grow fine, and you seem quite to
+forget your poor old father’s means are not quite so ample as
+Mr. Hamilton’s.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned round, but started at the ghastly appearance of
+Ellen. Henry had suffered agonies for his sister, and had
+tried to lead his father aside, that he might briefly explain to
+him the case, without proclaiming it to the whole household.
+Ellen answered with the composure of despair.</p>
+
+<p>“You must let me stay in this house, father—I do not
+care where—only I must have the shelter of your paternal
+roof.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can go to the inn perfectly well, dear father,” added
+Henry.</p>
+
+<p>“And Ellen can have her old room,” interposed Matilda;
+“little Caroline can sleep with me, and George can sleep on
+the sofa in Mr. Allenham’s dressing-room; and now it is all
+arranged, so don’t you be cross, papa. Ellen looks quite ill,
+and I dare say she is faint for want of something to eat, so
+leave it all to me, and don’t make a fuss, that’s all, papa,”
+and she gave her father a playful tap on the cheek. She was
+a high-spirited, warm-hearted, ingenuous girl, in many respects
+the precise opposite of her sisters. If her father was cross,
+her spirit rose; and she consequently possessed that sort of
+control over him which the most decided, positive, and wilful,
+generally obtains over the less resolute temper, whatever may be
+their relative positions. She was also an excellent manager,
+always had cold meat in the house, and was never at a loss for
+an expedient on any emergency.</p>
+
+<p>Caroline was exceedingly uneasy at the appearance of Ellen,
+and remembered her fainting fits when she had been last at Belhanger.
+Her look of settled grief, coupled with the absence
+of Mr. Hamilton, made her fear that, notwithstanding the
+affection which had formerly subsisted between them, their
+quarrel must have been a serious one, and that her unannounced
+arrival must mean that they were separated. She found, also,
+that only the two Cresford children accompanied her; and this
+served to confirm her fears.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span></p>
+<p>Even Captain Wareham began to be alarmed at the subdued
+yet resolute manner of Ellen; and looked from one to the
+other, perplexed, amazed, and annoyed.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you want something to eat, Ellen?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, father! I could not touch any thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the children must have supper.”</p>
+
+<p>“Matilda, you will give them some tea, poor little things?”
+she answered, turning towards Matilda.</p>
+
+<p>“I could not eat a mouthful either,” said Henry, “so do
+not get any thing for me, father. I wish you would just
+step this way, I want to consult you which inn I had best go
+to.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear boy, it is very chilly to-night, and you may just
+as well consult me here by the fire.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen,” added Henry, “would you not be better up-stairs
+on the sofa? Ellen is not well, father, and we must take great
+care of her!”</p>
+
+<p>“You do not seem well indeed, Ellen. Why, you look ten
+years older, girl, than when I saw you last!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen had risen from her seat, and was mechanically obeying
+Henry in walking up-stairs, when he said,</p>
+
+<p>“Do give Ellen your arm, Allenham, she is faint and
+weak. I have some things to arrange, and will follow you
+presently.”</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham, whose parental tenderness had been
+awakened by the expression of suffering in Ellen’s face, was
+following also, when Henry laid his hand upon his arm, and
+forcibly detained him. He closed the door after them. Captain
+Wareham turned round.</p>
+
+<p>“What does all this mean, Henry? Really it is very disagreeable,
+and you quite frighten me; I wish you would not
+be so odd and mysterious.”</p>
+
+<p>“Listen to me, father. I scarcely know how to break to
+you the news I have to impart.”</p>
+
+<p>“Speak, for Heaven’s sake. I always hate being kept in
+suspense.”</p>
+
+<p>“Cresford is alive! alive, and coming home, as he thinks,
+to the arms of his beloved wife!”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible, Henry! you are jesting;” and Captain
+Wareham attempted to smile; but he dropped powerless into
+his chair, and clasped his hands, adding, “If this is a jest,
+it is a cruel one!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span></p>
+<p>Henry then, in a few words, gave him an outline of the
+case, and told him that Ellen and he had agreed, that until
+Cresford arrived, and that the truth was past all hope of concealment,
+it was best to treat it as an amicable separation on
+the score of temper. Henry had advised Ellen not even to
+confide the truth to Mrs. Allenham; for amiable and kind-hearted
+as she was, still she was not free from an inclination
+to gossip, and she would never be able to prevent such a secret
+from escaping her lips, to some of her old and dear friends in
+her native place.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham, whose good heart and high feeling of
+honour rendered him, in fact, an estimable man, approved of
+all that his unfortunate daughter had done; and was cut to
+the soul when he looked forward to the miserable fate which
+probably awaited her.</p>
+
+<p>“And when Cresford does return, Henry, how will he conduct
+himself? I dread his violence!”</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say he will make her a liberal allowance,” answered
+Henry; “for he was always noble about money; but at the
+same time I cannot help fearing he will take the children from
+her. In common justice, he cannot visit upon her, farther
+than that, the consequences of his own rash imposture.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope not; but you were too young when he went to
+France, to know the full violence of his character—the vehemence
+of his ungoverned passions. But we must go to my
+poor, poor unhappy child.”</p>
+
+<p>Her sisters had been all kindness to Ellen, though Matilda,
+in her thoughtless fondness, had asked a thousand painful
+questions concerning Mr. Hamilton, her pet Agnes, &amp;c.; but
+Caroline, who was quite persuaded she understood the whole
+case perfectly, discreetly avoided every thing that led to such
+subjects, till Matilda went to see to her hospitable arrangements
+for their accommodation, and they were left alone.</p>
+
+<p>“Dearest Ellen!” Caroline then said, “I was afraid it
+would come to this, when I left you a month ago. Who
+would ever have thought that Mr. Hamilton could have turned
+out so ill, for I am sure you could never have been the one to
+blame; nobody ever saw you out of temper in your life.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen looked up.</p>
+
+<p>“Breathe not a word against him, Caroline: he is the most
+perfect, the most faultless of human beings! I always thought
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>my happiness was too great to last, and it has proved so. May
+Heaven, in its mercy, protect and bless him!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, you always were a gentle, forgiving creature!” answered
+Mrs. Allenham.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="11" style="text-decoration: none;">XI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">See the poor captive from his dungeon break,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Where long he pined, and hail the light of day,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">With eyes that in the broad effulgence ache,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">With smiles that ’mid deep lines of anguish play!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">How eagerly he meets the morning gale</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">With lab’ring lungs that each sweet breath would seize!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">How fondly views the hill, the plain, the vale,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Green meadows, brooks, fields, flowers, and waving trees!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And, “Gods!” he cries, “how dear is liberty!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Is there in Heaven’s large gift a boon beside?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The world is mine, and all the good I see!”</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">But soon, too soon, his raptures wild subside,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And sighing sad, “Not Freedom’s self to me</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Is sweet,” he cries, “if one to share it be denied.”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Unpublished Poems.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The next day Henry was obliged to return to London: indeed,
+he wished to be upon the spot, in case of Mr. Cresford’s arrival;
+and Ellen was, on the same account, equally anxious he
+should depart.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Allenham made several attempts to learn from Ellen
+the particulars of her separation; but Ellen assured her the
+subject was at present too painful to dwell upon; and they
+remained together in melancholy calmness not unmixed with
+<i lang="fr">gêne</i>, for Caroline was somewhat hurt at Ellen’s reserve.</p>
+
+<p>She had one conversation with her father, in which he was
+all kindness and sympathy, and she now sat down to a task
+which she deemed one of absolute necessity, although of the
+utmost difficulty, namely, to write to Mr. Cresford a letter
+which should meet him on his arrival in London, and convey
+to him the dreadful intelligence, which sooner or later, must
+reach him.</p>
+
+<p>It was as follows:—</p>
+
+<p>“I know not how to address you, and I dread lest you
+should have heard from some other quarter all that has occurred,
+and may cast aside the letter of one whom you deem
+untrue to you, without reading her own statement of the
+facts.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span></p>
+<p>“Believe me, when I swear by every thing we hold most
+sacred, that the first communication I received from you, from
+the time I read the official account of your death in the public
+newspapers, was the letter I received last month, dated
+from Gratz. I had then for two years believed myself the
+wife of Mr. Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>“As I write these words, my spirit quails at the effect I
+know they must produce on you; my heart bleeds for the
+pain I am inflicting on you; for, indeed, I do justice to the
+strength of your affection for me, and I grieve to be thus the
+cause of anguish to one who loves me! It is a cruel return
+for all the fidelity you have preserved to me; but you must
+know the truth, and I had rather you should learn it from me,
+than from common report—from the busy tongue of slander.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Maitland never brought me the letter to which you
+allude. I have never seen any of your companions in misfortune,
+except Colonel Eversham, who told me how he followed
+your remains to the grave, and I have yet to learn by
+what means you effected your escape from Verdun. For two
+years I mourned you in sincerity and truth. During all that
+time I regulated my conduct by what I supposed would have
+been your wishes, if you had been able to express them to me
+before your supposed death.</p>
+
+<p>“Some months after the expiration of my two years’
+mourning, I accepted the hand of Mr. Hamilton. You must
+feel, that, although this second marriage is null and void, and
+that in the eye of the law I am your wife, an eternal barrier
+is placed between yourself and me.</p>
+
+<p>“Upon the reception of your first letter, Mr. Hamilton
+left me, and I have not seen him since. Upon the confirmation
+of this first letter (in the authenticity of which we scarcely
+believed), I removed with—the—two children to my father’s.”
+[She had at first written “<em>your</em> two children;” but she felt
+as if by that word she were tacitly yielding them up to him,
+and she substituted <em>our</em>. This she feared might imply that
+their reunion was not impossible, and she wrote <em>the</em>.] “Indeed,
+indeed, my conscience acquits me of having wilfully done any
+thing wrong, though I am aware I have cast a blight over the
+fate of all those whose happiness I would gladly die to secure.
+Would I could die! But it is our duty to suffer and submit.
+Misfortune has, I hope, taught you likewise the duty of resignation.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span>Pray, as I do, for strength to fulfil our pilgrimage
+here on earth in unrepining patience and humility, so that we
+may hereafter be deemed worthy of our Maker’s promised
+blessings to those who do his will in this world. Our misfortunes
+have not originated in guilt: in that reflection let us
+find a supporting hope; and rest assured that, had I known
+you to be living, no length of absence, no human power, no
+imaginable circumstances, should have shaken my adherence
+to my maiden vow of constancy: you should have found me
+as you left me—</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+“Your faithful wife,<br>
+“<span class="smcap">Ellen Cresford</span>.”<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>With what unutterable anguish did she write that name!
+For some minutes she held the pen suspended before she summoned
+courage to trace the dreaded characters. Yet why,
+when her whole letter avowed herself his wife, why fear to
+write the word? She forced herself to do so; but as she
+wrote, she felt guilty towards Algernon. She had been so
+completely in the habit of doing every thing with reference to
+him, of being guided by him, of acting as if his eye was always
+upon her, that she thought what would be his emotions,
+if he saw her thus deliberately deny him! Yet this was indeed
+her name, and if she avoided it, she might irritate him
+who was in very truth her husband; him, who had a right at
+any moment to tear her children from her! She would no longer
+hesitate—she would not give herself the opportunity of
+altering the signature; she sealed the letter, she directed it,
+she enclosed it to her brother, and when all was done, she
+felt her separation from him she loved more complete than
+ever. A gush of tenderness came over her soul. If Algernon
+had at that moment been at her feet, there is no knowing
+whether she might not have consented to fly with him to the
+wilds of America, or to any spot on earth where human institutions
+could not reach.</p>
+
+<p>When Algernon arrived at Belhanger, a few days after
+Ellen’s departure, he lost no time in sending little Agnes to
+rejoin her mother. He thought the presence of her child,—his
+child,—might afford her the sensation nearest approaching
+to pleasure of any thing she was now capable of experiencing.
+It was not without many a bitter pang that he brought himself
+to part from the only object that remained to him, of all that a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>few short weeks ago had made him the happiest man alive.
+But, in addition to his anxiety to lessen by any means within
+his power the bitterness of her fate, it is possible that a lingering
+hope mingled itself, that she could not refuse to let him
+occasionally see his child, and that he might perhaps thus obtain
+an interview with herself.</p>
+
+<p>His home was now utterly desolate. He wandered as she
+had done before, like an unquiet spirit, from room to room.
+He pictured to himself what must have been her feelings when
+she tore herself from them. He longed to know how she had
+passed that last sad month; he wished for every trifling detail
+concerning her occupations, her looks, and yet he did not like
+to question the servants. He saw in their faces an expression
+of wonder and dismay; they moved about with stealthy steps,
+and spoke with subdued voices, while in the part of the house
+which he inhabited; or else, as he passed by the offices, he
+heard the loud laugh proceeding from the servants-hall, or
+the blithe carol of the laundry-maids over their wash-tub,
+which jarred his feelings, and he was tempted to exclaim
+mentally against the heartlessness of menials. Their curiosity,
+and their want of sympathy, both checked the inclination to
+question them concerning Ellen, which his restlessness caused
+frequently to arise in his bosom. Moreover, he scarcely knew
+in what terms to speak of her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Topham, however, spared him the trouble of deciding
+for himself. A few days after his return, she made her appearance
+to receive his orders about the furniture of the chintz-room,
+saying that Mrs. Hamilton had desired her to ask him
+what he wished to have done, and also to inquire his pleasure
+concerning the neck-cloths. He begged her to use her own
+discretion on those subjects, but still detained her in conversation,
+hoping she would, of her own accord, allude to Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>Finding that Mrs. Topham’s discourse was strictly confined
+to her business, he ventured at length to say,</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid your mistress was not quite well when she
+left Belhanger?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why certainly, sir, Mrs. Hamilton did not look so well
+as she used to do. There was not a servant in the house that
+did not remark it. But it was very lonesome for her here by
+herself, and we thought perhaps that was the reason she appeared
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span>so low. I am sure, sir, we all heartily wished for you
+back again, if it was only for our poor mistress’s sake.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Topham, whose curiosity had only been repressed by
+her respectful discretion, had no mind to lose this opportunity
+of ascertaining whether her master and mistress were really
+parted or not, and of satisfactorily clearing up the mystery of
+their late proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose, sir,” she continued, “my mistress will be
+coming back soon;—do you not think it would be a good
+thing to get the muslin curtains in the boudoir washed before
+her return?”</p>
+
+<p>Poor Hamilton had wished to lead the conversation to Ellen,
+and now he had succeeded in doing so, he writhed under the
+questions,—he thought it better not to hear her name mentioned
+at all, than to be subject to them, and hastily bidding
+Mrs. Topham see to all those things in her own department,
+he hurried out to mount his horse, and to gallop like a maniac
+over the country, as if he could thus escape from the corroding
+care which followed faster than he could fly.</p>
+
+<p>When, in violent exercise alone, did he experience temporary
+relief from misery. At home every thing breathed of Ellen,
+and, though it was agonizing to him to see traces of her on all
+sides, he could not tear himself from the spot; he would pass
+whole hours in her morning room, looking over her books,
+turning over the leaves of the blotting book, in which were
+notes, memorandums, various little matters which belonged to
+her. He would gaze for several minutes upon any half-bound
+book, which had “Ellen Hamilton” written in her hand on
+the outside. Those two words contained for his heart a world
+of passionate and blasted feelings. The very household accounts
+were not without a charm in his eyes—for they perpetuated
+the memory of a time when she was his wife.</p>
+
+<p>There is no need to dwell upon the emotions of Ellen when
+the nurse brought her child. The smiles of the infant and
+the letter which accompanied it were a momentary balm to
+her heart. Algernon expressed his conviction that, whatever
+their own fates might be, he could in no way so effectually
+secure the ultimate and eternal welfare of their child, as by
+causing its young mind to be trained to all that was virtuous,
+under Ellen’s own immediate eye. She could not but be
+gratified by his opinion of her, and grateful for his kindness.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>It was about a fortnight from the period of their final separation,
+when Henry Wareham was one day called out of his
+office to speak to a gentleman who awaited him in a private
+apartment. Henry’s heart misgave him. His worst fears
+were on the point of being realized. It must be Cresford.</p>
+
+<p>The room was dark. Henry’s eyes were dizzy with intense
+anxiety; he thought he did not recognise the face; but
+it was Cresford’s voice which asked,</p>
+
+<p>“Are you Henry Wareham?”</p>
+
+<p>“Heavens! Cresford. Is it indeed yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is my wife?” uttered Cresford, in a choked tone
+of defiance.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen is with her father,” stammered Henry.</p>
+
+<p>“Why was she not here to receive her husband?” continued
+Cresford.</p>
+
+<p>“Here is a letter, Cresford, which she desired me to give
+you, and which will explain all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then what I have heard is true!” exclaimed Cresford
+in a burst of uncontrollable passion. “Your virtuous sister
+thought I was safe in an Austrian dungeon, and she has given
+the loose to her profligate fancies, under the specious veil of
+marriage! Well done, your sanctified hypocrite! The mourning
+widow of Ephesus with a vengeance!” And he laughed
+an appalling, withering laugh, which made Henry shudder.
+His eyes glared with the fire of madness. Henry almost
+shrank with the involuntary terror from which the bravest
+cannot defend themselves if they suspect mental aberration in
+a fellow-creature.</p>
+
+<p>“Cresford, read this letter, and I think you will not make
+use of such hard expressions. Though you may be miserable,
+you will not be so angry.”</p>
+
+<p>“So, because I have loved her with mad idolatry, because
+my passion for her has driven me to acts of desperation,—has
+driven me to set at nought my life—my safety, you think
+I am such a besotted fool, that three lines traced by her
+hand, are to turn the whole current of my feelings; that she
+can persuade me quietly to yield her to the arms of my
+rival.” He paused, then added in a deep and thrilling voice,
+“You neither of you know me. You know not half I have
+gone through.”</p>
+
+<p>“Cresford, all I implore is that you will read my sister’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span>letter. We all believed you dead. The partners in the firm
+all believed it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was their interest—it was your interest to do so,” he
+answered with a bitter smile.</p>
+
+<p>However, he took the letter.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, how I have longed to see any thing belonging to her.
+And now—”</p>
+
+<p>A tear gathered in his eye. Henry augured well of that
+omen, and stood in silence, somewhat apart.</p>
+
+<p>He had leisure to remark the havoc which time and suffering,
+and, as he began to fear, madness, had worked in the fine
+features of his brother-in-law. They were sharper, his nose
+more prominent, his lips thinner, and more compressed. His
+brow low on his eye, which glanced quickly and suspiciously
+from beneath it. Although still young, for Cresford was not
+yet thirty, his hair was considerably mixed with grey.</p>
+
+<p>Henry watched the varying expression of his countenance
+as he proceeded with poor Ellen’s letter, and he sincerely
+commiserated the wretched man, who was now a prey to the
+most agonizing passions of our nature—blasted hope—indignant
+jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to the part in which she spoke of having for
+two years believed herself the wife of Mr. Hamilton, he stamped
+upon the floor, and crushing the paper in his clenched hand,
+Henry thought would have destroyed it, in the paroxysm of
+his rage. However, he proceeded, and a softer shade stole
+over his face when he read of her grief at making such a return
+for all his kindness and affection. A tear trickled down
+his cheek as he came to the part where she described her strict
+adherence to his wishes; and when she mentioned her having
+parted from Mr. Hamilton upon the reception of his first
+letter, he vehemently laid his hand on Henry’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Is this true?” he said. “Did she part from that man at
+once?”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed she did, and has not seen him since.”</p>
+
+<p>“Henry, did she love him?—answer me that.”</p>
+
+<p>Henry hesitated—“They seemed to live comfortably together,
+whenever I have seen them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Madness! distraction! Did they love each other?”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw but little of them, for I was always in the office,”
+replied Henry evasively.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span></p>
+<p>“I must see her—I must see her herself; I must know
+the truth!” He resumed the letter, but hastily passing over
+that part which spoke of resignation, “There is no use in
+preaching resignation to me! She might as well attempt to
+chain the ocean!” He glanced at the signature. “Oh,
+merciful Heaven! that I could forget all that has gone
+before; that I could annihilate the preceding words, and
+preserve nothing but the last, ‘Your faithful wife, Ellen
+Cresford!’”</p>
+
+<p>He gazed in rapturous tenderness upon the words; his tears
+flowed fast; he kissed the name again and again. Then
+hastily turning to Henry, he added, “I must see her once
+again, and then—God knows what will become of me!”</p>
+
+<p>He rushed out of the house, and before many minutes had
+elapsed was on his road to Captain Wareham’s residence.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="12" style="text-decoration: none;">XII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shall then, in earnest truth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">My careful eyes observe her?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shall I consume my youth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">And short my time to serve her?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Shall I beyond my strength,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">Let passion’s torments prove me,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">To hear her say at length</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2">“Away,—I cannot love thee!”</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">George Wither.</span>—<span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1588.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ellen was one morning quietly seated in the back drawing-room
+which had been given up to her and her children; the elder
+ones were employed, George in reading to his mother, and
+Caroline in working, seated on a stool at her feet, while the
+little Agnes was playing on the floor. Ellen heard a knock at
+the door. Every sound made her start. She heard a loud
+voice in the passage! A voice! His voice! Yes it was his
+voice whom she had so long believed in the grave, uttering in
+loud and stern accents, “Show me to Mrs. Cresford,—I must
+instantly see her,” and he darted by the servant up the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>“Not into the front room, sir,” the servant called out;
+“there is company in the front room! the back room, sir, if
+you please.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span></p>
+<p>Cresford burst open the door, and stood before her, pale and
+haggard. She did not faint, she did not scream: she had
+risen from her seat, and she stood transfixed!</p>
+
+<p>She was as beautiful as ever. Sorrow could but dim her
+brilliancy,—the finely chiselled features, the marble brow, the
+angelic expression, the feminine dignity, were all there. Cresford
+gazed in agonized admiration.</p>
+
+<p>“How I have longed for this moment!—this moment,
+which proves one of torture! Ellen, Ellen, you never loved
+me, or you could not have done what you have done. But I
+was resolved to see you again.—Yes, if heaven and hell had
+conspired against me, I would have gazed upon that face
+again.” She hid her face with her hands. “No,” he said,
+and forcibly removed them, “I will look upon those features.
+It was the recollection of those eyes, of that brow, those lips,
+which made me cling to life, while they induced me to hazard
+it a thousand times to gain another sight of them; it was to
+gaze on them that I practised the imposture by which I
+escaped from my prison; it was to gaze on them that I preserved
+my life, though treated as a spy, a prisoner, and a
+maniac!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen shook from head to foot. Fear, simple, deadly fear,
+absorbed every other feeling. She spoke not, she struggled not.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen, do you love me still? Have you thought of me
+in absence? Have you wept for me? Is your heart faithful?”</p>
+
+<p>A horrible surmise crossed her. Surely he could not contemplate
+the idea of taking her back.—“Do you love me,
+Ellen?” he repeated, and he still held her hands.</p>
+
+<p>“I pity you from the bottom of my heart.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you love me?” and he dashed her hands from him.</p>
+
+<p>“No!” she exclaimed, clasping them earnestly, “No!
+my whole heart, soul, and affections are Algernon’s,” and she
+sank on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>“And do I live to hear you avow your guilt? Shameless,
+abandoned creature! You, whom I so worshipped! now,
+now,—in truth my brain will madden!” He struck his forehead
+with his clenched hands. Then looking round, “These
+are my children, are they not?—I believed them mine. Yes,
+yes, they are mine, and mine they shall be! Come with me,
+children; you shall not remain to be contaminated by the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span>example of a creature who glories in her shame. And this,”
+he added, and lifted the little Agnes from the floor, “this,
+this is <em>his</em> child! Take it,—take it, before I commit any
+crime I may repent of!” Ellen rushed to it, tore it from
+him, and hugged it to her bosom. “But these are mine!”
+he continued, and “these are mine, by every law of nature
+and of man!” He seized one in each hand. She flew to him,—she
+clung round his feet. He looked down on her in
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, spare my children! Oh, Charles, have mercy upon
+me,” and she desperately held the children who clung round
+her.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment Captain Wareham, who had heard the
+tumult, entered,</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Wareham, you see a man who claims his children—his
+children—by the law of the land, his! I conclude
+you will not interfere with the exercise of my rights as a free-born
+Englishman.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen had sunk exhausted and sobbing on the floor, feeling
+that her father would protect her, and preserve her children.</p>
+
+<p>“Surely, Mr. Cresford, this is not the manner in which an
+Englishman, and a gentleman, would enforce his rights.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have been taunted by that woman with her love for
+another man, and I cannot leave my children in her keeping.
+They must be delivered up to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“They shall—they shall, Mr. Cresford. I pledge myself
+that before evening they shall be sent to you, at any place you
+may appoint.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am at the hotel opposite, sir, and there I await them
+within the next two hours.”</p>
+
+<p>He darted down the stairs, and out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>The terrified children hung round their mother; Captain
+Wareham supported her; Caroline—Matilda rushed in. Concealment
+was no longer practicable—despair and consternation
+prevailed through the whole house. The two Miss Parkses,
+who had been “the company in the front drawing-room,”
+discreetly took their departure, but not before they had seen
+and heard enough to be perfectly <i lang="fr">au fait</i> as to the cause of
+the confusion, and, in a quarter-of-an-hour, the fact of Mrs.
+Hamilton’s first husband’s return was known in every house
+in the Close, and in half-an-hour more throughout the whole
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span>town. But one feeling, however, prevailed—sincere sorrow
+for the unfortunate Ellen!</p>
+
+<p>Her manners were so gentle, she had not an enemy—her
+conduct so irreproachable, that even the slander of a country-town
+coterie had never approached her name. Every one felt
+disposed to be angry with Mr. Cresford for being alive, and
+many a parent made use of the event to impress upon the
+minds of their children the dreadful consequences of a deviation
+from truth, under any circumstances whatsoever.</p>
+
+<p>Why should we return to the scene where Ellen is helplessly
+kissing her two elder children, while they are as helplessly
+hanging around her? The idea of resistance never for a moment
+crossed her. The strong arm of the law she knew could
+wrest them from her—there was no hope of touching Cresford’s
+heart. Ellen thought this was the bitterest drop of all,
+in her cup of woe. To be parted from the beings over whose
+welfare, bodily and mental, she had so carefully watched; in
+whom she had with tender, and patient care, sown the seeds
+of good, which she now saw every day bearing fruit according
+to her most sanguine wishes! The instinctive bond between
+mother and child may be equally strong at all ages; but when,
+in addition to the natural pang at such a tie being severed,
+there is the sorrowful and disappointing prospect of seeing
+your labour of love all wasted, and the grief of seeing your
+sorrow shared by the innocent sufferers, there can be no
+anguish more poignant, more hopeless.</p>
+
+<p>In man there may exist a preference towards the children
+of the woman he loves, over those of the woman he has not
+loved—not so in the gentler sex. It frequently happens
+that maternal affection is the more powerful principle in those
+who have been disappointed in their hopes of conjugal happiness.
+The heart whose tenderness has been repelled in one
+quarter, expands and fixes itself in the one other lawful direction,
+and Ellen’s love for her elder children fully equalled that
+she felt for the child of Algernon.</p>
+
+<p>She has taken her last kiss of them; she has for the last
+time wrapped the handkerchiefs close round their throats to
+defend them from the chill of the evening; she has for the
+thousandth time bade them be good children, and implored
+them to remember all she has told them concerning their duty
+to God, and to their fellow-creatures. Above all, she made
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span>them both promise never to forget to say their prayers, and
+added, “never forget to pray for me, my children.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, mamma; but we shall see you again soon.”</p>
+
+<p>“We will hope so, my loves—we shall, I trust, meet
+again, here, or elsewhere,” and her eyes sought that Heaven
+to which her spirit longed to flee, and be at rest.</p>
+
+<p>“We are not always to remain with that pale dark
+stranger?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is your father, my children. You owe to him the
+same duty you owe to me.” But she could not bid them love
+him, obey him, watch his every look, and attend to his every
+word, as they did to hers, for alas! she remembered but too
+well what was his violent uncertain temper in happier days,
+and she trembled to think to what guardianship their helpless
+innocence was committed.</p>
+
+<p>“If strangers,” she added, “should speak slightingly of
+me, darlings,—my own dear good children will not believe
+them. I know they will not.”</p>
+
+<p>Once more they were locked in a long and close embrace—gradually
+she relaxed her hold. Matilda, Caroline, Captain
+Wareham gently unwound them from her. The awe-struck
+children let themselves be quietly withdrawn, and when Ellen
+recovered from her swoon, they were with their father some
+miles on the road to London.</p>
+
+<p>What were Cresford’s emotions?—Such was the tumult of
+his soul they could scarcely be defined. The circumstances
+under which the children had been introduced to their father
+were not such as to inspire them with filial affection; and,
+notwithstanding their mother’s parting injunction, they looked
+upon him with fear and horror, as the stranger who had made
+mamma so unhappy, and had taken them away from her in
+such a hurry. They could not the least comprehend what
+was meant by this man’s being their father, for they remembered
+wearing black frocks for a long time, because their
+father was dead.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford saw the instinctive terror with which, when he
+kissed them, and bade them love him, they shrank from his
+caresses. With increased bitterness he exclaimed, “She has
+taught them to hate me! My own children hate me,—my
+wife disowns me! I am an outcast on the face of the earth!
+It had been better, a thousand times better for me to have
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span>consumed away the remnant of my existence in my dungeon!
+There I had hope!—I could think of my Ellen,—of my
+children! and fancy the time might come when I should once
+more know happiness with them. Oh! for those visionary
+days of fancied bliss!—how much better than this horrible
+waking certainty of endless misery! But I will be revenged!
+If I am miserable, those who have made me so shall not be
+happy!” And at that moment he took the resolution of availing
+himself of every power which the law placed in his hands,
+of bringing her, who had caused him to be the wretch he was,
+to open and public shame.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the journey was performed in silence. His
+heart had been too long seared by suffering, to open to parental
+affection. His children showed none for him; he was not in
+a state of mind to attempt to win it by patient kindness, and
+he felt injured as a father, as well as a husband. In truth, a
+calmer, gentler disposition than his might have had all the
+milk of human kindness turned to gall, in his situation. He
+had most truly loved his wife, and his case was as pitiable,
+and as hopeless a one, as can well be imagined. The mental
+aberration to which he had slightly alluded, and which had
+prevented him for some years from even attempting to make
+his imprisonment in Austria known, either to his friends or to
+the Government, had been brought on by the vehement and
+ungoverned nature of his passions; which, as might be expected,
+did not meet with the soothing treatment calculated to
+allay them, but, on the contrary, with every thing tending
+most to inflame and irritate them. The reason which might
+have controlled them remained, in some degree, weakened,
+while the passions themselves were in full force.</p>
+
+<p>Upon his arrival in London he deposited his children at an
+hotel, and sallied forth in search of a lawyer. He walked to
+Lincoln’s Inn, and knocked at the first door that presented
+itself. He was admitted, and was shown up to a middle-aged,
+quiet little man, with spectacles upon his nose.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="13" style="text-decoration: none;">XIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Gomez.</i>—And wouldst thou bare thy bosom’s grief to one,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">A dull mechanic, who but stares on thee</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">With cold unmeaning wonder? I had rather</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The secret pang should rankle at the core,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And eat my life away, than my dear thoughts</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Be made thus stale and common. Hast no friend,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">No tried companion, whose unwearied ear</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Would ease thy o’ercharged breast?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent2"><i>Pedro.</i>— ... Not one—not one!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">I am alone, with such a sum of ills</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">As o’erturns reason.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Manuscript Tragedy.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Sir,” said Cresford to the lawyer, “I come to you for justice.
+You see before you a man who has been deeply injured
+in his honour, his affections, and his rights as a man, a husband,
+and a father.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. M‘Leod pointed to a chair, and begged the gentleman
+to be seated—professed his willingness to lend any assistance
+in his power to a person who appeared to be suffering under
+such injuries, and begged him calmly to detail to him the circumstances
+of the case, that he might judge in what mode he
+could best render this assistance.</p>
+
+<p>“I am calm, sir: if you knew all, you would wonder at
+my calmness. During the year of peace in 1802, I was
+called to France on mercantile business. I left a wife I adored—Oh,
+sir! she was the loveliest creature that ever walked
+this earth—she seemed as pure as she was lovely. I worshipped
+her as the Persians of old worshipped the sun. She
+was every thing to me! I scarcely suffered the wind to blow
+on her. The gaze of another man appeared to me almost
+pollution to a creature so sacred. I left her with her father,
+as I thought, in honour and in safety, and with her my two
+children.</p>
+
+<p>“Every one knows the fate of those who were found in
+France upon the declaration of hostilities. I was one of the
+<i lang="fr">détenus</i>, and at Verdun I was condemned to drag out many,
+many weary months, in absence from her I so madly adored.
+A vague jealousy, a fear of what might occur in my absence,
+racked my brain almost to madness. I would not accept my
+parole: the severity of my imprisonment was nothing to me.
+Of what avail was the liberty of wandering a few miles from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span>the town, to one whose whole soul was in another land? It
+mattered little to me where I was detained, if I was far from
+her, and I would be bound by no ties of honour from attempting
+every thing in my power to make my escape. Several
+times I had nearly accomplished it, but each time the vigilance
+of my jailers overtook me.</p>
+
+<p>“At length I thought of a plan which proved successful.
+I wrote a letter to my wife, informing her that I intended to
+counterfeit illness,—on my feigned death-bed, to obtain permission
+to be buried by torch-light in the Protestant burying-ground
+outside the town, and with the assistance of my friend
+and only confidant, Morton, to follow my own funeral procession,
+at night, wrapt in a military cloak, as one of the
+mourners. Every thing succeeded to my wishes. I was
+considered as falling a victim to my mental sufferings, and my
+fate excited pity. I obtained the permission required. Morton
+administered a strong sleeping draught, and as he was my
+constant attendant, he pronounced me dead. I was placed in
+my coffin, and on the evening of my funeral, which was the
+next succeeding my supposed death, he begged to be allowed
+to weep in private over the bier of his best friend, and took
+that opportunity of opening the coffin, dressing me in the
+clothes which he had conveyed into the room, filling the coffin
+with some billets of wood which had been brought to make up
+the fire, and of concealing me in an adjoining closet till the
+moment arrived for the procession to move on. I then mixed
+among the mourners, and by favour of the darkness, escaped
+detection. As most of the other officers were on parole, there
+was no difficulty made as to the number who passed the gates,
+and with a palpitating heart, I found myself, unfettered by
+any pledge of honour, beyond the walls of Verdun.</p>
+
+<p>“It was not till all present were occupied in actually lowering
+the coffin into the ground that I ventured to absent myself.
+I took that moment to steal away, and plunging into a
+neighbouring thicket, I remained there closely concealed, till
+they had all wound their way back into the town.</p>
+
+<p>“Morton had placed for me a peasant’s dress, a bag of provisions,
+and some money, in a hollow tree, the situation of
+which he had so accurately described to me, that I found it
+without much loss of time, and having changed my dress, and
+carefully concealed my military costume, I dashed right onwards,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span>and before morning had cleared three leagues. I need
+not tell you how I made my way from day to day—how I
+crossed the Rhine in an open boat, which in my wanderings
+I found moored to the shore; how I was, in Germany, immediately
+seized as a spy, and how for four years, I was enabled
+still to endure the tortures of an Austrian dungeon, by the
+distant hope of some day being restored to my Ellen,—<em>my</em>
+Ellen! I thought her <em>mine</em> then! I have escaped from my
+dungeon—I have returned! I came to my home—no one
+knew me—I asked for my wife—I received no answer—I
+inquired for my children—they were at Mr. Hamilton’s!—for
+that is his name—that is the name of the man who has
+robbed me of my wife—my wedded, lawful wife!—for she
+is my wife! By the law of the land, she is my wife, sir?
+There is justice for me in this land of law, of liberty, of impartial
+justice, is there not? She can be prosecuted for
+bigamy, sir. She must be found guilty. I come to you to
+learn how to proceed—Do you advise me, guide me. Oh!
+my brain is confused and maddened! I cannot, cannot
+think!”</p>
+
+<p>Cresford paced the apartment in violent agitation. The
+quiet lawyer looked up from his spectacles, and half wondered
+whether his would-be client was quite in his right senses.
+Cresford had not paused for a moment. There was a relief
+in thus disburthening himself of all that had long been pent up
+in his soul. He had found those who were nearest and
+dearest to him, severed, eternally severed from him. All
+other ties and affections were as nothing before those which
+had been thus rudely rent asunder, and having once begun to
+speak to this stranger, he poured forth all his tale as to his
+best friend. He might also be prompted to indulge in this
+confidence by a feeling unknown to himself, that a person
+totally unacquainted with Ellen would be more likely to listen
+with complete sympathy to his wrongs, than any one who had
+known, or even seen her.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. M‘Leod answered,</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, sir, your case appears to be a very hard one. You
+wrote, you say, to your wife to inform her of the plan you
+meant to adopt?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wrote to her explaining the whole thing, and sent the
+letter by my friend Maitland, who succeeded in making his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span>escape a month before I put my plan in execution. I waited
+to make sure he got off in safety. He wrote to me the evening
+before he sailed in a fishing-vessel for England.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you are confident she received this letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“She says she did not—but she had fallen in love with
+Hamilton! She never loved me, I am now sure she never
+loved me,” he repeated in a tone of deep despondency, but he
+continued with more bitterness: “It was very convenient to
+her to believe in my death; convenient to my partners in
+trade, to divide the profits of the business—very convenient
+for her brother to be admitted to a share. Ha, ha, ha! they
+have all revelled in my spoils—they have thought me safe in
+my dungeon! But I am here—I am alive—they cannot
+prove me dead. I will wrest my wife, my children, my property,
+from the spoiler’s grasp!” and he laughed a wild laugh
+of desperation.</p>
+
+<p>It had been Mr. M‘Leod’s fate frequently to see people
+under a state of great excitement, so that, although he feared
+his visiter’s mind might be somewhat warped by his misfortunes,
+he did not doubt there was ground for all he stated,
+and he now inquired methodically into his name, his connections,
+his residence.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered the name as one of considerable note in the
+mercantile world, and he had some recollection of having heard
+his death mentioned, as one of the melancholy consequences
+of the cruel and unjustifiable act of arbitrary power, which
+must always be a disgrace on the name of Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, Mr. Cresford,” rejoined M‘Leod, “I pity you
+most sincerely—whether your wife may be to blame or not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whether my wife may be to blame or not? And do I
+hear an Englishman, whose profession it is to right the injured,
+to procure justice for all indifferently—do I hear him
+advocate the cause of the faithless wife? then, indeed, have I
+little chance of redress!”</p>
+
+<p>“My good sir, you misunderstand me entirely. I do not
+mean to advocate her cause, or anybody’s cause. I merely
+mean to say, that I am very sorry for you, whether your
+wife did ever receive the letter you wrote to her, or whether
+she did not.”</p>
+
+<p>“She did receive it—she must have received it; and, if
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</span>she did not, she should have waited for some more positive
+and certain information of my death than common report!”</p>
+
+<p>“Very true, Mr. Cresford—quite true, sir; yet, if you
+had been dead, it would not have been easy for you to write
+her word you were dead, though she might have expected to
+hear from you that you were alive.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is there justice for me in the laws of my country, or is
+there not?” repeated Cresford sternly.</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly, sir. In this country there is justice for everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then how am I to seek redress? In what court?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, if by redress you mean revenge, that is to be obtained
+by prosecuting your wife for bigamy, in which case the
+trial would take place at the assizes of the county in which
+the marriage ceremony was performed: but, under the circumstances
+of the case under which the crime of bigamy was
+committed, I conclude, that if she quits the roof of her second
+husband——”</p>
+
+<p>“He is not her husband, sir; I am her husband, and I
+will prove it. She, the immaculate—the refined—who seemed
+to shrink from my love as too impassioned—she shall be
+proved to have been living in sin with another man!”</p>
+
+<p>“Does she still reside with Mr.——I beg your pardon,
+what was the name you mentioned?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hamilton—Hamilton is his name—and curses on it!”
+exclaimed Cresford, goaded to madness by the cool and methodical
+manner of the lawyer, who, though a lawyer, was an
+honest straightforward man, with plain manners and a good
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>“Does she still reside with Mr. Hamilton?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! she is with her father. She had not the face to live
+on with Hamilton when she knew I was alive, and on my way
+home.”</p>
+
+<p>“And your children, sir, does she make any difficulty about
+sending them to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! I brought them away with me yesterday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I do not exactly understand what redress you seek
+at the arm of the law.”</p>
+
+<p>The clear head, and the kind heart of the lawyer, made him
+begin to see that, although a most singular and lamentable
+case, it was one in which all parties were more deserving of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</span>pity than of blame, and it seemed to him that the poor
+woman had acted as well as she could under the unfortunate
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you and Mrs. Cresford had an interview since your
+return, and in what manner did she comport herself?”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw her yesterday. I saw her in all her loveliness—I
+could almost have forgotten every thing—for the moment
+it was such rapture to gaze on her again; when she told me,
+in so many words, that her whole heart and soul were his—my
+rival’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor woman!” ejaculated Mr. M‘Leod.</p>
+
+<p>“And is it she whom you pity? Am I doomed to be
+scorned and persecuted by the whole human race? To be
+hated by all who are bound to me by the nearest and dearest
+ties? Are even strangers to take part against me? But I
+will have revenge, if I cannot have sympathy. I will be
+feared, if I cannot be loved. I would fain be loved; it was
+my nature to love, and to wish for love in return.” His voice
+softened, and the tears swam in his eyes. “But I have never
+been loved—no, she never did love me! He had her first
+affections—her whole affections! Oh, how those words ring
+in my ears!”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. M‘Leod was moved by his expressions of wretchedness,
+and rising from his seat, he took his hand kindly.</p>
+
+<p>“Though I am a stranger to you, sir, I pity you most sincerely,”
+he said, “and I wish I could persuade you to look
+more calmly on the case.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you—will you assist me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Explain to me in what mode you wish for my assistance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you undertake the prosecution of Ellen Cresford for
+bigamy?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I must consider a little about it. I am an odd
+sort of fellow, and though I am a lawyer, I have a corner of
+conscience,” and Mr. M‘Leod smiled. Cresford hated him
+for being able to smile. “I do not engage in any thing till I
+know a little more about the matter. I am very well off in
+the world, and I do not want to make money, by causing my
+fellow-creatures to be more unhappy than they need be. I
+can’t tell what I might do if I was poor; but, thank God, I
+can afford to dismiss a client, if I think that no good can come
+of gaining his cause.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</span></p>
+<p>“Then you dismiss me, Mr. M‘Leod?”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not justly say that; but I should like to know how
+truly your wife believed you were dead and buried, and
+whether she had got acquainted with the other gentleman
+before she heard the news of your death, and a few more such
+questions; for it runs in my head, that though your case is a
+hard one, hers may be a hard one too; and that the best
+thing you could both do, would be to let each other alone, and
+bear your misfortunes as well as you can.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is easy enough to preach forbearance, and patience, and
+submission, and resignation. You would not find them quite
+so easy to practise. I did not come to you, Mr. M‘Leod, for
+ghostly counsel! I came to you for professional advice. Thus
+much I have ascertained, that the offence will be tried at the
+county assizes, and the punishment——?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mercy upon me, sir! You do not really wish your wife
+to be transported, when you deceived her with a false report
+of your death! I will have nothing to say to the matter, Mr.
+Cresford. You may find another solicitor, who is sharper set
+for a job than I am.”</p>
+
+<p>Cresford seized his hat, and muttering between his teeth,
+“Friend and foe, stranger and the wife of my bosom,—all
+leagued against me!” he made a slight bow to the honest
+lawyer, and again found himself jostled in the busy throng of
+London.</p>
+
+<p>One thing, however, he had ascertained,—that the prosecution
+would take place at her native town, and he felt a certain
+pleasure in the idea that she would be held up to disgrace
+there, among the very people who knew he was the betrayed
+and the detested husband. Those who were aware of the
+humiliating situation in which he was placed, would be witnesses
+of his revenge.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="14" style="text-decoration: none;">XIV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">And sudden hurricanes sweep all around,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That strip the tender leaves, and whirl amain,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">While dread convulsions heave the shuddering ground,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And rocks, and caves, with hollow moan complain;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">For anger hight, the lord of this domain,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Who when he fondly deems the ruin brought</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">On others’ fame and fortunes, his dear gain,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Finds that his own destruction he hath wrought,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And on himself hath wreaked the vengeance that he sought.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><cite>Manuscript Poem.</cite></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>One other mode of vengeance Cresford was determined to pursue,
+namely, to call out Mr. Hamilton. He returned to the
+hotel, and there he sat down to write a challenge couched in
+language such as he thought must goad any man to give him
+the satisfaction for which he pined.</p>
+
+<p>Having from the red-book ascertained the direction to Mr.
+Hamilton’s place, he sent it by the post, for there was no one
+to whom he could apply on this emergency. He had not yet
+communicated with any of the partners of his house; he had
+seen no one except Henry Wareham; he felt that all living
+beings were his foes, and he therefore could not bring himself
+to have recourse to any of those who formerly called themselves
+his friends. He fancied he should only thereby expose
+himself to meeting with fresh unkindness and want of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>When he had despatched his letter to Hamilton, he sent for
+his children into the room where he was sitting. They came
+pale and frightened. He tried to talk to them. He strove to
+adapt his conversation to their age. He asked them how they
+liked London, whether they had walked in the streets, and
+told them they should go to Kensington Gardens; but his eye
+was wild, his manner fierce and hurried, and they scarcely
+ventured to answer him. He soon sent them back to their
+attendant, his feelings rather embittered than softened by the
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>When he was able to fix his mind to the consideration of
+any subject, he became aware that he ought to arrange something
+more proper and more advantageous for them than their
+present mode of life, and he resolved, provided he did not
+fall by the hand of Hamilton, to take a small house in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</span>immediate vicinity of London, where they might reside with
+their <i lang="fr">bonne</i>, who had been with them for some time, and
+where they might also have the advantage of masters.</p>
+
+<p>He impatiently awaited Hamilton’s answer. It came; and
+in the first rage of disappointment he tore it into a thousand
+fragments. Hamilton distinctly and positively refused to meet
+Mr. Cresford, and told him that no taunts, no insults, should
+ever induce him to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford threw himself into a chaise, and in half an hour
+was on the Portsmouth road. When he arrived within sight
+of Belhanger, he gave a second letter to a messenger, and desired
+it to be instantly delivered to Mr. Hamilton. In this
+he branded him with the name of coward, and he flattered
+himself it was such as must secure to him the revenge he
+coveted.</p>
+
+<p>Dismissing his chaise, he approached the scene of Ellen’s
+former happiness, and prowled around the precincts with redoubled
+feelings of jealousy. The loveliness of the place excited
+his envy—the venerable-looking manor house, the old
+oaks, the deer! Yet from these things he gleaned a momentary
+consolation. Perhaps it was the splendour of the connection
+that tempted her! But, oh no! the expression of her
+countenance, when she said her whole heart, soul, and affections
+were Algernon’s! Those words sounded again in his
+ears, and he longed to find himself in mortal struggle with
+the man of whom she could so speak.</p>
+
+<p>He hurried back to the inn, hoping his last letter must
+have provoked an answer consonant to his wishes. He found
+an envelope containing his own despatch unopened.</p>
+
+<p>There was no further redress to be sought; and he had
+but to retrace his steps to London, if possible more infuriated
+than before.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon had not trusted himself to read this second letter.
+He had resolved that no earthly power should tempt him to
+lift his hand against her husband: he was determined to commit
+no act that would place a barrier between himself and
+Ellen, which neither time nor change of circumstances could
+remove. Cresford was mortal, as well as himself or Ellen;
+and if, although he might wait till extreme old age, there was
+a possibility of their ever being reunited, no act of his should
+have rendered their reunion impracticable.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</span></p>
+<p>Cresford returned to London, and he quickly put into execution
+the plan for the establishment of his children. It was
+necessary to enter into something like an arrangement with
+his partners. As yet he had taken no measures towards resuming
+his place among them; he had made himself known
+to none of his old acquaintances; he had communicated with
+no one, except those we have already mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>But money now became necessary to him. He revisited
+the house, and begged he might be immediately put in possession
+of his share of the receipts. His place of residence
+became known, and many left their names for him at the
+hotel; but even with the few whom he occasionally saw, he
+preserved a moody silence—to none did he speak of his misfortunes
+or of his intentions.</p>
+
+<p>The only person whose house he frequented, was an old
+bachelor who had been a friend of the family, who was his
+godfather, and who had taken advantage of that sort of connection
+to lecture him, and to find fault with him, when he
+was a boy. He had always disliked him, and why he should
+now be the only person whose society he selected, was one of
+the strange and unaccountable freaks of a mind ill at ease with
+itself, to which the spectacle of content and cheerfulness is
+irksome, while it finds a kind of relief in the contemplation of
+another equally joyless.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Stephenson Smith had in his youth esteemed himself a
+man of gallantry. He had never been handsome, but he had
+thought himself insinuating; and he had been made a fool of
+by many a fair one of his day. He had always professed to
+be on his guard against the machinations of the sex; and, as
+he fancied, had preserved his liberty up to the present day;—that
+is to say, he had been by turns the tyrant and the slave,
+of any woman who had art and vice enough to think it worth
+her while to dupe him. His conversation chiefly turned upon
+the coldness and the heartlessness of women. To most others
+it would have been a shocking sight; but Cresford found a
+strange satisfaction in watching the blind and helpless old man,
+as he sat in his arm-chair, surrounded by all the luxuries,
+which to him were of no avail, and receiving, with querulous
+impatience, the attentions of a bustling nurse, who, through
+evil report and good report, whether he was cross or not, conscientiously
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</span>did her duty by him, and quietly performed the
+offices for which she was hired.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford was one day paying Sir Stephenson his diurnal
+visit. He had sat for some time in silence; his two hands
+rested upon his two knees, his eyes looked vacantly, but
+fixedly, into the fire, when his meditations were broken in upon
+by the peevish lamentations of the old man.</p>
+
+<p>“There! that tiresome woman has not given me my
+snuff-box!” and his feeble, palsied hands, strayed over the
+table in search of the snuff-box which was in his pocket.
+“She has no feeling for me! she does not care whether I am
+comfortable or uncomfortable, as long as she gets her money
+and her perquisites—that is the way of women! Talk of
+their kindliness! They care for nothing but themselves.
+They can pretend to care for one, when one is young and
+handsome—and when one has plenty of money in one’s
+pocket too; but I never knew one of them who had a grain
+of feeling! I have been a pretty fellow in my youth, and
+have had as many women make love to me as my neighbours,
+but hang me, if any one of them ever loved me for myself.
+There is this Sarah Purbeck, she cares no more for me——”</p>
+
+<p>“What an infatuation it is,” exclaimed Cresford, “which
+can make us worship such fickle, heartless creatures! as variable
+as the weathercock, which changes with every wind that
+blows! But that time is past—I have awoke from my day-dream—I
+know what their love is worth now!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ay! and so do I, my boy. I never thought it worth
+much; and now I know it is worth—nothing at all! However,
+if I have not given them much of a heart-ache,” he
+added, laughing a feeble, old, cracked laugh, “they have not
+given me much of a heart-ache either!”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think they are capable of loving truly and sincerely?
+Do you think they can love, though you and I may
+have lived unloved?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; they can love themselves, and their clothes, and
+their opera-boxes, and, sometimes, some man they ought not
+to love.”</p>
+
+<p>Cresford bit his lips, and knit his brows, and his fist lay
+clenched upon the table. A long silence ensued. At length
+the old man fidgeted about, rang the bell, and asked for his
+chocolate. He struck his watch: it was five minutes past the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</span>hour. He scolded Mrs. Purbeck for her inattention, and
+when she left the room, he said in a dejected tone—</p>
+
+<p>“It is a sad thing to have nobody to care for one: that
+woman does not love me. Perhaps, after all, if I had married,
+I might, in a wife, have found an affectionate nurse.”</p>
+
+<p>“Affection!” exclaimed Cresford—“affection in a wife!
+Have not I a wife?—and have I met with affection?” He
+several times paced up and down the apartment, and then
+hastily took his leave.</p>
+
+<p>These visits did not tend to put him in good humour with
+human nature, or with womankind: they still more soured
+and embittered his temper; and when he had put his affairs
+in train, had resumed his situation as partner, and measures
+had been taken for Henry Wareham’s withdrawal from a
+concern in which he found himself frequently and painfully
+brought in contact with Cresford, he left London, his mind
+fully made up to pursue his unfortunate wife according to the
+rigour of the law.</p>
+
+<p>He had ascertained from Mr. M‘Leod that the trial would
+take place at the assizes of the county in which the second
+marriage had been celebrated, the very one in which she at
+present resided. He took up his abode in a neighbouring
+village. His first care was to obtain the certificate of his own
+marriage at the cathedral church of ——. He proceeded to
+procure that of the second marriage at Longbury, for which
+purpose he sent to the minister of that place, a regular application
+for the extract from the parish register.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Allenham had no option—he was obliged to comply;
+but he was inexpressibly alarmed at the application, and lost
+no time in informing Captain Wareham of the circumstance,
+while Caroline wearied herself in conjectures, and hopes, and
+fears as to what Cresford might meditate.</p>
+
+<p>This communication did not render Captain Wareham more
+easy and comfortable in his mind; and although the kindness
+of his heart prompted him to conceal his fears from Ellen, the
+additional weight of care rendered him more than usually difficult
+to be pleased. The Allenhams had returned to their own
+home soon after Ellen’s arrival, and her two poor elder children
+having been removed, the last few weeks had been passed in
+melancholy quiet. Still Matilda found her task more than
+usually difficult, and she was so subdued herself by the misfortunes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</span>of her sister, that she had no longer the buoyancy of
+spirit which enabled her, half gaily, half resolutely, to bear up
+against the daily worries of her father’s temper. To Ellen he
+never, on any occasion, spoke with captiousness; but he often
+appeared annoyed with the little Agnes, who was old enough
+to toddle about the room, to pull away grandpapa’s toast, to
+stumble over his foot as it was extended towards the fire, to
+frighten him lest she might fall against the fender, and to do
+the hundred things which are charming and attractive to those
+whose hearts are light, and who can give themselves up to
+watching the graceful awkwardnesses, the winning <i lang="fr">espiégleries</i>
+of infancy, but which are inexpressibly wearisome when the
+mind is oppressed with deep and serious care.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen saw that her child, her only remaining child, was
+often troublesome to her father, and she kept it out of the
+room as much as possible. He was then vexed that the child
+should not be with them, and his good-nature made him fear
+he might have hurt Ellen’s feelings.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford having obtained the two certificates, now waited
+upon Mr. Turnbull, a country gentleman and a magistrate,
+and producing the two documents, informed him that he wished
+to indict his wife, Ellen Cresford, for bigamy, and required him
+to issue a warrant for her apprehension.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turnbull, although not personally acquainted with the
+parties, knew the respectability of their situations, and had
+heard under what circumstances the second marriage had been
+contracted. He attempted to dissuade Mr. Cresford from
+carrying matters to such an extremity; to which Cresford
+sternly replied, as he had previously done to Mr. M‘Leod’s
+remonstrances, that he did not apply to him for advice, that he
+simply waited upon him to demand the performance of his
+duty as a magistrate—that the case was clearly made out before
+him, and he was not to counsel, but to act.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turnbull, although he did so most unwillingly, had no
+choice but to grant the desired warrant. It was with a feeling
+of triumph that Cresford seized the paper, and, bowing to
+Mr. Turnbull, abruptly quitted him, before he had time to
+adduce any arguments in favour of delay.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford proceeded to the county town, and delivering the
+warrant to the constable, desired him to perform his duty.</p>
+
+<p>It so happened, that the constable to whom he addressed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</span>himself, was the very Will Pollard who had once lived as
+gardener with Captain Wareham, and who had known Ellen
+from her childhood. He had inherited a little money, and
+had set up for himself, as nurseryman and seedsman. He
+stood aghast when the paper was placed in his hand, and declared
+in round terms, that nothing should induce him to be
+the bearer of such a thing, “to Miss Ellen that was.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take back your paper, sir! If you are for taking the
+law of her, sir, you must find somebody else—I’ll have
+nothing to say to it,” and he shoved the paper back to Cresford
+in no very civil manner.</p>
+
+<p>“You cannot help yourself,” Cresford replied with an exulting
+calmness. “You must execute a magistrate’s warrant—you
+cannot help yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I a’n’t bound to do such a thing as this?” asked Pollard
+the gardener, of Simpson the shoemaker, who happened to be
+present.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what right you have to refuse,” answered
+Simpson, who was a man of wisdom, and read all the newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>Pollard hesitated. He had not long been established in a
+concern of his own, he was new in office, and he looked up to
+Simpson for advice and guidance: after having scratched his
+head, brushed his hat with his sleeve, and pruned a thriving
+young shrub considerably more than it required, he said,</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe if ’tis to be done, I may be able to speak kinder
+to her than another, and she always was partial to me from a
+child.” So he took the paper and held it doubtingly and distrustfully
+in his hand. “No,” he said, again scratching his
+head, “I don’t half like the job; you had better get Mr. Clarke
+the carpenter, on the left-hand side, to do it for you, sir. He
+is a constable as well as me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Pollard, the law must have its course. You know
+that, as well as I do. You had better take the warrant I have
+now given you, and bring the person therein mentioned before
+the magistrate, as the law directs.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Pollard, “what must be, must be, and it don’t
+signify argufying. And when is it to be served?”</p>
+
+<p>“To-day, sir! Now!” answered Cresford in a stentorian
+voice. “I expect to meet you at Mr. Turnbull’s with—with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</span>the person specified in that warrant, in your custody. In
+three hours I shall be there.”</p>
+
+<p>Cresford departed, leaving poor Pollard perplexed and confounded.
+It went against him sadly to do what was required
+of him. He turned in his head how he might open the business
+to Miss Ellen “just easy like, without putting her in a
+fluster;” and in the first place he resolved to change his dress.
+“He wasn’t no ways tidy to appear before Captain Wareham
+and his family. He would look clean and decent at least. He
+would do nothing as was not respectful by the family.” So
+Pollard retired to repair his toilette, feeling that he thereby
+softened the blow which was hanging over poor Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>His wife was surprised to see him all in his Sunday’s best.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what merry-making are you ever going to, Will?”
+said she: “is it your club day?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, ’tan’t my club day, woman; you know well enough
+that a’n’t till next week?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, in the name of fortune, where are you going to,
+then? You are not going to Tharford fair, sure!”</p>
+
+<p>“No! I a’n’t going to no fair, nor no merry-making,”
+and he stood brushing his hat round and round with the sleeve
+of his coat; “I am going where I have no mind to go.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Will, you quite fright me! You can’t have done
+any thing wrong?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! But I’ve got a warrant to sarve.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Lord bless us, this is not the first warrant you have
+had to sarve! But I never knew you dress yourself out so
+fine to sarve a warrant before,” and Peggy smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“You would not laugh, if you knew who that warrant was
+made out for—It’s for my Miss Ellen as you have heard me
+talk of, many and many’s the time. She’s the one, as I’ve
+often told you, was as quick up the ladder as I was myself—and
+such a one as she was to sow seeds! and she could make
+cuttings almost as well as I could myself! Miss Caroline,
+she was always for walking in the streets, and looking out for
+the beaux, but Miss Ellen, she would hoe and rake for me all
+her play-time, if they would let her.”</p>
+
+<p>“A warrant for her, Will? You are dreaming.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I a’n’t; But hold you tongue, and mind your business.
+There’s no good in prating—we must all do what is
+appointed us.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</span></p>
+<p>Will marched out at the door with a tear called up by his
+own eloquence gathering in his eye.</p>
+
+<p>He proceeded to Captain Wareham’s. He knocked at the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>“If you please, James,” said he, “if you please, I want to
+have a word with Mrs. Hamilton—that is—Mrs. Cres—Miss
+Ellen that was—my Miss Ellen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Step in, Master Pollard, I’ll tell her directly.”</p>
+
+<p>Pollard stood twirling his hat, and debating within himself
+how he was to open his business, when James came back, and
+bade him walk up.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Cresford is alone—she bids us all say Mrs. Cresford
+now,” he whispered; “she says there’s no use in standing out
+about a name,—and yet she takes her letters every morning
+as if she did not half like to touch them.”</p>
+
+<p>Pollard entered the room where Ellen sat, meek and dejected,
+with little Agnes in her lap playing at the table—she
+looked up with a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>“I have not seen you a long time, Pollard; I hear you are
+become a married man since you left my father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, ma’am, so I am, an’t please you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you are quite comfortable; I should have been to
+call on you, but I have not been out lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, ma’am, all the same for thinking of me.
+’Twould be a pride and a pleasure to me, to show you how nice
+and comfortable I’ve got every thing about me—but——”</p>
+
+<p>“Speak out, Pollard; you are a very old friend: you were
+a great play-mate of mine in my childhood. If you have any
+little favour to ask of me, I shall be glad to do my best, though
+I am not quite so rich now as I once was.” Her eyes dropped,
+and a paler hue stole over her cheek.</p>
+
+<p>“No, ’tisn’t that, bless your kind heart, ’tisn’t that. I had
+rather by half ask a favour of you, for I know ’twould be a
+pleasure to you to grant it. But I’ve got a bit of paper here,
+ma’am. You see, ma’am, I’m a constable, and they have put
+this upon me. They say as I must give you this here bit of
+paper, and I scarce know what will come of it.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen received the paper from Pollard’s trembling hand,
+while with the back of the other he brushed off a tear. She
+still thought some misfortune had befallen his family,—that
+most likely it was a petition,—and it took her some moments
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</span>to collect her thoughts so as to comprehend the full purport
+of the warrant.</p>
+
+<p>The idea that she could be prosecuted for bigamy had never
+before crossed her imagination. The misfortune of no longer
+being the wife of Algernon, and the disgrace and shame of
+having lived with him for two years, had completely occupied
+her whole soul. She had not been able to imagine any misery
+beyond this. No one had ever hinted at such a possibility,
+nor indeed had any one believed that Cresford, however keenly
+he might himself suffer from the consequences of his own imprudence,
+would have wreaked his useless vengeance upon his
+unfortunate wife.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was thunder-struck! The poor constable begged her
+pardon, entreated her to believe it was no fault of his; that he
+was bound to obey the law. “We can’t help ourselves,
+ma’am; we must do what the law directs,—them as have to
+execute the laws, and them as have to obey them,—’tis all one
+for us both.”</p>
+
+<p>Poor Ellen begged him to find her father, and to bid him
+come to her. She was scared, frightened. She could not be
+more completely separated from Algernon,—her children were
+already torn from her. She was, therefore, simply, vaguely
+frightened.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham came. She gave him the paper. He
+guessed the purport but too well, and turned deadly pale:
+“When is this summons to be attended, Pollard?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, sir, Mr. Cresford said we must meet him at Squire
+Turnbull’s in three hours from the time he was at my house,
+and that was at two o’clock, just as I had done dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Meet him! Am I to meet Mr. Cresford? Oh, father!
+any thing but that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Dearest child, there is no avoiding it. You must exert
+all your strength of mind: you must not give way. Mr. Turnbull
+is a good sort of man, and there will be no one else present.
+Cresford is a brute, an unmanly brute! If you could feel
+half as angry with him as I do, your anger would give you
+strength to go through the interview.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am too miserable to feel angry, father. Besides, I am
+sorry for him:—I have made him very unhappy. I know
+what pain it is to be separated from what one loves, even
+when one knows one is loved in return. What am I to do,
+father?” she meekly added.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</span></p>
+<p>“The sooner we get this unpleasant business over, the
+better, my dearest child. Go and put on your things; I will
+order a chaise immediately.” He hurried Ellen out of the
+room; he longed to be for a moment freed from her presence;
+he knew that this summons was the prelude to a prosecution;
+he knew that the punishment of bigamy might be transportation.
+Though he had no idea matters would ever be brought
+to such an extremity, he felt awed and nervous in the extreme,
+and he paced the apartment in the greatest agitation. Pollard
+stood still, perplexed and grieved. “Get along, Pollard,”
+exclaimed Captain Wareham, angrily; “can’t you wait down-stairs?
+Why do you stand here watching me?” He rang
+the bell violently, and ordered the hack chaise to be instantly
+procured.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham kept no carriage. Ellen had strictly
+conformed to her father’s mode of life: she would not consent
+to live in splendour upon the money Mr. Hamilton would fain
+have forced upon her.</p>
+
+<p>The hack chaise came to the door. The lovely, the graceful
+Ellen, who, as the wife of Mr. Cresford, had been used to
+all the luxuries of life, and, as the wife of Algernon Hamilton,
+to all its refinements, ascended the jingling steps, and, rustling
+through the straw, seated herself at the farther corner of the
+narrow seat, while the constable of the parish, mounted on the
+bar before, conveyed her like a common culprit before the
+magistrate.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="15" style="text-decoration: none;">XV.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>Cosmus, Duke of Florence, had a desperate saying against perfidious or neglecting
+friends, as if those wrongs were unpardonable. “You shall read,” saith he,
+“that we are commanded to forgive our enemies, but you never read that we are
+commanded to forgive our friends.” But yet the spirit of Job was in a better tune:
+“Shall we,” saith he, “take good at God’s hands, and not be content to take evil
+also?” and so of friends in proportion. This is certain, that a man that studieth
+revenge, keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well.—<span class="smcap">Lord Bacon.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">Redeemer, heal his heart! It is the grief</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Which festers there that hath bewildered him.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey</span>’<i>s Roderick</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The events of the morning had been so sudden and so bewildering,
+that Ellen scarcely comprehended what was happening.
+The knowledge that she was again to be brought into the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</span>presence of Cresford, was the one idea that possessed her mind.
+“What does he want me for? What am I to say to him,
+father? What is this to lead to?”</p>
+
+<p>“I scarcely know, my child. You have nothing to do but
+to answer the truth. Your conduct has been irreproachable.
+You have nothing to blush for.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, how I dread meeting those eyes again! Keep close
+to me, father.”</p>
+
+<p>They arrived. Ellen, pale and trembling, was supported
+by her father into the hall. They were instantly shown into
+Mr. Turnbull’s study, where he waited to receive them. He
+offered Ellen a seat. There was a dignity in her timidity that
+awed, while it excited compassion; and Mr. Turnbull, though
+a plain matter-of-fact man, treated her with more polite deference
+than usually appeared in his manner towards women.</p>
+
+<p>“I believe,” he said, “I must now summon Mr. Cresford,
+that he may go through the form of his deposition.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen bowed assent, and trembled through every limb. But
+she kept her eyes on the ground, and moved not. Cresford
+entered,—she did not stir.</p>
+
+<p>As he approached the table, he gazed on her, though it was
+rather in triumph than in love; but her veil was down, her
+bonnet tied close, her form enveloped in a cloak. The oath
+was administered. Mr. Turnbull said:—</p>
+
+<p>“I believe, madam, you must for a moment remove your
+veil, that the complainant may identify you.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen drew it aside, and turned on him her pale, sad face;
+but still she raised not her eyes. Cresford advanced a step
+towards the table, to take the Bible, and to swear that the
+prisoner was Ellen Cresford, his wife. She instinctively seized
+her father’s arm, and sheltered herself behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford showed his marriage certificate. The servant who
+had formerly lived with him, and the clerk of * * * *, were
+present to prove the celebration of the marriage. He then
+produced the extract from the Longbury register.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turnbull asked Ellen what she had to say in reply. In
+a faint voice, she answered “Nothing!” She had but one
+absorbing feeling—that of bringing this painful interview to
+a close. But Captain Wareham interposed.</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot allow this cruel and unjust statement to be made,
+without simply mentioning the circumstances under which
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</span>my daughter’s second marriage was contracted. Mr. Cresford
+chose to publish an account of his own death—he chose to
+enact his own funeral—his friends and relations mourned him
+as dead. Two years and two months after the receipt of the
+paper containing this account of his decease, my daughter contracted
+a second marriage. Should any man in justice, in
+honour, prosecute such a case?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly not,” was Mr. Turnbull’s concise reply. He
+looked at Cresford: “Do you wish me, sir, to proceed?—it
+is yet time to pause. You will no longer be at liberty to retract.
+If I make out the commitment, you are bound over to
+prosecute.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know it, sir! It is my intention so to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Madam, my duty is a painful one, but I must proceed
+according to the provisions of the Act!” and Mr. Turnbull
+drew out the warrant of commitment; at the same time he
+informed the constable that he would himself attend that
+evening, with a brother magistrate, to admit her to bail; and
+that he authorised him to conduct her back to her own house,
+there to await his arrival, rather than at the county gaol.</p>
+
+<p>“Father, father! I am not to be taken to prison! Impossible!
+He cannot mean to bring such disgrace upon the
+mother of his children?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear madam, I will attend you at your own house:
+as the presence of two magistrates is necessary, I will bring
+Sir John Staples with me. Captain Wareham can then give
+us bail for your appearance at the ensuing assizes.”</p>
+
+<p>“The assizes! Oh! he cannot be in earnest! This is
+too, too cruel! Drag me before the eyes of the whole county!
+blazon our misery, and our shame to the world! bring upon
+us the mockery of the coarse and the unfeeling mob! Oh,
+Charles! what have I done to deserve this?” She burst into
+an agony of tears.</p>
+
+<p>“What have you done? Have you not blasted my happiness,
+broken my heart, and maddened my brain?—and she
+asks what she has done!” he added, turning round to those
+present, with a wild and fearful laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Turnbull hastened to bring the scene to a close, and
+lost no time in leading poor Ellen back to her hack chaise.
+He almost turned Cresford from the door, and instantly galloped
+off himself in search of Sir John Staples, to proceed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</span>with him to Captain Wareham’s house, and there to admit
+Ellen to bail, that, at least, she might thus be spared one painful
+and ignominious part of what she was doomed to endure.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen threw herself, sobbing and weeping, into the corner
+of the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>“So I am to be tried, father—tried for bigamy, I suppose!
+Oh! have mercy Heaven! tried like a common malefactor!
+placed at the bar, with all the lawyers to look at me;
+and the dirty mob to laugh, and bandy jests upon me! Oh!
+I never, never thought of this! And must it be? Is there
+no escape?”</p>
+
+<p>“Alas! alas! my poor Ellen, I know of none. There is
+no chance of bringing Cresford to reason; every attempt to
+do so seems but to incense him. I really think his intellects
+are affected,—he is scarcely in his right senses.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have done that!” she said, in a dejected tone. “It is
+not for me to be too hard upon him.” After a pause of some
+length, she added, “And, father—the punishment?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, my child! do not think of that! no jury on earth
+can find you guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am guilty, father!—it is true I have committed
+the crime! I am guilty of bigamy—though it is not my
+fault.”</p>
+
+<p>“They will not condemn you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if they should? I should like to know the worst.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, under aggravated circumstances, the punishment
+may be transportation for seven years; but they will never
+pass such a sentence, so think no more of that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I had rather it had been death,” she replied, in a quiet
+tone of despair. After another pause she asked, “If I were
+to be transported, would that annul my marriage? Should I
+be free?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, even that would not annul your marriage.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps it is best so. I am glad it would not: I would
+not mar his glorious and honourable career in his own country.
+It is enough to have the ruin of one fellow-creature on one’s
+conscience.” She spoke no more.</p>
+
+<p>They arrived at home. In less than an hour Mr. Turnbull
+and Sir John Staples arrived, and with them Lord Besville,
+whom Mr. Turnbull also called upon, and who became bail,
+with Captain Wareham, for her appearance at the assizes.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</span></p>
+<p>The constable was dismissed. Poor Will Pollard! Never
+had the law of the land a more unwilling assistant in its execution.
+When he returned to his cottage late in the evening,
+he threw down his hat on the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he muttered to himself, “this has been the worst
+day’s job that ever I had to do. I would not have such
+another, no—not to be justice of the peace, and a squire to
+boot. Why,” he exclaimed in a louder voice, and striking
+his fist on the table, “why, that fellow had no more business
+to come back alive, after having sent word he was dead, than
+I have to bring in my bills twice over! Shame upon him!”</p>
+
+<p>It was some time before Peggy got at the rights of the
+case.</p>
+
+<p>“So, ’tis her second husband as is her true love. Poor
+soul! Well, ’tis very hard. Why ’tis almost worse than if
+it was her husband’s ghost come to haunt her—not that I
+should any ways like to see the ghost of my first lover Tom
+Hartrop, as was drowned off Ushant.”</p>
+
+<p>Peggy had been a beauty, and was rather fond of talking
+of her first, her second, her third, and her tenth lover. Will
+Pollard was in no mood to listen, and, with a manner unusually
+surly, bade her, “hold her jaw, and make haste with his
+supper.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a sorrowful evening at Captain Wareham’s. Ellen
+retired early to rest, or rather to weep. Captain Wareham
+sat up late preambulating the small drawing-room, while the
+measured creaking of his shoes, and periodical stamp of his
+foot, were heard by Ellen in her apartment above, and by
+Matilda in hers, as they each passed the greater part of the
+night in painful watching.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen sat down to write to Algernon for the first time since
+she had quitted his roof, and resumed the name of Cresford.
+To him she now looked for succour. The cruelty of Cresford
+seemed to have widened the breach between them, and to
+draw her irresistibly towards one whose conduct throughout
+had been dictated by the very spirit of honour, generosity, and
+tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>She detailed to him all which had that day taken place.
+She told him she was to be tried, publicly tried; that she
+must, in vindication of her own fame, produce every proof that
+they had received the most authentic accounts of Cresford’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</span>death. She begged him to take every means towards finding
+a copy of the newspaper containing the official return of the
+deaths at Verdun. She begged him to inquire for Colonel
+Eversham, and, if possible, to discover what had been the fate
+of young Maitland, to whom Cresford had entrusted the letter
+which was to apprize her of his plan.</p>
+
+<p>“I write to you, Algernon,” she continued, “because I
+know you will leave nothing unattempted to serve me, and to
+rescue me from the only one additional misery which can now
+be heaped upon me—that of being supposed to have sinned
+knowingly. Perhaps I may always have been too much alive
+to the opinion of the world. Perhaps one ought to be satisfied
+with knowing one’s intentions to have been innocent, and it
+may be nobler to despise the idle gossip of those one neither
+loves nor esteems; but my error, if it is one, is the safest for
+woman; and you, who know that I would neither see you, nor
+correspond with you, till I fancied the two years of my widowhood
+expired, can alone guess what I feel at thus having my
+miserable history dragged before the public. I have been
+stunned, annihilated by the blow. The idea of such a consummation
+to my earthly woes never crossed my mind before.
+But now my one only hope is at least to prove I sincerely
+believed myself free when I gave myself to you,—that I did
+not wittingly involve you in the misery which attends all in
+any way connected with me.</p>
+
+<p>“You must secure for me the best lawyer. In short, I
+trust every thing to you. This will be expensive; it has not
+been pride, but my deference for that world before whom I
+am doomed to be degraded, which has hitherto prevented my
+allowing you to contribute to my support. I know full well
+that all you have might be mine; I know from my own
+what your feelings are, and for this cause, for the cause of my
+honour, I am ready to let you incur whatever expense may be
+necessary. I write to you at once that not a moment may be
+lost. The assizes are to be held the 20th of next month. If
+possible, discover the fate of Maitland.—Adieu! I write no
+more—but you may communicate with my father. May
+Heaven preserve you to be a blessing to all who are allowed
+the happiness of belonging to you!</p>
+
+<p>“Our child—oh, there is still one link which binds us
+together!—our child is well and lovely.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Ellen.</span>”<br>
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</span></p>
+<p>Algernon, upon the receipt of this letter, was nearly frantic
+with rage and indignation. If Cresford longed to find himself
+hand to hand engaged with his rival, not less did Algernon
+burn to meet him in mortal strife; but still Cresford would
+have been safe with him in a desert, so closely did he cling to
+some distant hope of reunion with Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>Though he was wild with indignation at Cresford’s unmanly
+and cruel revenge, there was a sense of relief to him
+in having a definite object to pursue. He had hitherto remained
+in utter seclusion and inactivity. He feared to injure
+or to distress her, by any measure he could take, and he had
+lived the life of an anchorite, wandering among his own
+woods, far from public business, useless alike to himself and
+to others. At length he was roused to exertion, and, horrified
+as he was at the image of his lovely, refined, delicate, shrinking
+Ellen being exposed to the gaze of a public court, there
+was a comfort in being actively employed in her behoof. He
+threw himself into his carriage to fly to London, and there to
+begin the necessary inquiries.</p>
+
+<p>He first drove to the house of the most eminent lawyer of
+the day, to secure him as counsel. Cresford had been there
+before him. He had retained him; and although he was so
+engaged that he did not attend this circuit, he was effectually
+prevented from affording Algernon any assistance. He proceeded
+to another, whose name stood high as a man of overpowering
+eloquence, when he had justice on his side, although
+not perhaps equally skilled in making the worse appear the
+better cause. He found him free, and he was instantly retained.</p>
+
+<p>He next repaired to the newspaper offices, and there having
+stated the date and the title of the paper of which he was in
+want, they gave him every hope of soon procuring it.</p>
+
+<p>And now to find Colonel Eversham! He looked in the
+army-list. He found the name. He proceeded to the Horse
+Guards. He there learned that Colonel Eversham was with
+his regiment in Spain, having joined the army under the
+command of Sir John Moore. He instantly applied to the
+adjutant-general. He wrote to the military secretary of the
+commander-in-chief. He explained the case, and implored
+that leave of absence might be despatched to Colonel Eversham
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</span>to quit his regiment, and if possible to return to England
+before the 20th of the ensuing month.</p>
+
+<p>The most difficult point remained. Maitland! He had no
+clue whereby to discover who or what Maitland was. The
+army-lists and navy-lists, for the years 1801, 1802, 1803,
+were turned over and over again. No one appeared whom he
+could make out to have been a <i lang="fr">détenu</i>.</p>
+
+<p>At length he thought of applying to the Court Guide, and
+of personally calling at every house in London inhabited by
+any one of the name of Maitland. He might by chance discover
+whether any relative had been a <i lang="fr">détenu</i>, and thus ascertain
+his fate.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="16" style="text-decoration: none;">XVI.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">For peace is with the dead, and piety</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Bringeth a patient hope to those who mourn</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">O’er the departed.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey</span>’<i>s Roderick</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>With the guide-book in his hand, Algernon proceeded in his
+search. It was the time of year when London was very empty,
+and at many houses he found the family were out of town.
+On such occasions he ascertained the address of the master of
+the house, resolving to write his inquiries should other means
+fail. At one large mercantile house in the city, he found a
+portly old man, who said a brother of his had a natural son,
+who had been abroad some years ago, and was now in India,
+he believed; but “he had been a wild chap, and he did not
+rightly know what had become of him.” This sounded as if
+he might be the person in question; but if so, the prospect
+was most unsatisfactory. Still Algernon was not disheartened.
+The next house at which he continued his inquiries was that
+of a widowed lady, in Upper Quebec Street. He knocked at
+the door. He asked for Mrs. Maitland. He was shown up-stairs
+into a small, two-windowed drawing-room, very tidy,
+very clean, and very formal. Not a chair was out of its
+place; the sofa was against the wall. At one side of the
+table, with her knitting, sat an oldish lady, very neatly
+dressed, and with a sweet but melancholy expression of countenance.
+On the other sat a younger person, evidently her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</span>daughter; but pale and faded, and decidedly past the bloom
+of youth. She was engaged in needlework.</p>
+
+<p>They both rose on the entrance of the stranger, and the
+elder lady begged him to be seated, with a gentle formality,
+while she and her daughter resumed their seats, and mildly
+awaited what he had to say. Their calmness and their politeness
+made him experience a sensation more akin to awkwardness
+than was usual to a person so accustomed to the world,
+and so gifted with a prepossessing manner. Moreover, a sort
+of intuitive conviction came over him, that he spoke to a
+widow who had lost her son, whether or no, she might be the
+parent of him of whom he was in search.</p>
+
+<p>It was with a certain degree of hesitation that he opened
+his story, and explained, that for reasons which were of the
+most vital importance to himself and others in whom he was
+deeply interested, he was anxious to know what had become
+of a young Mr. Maitland, who had been a <i lang="fr">détenu</i> at Verdun,
+and had effected his escape thence in the beginning of the
+year 1804. He saw the daughter look anxiously at the
+mother, and drop her work. He saw the mother’s hands
+shake as she knitted two or three more stitches before she
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>His kind heart grieved for the pain he had evidently given,
+but yet he felt a throb of pleasure as he hoped he had succeeded
+in discovering the object of his search. Mrs. Maitland
+laid down her knitting, and taking off her spectacles, replied
+in a calm voice,—</p>
+
+<p>“My only son was a <i lang="fr">détenu</i>, sir, and he never returned to
+me. He was lost in an open boat, off the coast between Antwerp
+and Bruges.”</p>
+
+<p>The mother slightly clasped her two hands, as they fell
+quietly on her knee, in the attitude of a person who is meek,
+and resigned, and accustomed to her sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the daughter.</p>
+
+<p>“It gives me infinite pain, madam, to continue to ask questions
+upon a subject which must be so trying to your mother’s
+feelings, but if you knew how much the peace and respectability
+of the person on earth most dear to me is implicated in
+the replies to my questions, you would pardon me for persisting.”</p>
+
+<p>He then briefly stated his and Ellen’s story to Mrs. and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</span>Miss Maitland. They listened with kindness and attention,
+and told him, in return, that young Maitland had been travelling
+in France for pleasure, and to see the world; that in a
+year he would have been of age, when he would have come
+into a large property which was strictly entailed upon him.
+That he would then have placed his mother and sister in a
+situation of comfort and affluence. But the war broke out.
+He became a <i lang="fr">détenu</i>. She said that he had often mentioned
+Mr. Cresford’s name in his letters, and had alluded to the
+impatience with which he bore his imprisonment. That they
+had never heard from him, from the time of his making his
+escape, but that from all they could learn, he had reached
+Bruges in safety. That he had there waited for some time in
+hopes of being able to row to some English vessels which
+were cruising off the coast. That at length he and some companions
+had one night made a desperate attempt to do so.
+But the weather was too tempestuous for the small fishing-boat
+which they had succeeded in unmooring from the shore,
+especially as it was manned by young men who were not accustomed
+to the perils of the sea. That only two, out of the
+five, had survived, having been picked up by the English
+vessels when the daylight dawned.</p>
+
+<p>The young man having thus perished before he came of
+age, the mother and sister had continued to live in poverty
+and seclusion. Care had long since impaired the bloom of
+his sister, who it seems was some years older than the youth,
+who had been the hope, the joy, the darling of them both.</p>
+
+<p>The parties had become mutually interested for each other,
+and Hamilton easily obtained from them a promise of committing
+to paper their statement of young Maitland’s death,
+and allowing it to be produced upon the trial. If possible,
+he would spare them the unpleasantness of being subpœnaed
+to appear in person.</p>
+
+<p>They parted in kindness, and Algernon returned home,
+anxiously expecting his answer from the Horse Guards. He
+was informed that Colonel Eversham’s leave would be granted;
+that he should be allowed to return to attend at the assizes,
+and, wind and weather permitting, there was every prospect
+he would arrive in time. He despatched a letter to Colonel
+Eversham to inform him of the purpose for which his presence
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</span>was so necessary, and entreated him to use all diligence
+in reaching England.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of time, the newspaper was found which
+contained the account of Cresford’s death, and Algernon felt
+some satisfaction in reflecting that every thing was now in a
+fair way to clear his Ellen from any suspicion, or shade of
+blame. He obeyed her injunctions by communicating only
+with Captain Wareham. His whole soul was bent as devotedly
+as hers could be, to the object of making her innocence
+shine forth untarnished.</p>
+
+<p>The report of the trial which was to take place soon became
+public, and excited the greatest sensation and interest in the
+whole neighbourhood. Every one felt for Ellen, and all were
+anxious to prove their pity and their personal respect for her.
+Captain Wareham’s humble door was literally besieged with
+carriages and inquirers. Every one of any note in the vicinity
+left their names, as a sort of homage to her character.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Besville, who had so kindly come forward at the first
+moment, offered his carriage to conduct her to the court, when
+the awful day arrived, and his offer was accepted with thankfulness.</p>
+
+<p>These tokens of approbation, and the support of all around,
+were some consolation to poor Ellen. She hated notoriety;
+she had rather have retired into obscurity, and, hoping that
+her fate was unnoticed and undiscussed, have hid her head in
+peace and humility: but, if she must be brought before the
+world, these testimonies of the esteem of her friends and
+neighbours in some measure soothed her feelings. People
+are seldom so wretched, that the proofs of sympathy in their
+fellow-creatures are not agreeable to them. The list of the
+inquirers is read with interest and gratification, by the sick
+and by the mourner. No feeling more bitter than that your
+sufferings, whether mental or bodily, are uncared for.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen had written her wishes to Algernon. She knew that
+every measure which human zeal and foresight could pursue to
+clear her fame would be adopted: upon that subject, therefore,
+she rested in security, and she passed her time schooling her
+mind to bear the worst and seeking strength and assistance
+from the one only unfailing source of consolation, under misfortunes
+such as hers.</p>
+
+<p>She believed her father, when he told her it was next to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</span>impossible that, supposing the sentence of transportation should
+pass, it would be carried into execution; and yet she thought
+it would be wiser to accustom her mind in some degree to such
+a possibility, than to allow herself to be so completely taken
+by surprise as she had been, when first the idea of undergoing
+a trial had opened upon her. Visions of the hulks, of foreign
+lands, of being associated with horrible criminals,—a thousand
+half-defined, ill-understood horrors would visit her. In her
+dreams she fancied herself torn from her remaining child, a
+stranger, and an outcast, at Botany Bay; and though, when
+she woke, and shook off the images conjured up by sleep, she
+assured herself that such a result was most improbable, she
+could not be certain that such was impossible. She knew not
+what farther evidence Cresford might adduce of his having duly
+warned her of his intentions: her proofs were all negative;
+and sometimes the anticipations of what might be her future
+fate were so appalling, that her ardent desire to exercise the
+virtue of resignation, and her fear of increasing the misery of
+others, were not strong enough to save her from paroxysms of
+terror and despondency.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Allenham had, upon the first intelligence of what was
+to take place, hastened to her sister. Captain Wareham was
+so full of care, and so unhappy, that he rejoiced in the presence
+of some one who should spare him the task of giving hopes,
+which, from the despondency of his own nature, he was far
+from feeling. Ellen would weep by the hour together, with
+the sympathizing Caroline, who, as usual, was all kindness
+and gentleness. Matilda, who was younger, and scarcely able
+to enter into the full and complicated miseries of the case, attempted
+to inspire Ellen with a proud feeling of disdain for
+her unjust accusations, and a confident expectation of an
+honourable acquittal. The three sisters were one day sitting
+together, and Ellen was bidding Caroline watch tenderly over
+her little Agnes, if their worst anticipations should be fulfilled,
+when Caroline could not help saying—</p>
+
+<p>“But, Ellen, if you really believe there is a chance of any
+thing so dreadful, I almost think, if I were you, I would fly
+the country with Mr. Hamilton, and your child. You were
+married to him too, after all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Caroline, I resisted Algernon when he pleaded. If Algernon’s
+voice, if Algernon’s beseeching countenance, if Algernon’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</span>eyes, failed to persuade me, fear will not! No; my
+fair fame shall be tarnished by no wilful act of my own.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is right, Ellen!” exclaimed Matilda; “I would
+die sooner! Respected as you are by everybody now, I would
+die sooner than be looked down upon!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you are quite right; it was very wrong of me to
+have thought of such a thing. And I, a clergyman’s wife
+too! But, I am afraid, if Mr. Allenham was to try and persuade
+me, I should not be so firm as you are.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he is your husband, Caroline.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, quite true; and then if he said it, it must be right,
+whatever it might be.”</p>
+
+<p>Time stole away. Hamilton watched with anxious eyes
+the vane of the neighbouring church, the smoke of each
+chimney of the houses opposite. He had arranged everything
+with Ellen’s counsel, and a fortnight before the day fixed for
+the trial he went to Falmouth, there to look out for the arrival
+of every packet, every transport, every fishing vessel, that he
+might be sure not to miss Colonel Eversham.</p>
+
+<p>The wind had been favourable for conveying the despatches
+which contained Colonel Eversham’s leave of absence, but it
+continued in the East, long after Algernon had wished it to
+veer round. Steam-vessels were not then in use, and every
+thing depended on the elements.</p>
+
+<p>The morning of the 18th arrived. Colonel Eversham had
+not yet appeared—Algernon was in despair—but leaving his
+servant to watch for him, he could no longer remain absent
+from the spot where his beloved Ellen’s fate was to be decided,
+and he hastened to ——. On the evening of the 19th he
+had an interview with Captain Wareham, and was obliged to
+tell him that Eversham had not yet landed, but that he had
+Mrs. Maitland’s account of her son’s death, and that their
+counsel was confident of success. Mrs. Maitland was in the
+town, that in case her statement was not considered sufficient
+she, if necessary, might be called into court.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton was so painfully interested, and so occupied with
+business, that it was not till the busy streets were quiet, the
+tumult of the well-filled hotel hushed, and midnight approaching,
+that he had time to reflect how short a space
+divided him from Ellen and from his child.</p>
+
+<p>How his heart yearned towards them! how he longed to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</span>allowed to see them! but he determined to do nothing, till
+the eventful morrow was passed. His counsel should be able
+to aver, with truth, that they had never met from the time
+they heard that Cresford was living. He would not even indulge
+himself by walking before the house, and looking at the
+exterior of the dwelling which contained his soul’s treasures,
+lest any one might recognize him, and might fancy he had
+visited her clandestinely. He passed the night, however, in
+restless sleeplessness. He sat at the window of his bedroom,
+and having thrown open the sash, he gazed out upon the clear
+deep blue, quiet heavens: the busy hum of men had subsided;
+the streets were deserted; the lights one by one had been extinguished;
+not a sound was to be heard but the monotonous
+call of the watchman, pacing his rounds. A gentle breeze
+just whispered through the poplar trees of a neighbouring
+garden, and brought with it the refreshing smell which the
+dews of evening extract from them. It was a season for
+gentle and holy musings.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet,” he reflected, “how many beings are now enduring
+the utmost pangs of human anxiety! The culprits in
+the gaol—their relatives—my poor Ellen—her father, and
+myself—Cresford too—the wretch whose very name makes
+my blood boil; he—even he, must suffer! He must feel
+remorse, repentance—he must have been hurried into this
+act of unreasonable, useless cruelty, by a sudden impulse of
+passion. I pity the unfortunate man! Yes, I pity him—for
+he has lost her! Is not that enough to madden him? Oh!
+what will the morrow bring to us all? What will be our
+fate?” His eyes glanced to the heavens; “Whatsoever
+may be our fates on earth, that placid Heaven, those innumerable
+stars, those signs of Omnipotence, speak to us of
+another world, in which happiness must assuredly be my
+Ellen’s portion, and where I may humbly hope to share in
+that heavenly joy, which we cannot conceive nor comprehend,
+but in the truth of which we may firmly place our trust!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen, meanwhile, was in some measure spared the overwhelming
+anxiety of that night, by another source of disquiet.
+Agnes was feverish and unwell: perhaps it was a
+fortunate occurrence for her, that such was the case; under
+any circumstances she could not have slept. While sitting by
+the sick bed of her little girl, her thoughts were drawn away
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</span>from her own miseries; and when, at length, the child
+dropped off into a calm and easy sleep, the sense of relief
+almost resembled joy. But to this succeeded the dreadful
+thought,</p>
+
+<p>“If I should be torn from her! If this should be my
+last night of watching over her! If she should be worse to-morrow,
+and I far away! Imprisoned! alone! and my sick
+child away from me! It is possible—very possible! and I
+shall survive this; for I have survived being torn from Algernon,
+and from my poor George and Caroline!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="17" style="text-decoration: none;">XVII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent26">For thyself</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Thou hast had thy fill of vengeance, and perhaps</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The cup was sweet; but it hath left behind</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">A bitter relish.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey</span><i>’s Roderick</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Little Agnes was better in the morning. Ellen’s name was
+not the first on the list; a common case of burglary was
+nearly disposed of when she was summoned.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Besville’s carriage, as previously arranged, conveyed
+her to the court-house. The curious mob gave way, with an
+expression of pity, as Ellen, assisted by her father, and by
+Lord Besville, and accompanied by Mr. Turnbull, alighted
+from the carriage. She was supported through the crowd of
+black, shabby-genteel, greasy-looking attendants, who are to
+be found about the purlieus of a court of justice. She had to
+wait some minutes in the passage, till the thief who had preceded
+her at the bar was removed. She was then led in, and
+placed where he had stood.</p>
+
+<p>There was an universal whisper and commotion throughout
+the assembly, as her graceful form took the place of the
+coarse, vulgar, brutal figures, which had usually occupied
+that spot.</p>
+
+<p>A silence of a moment succeeded. She held by the iron
+bar before her, as if to sustain herself. A request for a chair
+was heard from every quarter, and in a few seconds she was
+enabled to seat herself. There was another pause—Mr. Cresford’s
+lawyer then rose. He felt he had the sense of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</span>court against him—that all instinctive and human feelings
+must be in favour of the delicate and shrinking creature
+before them.</p>
+
+<p>She sat shrouded in a wrapping black cloak, her face concealed
+by a close bonnet and a thick veil. Scarcely any thing
+was visible except the slender, rounded, swan-like throat, and
+one white hand which occasionally clutched the iron bar.</p>
+
+<p>Though one of the ablest men in his profession, he had
+scarcely his usual self-possession when he began; but he soon
+warmed with his subject. The fact of bigamy was clearly to
+be proved; and he expatiated upon the feelings of the adoring
+and deserted husband, and made use of the very interest excited
+by her appearance, as an argument for the sympathy he
+deserved, an enhancement of the injury received.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton had, unobserved, crept into a retired corner. He
+had heard the eloquent appeal. Accustomed to read the effect
+produced upon his fellow-creatures by public speaking, he had
+perceived that the able counsel had affected his audience; that
+in truth the very interest excited by Ellen did tell against her.
+He could not bear the situation any longer. He rushed into
+the street, and paced it up and down in agonized perturbation.
+He longed to madness that Colonel Eversham should
+arrive. His evidence was material. He had continued to
+hope against all reason that he would appear, and he now felt
+ready to accuse him and the Government, the winds and the
+waves, of cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of the case for the prosecution, Ellen for the
+first time raised her eyes, and saw the large round green
+table, surrounded by the youthful faces of the lawyers in their
+powdered wigs. She took one fearful glance at their countenances,
+to see if, accustomed as they were to make their
+harvest of the woes and the crimes of their fellow-men, there
+might not be a lurking expression of levity or mirth among
+them. She ventured one look at the judge. He was a firm,
+but a venerable and mild-looking man; and she hoped for
+justice, tempered with mercy, at his hands. One other look
+towards the jury. She thought she recognized some faces she
+remembered in her youth.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! they will have pity on me,” she thought.</p>
+
+<p>The certificates of the two marriages had been produced—the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</span>witnesses were called. At this moment a voice was heard
+in a loud whisper addressing one of the counsel,</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Eversham is come!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen looked up. She saw on the right of the judge’s seat,
+at the door by which the lawyers, the high sheriff, &amp;c., had
+free ingress and egress, Algernon’s eager beaming face!</p>
+
+<p>It was the first time she had seen it since they had parted
+at Belhanger. She gave a faint scream, and uttering his name,
+fell back in her chair. The assistants who were near at hand
+quickly lifted up her veil; they took off her bonnet, and in
+their awkward attentions, they loosened her comb, and her
+long black hair fell in showers around her. The marble
+brow, the fringed lids, the pencilled eyebrows, the oval face,
+the graceful form, caused a sensation of enthusiastic admiration
+and pity, and tears fell fast from the eyes of the few
+ladies who had had nerves to attend the trial. They handed
+smelling-bottles and drops, and in a few moments she revived.
+Her father was close at hand, and he supported her drooping
+head, while the tear-drops coursed one another rapidly down
+his pallid cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford stood apart, stern and immovable. He had seen
+the cause of her agitation; he had watched the direction of
+her eye, and the fiend of jealousy possessed his soul and
+scared every softer emotion.</p>
+
+<p>The case for the prosecution was quickly closed. Ellen’s
+counsel rose, relieved by finding there was no further evidence
+produced against his client than what he was fully prepared
+to meet, and inspirited by the comfortable assurance that
+Colonel Eversham was at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he did not attempt to disprove the fact of the two
+marriages; but in a clear and circumstantial manner he stated
+the events with which the reader is already well acquainted,
+and wound up the whole with so touching a description of the
+sufferings and virtues of the “exemplary lady then writhing
+under the unmerited disgrace of being placed in the situation
+in which they beheld her,” that most people present agreed
+with Will Pollard, that Cresford had no business to be alive.
+Making a forcible appeal to their feelings, he continued:—</p>
+
+<p>“And when we contemplate such unmerited sufferings,
+does not every thing that is human in us array itself in her
+defence? Do we not feel ourselves rather called upon to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</span>minister relief than to inflict punishment? Good God, gentlemen,
+when we see this blameless lady, the victim of an
+imposture (for although perhaps an excusable one, still it was
+an imposture, an enacted lie),—when we find her, in consequence
+of this imposture, deprived of the name to which she
+was an honour, of the station in society of which she was so
+bright an ornament,—when we see her torn from her children,
+and her children bereft of a mother’s watchful care,—when
+we see her thus doubly widowed, severed from the man
+to whom in innocence and purity of thought she had given
+her affections at the altar,—from the man who so well deserves
+and still possesses those affections, of which, gentlemen,
+we have even now witnessed such affecting evidence,—can
+we, can we, I say, contemplate such accumulation of unprecedented
+distress, and call it guilt? Forbid it reason! Forbid
+it justice! Forbid it truth! And what, in her sorrows,
+her privations, her bereavement, what does this injured lady
+ask? But to live in virtuous singleness and seclusion—to
+devote her days to her aged father, to her innocent child—the
+babe from whose bed of sickness she has this day been
+dragged before you?”</p>
+
+<p>But one feeling prevailed throughout the court. Captain
+Wareham, Hamilton, Henry Wareham, all felt confident of
+the result. Every thing that had been stated in favour of
+Ellen was amply borne out by the newspaper, the account of
+Maitland’s death, and the evidence of Colonel Eversham, who
+distinctly detailed each particular concerning the supposed
+death of Cresford, and also declared he had reported every
+detail to Mrs. Cresford upon his own return to England, which
+he effected a short time afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>The judge clearly and concisely summed up the evidence,
+and told the jury it was for them to decide whether the prisoner
+was, or was not, guilty of the crime with which she was
+charged.</p>
+
+<p>The jury retired for a few minutes. To Ellen they appeared
+an age. The whispered hopes and consolations of
+those around, fell on her ear, without entering into her mind.
+She had suffered so much, that she durst not give way to
+hope.</p>
+
+<p>The jury could not do otherwise than bring in the verdict
+“guilty” of the crime, though at the same time they recommended
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</span>the prisoner to mercy. She heard but the first word.
+A mist came over her eyes, a rushing noise sounded in her
+ears; she fainted before she had time to hear the sentence of
+the judge.</p>
+
+<p>He premised that bigamy came under the head of felony,
+which by the statute 35th of George <abbr title="the third" style="text-decoration: none;">III.</abbr> rendered persons
+liable to the same punishments, pains, and penalties as those
+who are convicted of grand or petit larceny. Under aggravated
+circumstances, therefore, the punishment might be transportation
+for seven years;—but under those of the present
+case, he commanded the prisoner to be fined one shilling, and
+to be forthwith discharged.</p>
+
+<p>Though unseen himself, Hamilton’s eyes had been riveted
+upon her. He instantly darted to her side when he saw her
+fall. The impulse was uncontrollable. The sentence had
+passed, and before he had time to think, to feel, to reflect, to
+calculate, he had taken her from Captain Wareham’s trembling
+arms, and had carried her into the lobby. She was still insensible,
+but he supported that beloved form, and the moment
+was one of rapture!</p>
+
+<p>She faintly opened her eyes, and it was from his voice that
+she first heard, “You are free, Ellen, you are free!”</p>
+
+<p>“Free?” and she gazed wildly around her. “Free, from
+him? May I become lawfully your wife?”</p>
+
+<p>Her scattered senses were not yet collected—she scarcely
+knew what had passed, or where she was. The words “you
+are free,” sounded in her ear as if the fatal tie was dissolved.
+He had not the courage to undeceive her, while, under this
+impression, she leaned weakly and trustingly on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham was preparing to explain the meaning of
+his words, when Cresford rushed forward. His eyes flashed
+fire, and hastily pushing aside all around, he forced his way
+by her father, he seized her helpless form, and sternly fixing
+his hand against Algernon’s breast, he forcibly repelled him.</p>
+
+<p>“The law of the land has just pronounced this woman to
+be my wife, and you—her paramour.”</p>
+
+<p>“Unmanly wretch!” and Hamilton’s dark eye flashed on
+him with as infuriated a glance as his own, his lip quivered
+with rage, but he restrained himself. “Say what you will—insult
+me—strike me—to me you are sacred.” Hamilton
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</span>drew himself up to his full height, and looked with proud
+contempt upon Cresford.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen had strength enough to struggle from Cresford’s
+grasp, and to fling herself into her father’s arms, who implored
+him to have pity upon his poor worn-out child, and
+not to make her the subject of a common brawl, in the public
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>Angry as Cresford was, he felt that he was only exposing
+himself to the ridicule, as well as to the blame of all around,
+and turning to Captain Wareham, he said,—</p>
+
+<p>“In your hands—in the hands of her father I am content
+to leave her. But I owe it to myself, that she should be
+preserved from one who is avowedly nothing to her. I trust
+my wife’s honour in your hands, Captain Wareham. When
+I have seen you and your daughter safely placed in the carriage,
+which awaits you, I shall depart.”</p>
+
+<p>Sternly folding his arms, and placing himself between
+Hamilton and Ellen, he watched them into Lord Besville’s
+carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Hamilton, ever fearful of adding to Ellen’s sufferings, commanded
+himself, restrained his feelings, and saw her dear form
+depart, without making a movement to follow or to assist.
+When the carriage had driven away, Cresford and Hamilton,
+for one short minute, gazed fixedly on each other; each seemed
+to wish to look the other dead, but neither spoke. Cresford
+was not so deprived of all sense of reason, and honour, as to
+farther insult a man who would not raise his hand against
+him. Hamilton still maintained his resolution that no provocation
+should urge him to place an impassable barrier between
+himself and Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>Each turned on his heel and walked away, with a storm of
+turbulent and angry passions raging in his bosom. They returned
+to their respective hotels.</p>
+
+<p>Did Cresford feel the happier for having accomplished his
+revenge? No! he only felt, if possible, more injured, more
+miserable, than ever. It is true he had increased the wretchedness
+of Ellen, but had that afforded his own any alleviation?
+He had merely given her the occasion of proving how innocently
+she had contracted her second marriage, and how exemplary
+had been her conduct, how conscientious and considerate
+that of his rival, since they had discovered that he was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</span>still in existence. He had merely given the world an opportunity
+of knowing how little share he had in her affections,
+how dear to her was Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon’s mind was scarcely less agitated. The sight of
+Ellen had distracted him. How were they to drag on their
+weary lives in hopeless absence? The blank and cheerless
+prospect before them, never struck him so forcibly as now.
+The excitement of the last six weeks had kept up his spirits.
+There was something to be done, something to look to, something
+to hope, something to fear. He felt it impossible to
+seek again his solitary home; impossible to pursue any regular
+fixed course of life, to which there seemed no period, no end,
+except in the grave. His child, too! his only child was ill.
+He had a father’s longing to see it; he knew not what to do,
+or how to act. He would not expose Ellen to another outbreak
+of Cresford’s passion, and he at length made up his
+mind, that if the next day his child was going on well, he
+would leave the neighbourhood, but that, when Cresford had
+also departed, he would arrange with Captain Wareham that
+he should occasionally see his little Agnes.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Ellen had reached her home. Exhausted by the overwhelming
+emotions of the day, she had scarcely feeling left,
+to comprehend any thing beyond being restored to her child.
+Caroline, to whose care she had committed her, and Matilda,
+whom her father had not allowed to attend the trial, received her
+in their arms, and almost carried her to her child’s bedside.</p>
+
+<p>Little Agnes was better, and Ellen sat close by her, with a
+vague weak feeling of gratitude to Heaven for re-uniting them.
+They persuaded her to lay herself on the bed by her side, and
+in a very few moments she was wrapped in slumber, as calm,
+as placid as the child’s.</p>
+
+<p>It was late in the evening before she awoke. Caroline and
+Matilda were both in the room. She started up. “Is it over?”
+she cried; “is the trial over? or did I only dream it?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is over, all well over, dearest sister, and you are restored
+to us.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, dear creatures. And my child, she is better;
+she is sleeping nicely, and quite close to me. Oh, the relief
+of finding myself among you all, without the fear of those
+dreadful hulks! Where is my father, my poor father! He
+has gone through a great deal to-day.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</span></p>
+<p>“He has just stolen out of the room. He has been here,
+looking at you and Agnes, as you both slept, till the tears
+streamed down his face.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, let me go to him!” She hastened down-stairs, and
+poor Captain Wareham felt almost happy when he saw a smile,
+though it was a troubled and an unquiet one, upon Ellen’s
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, father, I scarcely thought I should ever again feel
+any thing so near akin to joy as this. If you knew how the
+horrible idea of transportation preyed upon my mind! I did
+not like to own how much I thought of it. At least, I can look
+round and feel that from all of <em>you</em> I need not now be parted.
+Yet mixed with this sensation of joy, which is so strange to
+me, there comes such a yearning for George and Caroline, my
+poor dear children, whom I must not see. Oh! if I could
+kiss them once, if I could look upon them, if I could know
+they were well! My poor dear innocent children!” She sat
+down and wept freely, weakly, gently, as a person utterly worn
+out, body and mind.</p>
+
+<p>Latterly she had not spoken much of her elder children;
+her mind had been bent to the one point, and the fear of
+another, still more dreadful misfortune, had prevented her
+dwelling so much on their absence. But now that her heart,
+for the first time, gave way to this unwonted feeling of happiness,
+she longed for their presence, with a passionate desire.</p>
+
+<p>She breathed not Algernon’s name. But when they all retired
+to rest, and she found herself alone in her chamber, she
+seated herself in an arm-chair, and covering her eyes with her
+hands, she yielded herself up to a sort of dreamy but delightful
+consciousness that she had seen him, heard him; that her eye
+had met his, that her head had rested on his shoulder, that his
+voice had sounded in her ear. She dreaded to move, and to
+rouse herself to the sad prospect that she was to see him no
+more—that days, months, years, must roll on, and she must
+meet those eyes, and hear that voice no more!</p>
+
+<p>But this weakness was not to be indulged; she shook it off,
+and calmed and refreshed her soul with humble and grateful
+prayer.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="18" style="text-decoration: none;">XVIII.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Cher petiot, bel amy, tendre fils que j’adore,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Cher enfançon, mon souicy, mon amour,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Te voy, mon fils, te voy, et veux te veoir encore,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Pour ce trop brief me semblent nuiet et jour.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Clotilde de Suuville</span>, 13th <i>Century</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The next morning Captain Wareham, at Ellen’s request, wrote
+a note to Algernon to tell him she was well, and that little
+Agnes was rapidly recovering, and also to assure him that
+Ellen’s mind was comparatively at ease. In his answer to
+Captain Wareham he told him that having heard so satisfactory
+an account of those in whose welfare his every feeling
+was centered, he should quit * * *, as he feared his presence
+in the town might occasion Cresford’s also remaining there, in
+jealous irritation; but that he trusted, when every thing was
+quiet, and Cresford (as he flattered himself he would) had
+resumed his habits of business, he might be allowed to visit his
+child; that he likewise claimed some pity, and that a father’s
+heart yearned towards his only child. He said no more. He
+wished to accustom her to the idea that he must, that he ought
+to see Agnes, and he hoped by degrees to persuade Ellen to
+allow him an interview herself.</p>
+
+<p>Cresford, as Hamilton had anticipated, left * * * when he
+had ascertained his rival’s departure, and he returned to
+London. He then entered with ardour into the concerns of
+the house,—peremptorily insisted upon the speedy adjustment
+of the affairs, which had been rendered perplexed by his return,
+and resolved that he would make himself a name as the first
+and greatest of English merchants. If, in private life, he
+stood in the contemptible position of the discarded, the deserted
+husband, in the world he would be respected as one of the
+most leading men in the city. But his mind, weakened, excited,
+and unsettled by what he had undergone, was not equal
+to accomplishing all he undertook. His schemes were wild and
+visionary, and neither added to the stability nor to the consideration
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Henry Wareham, who had lost no time in withdrawing
+himself, had found little difficulty in gaining admittance into
+another establishment of equal, if not greater, note; his capital,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</span>which, though not large, had increased during the time he had
+formed one in the Cresford partnership, his character for
+steadiness and industry, and his clear practical head, making
+him an acquisition in any concern, while the cause of his
+retirement from his present business excited an interest in his
+favour.</p>
+
+<p>There is no want of generous and kind feeling in this country.
+A case of undeserved misfortune, if once known and understood,
+rarely fails to create friends and protectors.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen’s ardent desire to see her elder children increased,
+rather than diminished, with time. The savage wildness of
+Cresford’s eye and manner filled her with uneasiness for their
+fate. Henry had ascertained that he had taken for them a
+small house at Brompton, and that he visited them once or
+twice a week. The <i lang="fr">bonne</i>, whom she had placed about them,
+she knew to be a good creature, although not possessed of
+much information, nor by any means the person to whom she
+would willingly have entrusted the complete guidance of their
+minds and characters. Still she was grateful that he left them
+under her care, and she rejoiced that he did not habitually
+live with them, and that consequently they were not exposed
+to the starts of passion which, even in better days, had been
+formidable.</p>
+
+<p>She thought if she could once see them, unknown to themselves,—merely
+see them as they passed by, and ascertain
+that they looked healthy and happy, that she should feel more
+contented.</p>
+
+<p>She opened this idea one day to Captain Wareham, who
+treated it as fanciful and romantic. The irritability of temper,
+which, during the time of great and serious distress completely
+subsided, had gradually again grown into a habit. He was
+too old to alter, and although his heart was most kind, his
+feelings for Ellen tender, yet in the every-day intercourse of
+life she could not avoid sometimes perceiving that she brought
+much trouble and discomfort upon him in the decline of life.</p>
+
+<p>She proposed a visit to Caroline and to Mr. Allenham, who
+had urged her completing the cure of little Agnes by trying
+change of air. She knew that the kind-hearted Caroline would
+willingly agree to any plan which might promise her a moment’s
+comfort, and, if Mr. Allenham would give his consent,
+she could not have more respectable sanction and assistance.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</span></p>
+<p>Caroline, as she expected, was all good-nature, nor did Mr.
+Allenham disapprove of the idea. He saw that she was in so
+restless a state, that she was so possessed with the notion that
+if her children were sick, she would not be apprised of their
+illness,—that they might be dying, and she remain in ignorance,—that
+he really thought it desirable her mind should be relieved
+upon this subject. One thing he premised,—that she
+should not make herself known to them. If it ever came to
+Cresford’s ears, he might secrete them where she would have
+no means of hearing or knowing about them; and at all events
+it would be wrong to excite curiosity, useless regrets, or premature
+sensibilities in the children; still more so to accustom
+them to mystery and concealment. She saw the reason of his
+arguments: all she begged was to be allowed to disguise herself
+in the dress of a common maid-servant, and to walk in the
+street near which they lived, till she could once see them pass
+along, healthy and cheerful.</p>
+
+<p>In compliance with her wishes, they all three repaired to
+London. Ellen and Caroline dressed themselves in the most
+homely apparel, and Ellen solemnly promised Mr. Allenham
+to do nothing which might cause herself to be recognised.
+They entered a shop nearly opposite the dwelling which contained
+her children. Mrs. Allenham busied herself bargaining
+for threads, tapes, and ribbons, while Ellen stood near the
+door, half out of sight, watching with a palpitating heart, and
+eyes which were almost blinded with intense gazing, the windows,
+the doors of the house.</p>
+
+<p>After some time the sash was thrown up, and she saw her
+own little Caroline run into the balcony. The child looked
+well and blooming; her fair hair hanging down her back in
+glossy ringlets, her laughing eyes sparkling with gaiety, her
+cheeks glowing with health! Those ringlets which she had
+so often fondly twisted through her fingers, those eyes she had
+so often kissed, those cheeks which had so often been pillowed
+to rest upon her bosom!</p>
+
+<p>She had pledged herself to do nothing to attract attention,—and
+she kept her word. But a fearful chill ran through her.
+Where was George? Why was not he playing with his
+sister? Was he ill? She could no longer watch every graceful
+movement of Caroline, so agonizingly did she look for
+her boy. George, the playful, the high-spirited George, what
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</span>could keep him within? The suspense was almost too much
+to endure without betraying herself. She had nearly made
+up her mind to ask the shop people, in as unconcerned a tone
+as she could command, whether they had lately seen the little
+boy who lived opposite. She had approached Mrs. Allenham,
+and had grasped her arm in almost speechless tremor, when
+she saw George appear for one moment at the window, and
+beckon his sister in. She breathed again, and, seating herself
+for a few moments, recovered her self-possession. Mrs. Allenham
+had turned round with an anxious look of inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>“It is nothing,” whispered Ellen, “it is all right now!”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you ready to go,” rejoined Caroline.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—oh, no, wait a few minutes longer.” She returned
+to the door to look once more. All was quiet—no one was
+to be seen at the window. At length Caroline could devise
+no fresh articles to purchase, and they left the shop. At that
+moment the door opened, and bounding down the steps, she
+saw both children with rosy cheeks and active forms, and
+radiant faces.</p>
+
+<p>She stopped, trembling, and gazed till they were out of
+sight. They passed on, unconscious and contented, each holding
+a hand of the good old <i lang="fr">bonne</i>, and jumping as they went
+with the light-hearted merriment of childhood. She faithfully
+made no sign, nor movement that should attract attention,
+and turned her steps towards their temporary domicile,
+satisfied and relieved; but, such is the inconsistency of the
+human heart, that, anxious as she was to know them happy, a
+painful feeling shot through her to think how joyous they
+were without her. While she—yet she wished them to be
+joyous, though it was bitter to think her children should grow
+up without any love for her, any recollection of her.</p>
+
+<p>If such thoughts did cross her mind, they found not utterance
+in words. She professed herself satisfied, and they returned
+to Longbury. She loved Longbury; it was there she
+had first seen Algernon. It was there he had first breathed
+his vows of love; it was there she had, as she then fancied,
+bound herself to him by ties, which death only was to sever.</p>
+
+<p>Since the trial, Cresford insisted upon her receiving alimony
+from him. It was painful to her to do so; but he would
+have been furious at the idea of her being beholden to Hamilton.
+Her father, though he had the will, had not the means
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</span>of supporting her; and feeling also that her miseries tended
+rather to depress him, and to throw a gloom over the youth of
+Matilda, she retired to a very small cottage in the outskirts of
+the town, and there resided in the deepest retirement, seeking
+consolation in the performance of the few duties which remained
+to her to fulfil,—devotion to her child, and attention
+to the poor around her; her only amusement, the cultivation
+of her tiny flower-garden.</p>
+
+<p>The neighbouring peasants soon learned to look upon her
+as their friend, and applied to her in all cases of distress. She
+had heard Algernon’s opinions upon the mischief produced
+by indiscriminate charity, and she tried so to regulate her’s,
+as not to reward the idle and complaining, while the frugal,
+industrious, and contented, were unnoticed, and unassisted.
+She felt, while making this her study, that she was in some
+measure executing his wishes. How well she succeeded in
+doing real good, is another question. The task is one of great
+difficulty; but she succeeded in making herself loved by all
+the best of her poor neighbours, though she might occasionally
+be imposed upon by some of the worst.</p>
+
+<p>Her gentle words, her good advice, her attempts to convert
+the wicked, and to console the suffering, could do no harm,
+even when they failed of effecting good.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="19" style="text-decoration: none;">XIX.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Las! Si j’avois pouvoir d’oublier</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Sa beauté, sa beauté, son bien dire,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Et son tant doux, tant doux regarder,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Finiroit mon martire.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Mais, Las! Mon cœur je n’en puis ôter;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent4" lang="fr">Et grand affollage</div>
+ <div class="verse indent4" lang="fr">M’est d’esperer,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent4" lang="fr">Mais tel servage</div>
+ <div class="verse indent4" lang="fr">Donne courage</div>
+ <div class="verse indent4" lang="fr">A tout endurer.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Et puis comment, comment oublier</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Sa beauté, sa beauté, son bien dire,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0" lang="fr">Et son tant doux, tant doux regarder?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent2" lang="fr">Mieux aime mon martire.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap" lang="fr"><cite>Complainte à la Reine Blanche, par Thibeaut.</cite></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Some months had now elapsed. Algernon ventured to write
+to Ellen herself, describing to her his life of loneliness. He
+assured her that if he might look forward to the prospect of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</span>seeing her and his child at stated periods, however rare, however
+distant, he might again be able to exert himself, and
+strive to be an active and an useful member of society. That
+at present his existence appeared so aimless, so hopeless, that
+he could not rouse himself to attend to public any more than
+to private affairs.</p>
+
+<p>These arguments were to her irresistible. She knew too
+well what were the yearnings of a parent for his child, and she
+would not inflict upon Algernon what she herself endured.</p>
+
+<p>His fame too! His position in the world! His utility to
+his fellow-creatures! Her pride in his fame was second only
+to her love for himself, and though she would not have consented
+to that which was wrong in itself, even for his sake,
+she thought she might promise to see him once in every six
+months, and in the presence of her father, without compromising
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>Having consulted Captain Wareham, and obtained his consent
+to this plan, she wrote Algernon word, that she agreed to
+his proposition, but that he must give her due warning of his
+coming, and that she would not see him except in the presence
+of her father. That she would meet him as a dear and
+valued friend, but they must not indulge in vain repinings, or
+in useless or sinful hopes.</p>
+
+<p>Her letter was calm, it cost her much to make it so—but
+it was calm.</p>
+
+<p>Such as it was, it infused new life into Algernon. He
+doubted not her love. He respected her scruples. He was
+so happy at having gained that much, that he did not quarrel
+with the measured style. He should see her again! He
+should again hear the music of her voice! And his eye
+beamed once more with hope—he moved with a more elastic
+step.</p>
+
+<p>The very servants observed the altered aspect of their
+master, and Mrs. Topham remarked, as he walked by the
+windows of the housekeeper’s room to the stables, that she
+“had not heard her master tread so light and quick, since
+her poor mistress went away;” she wondered “whatever
+had come to him!”</p>
+
+<p>He appointed the day following that on which Ellen
+should receive his answer—the hour one o’clock. And
+meanwhile he was in a restless state of joyful expectancy,
+which allowed him to fix his mind to nothing.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</span></p>
+<p>He thought a hack chaise was the most unobtrusive mode
+of conveyance, and that which was least likely to excite observation,
+and he departed on his journey alone.</p>
+
+<p>With what feelings did Ellen await his arrival? She strove
+to preserve the even composure of her mind, but in vain!</p>
+
+<p>“Algernon will find me sadly altered,” she thought, as she
+arranged her dress with more attention to what was becoming
+than she had done for many months. “This mode of dressing
+my hair makes me look ten years older, and my cheeks
+are grown so thin!” She checked herself for the vain
+thought: “What business have I to wish to look well in his
+eyes now? I ought not to think of such things.” But we
+will not pledge ourselves that she might not pass rather more
+time at her toilette that morning, than she had usually done;
+perhaps she was almost sorry she had adopted the habit of
+wearing her hair smoothly parted on her brow, instead of in
+the luxuriant ringlets which used to fall in showers on her
+cheeks. Yet had she nothing to regret. The touching, holy,
+Madonna-like expression of her countenance at present, fully
+compensated for what she might have lost in brilliancy.</p>
+
+<p>To Agnes’s appearance, however, she devoted herself without
+any fear of doing wrong, and the blooming little creature
+amply repaid her cares. She was now able to lisp a few
+words, and Ellen had taught her to say papa, and bade her be
+sure so to call the gentleman who was coming, as soon as she
+saw him. Captain Wareham had walked down early to
+Ellen’s cottage, and they remained waiting in perturbed expectation.
+Ellen felt confused. Her situation was so strange—so
+new. There was no precedent by which to shape her
+conduct. But she had the best of guides: her guileless
+heart, her innate purity.</p>
+
+<p>Exactly as the clock struck one, a post-chaise drove to the
+door. In one second, Algernon sprang from it; in another,
+he was in the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen’s heart beat, till she thought her bosom would burst.
+Algernon rushed towards her—but she extended her hand to
+him before he approached her, and he merely pressed it to
+his lips in speechless agitation.</p>
+
+<p>“Look at your child, Algernon,” she said, as soon as she
+could command utterance; “she looks quite well now.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will, I will—but at this moment I can see nothing
+but you.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</span></p>
+<p>Ellen withdrew her hand, and seated herself in an arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p>“You have not spoken to my father,” she added.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon brushed his hand across his eyes, and turning to
+Captain Wareham, he pressed his in silence.</p>
+
+<p>Little Agnes whispered,</p>
+
+<p>“Mamma, is that the gentleman I am to call papa?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, go to him!” and the obedient child
+timidly advanced a few steps. Algernon caught her in his
+arms, and devoured her with kisses, while the tears flowed
+fast down his manly cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>The tears of a man are always powerfully affecting. What
+must the tears which Algernon shed over their child have
+been to Ellen? She did not weep. She had worked herself
+up to be firm, and not to allow this interview to lead to any
+out-pourings of the heart, to any expressions of feelings, for
+which she might afterwards reproach herself.</p>
+
+<p>At length Algernon spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“Our child, Ellen, is not like you,” and he looked from
+one to the other with eyes of such melting tenderness, that it
+would have been difficult to say, to which, at that moment,
+his heart went forth most.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no!” she exclaimed, “thank Heaven, she is like
+you!” but she presently added, in a more composed manner,
+“She has quite recovered her looks, and her strength now.”</p>
+
+<p>She loved to hear Algernon say <em>our</em> child. And yet how
+strange to see the father of her child clasp it to his bosom,
+shed tears of love over it, and to be obliged to keep up a calm,
+company, conversation!</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham now inquired which road Algernon had
+taken, whether the rain had not made it very bad travelling,
+and a few more such interesting questions.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you come straight from Belhanger?” asked Ellen in
+a low and tremulous voice.</p>
+
+<p>“I left it yesterday afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“It must look very pretty, now the spring is come; and
+is my—is the garden very nice?” One silent tear stole
+down Ellen’s cheek as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Your</em> garden is lovely! It might be a paradise! but to
+me, it is a place of torment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh do not say that! Algernon. But you do not look
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</span>well. You have come a great way this morning; you must
+be hungry; will you not have some luncheon?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hungry!” he said, and gave her a half reproachful
+glance: “thank you, I could not eat!”</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham now inquired what Hamilton’s political
+friends thought of the Spanish war, and whether the Spaniards
+were sincerely attached to the cause of liberty.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know, my dear sir. I never communicate with
+my political friends. I know nothing about them.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen’s heart smote her, that she should be the cause of his
+abandoning a career for which he was so well fitted.</p>
+
+<p>“This must not be,” she said; “you ought to exert yourself,
+Algernon. Indeed this is not right!”</p>
+
+<p>“But tell me, Ellen, how do you pass your time? What
+occupations have you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you what she does, Mr. Hamilton,” interrupted
+Captain Wareham, “she goes about doing good, and
+there is not a poor distressed creature within miles, that does
+not know her, and bless her.”</p>
+
+<p>Algernon at first felt vexed with Captain Wareham for
+taking up the answer to his question, for he longed to hear the
+music of Ellen’s voice; but he no longer regretted it was her
+father who had spoken, for the report of her good deeds was
+equally sweet in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>“God will bless you also, Ellen!”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish to remember all you have told me about the
+management of the poor, and I hope I do not encourage the
+idle; but I have no influence here, and I cannot give them
+good cottages, and gardens, as you have done, and have thus
+enabled them to live comfortably, without charity. Are the
+cottages as nice as ever?”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe they are. Yes, they look very neat as I ride by.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how is poor old Amy Underwood?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dead!—poor old soul! She died last winter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor Amy! So she is at rest! Who takes care of her
+little grand-daughter?—She made me promise I would always
+be a friend to her when she was gone. Algernon, you will
+see that the child is religiously and virtuously brought up. I
+cannot,—you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes! that I will! Can you think of nothing else
+for me to do? Tell me more protégés of your’s, that I may
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</span>attend to them. Express your wishes, give me your orders.
+You will invest anew Belhanger with interest in my eyes.
+You will give me something to live for.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen smiled faintly, and gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>“Have pretty Jane Earle and her husband got a cottage yet?
+If they had a tidy cottage to themselves, it might confirm him
+in his reformation; now he has such a pretty wife too.”</p>
+
+<p>In this manner Ellen endeavoured to lead him to again
+interest himself in his peasantry, while to herself there was a
+certain melancholy pleasure in uttering the names, and picturing
+the spots, once so familiar to her.</p>
+
+<p>Agnes meantime had nestled herself comfortably into his
+arms. Perhaps she had some indistinct recollection of him;
+perhaps it was merely the caprice which sometimes makes
+children immediately attach themselves to one person, while
+they take an antipathy to another, but from the first moment
+she seemed attracted by him. Ellen looked at them, and
+thought how happy were those who might, in peace and
+honour, gaze every day of their lives upon their child, and the
+father of their child.</p>
+
+<p>The hour for departure approached. At four o’clock the
+chaise was again to be at the door. Captain Wareham’s
+dinner-hour was five, and he had to walk back into the town.</p>
+
+<p>In a clear and gentle voice Ellen addressed Algernon—</p>
+
+<p>“One thing I wished to ask you, Algernon, before you
+went. Should you not like to have Agnes pay you a visit at
+Belhanger?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not for worlds, Ellen, would I rob you of her for a
+moment!” It was true that he would not have robbed her
+for a moment of that which was her only pleasure; but he
+also wished to put an end to such an idea, as it would deprive
+him of his one excuse for seeing Ellen. “And are we not to
+meet again for six months, Ellen?” he added, after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>She exerted all her might, and answered—</p>
+
+<p>“Not for six months.”</p>
+
+<p>“I may write to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; we must not correspond. If Agnes should be ill,
+of course I will let you know; and if you should be ill, you
+must write to me. For God’s sake, write if any thing should
+be the matter!” she repeated with an expression of terror
+from the image she had herself conjured up.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</span></p>
+<p>The chaise had been some time announced. Captain Wareham,
+though from the bottom of his heart he pitied them
+both, thought there was no use in prolonging this distressing
+interview—to himself doubly so, for he felt himself a third;
+and yet Ellen had made him promise to give her the support
+of his presence. She thought, if the interview should not
+remain unknown (and what does remain unknown in the
+present civilised state of society?), her fair name could not
+suffer if it was conducted under the sanction of her father.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon had kissed his child; he had wrung Captain
+Wareham’s hand; Ellen had risen from her seat, and again
+held forth her hand to him.</p>
+
+<p>“May heaven bless you, my dear and valued friend!” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen! my own Ellen!”</p>
+
+<p>“You had better go now,” she gently replied. “My
+father is not so young as he was, and we must not make him
+too late for his dinner. This day six months we meet again!”</p>
+
+<p>Algernon replied not. Slowly and reluctantly he left the
+room: he dared not remonstrate; he knew her firmness to do
+what she deemed right, and he feared by word or deed to lose
+the grace he had obtained: he threw himself into his carriage,
+and drove away.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wareham walked home to dinner, and Ellen at
+length gave way to the tumult of feelings which she had resolutely
+subdued.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to say whether joy at having seen
+him, or sorrow at having parted from him, preponderated:
+she certainly found it more difficult to resume the occupations
+to which she had accustomed herself; but still she had a
+point to look to, a bright speck in the distant horizon, to lead
+her on through the cheerless desert of life.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon religiously executed all Ellen’s innocent behests,
+and, for her sake, did resume in some measure his former
+habits of practical utility: he attended parliament—he was
+put upon committees—his eye once more flashed with fire—his
+countenance recovered its animation, his manner its energy.</p>
+
+<p>His re-appearance in the world was hailed with joy by all
+who knew, and consequently loved and respected him. Though
+there was still a corroding care within—though there was
+still a cheerless void in his heart, yet when once he began
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</span>again to mix with his fellow men, and to enter into public
+affairs, there were so many objects to interest and occupy a
+man, that the next six months were not to him so immeasurably
+long as to Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>At the appointed day and hour he was again at the cottage,
+and claimed her approving smile for his obedience to her
+wishes. She had carefully spelled every newspaper, waded
+through columns of parliamentary debates on subjects she
+could not comprehend, for fear of missing, or not properly
+appreciating, some short reply of his; but it had been with
+joy she had seen his name frequently among the speakers,
+and her approving smile was not wanting to reward him.</p>
+
+<p>When his parliamentary duties were over, he found his
+lone and loveless home so cheerless that he again became a
+frequent visiter at Coverdale Park, and Ellen often heard of
+him when there, through Caroline. It was a consolation to
+him to see Ellen’s sister, and to talk to her of past happiness.
+Lord and Lady Coverdale were friendly people, and Miss
+Coverdale was a gentle, pleasing girl, who loved Ellen with
+the enthusiastic warmth of admiration, which girls often feel
+for a young married woman a few years older than themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The consciousness that she did full justice to his beloved
+Ellen, that she had tact and discrimination enough to perceive
+her superiority to other people, formed a bond of union
+between them, and the Coverdales were almost the only family
+of his former acquaintance, from whose society Algernon appeared
+to derive any pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>From his frequent visits, and from the intimacy which subsisted
+between him and Miss Coverdale, reports arose which
+immediately came to the ears of Mrs. Allenham. Some people
+have the faculty of always hearing news, and Caroline was
+one of those.</p>
+
+<p>She knew how totally groundless was such an idea; but
+she thought if such gossip should reach * * *, it might be
+very unpleasant to Ellen, and that she should do well to warn
+her against giving any credit to it. In short, to prevent her
+hearing it, she immediately wrote her word of it.</p>
+
+<p>She told her “It was quite a foolish notion of some meddlesome
+neighbours; that Algernon’s pleasure in the society
+at Coverdale was principally on account of their all knowing
+Ellen so well, and because Coverdale was so near Longbury;”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</span>and she bade her “not fret herself at all, if she did hear such
+silly things said.”</p>
+
+<p>The very possibility that Algernon should think of any
+other wife, or that people should imagine he could think of
+any one else, was almost agonizing to Ellen. She instantly
+drove the suspicion from her mind. She felt too certain of
+his unceasing affection for her. Yet when she had done so,
+she reproached herself for selfishness in wishing to doom him
+to a life of singleness—him so formed for every domestic
+affection. She told herself she ought rather to wish he should
+find happiness with another, as she was for ever precluded from
+contributing to it.</p>
+
+<p>“But I am sure,” she thought, “quite sure, there is no
+truth in the report. I know him too well!”</p>
+
+<p>Still the rumour having ever arisen was disagreeable. Implicit
+as was her reliance on his devotion, it proved how completely
+he was looked upon in the world as a free man. How
+entirely null and void the world considered her marriage to
+him. She knew it. The fact had been too painfully proved
+and ascertained! but she experienced a sense of humiliation,
+that it was so decided by the law of opinion, as well as by the
+law of the land.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<h3>CHAPTER <abbr title="20" style="text-decoration: none;">XX.</abbr></h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">God doth not leave the unhappy soul, without</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">An inward monitor, and till the grave</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Open, the gate of mercy is not closed.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="right"><span class="smcap">Southey</span>’<i>s Roderick</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Cresford, as we have before mentioned, had given his mind
+to business; but his visionary schemes of aggrandizement
+had not proved successful. He had, on the contrary, involved
+the concern in considerable embarrassments, and to retrieve
+all, he ventured on a still bolder speculation,—which failed!</p>
+
+<p>In a few words, the house broke.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone through much during the time that these difficulties
+had been thickening around him, and when at last the
+storm, which had been long gathering, broke upon his head,
+it found him totally unequal to bearing up against it,—in
+impotent anger against himself, and every one else.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</span></p>
+<p>It was galling to his spirit to find that by his rashness and
+imprudence he had reduced from affluence to a state of indigence,
+men who had been honestly labouring all their lives.
+For himself, if he could not make himself a name, as one of
+the richest merchants of the great emporium of commerce, he
+cared not if he were the poorest. But he felt for his children.
+He loved them, though it was not with a tender love. He
+meant his son should be as great a man as any in the kingdom;
+he intended that his daughter should be the most accomplished
+of girls; he would have spared nothing for their
+education.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen first learned the failure of his house from the public
+papers, and she mourned over the altered fortunes of her
+children. She grieved, too, for the unfortunate man who seemed
+doomed to have his hopes blasted in this world, while his
+earthly sorrows had not as yet softened or prepared his heart
+for happiness in another.</p>
+
+<p>Her brother Henry soon wrote her word of some further
+particulars, and informed her that the firm would be able to
+pay a good dividend in the pound; so that, although a bankruptcy,
+it would not be a disgraceful one. He had called to
+inquire about Cresford, and the answer was, that he had been ill,
+but was now better, though not well enough to receive visiters.
+Henry could not ascertain what prospects there were for his
+future provision; but promised to let her know when he
+could learn any thing farther.</p>
+
+<p>Pity swallowed up all other feelings, and she anxiously
+awaited the result. Henry again wrote to her. He had
+called a second time, and was refused admittance. The servant
+shook his head, and said “he feared his master was
+very ill. The doctors said they could do nothing for him unless
+his mind was kept quiet; and as for keeping his mind
+quiet, that was impossible. He was night and day poring over
+papers, and the lawyers were with him two or three times a
+day; if they did not come, he kept sending for them; so
+there was no use in telling them not to trouble him till he got
+a little better.” The servant added, he thought “it would be
+a good thing if he would go to Brompton, and be with his
+children for a while; but it made him worse to talk of that.
+He said he could not bear to think of his poor ruined children,
+much less to see them.”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</span></p>
+<p>Ellen’s heart bled for him. She sometimes considered
+within herself whether duty did not call her to him in his present
+miserable state. But perhaps her presence might only
+irritate him; and even if he did wish for it, could she bring
+herself to attend his summons? She scarcely thought she
+could do so. She begged Henry to discover whether he ever
+mentioned her name. It would be a relief to know he did not
+think of her.</p>
+
+<p>Henry, the next time he called, sounded the servant, who
+was an old acquaintance of his, as he had been porter at the
+time when Henry belonged to the house. He could not find
+that Cresford ever alluded to his wife. Once, when he was
+very ill, he had said, “If I get worse, let her be written to!”
+without mentioning any name.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen’s mind was set at ease upon this subject. She had
+nothing to do but patiently to wait the event.</p>
+
+<p>It was some time before she heard again, and then it was
+from Henry, to say he had seen Cresford; that, having
+learned he was considerably worse, he had again called, and
+had ventured to send up word that he was there; that Cresford
+had admitted him, and that he had been shocked at the
+havoc which a few months had made in his appearance;
+that he was certainly very ill, but he thought it was the
+mind, which preyed upon the body—the sword consuming
+the scabbard: his face was haggard—his eye was restless—his
+voice feeble and hollow. There seemed to be no positive
+complaint, except a slight but frequent cough. He spoke much
+of his affairs—said he did not care for himself, but he lamented
+the fate of his children; that, perhaps, his schemes had been
+imprudent, but that his partners hampered him. They would
+not enter into his views, and their timid prudence prevented his
+projects being carried on in the only manner which could lead
+to a successful termination, boldly and gallantly as they had
+been conceived.</p>
+
+<p>“God knows,” he added, “what remnant of fortune may
+be saved from the wreck, or whether I may have anything to
+allow—your sister. That thought torments me past all others.
+She will be supported by Hamilton after all!”</p>
+
+<p>Henry added that he had done all he could to tranquillise
+his mind—had told him how few her wants were; that he
+and Captain Wareham would do their utmost to supply them—in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</span>short, said all the soothing things he could. He had
+left him with the promise of calling again in a few days.</p>
+
+<p>Before these few days had elapsed, Ellen received an express
+from Henry, imploring her to come forthwith to London—that
+a change for the worse had taken place, and that the
+physicians thought Cresford could not survive many days,
+perhaps not many hours; that, upon being made aware of
+their opinion, he had expressed a passionate desire to see her;
+and that he thought she ought to lose no time in acceding to it.</p>
+
+<p>In two hours from the moment she received Henry’s letter,
+Ellen was on her way to London, having left little Agnes
+with her father and Matilda. Captain Wareham was not well,
+and was quite unequal to so sudden a journey.</p>
+
+<p>The journey was long. She had time to think, and to
+think of every thing—of every probability, of every possibility.
+But there was one on which she dared not allow her
+mind to rest.</p>
+
+<p>What was to happen if Cresford died? She felt it criminal
+to look forward to what would then ensue. If he recovered,
+what then? Would her visit to his bed of sickness be a reconciliation?
+Could he wish to take her back, when he knew
+her whole heart was another’s? What would, what could
+happen? She strove not to look forward beyond the present
+moment. She had but one course to pursue. She could not
+refuse such an appeal from a dying man, and that man her
+lawful husband. The path of duty was clear; for the rest,
+she must trust to Providence for guidance and support.</p>
+
+<p>She first drove to her brother’s lodgings: she found him
+there. His countenance betrayed anxiety, his brow was care-worn.</p>
+
+<p>“He is yet alive,” he said; “I sat up with him all night.
+In your absence he will scarcely allow me to leave him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Henry, this is an awful meeting! How will he receive
+me? Does he feel kindly towards me? Or must I
+endure his reproaches from his death-bed?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is entirely changed; he is gentle and forgiving now;
+all his former love for you seems to have revived.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is almost worse! Poor Charles! his love has ever
+been a source of woe to both of us.”</p>
+
+<p>Henry lost no time in conveying her to Cresford’s house,
+which was attached to the office, and, although not in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</span>most fashionable part of London, was roomy and commodious,
+and was usually inhabited by the head-partner of the concern.
+In that house she had passed four years as his wife.</p>
+
+<p>It was with painful recollections, and painful anticipations,
+that she traversed the stone-hall, and mounted the broad but
+dismal oak staircase, once so familiar to her.</p>
+
+<p>Henry left her in the drawing-room, while he went up-stairs
+to prepare Cresford for her arrival. She looked round;
+there were the curtains which she had chosen, the carpet, the
+sofas, of her selection—now dirty and dingy with years of
+London wear.</p>
+
+<p>Henry returned. He said the physicians were at that moment
+visiting their patient, and that when they left the room
+he would apprise him of her arrival. She had still to wait.
+When once the mind is worked up to the performance or the
+endurance of any thing disagreeable or painful, a few additional
+moments of suspense are almost agonising.</p>
+
+<p>She mechanically took the hand-skreen off the chimney-piece.
+It was one she had herself ornamented with wafer
+cameos, and little scraps of verses. The gold paper was all
+tarnished, the cameos broken, the writing half effaced; but
+she could still distinguish some lines, which carried her back
+to the feelings of former days, and the emotions under which
+they had been selected, till the flood of recollections which
+crowded upon her almost bewildered her.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of ten minutes the physicians entered. Ellen
+felt awkward and confused. They must think her presence so
+odd! She knew not what tone to take, and it was with timidity
+and shyness that she ventured to ask what was their opinion
+of Mr. Cresford.</p>
+
+<p>The taller, a pale slender man, with a sweet countenance,
+and soft manner, informed her, “that he could not venture
+to say the symptoms had improved; that the lungs and the
+heart both seemed to be affected, and that although he might
+linger some time, or indeed might ultimately recover, still a
+fatal termination might take place in a few hours—that it
+was a case in which medicine could do little or nothing!” and
+having delivered this most conclusive and luminous opinion, he
+sat himself down to a table, and there wrote prescriptions for
+some draughts, some pills, an aromatic mixture, a liniment,
+and a warm plaister for the chest, and prepared to take his leave.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</span></p>
+<p>The second physician, who was a short, thick man, with a
+bob-wig, stood quietly by, while there played around his
+mouth something approaching a smile, at the inutility of all
+these measures at the present stage of the disorder.</p>
+
+<p>Ellen ventured to turn to him with an inquiring countenance.</p>
+
+<p>“Madam,” he said, “if you wish to know my opinion, it
+is that he cannot recover. He is too far gone for that. But
+we do not justly know what his complaint is, so we may prove
+wrong, and while there is life there is hope. So I wish you
+a good morning!” and away he trudged, having made a short,
+abrupt bow to Ellen.</p>
+
+<p>When they were gone, she sat down for a few moments,
+and tried to collect her thoughts for the interview which approached.</p>
+
+<p>She heard Henry’s step on the stairs; her heart felt sick
+within her—his hand was on the lock of the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, Ellen!” he said, “Cresford is tolerably composed.
+But how pale you are! Shall I get you any thing?—a glass
+of water?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing! thank you; I am quite well now.”</p>
+
+<p>She took Henry’s arm, and he led her up stairs. He gently
+opened the door—the apartment was darkened. As they
+entered, the nurse discreetly slipped past them out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Coming from the full light, Ellen could scarcely see. She
+approached the bed; he was propped up with pillows and
+cushions, almost in a sitting posture. She could distinguish
+that he looked ghastly; she shook from head to foot, and
+leaned heavily on Henry’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen! are you come at last? I was afraid you would
+not have arrived in time. I am ill—very ill—and I wished
+to see you once more; you will soon be free of me, and then—but
+I wished to see you, and to forgive you for all I have
+suffered on your account, and to ask your forgiveness for
+having made you miserable too. I ought not to have brought
+you to a trial;—it was a bad feeling of revenge which drove
+me to it, and I repent it now; but I was maddened—goaded
+to desperation. Ellen! I have loved you fearfully! I have
+loved you unto death—for I am dying of a broken heart!
+The doctors do not know my complaint—I can tell it them!”</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</span></p>
+<p>Ellen had sunk on her knees by the bedside. She sobbed
+audibly.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me you are sorry for me,” he continued; “and tell
+me that you forgive me, as truly as I forgive you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Charles! you know I do pity you, and I have from
+the beginning. I have not wilfully done any thing to increase
+your wretchedness. As for forgiving you, that I do, indeed,
+from the bottom of my heart.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I have your pity!—and your forgiveness!—your
+love I never had!”</p>
+
+<p>There was a mixture of dejection and of hardness in the
+tone in which the last few words were uttered. Ellen could
+not reply. It would have been a glaring falsehood, to say it
+was true love she had ever felt for him; an impious, and an
+useless falsehood, to lie to one on the verge of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Turning to Henry, he inquired,—</p>
+
+<p>“Are the children come yet? I wanted to bless them,
+and to bless my wife too; for you are still my wife, Ellen!—as
+long as I am alive, you are my wife—I am your
+husband!”</p>
+
+<p>There was a shade of his former stern and violent manner,
+which made Ellen shudder to her inmost soul.</p>
+
+<p>“Are my children coming?” she faintly asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes! I sent for them hours ago. Why do they not
+come, Henry Wareham?” he inquired, in a peremptory and
+authoritative voice.</p>
+
+<p>“I expect them every moment,” replied Henry.</p>
+
+<p>“Ellen, come nearer!” She drew nearer. He extended
+his thin and bony hand. “Give me your hand—no! the
+other!” He took her left hand, and looking solemnly in her
+face, “Who put that ring on your finger?” he said. She
+could not reply. She had never had the heart to take off the
+ring Algernon had placed there; and in all the agitation of
+the last day, she had not remembered any thing concerning
+the rings. “Is that the ring I placed upon that finger?”
+and he held her hand with a firmness that appalled her: “answer
+me, and answer me truly!”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” she faintly replied.</p>
+
+<p>He dashed the hand he held away from him, with a
+strength of which all who had seen him for the last few days
+would have deemed him utterly incapable.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</span></p>
+<p>She tremblingly drew off the ring, and offered it to him, as
+a token of submission, and recognition of her duty to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Take it away!—destroy it!—I cannot look on it!”
+He turned away his head, and spoke with a vehemence which
+alarmed them. “Throw it into the fire—let me know it is
+consuming.”</p>
+
+<p>In humble penitence for having, by her inadvertence, so
+embittered the last moments of the unhappy man’s life, she
+walked to the fire, and, as he bade, committed the treasured
+ring to the flames. As she was doing so, she felt her soul die
+away within her.</p>
+
+<p>He had raised himself up with the unnatural strength of
+great excitement to witness the execution of his behest, and
+he fell back exhausted and faint. He gasped for breath.
+Henry and Ellen hastened to him. They thought his last
+moment was approaching; but he rallied. “Where is the ring
+I placed upon your finger?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is at home: I put it carefully away when—”</p>
+
+<p>“Speak on; finish your sentence.”</p>
+
+<p>“When—the other—was placed there.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have kept it, then? You did not cast it away?”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed I preserved it religiously. Are you not the father
+of my children?” she added in a gentle deprecating tone.
+“Oh, Charles, do not thus agitate yourself! Be calm, be
+patient. We are all weak, frail, erring creatures; we should
+mutually forgive, as we hope to be forgiven. Your children
+will soon be here, and let them not see their father thus perturbed
+and restless.” She paused.</p>
+
+<p>“Speak on; your voice does soothe my perturbed and restless
+spirit; speak on, Ellen,—and come here to the light.
+Open the curtains, Henry; let me look on her face while my
+eyes can yet see.”</p>
+
+<p>She stood trembling beneath his fixed and melancholy
+gaze. “Oh, Ellen, how I have loved you! I am too near
+the grave to curse any one, or else I could breathe forth a
+malediction on that tyrant, who, in his unmanly, deliberate,
+and useless vengeance, has blighted the prospects, ruined the
+characters, and blasted the hopes, both in this world and the
+next, of hundreds of unoffending fellow-creatures. I am not
+his only victim! Mine is not the only ruin of body and mind
+for which he is answerable! But I will forgive, as I hope to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</span>be forgiven. Ellen, repeat the Lord’s prayer to me; I think
+from your voice it will do me good.”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen and Henry knelt by the bed-side, and Ellen reverently
+and humbly obeyed him. As she spoke, his eyes
+gradually closed, and soon after he fell into a short but refreshing
+slumber.</p>
+
+<p>When he awoke, the nurse stole in to inform them that the
+children were come. He bade them enter.</p>
+
+<p>It was now more than a year since they had been parted from
+their mother, and when they unexpectedly saw her, they ran
+to her arms in silent joy. They made no exclamation, for the
+subdued voices of all the attendants, the darkened room, the
+vague awe of a death-bed, overpowered their young minds,
+and prevented any burst of delight. They clung round her,
+and she folded them to her bosom, with mingled emotions, in
+which pleasure bore no inconsiderable part.</p>
+
+<p>“Children,” said Cresford in a gentle tone.</p>
+
+<p>“Your father speaks,” Ellen hastily whispered; “go to
+him, my loves.”</p>
+
+<p>“My children,” he continued, “kneel here by my bed-side:
+I wish to give you my blessing, my parting blessing.
+Be good, and never let your passions get the better of you.
+Mind what your mother says, for she is an excellent and a
+conscientious woman, and she will teach you your duties.
+Ellen, I give you my blessing, too; may you be happy!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen was on her knees. She seized his pale hand as it lay
+feebly on the bed, and covered it with tears and kisses. He
+smiled faintly and gratefully upon her, and pressed her hand.
+He soon again dropped off to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>The children were removed, but Ellen remained. She had
+an earnest wish to do her duty by him to the last.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening, when the physicians came, they found him
+considerably better; the sleep he had enjoyed had refreshed
+him. His pulse was steadier, he was able to take some
+nourishment, and they appeared almost to imagine permanent
+improvement might take place.</p>
+
+<p>These words fell strangely on Ellen’s ear. She could not
+but rejoice in his amendment. Dreadful as was the prospect
+for herself, it was not in the nature of any thing so gentle, so
+feminine, so forgiving as Ellen, to watch the painful breathing,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</span>the feeble smile, the hectic cough, and not wish the
+breathing less painful, the cough less frequent.</p>
+
+<p>The comparative tranquillity of his mind had a wonderful
+effect upon his frame, and for two whole days it almost seemed
+as if the natural vigour of his constitution would conquer.
+On the third, however, a violent fit of coughing caused the
+rupture of a blood-vessel, and there was no doubt but that a
+few hours must close his sad existence.</p>
+
+<p>The effusion of blood could not be stopped. He gradually
+became weaker and weaker. As his strength declined, his
+tenderness towards Ellen increased, and all angry feelings
+vanished. From her hand alone would he receive either food or
+medicine. She watched over him with unwearied attention;
+and when at last his spirit quietly departed, so calmly, so
+gently, that the by-standers could scarcely ascertain the moment
+when he drew his last breath, it was her hand that closed his
+eyes, and she imprinted on his cold forehead, clammy with
+the dew of death, one pious kiss of duty and affection.</p>
+
+
+<h3>CONCLUSION.</h3>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent12">Methinks if ye would know</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">How visitations of calamity</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Affect the pious soul, ’tis shown ye there!</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Look yonder at that cloud, which through the sky,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Sailing alone, doth cross in her career</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The rolling moon! I watch’d it as it came,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And dream’d the deep opake would blot her beams;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">But, melting as a wreath of snow, it hangs</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">In folds of wavy silver round, and clothes</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The orb with richer beauties than her own,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Then passing, leaves her in her light serene.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Southey</span>’<i>s Roderick</i>.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>Ellen remained in the house till the last duties had been performed.
+The funeral of poor Cresford was conducted without
+pomp or show, and she then returned, with her restored George
+and Caroline, to her own cottage.</p>
+
+<p>She put his children in the deepest mourning. For herself,
+she also wore deep mourning; but she did not dress herself
+in weeds: she felt, under all the circumstances, that it would
+be a mockery.</p>
+
+<p>She had not written to Algernon to inform him of Cresford’s
+death. She had felt a superstitious horror when his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</span>wedding-ring was committed to the flames; and the last parting
+scenes with Cresford had to her feelings sanctioned and
+confirmed anew her first union, so that at the moment when
+she was free to give herself for ever to Algernon, she felt herself
+more severed from him than she had ever yet done.</p>
+
+<p>She knew not where he was; she had not allowed him to
+correspond with her; and though she felt it was scarcely kind
+not to be the first to inform him of the event, she had not
+courage to write to tell him she was free. She had never believed
+the rumours which had arisen from his frequent visits
+to Coverdale Park: she had been so sure of his devotion, that
+she would have felt guilty of ingratitude towards him, if she
+had allowed them to give her any uneasiness: yet now, for
+the first time, the recollection of the report would recur to her
+mind. It was possible, just possible, there might have been
+some foundation for it. She had heard, she had read a thousand
+times, that while there was hope, man might remain faithful;
+but that it was woman and woman only who could live a life
+of hopeless devotion. She should have no right to complain,
+if he had at length looked elsewhere for domestic bliss. He
+would still have been true and kind to her, beyond what she
+had any right to expect.</p>
+
+<p>As she did not write at first, from a feeling of delicacy towards
+the memory of Cresford, she now felt unwilling to do
+so from the shrinking sensitiveness which had always formed
+a leading feature in her character.</p>
+
+<p>She was not long, however, kept in suspense. Algernon
+had been in Scotland at the time, and more than a week elapsed
+before he learned the event. He instantly returned to London.
+He there found that Ellen was at her cottage, and he followed
+as fast as four horses could carry him.</p>
+
+<p>She was startled from a reverie of much hope, mixed with
+a little fear and wonder, by the clatter of a carriage at her
+door. Her heart leaped within her; she doubted not who it
+was, and in two seconds she found herself pressed to Algernon’s
+bosom.</p>
+
+<p>She did not, this time, insist upon two years of widowhood;
+but consented, at the end of one month, to be privately re-married.</p>
+
+<p>They agreed to renew those vows, to which their hearts had
+so strictly adhered, at Longbury Church, and to Mr. Allenham’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</span>they speedily removed: Captain Wareham and Matilda
+followed, and Henry arrived from London.</p>
+
+<p>It was late in the month of October. The party had
+gathered round a cheerful, blazing fire, on the evening preceding
+the ceremony. It was long since they had met together
+with feelings of peace and happiness, such as they now
+experienced, although in some of the party it was happiness
+chastened and subdued by all they had previously endured.</p>
+
+<p>Algernon’s eyes were fixed on Ellen with an expression of
+holy love, which bordered on veneration. Matilda remarked
+upon his steady gaze, and told him he would put Ellen quite
+out of countenance.</p>
+
+<p>“I was thinking,” he replied, “that if she had not been as
+virtuous as she is beautiful, as pure as she is kind, as firm as
+she is affectionate, if she had listened to me, when I wished
+to fly to America, we should never have known this hour of
+unalloyed happiness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” answered the lively Matilda, “those thoughts
+were very respectful, and respectable thoughts. I cannot find
+any fault with them!”</p>
+
+<p>Ellen smiled through the tears of virtuous gratification
+which Algernon’s words had called forth.</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite a comfort to see you smile, Ellen,” said Caroline;
+“I thought I should never have seen those white teeth
+again! And when do you mean to curl your hair? I long
+to see your glossy black ringlets! Do not you, Mr. Hamilton?
+Do not you miss the ringlets very much?”</p>
+
+<p>“I miss nothing!” replied Algernon; “Ellen is once
+more my Ellen. I have scarcely looked to see how she
+dressed herself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now that is what I call true love,” exclaimed Matilda;
+“Algernon does not look at Ellen’s beauty. Ellen is Ellen,
+and that is enough for him. You all call me proud and
+difficult, but when any man like Algernon loves me as
+Algernon loves Ellen, then I will love him as Ellen loves
+Algernon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you give this as a proof you are not difficult, Matilda?”
+replied Ellen, smiling almost gaily: “there are not Algernons
+to be met with every day!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I will stay and take care of you, papa. You know
+you would not manage at all well without me! you would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</span>have nobody to scold! and, what is more, there would be
+nobody to scold you,” she added, playfully tapping her father
+on the cheek.</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you what, Matilda,” replied Captain Wareham,
+who was too happy to be angry, “you must keep down this
+same spirit of your’s, or nobody will put you to the trial.”</p>
+
+<p>Matilda looked archly at Caroline, as if Caroline and she
+knew something that disproved Captain Wareham’s prognostics.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage was to take place early in the morning, as
+they meant to reach Belhanger the same day. The children
+had been already sent there, that they might be ready to greet
+them on their arrival.</p>
+
+<p>Before eight o’clock the whole party walked quietly up the
+hill to the church.</p>
+
+<p>There Mr. Allenham again pronounced over them the
+nuptial benediction. They both repeated after him, clearly,
+distinctly, and fervently, each word of their vow; and with a
+delightful but sober certainty of waking bliss, of assured
+happiness, the small party wound their way down again to
+the parsonage.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fine October morning, and the sun was quickly
+dispersing the vapours which still hung in the low grounds.</p>
+
+<p>The valley had, half an hour before, appeared almost like a
+lake, as they looked down on the mist below. The trees, the
+spires, the knolls of higher ground were gradually emerging,
+and in a few minutes all was clear and joyous, dancing in the
+morning sunshine. The robin redbreast sung cheerily from
+the dewy hedges, which were still bright in their rich autumn
+livery.</p>
+
+<p>“All Nature smiles upon us, Ellen,” whispered Algernon:
+“So the clouds of our early life are dispersed! All before us
+is bright and serene.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="center large p2">THE END.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p4">
+<span class="smcap">London</span>:<br>
+<span class="smcap">Spottiswoode</span> and <span class="smcap">Shaw</span>,<br>
+New-street-Square.<br>
+</p>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<p class="center large">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.</p>
+
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been changed.</p>
+
+<p>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75982 ***</div>
+</body>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+book #75982 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75982)