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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Lucretia, by Edward Bulwer Lytton
+ </title>
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+
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lucretia, Complete, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lucretia, Complete
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2009 [EBook #7691]
+Last Updated: August 28, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LUCRETIA, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ LUCRETIA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Edward Bulwer Lytton
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE TO THE EDITION OF 1853. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF2"> PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <a href="#link2H_PART1"> PART THE FIRST. </a>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_PROL"> PROLOGUE TO PART THE
+ FIRST. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A FAMILY GROUP. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002">
+ CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LUCRETIA. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003">
+ CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CONFERENCES. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GUY&rsquo;S OAK. <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOUSEHOLD TREASON.
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WILL
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ ENGAGEMENT. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ DISCOVERY. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ SOUL WITHOUT HOPE. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ RECONCILIATION BETWEEN FATHER AND SON. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_EPIL">
+ EPILOGUE TO PART THE FIRST. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <a href="#Blink2H_PART2"> PART THE SECOND. </a>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2H_PROL"> PROLOGUE TO PART THE
+ SECOND. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0011"> CHAPTER I.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE CORONATION. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0012">
+ CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0013"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EARLY TRAINING FOR
+ AN UPRIGHT GENTLEMAN. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0014"> CHAPTER IV.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;JOHN ARDWORTH. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0015">
+ CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WEAVERS AND THE WOOF. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0016"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LAWYER AND THE
+ BODY-SNATCHER. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0017"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ RAPE OF THE MATTRESS. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0018"> CHAPTER VIII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PERCIVAL VISITS LUCRETIA. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0019"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE ROSE BENEATH THE
+ UPAS. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0020"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ RATTLE OF THE SNAKE. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XI.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LOVE AND INNOCENCE. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0022">
+ CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;SUDDEN CELEBRITY AND PATIENT HOPE. <br /><br />
+ <a href="#Blink2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LOSS OF THE
+ CROSSING. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;NEWS
+ FROM GRABMAN. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;VARIETIES.
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ INVITATION TO LAUGHTON. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0027"> CHAPTER
+ XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE WAKING OF THE SERPENT. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;RETROSPECT. <br /><br />
+ <a href="#Blink2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MR. GRABMAN&rsquo;S
+ ADVENTURES. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MORE
+ OF MRS. JOPLIN. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;BECK&rsquo;S
+ DISCOVERY. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ TAPESTRY CHAMBER. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXIII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SHADES ON THE DIAL <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MURDER, TOWARDS HIS
+ DESIGN, MOVES LIKE A GHOST. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0035"> CHAPTER
+ XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MESSENGER SPEEDS. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SPY FLIES.
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LUCRETIA
+ REGAINS HER SON. <br /><br /> <a href="#Blink2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXVIII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LOTS VANISH WITHIN THE URN. <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#Blink2H_EPIL"> EPILOGUE TO PART THE SECOND. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO THE EDITION OF 1853.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lucretia; or, The Children of Night,&rdquo; was begun simultaneously with &ldquo;The
+ Caxtons: a Family Picture.&rdquo; The two fictions were intended as pendants;
+ both serving, amongst other collateral aims and objects, to show the
+ influence of home education, of early circumstance and example, upon after
+ character and conduct. &ldquo;Lucretia&rdquo; was completed and published before &ldquo;The
+ Caxtons.&rdquo; The moral design of the first was misunderstood and assailed;
+ that of the last was generally acknowledged and approved: the moral design
+ in both was nevertheless precisely the same. But in one it was sought
+ through the darker side of human nature; in the other through the more
+ sunny and cheerful: one shows the evil, the other the salutary influences,
+ of early circumstance and training. Necessarily, therefore, the first
+ resorts to the tragic elements of awe and distress,&mdash;the second to
+ the comic elements of humour and agreeable emotion. These differences
+ serve to explain the different reception that awaited the two, and may
+ teach us how little the real conception of an author is known, and how
+ little it is cared for; we judge, not by the purpose he conceives, but
+ according as the impressions he effects are pleasurable or painful. But
+ while I cannot acquiesce in much of the hostile criticism this fiction
+ produced at its first appearance, I readily allow that as a mere question
+ of art the story might have been improved in itself, and rendered more
+ acceptable to the reader, by diminishing the gloom of the catastrophe. In
+ this edition I have endeavoured to do so; and the victim whose fate in the
+ former cast of the work most revolted the reader, as a violation of the
+ trite but amiable law of Poetical Justice, is saved from the hands of the
+ Children of Night. Perhaps, whatever the faults of this work, it equals
+ most of its companions in the sustainment of interest, and in that
+ coincidence between the gradual development of motive or passion, and the
+ sequences of external events constituting plot, which mainly distinguish
+ the physical awe of tragedy from the coarse horrors of melodrama. I trust
+ at least that I shall now find few readers who will not readily
+ acknowledge that the delineation of crime has only been employed for the
+ grave and impressive purpose which brings it within the due province of
+ the poet,&mdash;as an element of terror and a warning to the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONDON, December 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF2" id="link2H_PREF2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is somewhere about four years since I appeared before the public as the
+ writer of a fiction, which I then intimated would probably be my last; but
+ bad habits are stronger than good intentions. When Fabricio, in his
+ hospital, resolved upon abjuring the vocation of the Poet, he was, in
+ truth, recommencing his desperate career by a Farewell to the Muses,&mdash;I
+ need not apply the allusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must own, however, that there had long been a desire in my mind to
+ trace, in some work or other, the strange and secret ways through which
+ that Arch-ruler of Civilization, familiarly called &ldquo;Money,&rdquo; insinuates
+ itself into our thoughts and motives, our hearts and actions; affecting
+ those who undervalue as those who overestimate its importance; ruining
+ virtues in the spendthrift no less than engendering vices in the miser.
+ But when I half implied my farewell to the character of a novelist, I had
+ imagined that this conception might be best worked out upon the stage.
+ After some unpublished and imperfect attempts towards so realizing my
+ design, I found either that the subject was too wide for the limits of the
+ Drama, or that I wanted that faculty of concentration which alone enables
+ the dramatist to compress multiform varieties into a very limited compass.
+ With this design, I desired to unite some exhibition of what seems to me a
+ principal vice in the hot and emulous chase for happiness or fame, fortune
+ or knowledge, which is almost synonymous with the cant phrase of &ldquo;the
+ March of Intellect,&rdquo; in that crisis of society to which we have arrived.
+ The vice I allude to is Impatience. That eager desire to press forward,
+ not so much to conquer obstacles as to elude them; that gambling with the
+ solemn destinies of life, seeking ever to set success upon the chance of a
+ die; that hastening from the wish conceived to the end accomplished; that
+ thirst after quick returns to ingenious toil, and breathless spurrings
+ along short cuts to the goal, which we see everywhere around us, from the
+ Mechanics&rsquo; Institute to the Stock Market,&mdash;beginning in education
+ with the primers of infancy, deluging us with &ldquo;Philosophies for the
+ Million&rdquo; and &ldquo;Sciences made Easy;&rdquo; characterizing the books of our
+ writers, the speeches of our statesmen, no less than the dealings of our
+ speculators,&mdash;seem, I confess, to me to constitute a very diseased
+ and very general symptom of the times. I hold that the greatest friend to
+ man is labour; that knowledge without toil, if possible, were worthless;
+ that toil in pursuit of knowledge is the best knowledge we can attain;
+ that the continuous effort for fame is nobler than fame itself; that it is
+ not wealth suddenly acquired which is deserving of homage, but the virtues
+ which a man exercises in the slow pursuit of wealth,&mdash;the abilities
+ so called forth, the self-denials so imposed; in a word, that Labour and
+ Patience are the true schoolmasters on earth. While occupied with these
+ ideas and this belief, whether right or wrong, and slowly convinced that
+ it was only in that species of composition with which I was most familiar
+ that I could work out some portion of the plan that I began to
+ contemplate, I became acquainted with the histories of two criminals
+ existing in our own age,&mdash;so remarkable, whether from the extent and
+ darkness of the guilt committed, whether from the glittering
+ accomplishments and lively temper of the one, the profound knowledge and
+ intellectual capacities of the other, that the examination and analysis of
+ characters so perverted became a study full of intense, if gloomy,
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these persons there appear to have been as few redeemable points as can
+ be found in Human Nature, so far as such points may be traced in the
+ kindly instincts and generous passions which do sometimes accompany the
+ perpetration of great crimes, and, without excusing the individual,
+ vindicate the species. Yet, on the other hand, their sanguinary wickedness
+ was not the dull ferocity of brutes; it was accompanied with instruction
+ and culture,&mdash;nay, it seemed to me, on studying their lives and
+ pondering over their own letters, that through their cultivation itself we
+ could arrive at the secret of the ruthless and atrocious pre-eminence in
+ evil these Children of Night had attained; that here the monster vanished
+ into the mortal, and the phenomena that seemed aberrations from Nature
+ were explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not resist the temptation of reducing to a tale the materials
+ which had so engrossed my interest and tasked my inquiries. And in this
+ attempt, various incidental opportunities have occurred, if not of
+ completely carrying out, still of incidentally illustrating, my earlier
+ design,&mdash;of showing the influence of Mammon upon our most secret
+ selves, of reproving the impatience which is engendered by a civilization
+ that, with much of the good, brings all the evils of competition, and of
+ tracing throughout, all the influences of early household life upon our
+ subsequent conduct and career. In such incidental bearings the moral may
+ doubtless be more obvious than in the delineation of the darker and rarer
+ crime which forms the staple of my narrative. For in extraordinary guilt
+ we are slow to recognize ordinary warnings,&mdash;we say to the peaceful
+ conscience, &ldquo;This concerns thee not!&rdquo; whereas at each instance of familiar
+ fault and commonplace error we own a direct and sensible admonition. Yet
+ in the portraiture of gigantic crime, poets have rightly found their
+ sphere and fulfilled their destiny of teachers. Those terrible truths
+ which appall us in the guilt of Macbeth or the villany of Iago, have their
+ moral uses not less than the popular infirmities of Tom Jones, or the
+ every-day hypocrisy of Blifil. Incredible as it may seem, the crimes
+ herein related took place within the last seventeen years. There has been
+ no exaggeration as to their extent, no great departure from their details;
+ the means employed, even that which seems most far-fetched,&mdash;the
+ instrument of the poisoned ring,&mdash;have their foundation in literal
+ facts. Nor have I much altered the social position of the criminals, nor
+ in the least overrated their attainments and intelligence. In those more
+ salient essentials which will most, perhaps, provoke the Reader&rsquo;s
+ incredulous wonder, I narrate a history, not invent a fiction [These
+ criminals were not, however, in actual life, as in the novel, intimates
+ and accomplices. Their crimes were of similar character, effected by
+ similar agencies, and committed at dates which embrace their several
+ careers of guilt within the same period; but I have no authority to
+ suppose that the one was known to the other.]. All that Romance which our
+ own time affords is not more the romance than the philosophy of the time.
+ Tragedy never quits the world,&mdash;it surrounds us everywhere. We have
+ but to look, wakeful and vigilant, abroad, and from the age of Pelops to
+ that of Borgia, the same crimes, though under different garbs, will stalk
+ on our paths. Each age comprehends in itself specimens of every virtue and
+ every vice which has ever inspired our love or moved our horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONDON, November 1, 1846.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PART1" id="link2H_PART1"></a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PART THE FIRST.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PROL" id="link2H_PROL">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PROLOGUE TO PART THE FIRST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In an apartment at Paris, one morning during the Reign of Terror, a man,
+ whose age might be somewhat under thirty, sat before a table covered with
+ papers, arranged and labelled with the methodical precision of a mind fond
+ of order and habituated to business. Behind him rose a tall bookcase
+ surmounted with a bust of Robespierre, and the shelves were filled chiefly
+ with works of a scientific character, amongst which the greater number
+ were on chemistry and medicine. There were to be seen also many rare books
+ on alchemy, the great Italian historians, some English philosophical
+ treatises, and a few manuscripts in Arabic. The absence from this
+ collection of the stormy literature of the day seemed to denote that the
+ owner was a quiet student, living apart from the strife and passions of
+ the Revolution. This supposition was, however, disproved by certain papers
+ on the table, which were formally and laconically labelled &ldquo;Reports on
+ Lyons,&rdquo; and by packets of letters in the handwritings of Robespierre and
+ Couthon. At one of the windows a young boy was earnestly engaged in some
+ occupation which appeared to excite the curiosity of the person just
+ described; for this last, after examining the child&rsquo;s movements for a few
+ moments with a silent scrutiny that betrayed but little of the
+ half-complacent, half-melancholy affection with which busy man is apt to
+ regard childhood, rose noiselessly from his seat, approached the boy, and
+ looked over his shoulder unobserved. In a crevice of the wood by the
+ window, a huge black spider had formed his web; the child had just
+ discovered another spider, and placed it in the meshes: he was watching
+ the result of his operations. The intrusive spider stood motionless in the
+ midst of the web, as if fascinated. The rightful possessor was also
+ quiescent; but a very fine ear might have caught a low, humming sound,
+ which probably augured no hospitable intentions to the invader. Anon, the
+ stranger insect seemed suddenly to awake from its amaze; it evinced alarm,
+ and turned to fly; the huge spider darted forward; the boy uttered a
+ chuckle of delight. The man&rsquo;s pale lip curled into a sinister sneer, and
+ he glided back to his seat. There, leaning his face on his hand, he
+ continued to contemplate the child. That child might have furnished to an
+ artist a fitting subject for fair and blooming infancy. His light hair,
+ tinged deeply, it is true, with red, hung in sleek and glittering
+ abundance down his neck and shoulders. His features, seen in profile, were
+ delicately and almost femininely proportioned; health glowed on his cheek,
+ and his form, slight though it was, gave promise of singular activity and
+ vigour. His dress was fantastic, and betrayed the taste of some fondly
+ foolish mother; but the fine linen, trimmed with lace, was rumpled and
+ stained, the velvet jacket unbrushed, the shoes soiled with dust,&mdash;slight
+ tokens these of neglect, but serving to show that the foolish fondness
+ which had invented the dress had not of late presided over the toilet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child,&rdquo; said the man, first in French; and observing that the boy heeded
+ him not,&mdash;&ldquo;child,&rdquo; he repeated in English, which he spoke well,
+ though with a foreign accent, &ldquo;child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy turned quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has the great spider devoured the small one?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said the boy, colouring; &ldquo;the small one has had the best of
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone and heightened complexion of the child seemed to give meaning to
+ his words,&mdash;at least, so the man thought, for a slight frown passed
+ over his high, thoughtful brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spiders, then,&rdquo; he said, after a short pause, &ldquo;are different from men;
+ with us, the small do not get the better of the great. Hum! do you still
+ miss your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes!&rdquo; and the boy advanced eagerly to the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you will see her once again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man looked towards a clock on the mantelpiece,&mdash;&ldquo;Before that
+ clock strikes. Now, go back to your spiders.&rdquo; The child looked irresolute
+ and disinclined to obey; but a stern and terrible expression gathered
+ slowly over the man&rsquo;s face, and the boy, growing pale as he remarked it,
+ crept back to the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father&mdash;for such was the relation the owner of the room bore to
+ the child&mdash;drew paper and ink towards him, and wrote for some minutes
+ rapidly. Then starting up, he glanced at the clock, took his hat and
+ cloak, which lay on a chair beside, drew up the collar of the mantle till
+ it almost concealed his countenance, and said, &ldquo;Now, boy, come with me; I
+ have promised to show you an execution: I am going to keep my promise.
+ Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy clapped his hands with joy; and you might see then, child as he
+ was, that those fair features were capable of a cruel and ferocious
+ expression. The character of the whole face changed. He caught up his gay
+ cap and plume, and followed his father into the streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silently the two took their way towards the Barriere du Trone. At a
+ distance they saw the crowd growing thick and dense as throng after throng
+ hurried past them, and the dreadful guillotine rose high in the light blue
+ air. As they came into the skirts of the mob, the father, for the first
+ time, took his child&rsquo;s hand. &ldquo;I must get you a good place for the show,&rdquo;
+ he said, with a quiet smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in the grave, staid, courteous, yet haughty bearing of
+ the man that made the crowd give way as he passed. They got near the
+ dismal scene, and obtained entrance into a wagon already crowded with
+ eager spectators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now they heard at a distance the harsh and lumbering roll of the
+ tumbril that bore the victims, and the tramp of the horses which guarded
+ the procession of death. The boy&rsquo;s whole attention was absorbed in
+ expectation of the spectacle, and his ear was perhaps less accustomed to
+ French, though born and reared in France, than to the language of his
+ mother&rsquo;s lips,&mdash;and she was English; thus he did not hear or heed
+ certain observations of the bystanders, which made his father&rsquo;s pale cheek
+ grow paler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the batch to-day?&rdquo; quoth a butcher in the wagon. &ldquo;Scarce worth
+ the baking,&mdash;only two; but one, they say, is an aristocrat,&mdash;a
+ ci-devant marquis,&rdquo; answered a carpenter. &ldquo;Ah, a marquis! Bon! And the
+ other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only a dancer, but a pretty one, it is true; I could pity her, but she is
+ English.&rdquo; And as he pronounced the last word, with a tone of inexpressible
+ contempt, the butcher spat, as if in nausea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mort diable! a spy of Pitt&rsquo;s, no doubt. What did they discover?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man, better dressed than the rest, turned round with a smile, and
+ answered: &ldquo;Nothing worse than a lover, I believe; but that lover was a
+ proscrit. The ci-devant marquis was caught disguised in her apartment. She
+ betrayed for him a good, easy friend of the people who had long loved her,
+ and revenge is sweet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man whom we have accompanied, nervously twitched up the collar of his
+ cloak, and his compressed lips told that he felt the anguish of the laugh
+ that circled round him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are coming! There they are!&rdquo; cried the boy, in ecstatic excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the way to bring up citizens,&rdquo; said the butcher, patting the
+ child&rsquo;s shoulder, and opening a still better view for him at the edge of
+ the wagon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd now abruptly gave way. The tumbril was in sight. A man, young
+ and handsome, standing erect and with folded arms in the fatal vehicle,
+ looked along the mob with an eye of careless scorn. Though he wore the
+ dress of a workman, the most unpractised glance could detect, in his mien
+ and bearing, one of the hated noblesse, whose characteristics came out
+ even more forcibly at the hour of death. On the lip was that smile of gay
+ and insolent levity, on the brow that gallant if reckless contempt of
+ physical danger, which had signalized the hero-coxcombs of the old regime.
+ Even the rude dress was worn with a certain air of foppery, and the bright
+ hair was carefully adjusted, as if for the holiday of the headsman. As the
+ eyes of the young noble wandered over the fierce faces of that horrible
+ assembly, while a roar of hideous triumph answered the look, in which for
+ the last time the gentilhomme spoke his scorn of the canaille, the child&rsquo;s
+ father lowered the collar of his cloak, and slowly raised his hat from his
+ brow. The eye of the marquis rested upon the countenance thus abruptly
+ shown to him, and which suddenly became individualized amongst the crowd,&mdash;that
+ eye instantly lost its calm contempt. A shudder passed visibly over his
+ frame, and his cheek grew blanched with terror. The mob saw the change,
+ but not the cause, and loud and louder rose their triumphant yell. The
+ sound recalled the pride of the young noble; he started, lifted his crest
+ erect, and sought again to meet the look which had appalled him. But he
+ could no longer single it out among the crowd. Hat and cloak once more hid
+ the face of the foe, and crowds of eager heads intercepted the view. The
+ young marquis&rsquo;s lips muttered; he bent down, and then the crowd caught
+ sight of his companion, who was being lifted up from the bottom of the
+ tumbril, where she had flung herself in horror and despair. The crowd grew
+ still in a moment as the pale face of one, familiar to most of them,
+ turned wildly from place to place in the dreadful scene, vainly and madly
+ through its silence imploring life and pity. How often had the sight of
+ that face, not then pale and haggard, but wreathed with rosy smiles,
+ sufficed to draw down the applause of the crowded theatre; how, then, had
+ those breasts, now fevered by the thirst of blood, held hearts spellbound
+ by the airy movements of that exquisite form writhing now in no stage-mime
+ agony! Plaything of the city, minion to the light amusement of the hour,
+ frail child of Cytherea and the Graces, what relentless fate has conducted
+ thee to the shambles? Butterfly of the summer, why should a nation rise to
+ break thee upon the wheel? A sense of the mockery of such an execution, of
+ the horrible burlesque that would sacrifice to the necessities of a mighty
+ people so slight an offering, made itself felt among the crowd. There was
+ a low murmur of shame and indignation. The dangerous sympathy of the mob
+ was perceived by the officer in attendance. Hastily he made the sign to
+ the headsman, and as he did so, a child&rsquo;s cry was heard in the English
+ tongue,&mdash;&ldquo;Mother! Mother!&rdquo; The father&rsquo;s hand grasped the child&rsquo;s arm
+ with an iron pressure; the crowd swam before the boy&rsquo;s eyes; the air
+ seemed to stifle him, and become blood-red; only through the hum and the
+ tramp and the roll of the drums he heard a low voice hiss in his ear
+ &ldquo;Learn how they perish who betray me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the father said these words, again his face was bare, and the woman,
+ whose ear amidst the dull insanity of fear had caught the cry of her
+ child&rsquo;s voice, saw that face, and fell back insensible in the arms of the
+ headsman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. A FAMILY GROUP.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One July evening, at the commencement of the present century, several
+ persons were somewhat picturesquely grouped along an old-fashioned terrace
+ which skirted the garden-side of a manor-house that had considerable
+ pretensions to baronial dignity. The architecture was of the most enriched
+ and elaborate style belonging to the reign of James the First: the porch,
+ opening on the terrace, with its mullion window above, was encased with
+ pilasters and reliefs at once ornamental and massive; and the large square
+ tower in which it was placed was surmounted by a stone falcon, whose
+ talons griped fiercely a scutcheon blazoned with the five-pointed stars
+ which heralds recognize as the arms of St. John. On either side this tower
+ extended long wings, the dark brickwork of which was relieved with noble
+ stone casements and carved pediments; the high roof was partially
+ concealed by a balustrade perforated not inelegantly into arabesque
+ designs; and what architects call &ldquo;the sky line&rdquo; was broken with imposing
+ effect by tall chimney-shafts of various form and fashion. These wings
+ terminated in angular towers similar to the centre, though kept duly
+ subordinate to it both in size and decoration, and crowned with stone
+ cupolas. A low balustrade, of later date than that which adorned the roof,
+ relieved by vases and statues, bordered the terrace, from which a double
+ flight of steps descended to a smooth lawn, intersected by broad
+ gravel-walks, shadowed by vast and stately cedars, and gently and
+ gradually mingling with the wilder scenery of the park, from which it was
+ only divided by a ha-ha.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the terrace, and under cover of a temporary awning, sat the owner,
+ Sir Miles St. John of Laughton, a comely old man, dressed with faithful
+ precision to the costume which he had been taught to consider appropriate
+ to his rank of gentleman, and which was not yet wholly obsolete and
+ eccentric. His hair, still thick and luxuriant, was carefully powdered,
+ and collected into a club behind; his nether man attired in gray breeches
+ and pearl-coloured silk stockings; his vest of silk, opening wide at the
+ breast, and showing a profusion of frill, slightly sprinkled with the
+ pulvilio of his favourite Martinique; his three-cornered hat, placed on a
+ stool at his side, with a gold-headed crutch-cane (hat made rather to be
+ carried in the hand than worn on the head), the diamond in his
+ shirt-breast, the diamond on his finger, the ruffles at his wrist,&mdash;all
+ bespoke the gallant who had chatted with Lord Chesterfield and supped with
+ Mrs. Clive. On a table before him were placed two or three decanters of
+ wine, the fruits of the season, an enamelled snuff-box in which was set
+ the portrait of a female (perhaps the Chloe or Phyllis of his early
+ love-ditties), a lighted taper, a small china jar containing tobacco, and
+ three or four pipes of homely clay,&mdash;for cherry-sticks and
+ meerschaums were not then in fashion, and Sir Miles St. John, once a gay
+ and sparkling beau, now a popular country gentleman, great at county
+ meetings and sheep-shearing festivals, had taken to smoking, as in harmony
+ with his bucolic transformation. An old setter lay dozing at his feet; a
+ small spaniel&mdash;old, too&mdash;was sauntering lazily in the immediate
+ neighbourhood, looking gravely out for such stray bits of biscuit as had
+ been thrown forth to provoke him to exercise, and which hitherto had
+ escaped his attention. Half seated, half reclined on the balustrade, apart
+ from the baronet, but within reach of his conversation, lolled a man in
+ the prime of life, with an air of unmistakable and sovereign elegance and
+ distinction. Mr. Vernon was a guest from London; and the London man,&mdash;the
+ man of clubs and dinners and routs, of noon loungings through Bond Street,
+ and nights spent with the Prince of Wales,&mdash;seemed stamped not more
+ upon the careful carelessness of his dress, and upon the worn expression
+ of his delicate features, than upon the listless ennui, which,
+ characterizing both his face and attitude, appeared to take pity on
+ himself for having been entrapped into the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet we should convey an erroneous impression of Mr. Vernon if we designed,
+ by the words &ldquo;listless ennui,&rdquo; to depict the slumberous insipidity of more
+ modern affectation; it was not the ennui of a man to whom ennui is
+ habitual, it was rather the indolent prostration that fills up the
+ intervals of excitement. At that day the word blast was unknown; men had
+ not enough sentiment for satiety. There was a kind of Bacchanalian fury in
+ the life led by those leaders of fashion, among whom Mr. Vernon was not
+ the least distinguished; it was a day of deep drinking, of high play, of
+ jovial, reckless dissipation, of strong appetite for fun and riot, of
+ four-in-hand coachmanship, of prize-fighting, of a strange sort of
+ barbarous manliness that strained every nerve of the constitution,&mdash;a
+ race of life in which three fourths of the competitors died half-way in
+ the hippodrome. What is now the Dandy was then the Buck; and something of
+ the Buck, though subdued by a chaster taste than fell to the ordinary
+ members of his class, was apparent in Mr. Vernon&rsquo;s costume as well as air.
+ Intricate folds of muslin, arranged in prodigious bows and ends, formed
+ the cravat, which Brummell had not yet arisen to reform; his hat, of a
+ very peculiar shape, low at the crown and broad at the brim, was worn with
+ an air of devil-me-care defiance; his watch-chain, garnished with a
+ profusion of rings and seals, hung low from his white waistcoat; and the
+ adaptation of his nankeen inexpressibles to his well-shaped limbs was a
+ masterpiece of art. His whole dress and air was not what could properly be
+ called foppish, it was rather what at that time was called &ldquo;rakish.&rdquo; Few
+ could so closely approach vulgarity without being vulgar: of that
+ privileged few, Mr. Vernon was one of the elect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther on, and near the steps descending into the garden, stood a man in
+ an attitude of profound abstraction, his arms folded, his eyes bent on the
+ ground, his brows slightly contracted; his dress was a plain black
+ surtout, and pantaloons of the same colour. Something both in the fashion
+ of the dress, and still more in the face of the man, bespoke the
+ foreigner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles St. John was an accomplished person for that time of day. He had
+ made the grand tour; he had bought pictures and statues; he spoke and
+ wrote well in the modern languages; and being rich, hospitable, social,
+ and not averse from the reputation of a patron, he had opened his house
+ freely to the host of emigrants whom the French Revolution had driven to
+ our coasts. Olivier Dalibard, a man of considerable learning and rare
+ scientific attainments, had been tutor in the house of the Marquis de G&mdash;&mdash;,
+ a French nobleman known many years before to the old baronet. The marquis
+ and his family had been among the first emigres at the outbreak of the
+ Revolution. The tutor had remained behind; for at that time no danger
+ appeared to threaten those who pretended to no other aristocracy than that
+ of letters. Contrary, as he said, with repentant modesty, to his own
+ inclinations, he had been compelled, not only for his own safety, but for
+ that of his friends, to take some part in the subsequent events of the
+ Revolution,&mdash;a part far from sincere, though so well had he simulated
+ the patriot that he had won the personal favour and protection of
+ Robespierre; nor till the fall of that virtuous exterminator had he
+ withdrawn from the game of politics and effected in disguise his escape to
+ England. As, whether from kindly or other motives, he had employed the
+ power of his position in the esteem of Robespierre to save certain noble
+ heads from the guillotine,&mdash;amongst others, the two brothers of the
+ Marquis de G&mdash;&mdash;, he was received with grateful welcome by his
+ former patrons, who readily pardoned his career of Jacobinism from their
+ belief in his excuses and their obligations to the services which that
+ very career had enabled him to render to their kindred. Olivier Dalibard
+ had accompanied the marquis and his family in one of the frequent visits
+ they paid to Laughton; and when the marquis finally quitted England, and
+ fixed his refuge at Vienna, with some connections of his wife&rsquo;s, he felt a
+ lively satisfaction at the thought of leaving his friend honourably, if
+ unambitiously, provided for as secretary and librarian to Sir Miles St.
+ John. In fact, the scholar, who possessed considerable powers of
+ fascination, had won no less favour with the English baronet than he had
+ with the French dictator. He played well both at chess and backgammon; he
+ was an extraordinary accountant; he had a variety of information upon all
+ points that rendered him more convenient than any cyclopaedia in Sir
+ Miles&rsquo;s library; and as he spoke both English and Italian with a
+ correctness and fluency extremely rare in a Frenchman, he was of
+ considerable service in teaching languages to, as well as directing the
+ general literary education of, Sir Miles&rsquo;s favourite niece, whom we shall
+ take an early opportunity to describe at length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, there had been one serious obstacle to Dalibard&rsquo;s acceptance
+ of the appointment offered to him by Sir Miles. Dalibard had under his
+ charge a young orphan boy of some ten or twelve years old,&mdash;a boy
+ whom Sir Miles was not long in suspecting to be the scholar&rsquo;s son. This
+ child had come from France with Dalibard, and while the marquis&rsquo;s family
+ were in London, remained under the eye and care of his guardian or father,
+ whichever was the true connection between the two. But this
+ superintendence became impossible if Dalibard settled in Hampshire with
+ Sir Miles St. John, and the boy remained in London; nor, though the
+ generous old gentleman offered to pay for the child&rsquo;s schooling, would
+ Dalibard consent to part with him. At last the matter was arranged: the
+ boy was invited to Laughton on a visit, and was so lively, yet so well
+ mannered, that he became a favourite, and was now fairly quartered in the
+ house with his reputed father; and not to make an unnecessary mystery of
+ this connection, such was in truth the relationship between Olivier
+ Dalibard and Honore Gabriel Varney,&mdash;a name significant of the double
+ and illegitimate origin: a French father, an English mother. Dropping,
+ however, the purely French appellation of Honore, he went familiarly by
+ that of Gabriel. Half-way down the steps stood the lad, pencil and tablet
+ in hand, sketching. Let us look over his shoulder: it is his father&rsquo;s
+ likeness,&mdash;a countenance in itself not very remarkable at the first
+ glance, for the features were small; but when examined, it was one that
+ most persons, women especially, would have pronounced handsome, and to
+ which none could deny the higher praise of thought and intellect. A native
+ of Provence, with some Italian blood in his veins,&mdash;for his
+ grandfather, a merchant of Marseilles, had married into a Florentine
+ family settled at Leghorn,&mdash;the dark complexion common with those in
+ the South had been subdued, probably by the habits of the student, into a
+ bronze and steadfast paleness which seemed almost fair by the contrast of
+ the dark hair which he wore unpowdered, and the still darker brows which
+ hung thick and prominent over clear gray eyes. Compared with the features,
+ the skull was disproportionally large, both behind and before; and a
+ physiognomist would have drawn conclusions more favourable to the power
+ than the tenderness of the Provencal&rsquo;s character from the compact
+ closeness of the lips and the breadth and massiveness of the iron jaw. But
+ the son&rsquo;s sketch exaggerated every feature, and gave to the expression a
+ malignant and terrible irony not now, at least, apparent in the quiet and
+ meditative aspect. Gabriel himself, as he stood, would have been a more
+ tempting study to many an artist. It is true that he was small for his
+ years; but his frame had a vigour in its light proportions which came from
+ a premature and almost adolescent symmetry of shape and muscular
+ development. The countenance, however, had much of effeminate beauty: the
+ long hair reached the shoulders, but did not curl,&mdash;straight, fine,
+ and glossy as a girl&rsquo;s, and in colour of the pale auburn, tinged with red,
+ which rarely alters in hue as childhood matures to man; the complexion was
+ dazzlingly clear and fair. Nevertheless, there was something so hard in
+ the lip, so bold, though not open, in the brow, that the girlishness of
+ complexion, and even of outline, could not leave, on the whole, an
+ impression of effeminacy. All the hereditary keenness and intelligence
+ were stamped upon his face at that moment; but the expression had also a
+ large share of the very irony and malice which he had conveyed to his
+ caricature. The drawing itself was wonderfully vigorous and distinct;
+ showing great artistic promise, and done with the rapidity and ease which
+ betrayed practice. Suddenly his father turned, and with as sudden a
+ quickness the boy concealed his tablet in his vest; and the sinister
+ expression of his face smoothed into a timorous smile as his eye
+ encountered Dalibard&rsquo;s. The father beckoned to the boy, who approached
+ with alacrity. &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; whispered the Frenchman, in his own tongue,
+ &ldquo;where are they at this moment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy pointed silently towards one of the cedars. Dalibard mused an
+ instant, and then, slowly descending the steps, took his noiseless way
+ over the smooth turf towards the tree. Its boughs drooped low and spread
+ wide; and not till he was within a few paces of the spot could his eye
+ perceive two forms seated on a bench under the dark green canopy. He then
+ paused and contemplated them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one was a young man whose simple dress and subdued air strongly
+ contrasted the artificial graces and the modish languor of Mr. Vernon; but
+ though wholly without that nameless distinction which sometimes
+ characterizes those conscious of pure race and habituated to the
+ atmosphere of courts, he had at least Nature&rsquo;s stamp of aristocracy in a
+ form eminently noble, and features of manly, but surpassing beauty, which
+ were not rendered less engaging by an expression of modest timidity. He
+ seemed to be listening with thoughtful respect to his companion, a young
+ female by his side, who was speaking to him with an earnestness visible in
+ her gestures and her animated countenance. And though there was much to
+ notice in the various persons scattered over the scene, not one, perhaps,&mdash;not
+ the graceful Vernon, not the thoughtful scholar, nor his fair-haired,
+ hard-lipped son, not even the handsome listener she addressed,&mdash;no,
+ not one there would so have arrested the eye, whether of a physiognomist
+ or a casual observer, as that young girl, Sir Miles St. John&rsquo;s favourite
+ niece and presumptive heiress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as at that moment the expression of her face differed from that
+ habitual to it, we defer its description.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not,&rdquo; such were her words to her companion,&mdash;&ldquo;do not alarm
+ yourself by exaggerating the difficulties; do not even contemplate them:
+ those be my care. Mainwaring, when I loved you; when, seeing that your
+ diffidence or your pride forbade you to be the first to speak, I
+ overstepped the modesty or the dissimulation of my sex; when I said,
+ &lsquo;Forget that I am the reputed heiress of Laughton, see in me but the
+ faults and merits of the human being, of the wild unregulated girl, see in
+ me but Lucretia Clavering&rsquo;&rdquo; (here her cheeks blushed, and her voice sank
+ into a lower and more tremulous whisper) &ldquo;&lsquo;and love her if you can!&rsquo;&mdash;when
+ I went thus far, do not think I had not measured all the difficulties in
+ the way of our union, and felt that I could surmount them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; answered Mainwaring, hesitatingly, &ldquo;can you conceive it possible
+ that your uncle ever will consent? Is not pride&mdash;the pride of family&mdash;almost
+ the leading attribute of his character? Did he not discard your mother&mdash;his
+ own sister&mdash;from his house and heart for no other offence but a
+ second marriage which he deemed beneath her? Has he ever even consented to
+ see, much less to receive, your half-sister, the child of that marriage?
+ Is not his very affection for you interwoven with his pride in you, with
+ his belief in your ambition? Has he not summoned your cousin, Mr. Vernon,
+ for the obvious purpose of favouring a suit which he considers worthy of
+ you, and which, if successful, will unite the two branches of his ancient
+ house? How is it possible that he can ever hear without a scorn and
+ indignation which would be fatal to your fortunes that your heart has
+ presumed to choose, in William Mainwaring, a man without ancestry or
+ career?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not without career,&rdquo; interrupted Lucretia, proudly. &ldquo;Do you think if you
+ were master of Laughton that your career would not be more brilliant than
+ that of yon indolent, luxurious coxcomb? Do you think that I could have
+ been poor-hearted enough to love you if I had not recognized in you
+ energies and talents that correspond with my own ambition? For I am
+ ambitious, as you know, and therefore my mind, as well as my heart, went
+ with my love for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Lucretia, but can Sir Miles St. John see my future rise in my present
+ obscurity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not say that he can, or will; but if you love me, we can wait. Do
+ not fear the rivalry of Mr. Vernon. I shall know how to free myself from
+ so tame a peril. We can wait,&mdash;my uncle is old; his habits preclude
+ the chance of a much longer life; he has already had severe attacks. We
+ are young, dear Mainwaring: what is a year or two to those who hope?&rdquo;
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s face fell, and a displeasing chill passed through his veins.
+ Could this young creature, her uncle&rsquo;s petted and trusted darling, she who
+ should be the soother of his infirmities, the prop of his age, the
+ sincerest mourner at his grave, weigh coldly thus the chances of his
+ death, and point at once to the altar and the tomb?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was saved from the embarrassment of reply by Dalibard&rsquo;s approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More than half an hour absent,&rdquo; said the scholar, in his own language,
+ with a smile; and drawing out his watch, he placed it before their eyes.
+ &ldquo;Do you not think that all will miss you? Do you suppose, Miss Clavering,
+ that your uncle has not ere this asked for his fair niece? Come, and
+ forestall him.&rdquo; He offered his arm to Lucretia as he spoke. She hesitated
+ a moment, and then, turning to Mainwaring, held out her hand. He pressed
+ it, though scarcely with a lover&rsquo;s warmth; and as she walked back to the
+ terrace with Dalibard, the young man struck slowly into the opposite
+ direction, and passing by a gate over a foot-bridge that led from the
+ ha-ha into the park, bent his way towards a lake which gleamed below at
+ some distance, half-concealed by groves of venerable trees rich with the
+ prodigal boughs of summer. Meanwhile, as they passed towards the house,
+ Dalibard, still using his native tongue, thus accosted his pupil:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must pardon me if I think more of your interests than you do; and
+ pardon me no less if I encroach on your secrets and alarm your pride. This
+ young man,&mdash;can you be guilty of the folly of more than a passing
+ caprice for his society, of more than the amusement of playing with his
+ vanity? Even if that be all, beware of entangling yourself in your own
+ meshes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do in truth offend me,&rdquo; said Lucretia, with calm haughtiness, &ldquo;and
+ you have not the right thus to speak to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the right,&rdquo; repeated the Provencal, mournfully, &ldquo;not the right! Then,
+ indeed, I am mistaken in my pupil. Do you consider that I would have
+ lowered my pride to remain here as a dependent; that, conscious of
+ attainments, and perhaps of abilities, that should win their way, even in
+ exile, to distinction, I would have frittered away my life in these rustic
+ shades,&mdash;if I had not formed in you a deep and absorbing interest? In
+ that interest I ground my right to warn and counsel you. I saw, or fancied
+ I saw, in you a mind congenial to my own; a mind above the frivolities of
+ your sex,&mdash;a mind, in short, with the grasp and energy of a man&rsquo;s.
+ You were then but a child, you are scarcely yet a woman; yet have I not
+ given to your intellect the strong food on which the statesmen of Florence
+ fed their pupil-princes, or the noble Jesuits the noble men who were
+ destined to extend the secret empire of the imperishable Loyola?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You gave me the taste for a knowledge rare in my sex, I own,&rdquo; answered
+ Lucretia, with a slight tone of regret in her voice: &ldquo;and in the knowledge
+ you have communicated I felt a charm that at times seems to me to be only
+ fatal. You have confounded in my mind evil and good, or rather, you have
+ left both good and evil as dead ashes, as the dust and cinder of a
+ crucible. You have made intellect the only conscience. Of late, I wish
+ that my tutor had been a village priest!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of late, since you have listened to the pastorals of that meek Corydon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dare you despise him? And for what? That he is good and honest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I despise him, not because he is good and honest, but because he is of
+ the common herd of men, without aim or character. And it is for this youth
+ that you will sacrifice your fortunes, your ambition, the station you were
+ born to fill and have been reared to improve,&mdash;this youth in whom
+ there is nothing but the lap-dog&rsquo;s merit, sleekness and beauty! Ay, frown,&mdash;the
+ frown betrays you; you love him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I do?&rdquo; said Lucretia, raising her tall form to its utmost height,
+ and haughtily facing her inquisitor,&mdash;&ldquo;and, if I do, what then? Is he
+ unworthy of me? Converse with him, and you will find that the noble form
+ conceals as high a spirit. He wants but wealth: I can give it to him. If
+ his temper is gentle, I can prompt and guide it to fame and power. He at
+ least has education and eloquence and mind. What has Mr. Vernon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vernon? I did not speak of him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia gazed hard upon the Provencal&rsquo;s countenance,&mdash;gazed with
+ that unpitying air of triumph with which a woman who detects a power over
+ the heart she does not desire to conquer exults in defeating the reasons
+ that heart appears to her to prompt. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said in a calm voice, to
+ which the venom of secret irony gave stinging significance,&mdash;&ldquo;no, you
+ spoke not of Mr. Vernon; you thought that if I looked round, if I looked
+ nearer, I might have a fairer choice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are cruel, you are unjust,&rdquo; said Dalibard, falteringly. &ldquo;If I once
+ presumed for a moment, have I repeated my offence? But,&rdquo; he added
+ hurriedly, &ldquo;in me,&mdash;much as you appear to despise me,&mdash;in me, at
+ least, you would have risked none of the dangers that beset you if you
+ seriously set your heart on Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think my uncle would be proud to give my hand to M. Olivier
+ Dalibard?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think and I know,&rdquo; answered the Provencal, gravely, and disregarding
+ the taunt, &ldquo;that if you had deigned to render me&mdash;poor exile that I
+ am!&mdash;the most enviable of men, you had still been the heiress of
+ Laughton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you have said and urged,&rdquo; said Lucretia, with evident curiosity in her
+ voice; &ldquo;yet how, and by what art,&mdash;wise and subtle as you are,&mdash;could
+ you have won my uncle&rsquo;s consent?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my secret,&rdquo; returned Dalibard, gloomily; &ldquo;and since the madness I
+ indulged is forever over; since I have so schooled my heart that nothing,
+ despite your sarcasm, save an affectionate interest which I may call
+ paternal rests there,&mdash;let us pass from this painful subject. Oh, my
+ dear pupil, be warned in time; know love for what it really is, in the
+ dark and complicated history of actual life,&mdash;a brief enchantment,
+ not to be disdained, but not to be considered the all-in all. Look round
+ the world; contemplate all those who have married from passion: ten years
+ afterwards, whither has the passion flown? With a few, indeed, where there
+ is community of object and character, new excitements, new aims and hopes,
+ spring up; and having first taken root in passion, the passion continues
+ to shoot out in their fresh stems and fibres. But deceive yourself not;
+ there is no such community between you and Mainwaring. What you call his
+ goodness, you will learn hereafter to despise as feeble; and what in
+ reality is your mental power he soon, too soon, will shudder at as
+ unwomanly and hateful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; cried Lucretia, tremulously. &ldquo;Hold! and if he does, I shall owe
+ his hate to you,&mdash;to your lessons; to your deadly influence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lucretia, no; the seeds were in you. Can cultivation force from the soil
+ that which it is against the nature of the soil to bear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will pluck out the weeds! I will transform myself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child, I defy you!&rdquo; said the scholar, with a smile that gave to his face
+ the expression his son had conveyed to it. &ldquo;I have warned you, and my task
+ is done.&rdquo; With that he bowed, and leaving her, was soon by the side of Sir
+ Miles St. John; and the baronet and his librarian, a few moments after,
+ entered the house and sat down to chess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But during the dialogues we have sketched, we must not suppose that Sir
+ Miles himself had been so wholly absorbed in the sensual gratification
+ bestowed upon Europe by the immortal Raleigh as to neglect his guest and
+ kinsman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so, Charley Vernon, it is not the fashion to smoke in Lunnon.&rdquo; Thus
+ Sir Miles pronounced the word, according to the Euphuism of his youth, and
+ which, even at that day, still lingered in courtly jargon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir. However, to console us, we have most other vices in full force.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t doubt it; they say the prince&rsquo;s set exhaust life pretty quickly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It certainly requires the fortune of an earl and the constitution of a
+ prize-fighter to live with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet methinks, Master Charley, you have neither the one nor the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And therefore I see before me, and at no very great distance, the Bench
+ and&mdash;a consumption!&rdquo; answered Vernon, suppressing a slight yawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;T is a pity, for you had a fine estate, properly managed; and in spite
+ of your faults, you have the heart of a true gentleman. Come, come!&rdquo; and
+ the old man spoke with tenderness, &ldquo;you are young enough yet to reform. A
+ prudent marriage and a good wife will save both your health and your
+ acres.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you think so highly of marriage, my dear Sir Miles, it is a wonder you
+ did not add to your precepts the value of your example.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jackanapes! I had not your infirmities: I never was a spendthrift, and I
+ have a constitution of iron!&rdquo; There was a pause. &ldquo;Charles,&rdquo; continued Sir
+ Miles, musingly, &ldquo;there is many an earl with a less fortune than the
+ conjoined estates of Vernon Grange and Laughton Hall. You must already
+ have understood me: it is my intention to leave my estates to Lucretia; it
+ is my wish, nevertheless, to think you will not be the worse for my will.
+ Frankly, if you can like my niece, win her; settle here while I live, put
+ the Grange to nurse, and recruit yourself by fresh air and field-sports.
+ Zounds, Charles, I love you, and that&rsquo;s the truth! Give me your hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a grateful heart with it, sir,&rdquo; said Vernon, warmly, evidently
+ affected, as he started from his indolent position and took the hand
+ extended to him. &ldquo;Believe me, I do not covet your wealth, nor do I envy my
+ cousin anything so much as the first place in your regard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prettily said, my boy, and I don&rsquo;t suspect you of insincerity. What think
+ you, then, of my plan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vernon seemed embarrassed; but recovering himself with his usual ease,
+ he replied archly: &ldquo;Perhaps, sir, it will be of little use to know what I
+ think of your plan; my fair cousin may have upset it already.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, sir! let me look at you. So, so! you are not jesting. What the deuce
+ do you mean? &lsquo;Gad, man, speak out!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you not think that Mr. Monderling&mdash;Mandolin&mdash;what&rsquo;s his
+ name, eh?&mdash;do you not think that he is a very handsome young fellow?&rdquo;
+ said Mr. Vernon, drawing out his snuffbox and offering it to his kinsman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn your snuff,&rdquo; quoth Sir Miles, in great choler, as he rejected the
+ proffered courtesy with a vehemence that sent half the contents of the box
+ upon the joint eyes and noses of the two canine favourites dozing at his
+ feet. The setter started up in an agony; the spaniel wheezed and sniffled
+ and ran off, stopping every moment to take his head between his paws. The
+ old gentleman continued without heeding the sufferings of his dumb
+ friends,&mdash;a symptom of rare discomposure on his part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to insinuate, Mr. Vernon, that my niece&mdash;my elder niece,
+ Lucretia Clavering&mdash;condescends to notice the looks, good or bad, of
+ Mr. Mainwaring? &lsquo;Sdeath, sir, he is the son of a land-agent! Sir, he is
+ intended for trade! Sir, his highest ambition is to be partner in some
+ fifth-rate mercantile house!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sir Miles,&rdquo; replied Mr. Vernon, as he continued to brush away,
+ with his scented handkerchief, such portions of the prince&rsquo;s mixture as
+ his nankeen inexpressibles had diverted from the sensual organs of Dash
+ and Ponto&mdash;&ldquo;my dear Sir Miles, ca n&rsquo;empeche pas le sentiment!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Empeche the fiddlestick! You don&rsquo;t know Lucretia. There are many girls,
+ indeed, who might not be trusted near any handsome flute-playing spark,
+ with black eyes and white teeth; but Lucretia is not one of those; she has
+ spirit and ambition that would never stoop to a mesalliance; she has the
+ mind and will of a queen,&mdash;old Queen Bess, I believe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is saying much for her talent, sir; but if so, Heaven help her
+ intended! I am duly grateful for the blessings you propose me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite his anger, the old gentleman could not help smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, to confess the truth, she is hard to manage; but we men of the world
+ know how to govern women, I hope,&mdash;much more how to break in a girl
+ scarce out of her teens. As for this fancy of yours, it is sheer folly:
+ Lucretia knows my mind. She has seen her mother&rsquo;s fate; she has seen her
+ sister an exile from my house. Why? For no fault of hers, poor thing, but
+ because she is the child of disgrace, and the mother&rsquo;s sin is visited on
+ her daughter&rsquo;s head. I am a good-natured man, I fancy, as men go; but I am
+ old-fashioned enough to care for my race. If Lucretia demeaned herself to
+ love, to encourage, that lad, why, I would strike her from my will, and
+ put your name where I have placed hers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Vernon, gravely, and throwing aside all affectation of manner,
+ &ldquo;this becomes serious; and I have no right even to whisper a doubt by
+ which it now seems I might benefit. I think it imprudent, if you wish Miss
+ Clavering to regard me impartially as a suitor to her hand, to throw her,
+ at her age, in the way of a man far superior to myself, and to most men,
+ in personal advantages,&mdash;a man more of her own years, well educated,
+ well mannered, with no evidence of his inferior birth in his appearance or
+ his breeding. I have not the least ground for supposing that he has made
+ the slightest impression on Miss Clavering, and if he has, it would be,
+ perhaps, but a girl&rsquo;s innocent and thoughtless fancy, easily shaken off by
+ time and worldly reflection; but pardon me if I say bluntly that should
+ that be so, you would be wholly unjustified in punishing, even in blaming,
+ her,&mdash;it is yourself you must blame for your own carelessness and
+ that forgetful blindness to human nature and youthful emotions which, I
+ must say, is the less pardonable in one who has known the world so
+ intimately.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charles Vernon,&rdquo; said the old baronet, &ldquo;give me your hand again! I was
+ right, at least, when I said you had the heart of a true gentleman. Drop
+ this subject for the present. Who has just left Lucretia yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your protege, the Frenchman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, he, at least, is not blind; go and join Lucretia!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vernon bowed, emptied the remains of the Madeira into a tumbler, drank the
+ contents at a draught, and sauntered towards Lucretia; but she, perceiving
+ his approach, crossed abruptly into one of the alleys that led to the
+ other side of the house, and he was either too indifferent or too
+ well-bred to force upon her the companionship which she so evidently
+ shunned. He threw himself at length upon one of the benches on the lawn,
+ and leaning his head upon his hand, fell into reflections which, had he
+ spoken, would have shaped themselves somewhat thus into words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I must take that girl as the price of this fair heritage, shall I gain
+ or lose? I grant that she has the finest neck and shoulders I ever saw out
+ of marble; but far from being in love with her, she gives me a feeling
+ like fear and aversion. Add to this that she has evidently no kinder
+ sentiment for me than I for her; and if she once had a heart, that young
+ gentleman has long since coaxed it away. Pleasant auspices, these, for
+ matrimony to a poor invalid who wishes at least to decline and to die in
+ peace! Moreover, if I were rich enough to marry as I pleased; if I were
+ what, perhaps, I ought to be, heir to Laughton,&mdash;why, there is a
+ certain sweet Mary in the world, whose eyes are softer than Lucretia
+ Clavering&rsquo;s. But that is a dream! On the other hand, if I do not win this
+ girl, and my poor kinsman give her all, or nearly all, his possessions,
+ Vernon Grange goes to the usurers, and the king will find a lodging for
+ myself. What does it matter? I cannot live above two or three years at the
+ most, and can only hope, therefore, that dear stout old Sir Miles may
+ outlive me. At thirty-three I have worn out fortune and life; little
+ pleasure could Laughton give me,&mdash;brief pain the Bench. &lsquo;Fore Gad,
+ the philosophy of the thing is on the whole against sour looks and the
+ noose!&rdquo; Thus deciding in the progress of his revery, he smiled, and
+ changed his position. The sun had set, the twilight was over, the moon
+ rose in splendour from amidst a thick copse of mingled beech and oak; the
+ beams fell full on the face of the muser, and the face seemed yet paler
+ and the exhaustion of premature decay yet more evident, by that still and
+ melancholy light: all ruins gain dignity by the moon. This was a ruin
+ nobler than that which painters place on their canvas,&mdash;the ruin, not
+ of stone and brick, but of humanity and spirit; the wreck of man
+ prematurely old, not stricken by great sorrow, not bowed by great toil,
+ but fretted and mined away by small pleasures and poor excitements,&mdash;small
+ and poor, but daily, hourly, momently at their gnome-like work. Something
+ of the gravity and the true lesson of the hour and scene, perhaps, forced
+ itself upon a mind little given to sentiment, for Vernon rose languidly
+ and muttered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My poor mother hoped better things from me. It is well, after all, that
+ it is broken off with Mary. Why should there be any one to weep for me? I
+ can the better die smiling, as I have lived.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, as it is necessary we should follow each of the principal
+ characters we have introduced through the course of an evening more or
+ less eventful in the destiny of all, we return to Mainwaring and accompany
+ him to the lake at the bottom of the park, which he reached as its smooth
+ surface glistened in the last beams of the sun. He saw, as he neared the
+ water, the fish sporting in the pellucid tide; the dragonfly darted and
+ hovered in the air; the tedded grass beneath his feet gave forth the
+ fragrance of crushed thyme and clover; the swan paused, as if slumbering
+ on the wave; the linnet and finch sang still from the neighbouring copses;
+ and the heavy bees were winging their way home with a drowsy murmur. All
+ around were images of that unspeakable peace which Nature whispers to
+ those attuned to her music; all fitted to lull, but not to deject, the
+ spirit,&mdash;images dear to the holiday of the world-worn man, to the
+ contemplation of serene and retired age, to the boyhood of poets, to the
+ youth of lovers. But Mainwaring&rsquo;s step was heavy, and his brow clouded,
+ and Nature that evening was dumb to him. At the margin of the lake stood a
+ solitary angler who now, his evening&rsquo;s task done, was employed in
+ leisurely disjointing his rod and whistling with much sweetness an air
+ from one of Izaak Walton&rsquo;s songs. Mainwaring reached the angler and laid
+ his hand on his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sport, Ardworth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A few large roach with the fly, and one pike with a gudgeon,&mdash;a
+ noble fellow! Look at him! He was lying under the reeds yonder; I saw his
+ green back, and teased him into biting. A heavenly evening! I wonder you
+ did not follow my example, and escape from a set where neither you nor I
+ can feel very much at home, to this green banquet of Nature, in which at
+ least no man sits below the salt-cellar. The birds are an older family
+ than the St. Johns, but they don&rsquo;t throw their pedigree in our teeth,
+ Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay, my good friend, you wrong old Sir Miles; proud he is, no doubt,
+ but neither you nor I have had to complain of his insolence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of his insolence, certainly not; of his condescension, yes! Hang it,
+ William, it is his very politeness that galls me. Don&rsquo;t you observe that
+ with Vernon, or Lord A&mdash;&mdash;, or Lord B&mdash;&mdash;, or Mr. C&mdash;&mdash;,
+ he is easy and off-hand; calls them by their names, pats them on the
+ shoulder, rates them, and swears at them if they vex him. But with you and
+ me and his French parasite, it is all stately decorum and punctilious
+ courtesy: &lsquo;Mr. Mainwaring, I am delighted to see you;&rsquo; &lsquo;Mr. Ardworth, as
+ you are so near, dare I ask you to ring the bell?&rsquo; &lsquo;Monsieur Dalibard,
+ with the utmost deference, I venture to disagree with you.&rsquo; However, don&rsquo;t
+ let my foolish susceptibility ruffle your pride. And you, too, have a
+ worthy object in view, which might well detain you from roach and
+ jack-fish. Have you stolen your interview with the superb Lucretia?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, stolen, as you say; and, like all thieves not thoroughly hardened, I
+ am ashamed of my gains.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit down, my boy,&mdash;this is a bank in ten thousand; there, that old
+ root to lean your elbow on, this soft moss for your cushion: sit down and
+ confess. You have something on your mind that preys on you; we are old
+ college friends,&mdash;out with it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no resisting you, Ardworth,&rdquo; said Mainwaring, smiling, and drawn
+ from his reserve and his gloom by the frank good-humour of his companion.
+ &ldquo;I should like, I own, to make a clean breast of it; and perhaps I may
+ profit by your advice. You know, in the first place, that after I left
+ college, my father, seeing me indisposed for the Church, to which he had
+ always destined me in his own heart, and for which, indeed, he had gone
+ out of his way to maintain me at the University, gave me the choice of his
+ own business as a surveyor and land-agent, or of entering into the
+ mercantile profession. I chose the latter, and went to Southampton, where
+ we have a relation in business, to be initiated into the elementary
+ mysteries. There I became acquainted with a good clergyman and his wife,
+ and in that house I passed a great part of my time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the hope, I trust, on better consideration, of gratifying your
+ father&rsquo;s ambition and learning how to starve with gentility on a cure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not much of that, I fear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the clergyman had a daughter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are nearer the mark now,&rdquo; said Mainwaring, colouring,&mdash;&ldquo;though
+ it was not his daughter. A young lady lived in his family, not even
+ related to him; she was placed there with a certain allowance by a rich
+ relation. In a word, I admired, perhaps I loved, this young person; but
+ she was without an independence, and I not yet provided even with the
+ substitute of money,&mdash;a profession. I fancied (do not laugh at my
+ vanity) that my feelings might be returned. I was in alarm for her as well
+ as myself; I sounded the clergyman as to the chance of obtaining the
+ consent of her rich relation, and was informed that he thought it
+ hopeless. I felt I had no right to invite her to poverty and ruin, and
+ still less to entangle further (if I had chanced to touch at all) her
+ affection. I made an excuse to my father to leave the town, and returned
+ home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prudent and honourable enough, so far; unlike me,&mdash;I should have run
+ off with the girl, if she loved me, and old Plutus, the rascal, might have
+ done his worst against Cupid. But I interrupt you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I came back when the county was greatly agitated,&mdash;public meetings,
+ speeches, mobs; a sharp election going on. My father had always taken keen
+ interest in politics; he was of the same party as Sir Miles, who, you
+ know, is red-hot upon politics. I was easily led&mdash;partly by ambition,
+ partly by the effect of example, partly by the hope to give a new turn to
+ my thoughts&mdash;to make an appearance in public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a devilish creditable one too! Why, man, your speeches have been
+ quoted with rapture by the London papers. Horribly aristocratic and
+ Pittish, it is true,&mdash;I think differently; but every man to his
+ taste. Well&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My attempts, such as they were, procured me the favour of Sir Miles. He
+ had long been acquainted with my father, who had helped him in his own
+ elections years ago. He seemed cordially delighted to patronize the son;
+ he invited me to visit him at Laughton, and hinted to my father that I was
+ formed for something better than a counting-house: my poor father was
+ intoxicated. In a word, here I am; here, often for days, almost weeks,
+ together, have I been a guest, always welcomed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You pause. This is the primordium,&mdash;now comes the confession, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, one half the confession is over. It was my most unmerited fortune to
+ attract the notice of Miss Clavering. Do not fancy me so self-conceited as
+ to imagine that I should ever have presumed so high, but for&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But for encouragement,&mdash;I understand! Well, she is a magnificent
+ creature, in her way, and I do not wonder that she drove the poor little
+ girl at Southampton out of your thoughts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! but there is the sore,&mdash;I am not sure that she has done so.
+ Ardworth, I may trust you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With everything but half-a-guinea. I would not promise to be rock against
+ so great a temptation!&rdquo; and Ardworth turned his empty pockets inside out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tush! be serious, or I go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Serious! With pockets like these, the devil&rsquo;s in it if I am not serious.
+ Perge, precor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ardworth, then,&rdquo; said Mainwaring, with great emotion, &ldquo;I confide to you
+ the secret trouble of my heart. This girl at Southampton is Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ sister,&mdash;her half-sister; the rich relation on whose allowance she
+ lives is Sir Miles St. John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whew! my own poor dear little cousin, by the father&rsquo;s side! Mainwaring, I
+ trust you have not deceived me; you have not amused yourself with breaking
+ Susan&rsquo;s heart? For a heart, and an honest, simple, English girl&rsquo;s heart
+ she has.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven forbid! I tell you I have never even declared my love; and if love
+ it were, I trust it is over. But when Sir Miles was first kind to me,
+ first invited me, I own I had the hope to win his esteem; and since he had
+ always made so strong and cruel a distinction between Lucretia and Susan,
+ I thought it not impossible that he might consent at last to my union with
+ the niece he had refused to receive and acknowledge. But even while the
+ hope was in me, I was drawn on, I was entangled, I was spell-bound, I know
+ not how or why; but, to close my confidence, while still doubtful whether
+ my own heart is free from the remembrance of the one sister, I am pledged
+ to the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth looked down gravely and remained silent. He was a joyous,
+ careless, reckless youth, with unsteady character and pursuits, and with
+ something of vague poetry, much of unaccommodating pride about his nature,&mdash;one
+ of those youths little likely to do what is called well in the world; not
+ persevering enough for an independent career, too blunt and honest for a
+ servile one. But it was in the very disposition of such a person to judge
+ somewhat harshly of Mainwaring&rsquo;s disclosure, and not easily to comprehend
+ what, after all, was very natural,&mdash;how a young man, new to life,
+ timid by character, and of an extreme susceptibility to the fear of giving
+ pain, had, in the surprise, the gratitude, the emotion, of an avowed
+ attachment from a girl far above him in worldly position, been forced, by
+ receiving, to seem, at least, to return her affection. And, indeed, though
+ not wholly insensible to the brilliant prospects opened to him in such a
+ connection, yet, to do him justice, Mainwaring would have been equally
+ entangled by a similar avowal from a girl more his equal in the world. It
+ was rather from an amiability bordering upon weakness, than from any more
+ degrading moral imperfections, that he had been betrayed into a position
+ which neither contented his heart nor satisfied his conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With far less ability than his friend, Ardworth had more force and
+ steadiness in his nature, and was wholly free from that morbid delicacy of
+ temperament to which susceptible and shy persons owe much of their errors
+ and misfortunes. He said, therefore, after a long pause: &ldquo;My good fellow,
+ to be plain with you, I cannot say that your confession has improved you
+ in my estimation; but that is perhaps because of the bluntness of my
+ understanding. I could quite comprehend your forgetting Susan (and, after
+ all, I am left in doubt as to the extent of her conquest over you) for the
+ very different charms of her sister. On the other hand, I could still
+ better understand that, having once fancied Susan, you could not be
+ commanded into love for Lucretia. But I do not comprehend your feeling
+ love for one, and making love to the other,&mdash;which is the long and
+ short of the business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not exactly the true statement,&rdquo; answered Mainwaring, with a
+ powerful effort at composure. &ldquo;There are moments when, listening to
+ Lucretia, when, charmed by that softness which, contrasting the rest of
+ her character, she exhibits to none but me, struck by her great mental
+ powers, proud of an unsought triumph over such a being, I feel as if I
+ could love none but her; then suddenly her mood changes,&mdash;she utters
+ sentiments that chill and revolt me; the very beauty seems vanished from
+ her face. I recall with a sigh the simple sweetness of Susan, and I feel
+ as if I deceived both my mistress and myself. Perhaps, however, all the
+ circumstances of this connection tend to increase my doubts. It is
+ humiliating to me to know that I woo clandestinely and upon sufferance;
+ that I am stealing, as it were, into a fortune; that I am eating Sir
+ Miles&rsquo;s bread, and yet counting upon his death; and this shame in myself
+ may make me unconsciously unjust to Lucretia. But it is useless to reprove
+ me for what is past; and though I at first imagined you could advise me
+ for the future, I now see, too clearly, that no advice could avail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grant that too; for all you require is to make up your mind to be
+ fairly off with the old love, or fairly on with the new. However, now you
+ have stated your case thus frankly, if you permit me, I will take
+ advantage of the strange chance of finding myself here, and watch, ponder,
+ and counsel, if I can. This Lucretia, I own it, puzzles and perplexes me;
+ but though no Oedipus, I will not take fright at the sphinx. I suppose now
+ it is time to return. They expect some of the neighbours to drink tea, and
+ I must doff my fishing-jacket. Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they strolled towards the house, Ardworth broke a silence which had
+ lasted for some moments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how is that dear good Fielden? I ought to have guessed him at once,
+ when you spoke of your clergyman and his young charge; but I did not know
+ he was at Southampton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has exchanged his living for a year, on account of his wife&rsquo;s health,
+ and rather, I think also, with the wish to bring poor Susan nearer to
+ Laughton, in the chance of her uncle seeing her. But you are, then,
+ acquainted with Fielden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Acquainted!&mdash;my best friend. He was my tutor, and prepared me for
+ Caius College. I owe him, not only the little learning I have, but the
+ little good that is left in me. I owe to him apparently, also, whatever
+ chance of bettering my prospects may arise from my visit to Laughton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Notwithstanding our intimacy, we have, like most young men not related,
+ spoken so little of our family matters that I do not now understand how
+ you are cousin to Susan, nor what, to my surprise and delight, brought you
+ hither three days ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, my story is easier to explain than your own, William. Here goes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as Ardworth&rsquo;s recital partially involves references to family matters
+ not yet sufficiently known to the reader, we must be pardoned if we assume
+ to ourselves his task of narrator, and necessarily enlarge on his details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The branch of the illustrious family of St. John represented by Sir Miles,
+ diverged from the parent stem of the Lords of Bletshoe. With them it
+ placed at the summit of its pedigree the name of William de St. John, the
+ Conqueror&rsquo;s favourite and trusted warrior, and Oliva de Filgiers. With
+ them it blazoned the latter alliance, which gave to Sir Oliver St. John
+ the lands of Bletshoe by the hand of Margaret Beauchamp (by her second
+ marriage with the Duke of Somerset), grandmother to Henry VII. In the
+ following generation, the younger son of a younger son had founded, partly
+ by offices of state, partly by marriage with a wealthy heiress, a house of
+ his own; and in the reign of James the First, the St. Johns of Laughton
+ ranked amongst the chief gentlemen of Hampshire. From that time till the
+ accession of George III the family, though it remained untitled, had added
+ to its consequence by intermarriages of considerable dignity,&mdash;chosen,
+ indeed, with a disregard for money uncommon amongst the English
+ aristocracy; so that the estate was but little enlarged since the reign of
+ James, though profiting, of course, by improved cultivation and the
+ different value of money. On the other hand, perhaps there were scarcely
+ ten families in the country who could boast of a similar directness of
+ descent on all sides from the proudest and noblest aristocracy of the
+ soil; and Sir Miles St. John, by blood, was, almost at the distance of
+ eight centuries, as pure a Norman as his ancestral William. His
+ grandfather, nevertheless, had deviated from the usual disinterested
+ practice of the family, and had married an heiress who brought the
+ quarterings of Vernon to the crowded escutcheon, and with these
+ quarterings an estate of some 4,000 pounds a year popularly known by the
+ name of Vernon Grange. This rare occurrence did not add to the domestic
+ happiness of the contracting parties, nor did it lead to the ultimate
+ increase of the Laughton possessions. Two sons were born. To the elder was
+ destined the father&rsquo;s inheritance,&mdash;to the younger the maternal
+ property. One house is not large enough for two heirs. Nothing could
+ exceed the pride of the father as a St. John, except the pride of the
+ mother as a Vernon. Jealousies between the two sons began early and
+ rankled deep; nor was there peace at Laughton till the younger had carried
+ away from its rental the lands of Vernon Grange; and the elder remained
+ just where his predecessors stood in point of possessions,&mdash;sole lord
+ of Laughton sole. The elder son, Sir Miles&rsquo;s father, had been, indeed, so
+ chafed by the rivalry with his brother that in disgust he had run away and
+ thrown himself, at the age of fourteen, into the navy. By accident or by
+ merit he rose high in that profession, acquired name and fame, and lost an
+ eye and an arm,&mdash;for which he was gazetted, at the same time, an
+ admiral and a baronet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus mutilated and dignified, Sir George St. John retired from the
+ profession; and finding himself unmarried, and haunted by the apprehension
+ that if he died childless, Laughton would pass to his brother&rsquo;s heirs, he
+ resolved upon consigning his remains to the nuptial couch, previous to the
+ surer peace of the family vault. At the age of fifty-nine, the grim
+ veteran succeeded in finding a young lady of unblemished descent and much
+ marked with the small-pox, who consented to accept the only hand which Sir
+ George had to offer. From this marriage sprang a numerous family; but all
+ died in early childhood, frightened to death, said the neighbours, by
+ their tender parents (considered the ugliest couple in the county), except
+ one boy (the present Sir Miles) and one daughter, many years younger,
+ destined to become Lucretia&rsquo;s mother. Sir Miles came early into his
+ property; and although the softening advance of civilization, with the
+ liberal effects of travel and a long residence in cities, took from him
+ that provincial austerity of pride which is only seen in stanch perfection
+ amongst the lords of a village, he was yet little less susceptible to the
+ duties of maintaining his lineage pure as its representation had descended
+ to him than the most superb of his predecessors. But owing, it was said,
+ to an early disappointment, he led, during youth and manhood, a roving and
+ desultory life, and so put off from year to year the grand experiment
+ matrimonial, until he arrived at old age, with the philosophical
+ determination to select from the other branches of his house the successor
+ to the heritage of St. John. In thus arrogating to himself a right to
+ neglect his proper duties as head of a family, he found his excuse in
+ adopting his niece Lucretia. His sister had chosen for her first husband a
+ friend and neighbour of his own, a younger son, of unexceptionable birth
+ and of very agreeable manners in society. But this gentleman contrived to
+ render her life so miserable that, though he died fifteen months after
+ their marriage, his widow could scarcely be expected to mourn long for
+ him. A year after Mr. Clavering&rsquo;s death, Mrs. Clavering married again,
+ under the mistaken notion that she had the right to choose for herself.
+ She married Dr. Mivers, the provincial physician who had attended her
+ husband in his last illness,&mdash;a gentleman by education, manners, and
+ profession, but unhappily the son of a silk-mercer. Sir Miles never
+ forgave this connection. By her first marriage, Sir Miles&rsquo;s sister had one
+ daughter, Lucretia; by her second marriage, another daughter, named Susan.
+ She survived somewhat more than a year the birth of the latter. On her
+ death, Sir Miles formally (through his agent) applied to Dr. Mivers for
+ his eldest niece, Lucretia Clavering, and the physician did not think
+ himself justified in withholding from her the probable advantages of a
+ transfer from his own roof to that of her wealthy uncle. He himself had
+ been no worldly gainer by his connection; his practice had suffered
+ materially from the sympathy which was felt by the county families for the
+ supposed wrongs of Sir Miles St. John, who was personally not only
+ popular, but esteemed, nor less so on account of his pride,&mdash;too
+ dignified to refer even to his domestic annoyances, except to his most
+ familiar associates; to them, indeed, Sir Miles had said, briefly, that he
+ considered a physician who abused his entrance into a noble family by
+ stealing into its alliance was a character in whose punishment all society
+ had an interest. The words were repeated; they were thought just. Those
+ who ventured to suggest that Mrs. Clavering, as a widow, was a free agent,
+ were regarded with suspicion. It was the time when French principles were
+ just beginning to be held in horror, especially in the provinces, and when
+ everything that encroached upon the rights and prejudices of the high born
+ was called &ldquo;a French principle.&rdquo; Dr. Mivers was as much scouted as if he
+ had been a sans-culotte. Obliged to quit the county, he settled at a
+ distance; but he had a career to commence again; his wife&rsquo;s death
+ enfeebled his spirits and damped his exertions. He did little more than
+ earn a bare subsistence, and died at last, when his only daughter was
+ fourteen, poor and embarrassed On his death-bed he wrote a letter to Sir
+ Miles reminding him that, after all, Susan was his sister&rsquo;s child, gently
+ vindicating himself from the unmerited charge of treachery, which had
+ blasted his fortunes and left his orphan penniless, and closing with a
+ touching yet a manly appeal to the sole relative left to befriend her. The
+ clergyman who had attended him in his dying moments took charge of this
+ letter; he brought it in person to Laughton, and delivered it to Sir
+ Miles. Whatever his errors, the old baronet was no common man. He was not
+ vindictive, though he could not be called forgiving. He had considered his
+ conduct to his sister a duty owed to his name and ancestors; she had
+ placed herself and her youngest child out of the pale of his family. He
+ would not receive as his niece the grand-daughter of a silk-mercer. The
+ relationship was extinct, as, in certain countries, nobility is forfeited
+ by a union with an inferior class. But, niece or not, here was a claim to
+ humanity and benevolence, and never yet had appeal been made by suffering
+ to his heart and purse in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed his head over the letter as his eye came to the last line, and
+ remained silent so long that the clergyman at last, moved and hopeful,
+ approached and took his hand. It was the impulse of a good man and a good
+ priest. Sir Miles looked up in surprise; but the calm, pitying face bent
+ on him repelled all return of pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; he said tremulously, and he pressed the hand that grasped his own,
+ &ldquo;I thank you. I am not fit at this moment to decide what to do; to-morrow
+ you shall know. And the man died poor,&mdash;not in want, not in want?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Comfort yourself, worthy sir; he had at the last all that sickness and
+ death require, except one assurance, which I ventured to whisper to him,&mdash;I
+ trust not too rashly,&mdash;that his daughter would not be left
+ unprotected. And I pray you to reflect, my dear sir, that&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles did not wait for the conclusion of the sentence; he rose
+ abruptly, and left the room. Mr. Fielden (so the good priest was named)
+ felt confident of the success of his mission; but to win it the more
+ support, he sought Lucretia. She was then seventeen: it is an age when the
+ heart is peculiarly open to the household ties,&mdash;to the memory of a
+ mother, to the sweet name of sister. He sought this girl, he told his
+ tale, and pleaded the sister&rsquo;s cause. Lucretia heard in silence: neither
+ eye nor lip betrayed emotion; but her colour went and came. This was the
+ only sign that she was moved: moved, but how? Fielden&rsquo;s experience in the
+ human heart could not guess. When he had done, she went quietly to her
+ desk (it was in her own room that the conference took place), she unlocked
+ it with a deliberate hand, she took from it a pocketbook and a case of
+ jewels which Sir Miles had given her on her last birthday. &ldquo;Let my sister
+ have these; while I live she shall not want!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear young lady, it is not these things that she asks from you,&mdash;it
+ is your affection, your sisterly heart, your intercession with her natural
+ protector; these, in her name, I ask for,&mdash;&lsquo;non gemmis, neque purpura
+ venale, nec auro!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia then, still without apparent emotion, raised to the good man&rsquo;s
+ face deep, penetrating, but unrevealing eyes, and said slowly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is my sister like my mother, who, they say, was handsome?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much startled by this question, Fielden answered: &ldquo;I never saw your
+ mother, my dear; but your sister gives promise of more than common
+ comeliness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s brows grew slightly compressed. &ldquo;And her education has been, of
+ course, neglected?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, in some points,&mdash;mathematics, for instance, and theology;
+ but she knows what ladies generally know,&mdash;French and Italian, and
+ such like. Dr. Mivers was not unlearned in the polite letters. Oh, trust
+ me, my dear young lady, she will not disgrace your family; she will
+ justify your uncle&rsquo;s favour. Plead for her!&rdquo; And the good man clasped his
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s eyes fell musingly on the ground; but she resumed, after a
+ short pause,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does my uncle himself say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only that he will decide to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will see him;&rdquo; and Lucretia left the room as for that object. But when
+ she had gained the stairs, she paused at the large embayed casement, which
+ formed a niche in the landing-place, and gazed over the broad domains
+ beyond; a stern smile settled, then, upon her lips,&mdash;the smile seemed
+ to say, &ldquo;In this inheritance I will have no rival.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s influence with Sir Miles was great, but here it was not needed.
+ Before she saw him he had decided on his course. Her precocious and
+ apparently intuitive knowledge of character detected at a glance the
+ safety with which she might intercede. She did so, and was chid into
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning, Sir Miles took the priest&rsquo;s arm and walked with him into
+ the gardens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Fielden,&rdquo; he said, with the air of a man who has chosen his course,
+ and deprecates all attempt to make him swerve from it, &ldquo;if I followed my
+ own selfish wishes, I should take home this poor child. Stay, sir, and
+ hear me,&mdash;I am no hypocrite, and I speak honestly. I like young
+ faces; I have no family of my own. I love Lucretia, and I am proud of her;
+ but a girl brought up in adversity might be a better nurse and a more
+ docile companion,&mdash;let that pass. I have reflected, and I feel that I
+ cannot set to Lucretia&mdash;set to children unborn&mdash;the example of
+ indifference to a name degraded and a race adulterated; you may call this
+ pride or prejudice,&mdash;I view it differently. There are duties due from
+ an individual, duties due from a nation, duties due from a family; as my
+ ancestors thought, so think I. They left me the charge of their name, as
+ the fief-rent by which I hold their lands. &lsquo;Sdeath, sir!&mdash;Pardon me
+ the expletive; I was about to say that if I am now a childless old man, it
+ is because I have myself known temptation and resisted. I loved, and
+ denied myself what I believed my best chance of happiness, because the
+ object of my attachment was not my equal. That was a bitter struggle,&mdash;I
+ triumphed, and I rejoice at it, though the result was to leave all
+ thoughts of wedlock elsewhere odious and repugnant. These principles of
+ action have made a part of my creed as gentleman, if not as Christian. Now
+ to the point. I beseech you to find a fitting and reputable home for Miss&mdash;Miss
+ Mivers,&rdquo; the lip slightly curled as the name was said; &ldquo;I shall provide
+ suitably for her maintenance. When she marries, I will dower her, provided
+ only and always that her choice fall upon one who will not still further
+ degrade her lineage on her mother&rsquo;s side,&mdash;in a word, if she select a
+ gentleman. Mr. Fielden, on this subject I have no more to say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain the good clergyman, whose very conscience, as well as reason, was
+ shocked by the deliberate and argumentative manner with which the baronet
+ had treated the abandonment of his sister&rsquo;s child as an absolutely moral,
+ almost religious, duty,&mdash;in vain he exerted himself to repel such
+ sophisms and put the matter in its true light. It was easy for him to move
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s heart,&mdash;that was ever gentle; that was moved already: but
+ the crotchet in his head was impregnable. The more touchingly he painted
+ poor Susan&rsquo;s unfriended youth, her sweet character, and promising virtues,
+ the more Sir Miles St. John considered himself a martyr to his principles,
+ and the more obstinate in the martyrdom he became. &ldquo;Poor thing! poor
+ child!&rdquo; he said often, and brushed a tear from his eyes; &ldquo;a thousand
+ pities! Well, well, I hope she will be happy! Mind, money shall never
+ stand in the way if she have a suitable offer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was all the worthy clergyman, after an hour&rsquo;s eloquence, could
+ extract from him. Out of breath and out of patience, he gave in at last;
+ and the baronet, still holding his reluctant arm, led him back towards the
+ house. After a prolonged pause, Sir Miles said abruptly: &ldquo;I have been
+ thinking that I may have unwittingly injured this man,&mdash;this Mivers,&mdash;while
+ I deemed only that he injured me. As to reparation to his daughter, that
+ is settled; and after all, though I do not publicly acknowledge her, she
+ is half my own niece.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Half?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Half,&mdash;the father&rsquo;s side doesn&rsquo;t count, of course; and, rigidly
+ speaking, the relationship is perhaps forfeited on the other. However,
+ that half of it I grant. Zooks, sir, I say I grant it! I beg you ten
+ thousand pardons for my vehemence. To return,&mdash;perhaps I can show at
+ least that I bear no malice to this poor doctor. He has relations of his
+ own,&mdash;silk mercers; trade has reverses. How are they off?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perfectly perplexed by this very contradictory and paradoxical, yet, to
+ one better acquainted with Sir Miles, very characteristic, benevolence,
+ Fielden was some time before he answered. &ldquo;Those members of Dr. Mivers&rsquo;s
+ family who are in trade are sufficiently prosperous; they have paid his
+ debts,&mdash;they, Sir Miles, will receive his daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means!&rdquo; cried Sir Miles, quickly; then, recovering himself, he
+ added, &ldquo;or, if you think that advisable, of course all interference on my
+ part is withdrawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Festina lente!&mdash;not so quick, Sir Miles. I do not yet say that it is
+ advisable,&mdash;not because they are silk-mercers, the which, I humbly
+ conceive, is no sin to exclude them from gratitude for their proffered
+ kindness, but because Susan, poor child, having been brought up in
+ different habits, may feel a little strange, at least at first, with&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange, yes; I should hope so!&rdquo; interrupted Sir Miles, taking snuff with
+ much energy. &ldquo;And, by the way, I am thinking that it would be well if you
+ and Mrs. Fielden&mdash;you are married, sir? That is right; clergymen all
+ marry!&mdash;if you and Mrs. Fielden would take charge of her yourselves,
+ it would be a great comfort to me to think her so well placed. We differ,
+ sir, but I respect you. Think of this. Well, then, the doctor has left no
+ relations that I can aid in any way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange man!&rdquo; muttered Fielden. &ldquo;Yes; I must not let one poor youth lose
+ the opportunity offered by your&mdash;your&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind what; proceed. One poor youth,&mdash;in the shop, of course?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; and by his father&rsquo;s side (since you so esteem such vanities) of an
+ ancient family,&mdash;a sister of Dr. Mivers married Captain Ardworth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ardworth,&mdash;a goodish name; Ardworth of Yorkshire?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, of that family. It was, of course, an imprudent marriage, contracted
+ while he was only an ensign. His family did not reject him, Sir Miles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, Ardworth is a good squire&rsquo;s family, but the name is Saxon; there is
+ no difference in race between the head of the Ardworths, if he were a
+ duke, and my gardener, John Hodge,&mdash;Saxon and Saxon, both. His family
+ did not reject him; go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he was a younger son in a large family; both himself and his wife
+ have known all the distresses common, they tell me, to the poverty of a
+ soldier who has no resource but his pay. They have a son. Dr. Mivers,
+ though so poor himself, took this boy, for he loved his sister dearly, and
+ meant to bring him up to his own profession. Death frustrated this
+ intention. The boy is high-spirited and deserving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let his education be completed; send him to the University; and I will
+ see that he is put into some career of which his father&rsquo;s family would
+ approve. You need not mention to any one my intentions in this respect,
+ not even to the lad. And now, Mr. Fielden, I have done my duty,&mdash;at
+ least, I think so. The longer you honour my house, the more I shall be
+ pleased and grateful; but this topic, allow me most respectfully to say,
+ needs and bears no further comment. Have you seen the last news from the
+ army?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The army! Oh, fie, Sir Miles, I must speak one word more. May not my poor
+ Susan have at least the comfort to embrace her sister?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles paused a moment, and struck his crutch-stick thrice firmly on
+ the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see no great objection to that; but by the address of this letter, the
+ poor girl is too far from Laughton to send Lucretia to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can obviate that objection, Sir Miles. It is my wish to continue to
+ Susan her present home amongst my own children. My wife loves her dearly;
+ and had you consented to give her the shelter of your own roof, I am sure
+ I should not have seen a smile in the house for a month after. If you
+ permit this plan, as indeed you honoured me by suggesting it, I can pass
+ through Southampton on my way to my own living in Devonshire, and Miss
+ Clavering can visit her sister there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let it be so,&rdquo; said Sir Miles, briefly; and so the conversation closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some weeks afterwards, Lucretia went in her uncle&rsquo;s carriage, with four
+ post-horses, with her maid and her footman,&mdash;went in the state and
+ pomp of heiress to Laughton,&mdash;to the small lodging-house in which the
+ kind pastor crowded his children and his young guest. She stayed there
+ some days. She did not weep when she embraced Susan, she did not weep when
+ she took leave of her; but she showed no want of actual kindness, though
+ the kindness was formal and stately. On her return, Sir Miles forbore to
+ question; but he looked as if he expected, and would willingly permit, her
+ to speak on what might naturally be uppermost at her heart. Lucretia,
+ however, remained silent, till at last the baronet, colouring, as if
+ ashamed of his curiosity, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is your sister like your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget, sir, I can have no recollection of my mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother had a strong family likeness to myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is not like you; they say she is like Dr. Mivers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said the baronet, and he asked no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sisters did not meet again; a few letters passed between them, but the
+ correspondence gradually ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Ardworth went to college, prepared by Mr. Fielden, who was no
+ ordinary scholar, and an accurate and profound mathematician,&mdash;a more
+ important requisite than classical learning in a tutor for Cambridge. But
+ Ardworth was idle, and perhaps even dissipated. He took a common degree,
+ and made some debts, which were paid by Sir Miles without a murmur. A few
+ letters then passed between the baronet and the clergyman as to Ardworth&rsquo;s
+ future destiny; the latter owned that his pupil was not persevering enough
+ for the Bar, nor steady enough for the Church. These were no great faults
+ in Sir Miles&rsquo;s eyes. He resolved, after an effort, to judge himself of the
+ capacities of the young man, and so came the invitation to Laughton.
+ Ardworth was greatly surprised when Fielden communicated to him this
+ invitation, for hitherto he had not conceived the slightest suspicion of
+ his benefactor; he had rather, and naturally, supposed that some relation
+ of his father&rsquo;s had paid for his maintenance at the University, and he
+ knew enough of the family history to look upon Sir Miles as the proudest
+ of men. How was it, then, that he, who would not receive the daughter of
+ Dr. Mivers, his own niece, would invite the nephew of Dr. Mivers, who was
+ no relation to him? However, his curiosity was excited, and Fielden was
+ urgent that he should go; to Laughton, therefore, had he gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have now brought down to the opening of our narrative the general
+ records of the family it concerns; we have reserved our account of the
+ rearing and the character of the personage most important, perhaps, in the
+ development of its events,&mdash;Lucretia Clavering,&mdash;in order to
+ place singly before the reader the portrait of her dark, misguided, and
+ ill-boding youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. LUCRETIA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Lucretia first came to the house of Sir Miles St. John she was an
+ infant about four years old. The baronet then lived principally in London,
+ with occasional visits rather to the Continent or a watering-place than to
+ his own family mansion. He did not pay any minute attention to his little
+ ward, satisfied that her nurse was sedulous, and her nursery airy and
+ commodious. When, at the age of seven, she began to interest him, and he
+ himself, approaching old age, began seriously to consider whether he
+ should select her as his heiress, for hitherto he had not formed any
+ decided or definite notions on the matter, he was startled by a temper so
+ vehement, so self-willed and sternly imperious, so obstinately bent upon
+ attaining its object, so indifferently contemptuous of warning, reproof,
+ coaxing, or punishment, that her governess honestly came to him in
+ despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The management of this unmanageable child interested Sir Miles. It caused
+ him to think of Lucretia seriously; it caused him to have her much in his
+ society, and always in his thoughts. The result was, that by amusing and
+ occupying him, she forced a stronger hold on his affections than she might
+ have done had she been more like the ordinary run of commonplace children.
+ Of all dogs, there is no dog that so attaches a master as a dog that
+ snarls at everybody else,&mdash;that no other hand can venture to pat with
+ impunity; of all horses, there is none which so flatters the rider, from
+ Alexander downwards, as a horse that nobody else can ride. Extend this
+ principle to the human species, and you may understand why Lucretia became
+ so dear to Sir Miles St. John,&mdash;she got at his heart through his
+ vanity. For though, at times, her brow darkened and her eye flashed even
+ at his remonstrance, she was yet no sooner in his society than she made a
+ marked distinction between him and the subordinates who had hitherto
+ sought to control her. Was this affection? He thought so. Alas! what
+ parent can trace the workings of a child&rsquo;s mind,&mdash;springs moved by an
+ idle word from a nurse; a whispered conference between hirelings. Was it
+ possible that Lucretia had not often been menaced, as the direst evil that
+ could befall her, with her uncle&rsquo;s displeasure; that long before she could
+ be sensible of mere worldly loss or profit, she was not impressed with a
+ vague sense of Sir Miles&rsquo;s power over her fate,&mdash;nay, when trampling,
+ in childish wrath and scorn, upon some menial&rsquo;s irritable feelings, was it
+ possible that she had not been told that, but for Sir Miles, she would be
+ little better than a servant herself? Be this as it may, all weakness is
+ prone to dissimulate; and rare and happy is the child whose feelings are
+ as pure and transparent as the fond parent deems them. There is something
+ in children, too, which seems like an instinctive deference to the
+ aristocratic appearances which sway the world. Sir Miles&rsquo;s stately person,
+ his imposing dress, the respect with which he was surrounded, all tended
+ to beget notions of superiority and power, to which it was no shame to
+ succumb, as it was to Miss Black, the governess, whom the maids answered
+ pertly, or Martha, the nurse, whom Miss Black snubbed if Lucretia tore her
+ frock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s affection once won, his penetration not, perhaps, blinded to
+ her more evident faults, but his self-love soothed towards regarding them
+ leniently, there was much in Lucretia&rsquo;s external gifts which justified the
+ predilection of the haughty man. As a child she was beautiful, and,
+ perhaps from her very imperfections of temper, her beauty had that air of
+ distinction which the love of command is apt to confer. If Sir Miles was
+ with his friends when Lucretia swept into the room, he was pleased to hear
+ them call her their little &ldquo;princess,&rdquo; and was pleased yet more at a
+ certain dignified tranquillity with which she received their caresses or
+ their toys, and which he regarded as the sign of a superior mind; nor was
+ it long, indeed, before what we call &ldquo;a superior mind&rdquo; developed itself in
+ the young Lucretia. All children are quick till they are set methodically
+ to study; but Lucretia&rsquo;s quickness defied even that numbing ordeal, by
+ which half of us are rendered dunces. Rapidity and precision in all the
+ tasks set to her, in the comprehension of all the explanations given to
+ her questions, evinced singular powers of readiness and reasoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she grew older, she became more reserved and thoughtful. Seeing but few
+ children of her own age, and mixing intimately with none, her mind was
+ debarred from the usual objects which distract the vivacity, the restless
+ and wondrous observation, of childhood. She came in and out of Sir Miles&rsquo;s
+ library of a morning, or his drawing-room of an evening, till her hour for
+ rest, with unquestioned and sometimes unnoticed freedom; she listened to
+ the conversation around her, and formed her own conclusions unchecked. It
+ has a great influence upon a child, whether for good or for evil, to mix
+ early and habitually with those grown up,&mdash;for good to the mere
+ intellect always; the evil depends upon the character and discretion of
+ those the child sees and hears. &ldquo;Reverence the greatest is due to the
+ children,&rdquo; exclaims the wisest of the Romans [Cicero. The sentiment is
+ borrowed by Juvenal.],&mdash;that is to say, that we must revere the
+ candour and inexperience and innocence of their minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, Sir Miles&rsquo;s habitual associates were persons of the world,&mdash;well-bred
+ and decorous, indeed, before children, as the best of the old school were,
+ avoiding all anecdotes; all allusions, for which the prudent matron would
+ send her girls out of the room; but with that reserve speaking of the
+ world as the world goes: if talking of young A&mdash;&mdash;, calculating
+ carelessly what he would have when old A&mdash;&mdash;, his father, died;
+ naturally giving to wealth and station and ability their fixed importance
+ in life; not over-apt to single out for eulogium some quiet goodness;
+ rather inclined to speak with irony of pretensions to virtue; rarely
+ speaking but with respect of the worldly seemings which rule mankind. All
+ these had their inevitable effect upon that keen, quick, yet moody and
+ reflective intellect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles removed at last to Laughton. He gave up London,&mdash;why, he
+ acknowledged not to himself; but it was because he had outlived his age.
+ Most of his old set were gone; new hours, new habits, had stolen in. He
+ had ceased to be of importance as a marrying man, as a personage of
+ fashion; his health was impaired; he shrank from the fatigues of a
+ contested election; he resigned his seat in parliament for his native
+ county; and once settled at Laughton, the life there soothed and flattered
+ him,&mdash;there all his former claims to distinction were still fresh. He
+ amused himself by collecting, in his old halls and chambers, his statues
+ and pictures, and felt that, without fatigue or trouble, he was a greater
+ man at Laughton in his old age than he had been in London during his
+ youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia was then thirteen. Three years afterwards, Olivier Dalibard was
+ established in the house; and from that time a great change became
+ noticeable in her. The irregular vehemence of her temper gradually
+ subsided, and was replaced by an habitual self-command which rendered the
+ rare deviations from it more effective and imposing. Her pride changed its
+ character wholly and permanently; no word, no look of scorn to the
+ low-born and the poor escaped her. The masculine studies which her erudite
+ tutor opened to a grasping and inquisitive mind, elevated her very errors
+ above the petty distinctions of class. She imbibed earnestly what Dalibard
+ assumed or felt,&mdash;the more dangerous pride of the fallen angel,&mdash;and
+ set up the intellect as a deity. All belonging to the mere study of mind
+ charmed and enchained her; but active and practical in her very reveries,
+ if she brooded, it was to scheme, to plot, to weave, web, and mesh, and to
+ smile in haughty triumph at her own ingenuity and daring. The first lesson
+ of mere worldly wisdom teaches us to command temper; it was worldly wisdom
+ that made the once impetuous girl calm, tranquil, and serene. Sir Miles
+ was pleased by a change that removed from Lucretia&rsquo;s outward character its
+ chief blot,&mdash;perhaps, as his frame declined, he sighed sometimes to
+ think that with so much majesty there appeared but little tenderness; he
+ took, however, the merits with the faults, and was content upon the whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Provencal had taken more than common pains with his young pupil,
+ the pains were not solely disinterested. In plunging her mind amidst that
+ profound corruption which belongs only to intellect cultivated in scorn of
+ good and in suppression of heart, he had his own views to serve. He
+ watched the age when the passions ripen, and he grasped at the fruit which
+ his training sought to mature. In the human heart ill regulated there is a
+ dark desire for the forbidden. This Lucretia felt; this her studies
+ cherished, and her thoughts brooded over. She detected, with the quickness
+ of her sex, the preceptor&rsquo;s stealthy aim. She started not at the danger.
+ Proud of her mastery over herself, she rather triumphed in luring on into
+ weakness this master-intelligence which had lighted up her own,&mdash;to
+ see her slave in her teacher; to despise or to pity him whom she had first
+ contemplated with awe. And with this mere pride of the understanding might
+ be connected that of the sex; she had attained the years when woman is
+ curious to know and to sound her power. To inflame Dalibard&rsquo;s cupidity or
+ ambition was easy; but to touch his heart,&mdash;that marble heart!&mdash;this
+ had its dignity and its charm. Strange to say, she succeeded; the passion,
+ as well as interests, of this dangerous and able man became enlisted in
+ his hopes. And now the game played between them had a terror in its
+ suspense; for if Dalibard penetrated not into the recesses of his pupil&rsquo;s
+ complicated nature, she was far from having yet sounded the hell that lay,
+ black and devouring, beneath his own. Not through her affections,&mdash;those
+ he scarce hoped for,&mdash;but through her inexperience, her vanity, her
+ passions, he contemplated the path to his victory over her soul and her
+ fate. And so resolute, so wily, so unscrupulous was this person, who had
+ played upon all the subtlest keys and chords in the scale of turbulent
+ life, that, despite the lofty smile with which Lucretia at length heard
+ and repelled his suit, he had no fear of the ultimate issue, when all his
+ projects were traversed, all his mines and stratagems abruptly brought to
+ a close, by an event which he had wholly unforeseen,&mdash;the appearance
+ of a rival; the ardent and almost purifying love, which, escaping a while
+ from all the demons he had evoked, she had, with a girl&rsquo;s frank heart and
+ impulse, conceived for Mainwaring. And here, indeed, was the great crisis
+ in Lucretia&rsquo;s life and destiny. So interwoven with her nature had become
+ the hard calculations of the understanding; so habitual to her now was the
+ zest for scheming, which revels in the play and vivacity of intrigue and
+ plot, and which Shakspeare has perhaps intended chiefly to depict in the
+ villany of Iago,&mdash;that it is probable Lucretia could never become a
+ character thoroughly amiable and honest. But with a happy and well-placed
+ love, her ambition might have had legitimate vents; her restless energies,
+ the woman&rsquo;s natural field in sympathies for another. The heart, once
+ opened, softens by use; gradually and unconsciously the interchange of
+ affection, the companionship with an upright and ingenuous mind (for
+ virtue is not only beautiful, it is contagious), might have had their
+ redeeming and hallowing influence. Happier, indeed, had it been, if her
+ choice had fallen upon a more commanding and lofty nature! But perhaps it
+ was the very meekness and susceptibility of Mainwaring&rsquo;s temper, relieved
+ from feebleness by his talents, which, once in play, were undeniably
+ great, that pleased her by contrast with her own hardness of spirit and
+ despotism of will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Sir Miles should have been blind to the position of the lovers is
+ less disparaging to his penetration than it may appear; for the very
+ imprudence with which Lucretia abandoned herself to the society of
+ Mainwaring during his visits at Laughton took a resemblance to candour.
+ Sir Miles knew his niece to be more than commonly clever and well
+ informed; that she, like him, should feel that the conversation of a
+ superior young man was a relief to the ordinary babble of their country
+ neighbours, was natural enough; and if now and then a doubt, a fear, had
+ crossed his mind and rendered him more touched than he liked to own by
+ Vernon&rsquo;s remarks, it had vanished upon perceiving that Lucretia never
+ seemed a shade more pensive in Mainwaring&rsquo;s absence. The listlessness and
+ the melancholy which are apt to accompany love, especially where
+ unpropitiously placed, were not visible on the surface of this strong
+ nature. In truth, once assured that Mainwaring returned her affection,
+ Lucretia reposed on the future with a calm and resolute confidence; and
+ her customary dissimulation closed like an unruffled sea over all the
+ undercurrents that met and played below. Still, Sir Miles&rsquo;s attention
+ once, however slightly, aroused to the recollection that Lucretia was at
+ the age when woman naturally meditates upon love and marriage, had
+ suggested, afresh and more vividly, a project which had before been
+ indistinctly conceived,&mdash;namely, the union of the divided branches of
+ his house, by the marriage of the last male of the Vernons with the
+ heiress of the St. Johns. Sir Miles had seen much of Vernon himself at
+ various intervals; he had been present at his christening, though he had
+ refused to be his godfather, for fear of raising undue expectations; he
+ had visited and munificently &ldquo;tipped&rdquo; him at Eton; he had accompanied him
+ to his quarters when he joined the prince&rsquo;s regiment; he had come often in
+ contact with him when, at the death of his father, Vernon retired from the
+ army and blazed in the front ranks of metropolitan fashion; he had given
+ him counsel and had even lent him money. Vernon&rsquo;s spendthrift habits and
+ dissipated if not dissolute life had certainly confirmed the old baronet
+ in his intentions to trust the lands of Laughton to the lesser risk which
+ property incurs in the hands of a female, if tightly settled on her, than
+ in the more colossal and multiform luxuries of an expensive man; and to do
+ him justice, during the flush of Vernon&rsquo;s riotous career he had shrunk
+ from the thought of confiding the happiness of his niece to so unstable a
+ partner. But of late, whether from his impaired health or his broken
+ fortunes, Vernon&rsquo;s follies had been less glaring. He had now arrived at
+ the mature age of thirty-three, when wild oats may reasonably be sown. The
+ composed and steadfast character of Lucretia might serve to guide and
+ direct him; and Sir Miles was one of those who hold the doctrine that a
+ reformed rake makes the best husband. Add to this, there was nothing in
+ Vernon&rsquo;s reputation&mdash;once allowing that his thirst for pleasure was
+ slaked&mdash;which could excite serious apprehensions. Through all his
+ difficulties, he had maintained his honour unblemished; a thousand traits
+ of amiability and kindness of heart made him popular and beloved. He was
+ nobody&rsquo;s enemy but his own. His very distresses&mdash;the prospect of his
+ ruin, if left unassisted by Sir Miles&rsquo;s testamentary dispositions&mdash;were
+ arguments in his favour. And, after all, though Lucretia was a nearer
+ relation, Vernon was in truth the direct male heir, and according to the
+ usual prejudices of family, therefore, the fitter representative of the
+ ancient line. With these feelings and views, he had invited Vernon to his
+ house, and we have seen already that his favourable impressions had been
+ confirmed by the visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here we must say that Vernon himself had been brought up in boyhood
+ and youth to regard himself the presumptive inheritor of Laughton. It had
+ been, from time immemorial, the custom of the St. Johns to pass by the
+ claims of females in the settlement of the entails; from male to male the
+ estate had gone, furnishing warriors to the army, and senators to the
+ State. And if when Lucretia first came to Sir Miles&rsquo;s house the bright
+ prospect seemed somewhat obscure, still the mesalliance of the mother, and
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s obstinate resentment thereat, seemed to warrant the
+ supposition that he would probably only leave to the orphan the usual
+ portion of a daughter of the house, and that the lands would go in their
+ ordinary destination. This belief, adopted passively, and as a thing of
+ course, had had a very prejudicial effect upon Vernon&rsquo;s career. What
+ mattered that he overenjoyed his youth, that the subordinate property of
+ the Vernons, a paltry four or five thousand pounds a year, went a little
+ too fast,&mdash;the splendid estates of Laughton would recover all. From
+ this dream he had only been awakened, two or three years before, by an
+ attachment he had formed to the portionless daughter of an earl; and the
+ Grange being too far encumbered to allow him the proper settlements which
+ the lady&rsquo;s family required, it became a matter of importance to ascertain
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s intentions. Too delicate himself to sound them, he had
+ prevailed upon the earl, who was well acquainted with Sir Miles, to take
+ Laughton in his way to his own seat in Dorsetshire, and, without betraying
+ the grounds of his interest in the question, learn carelessly, as it were,
+ the views of the wealthy man. The result had been a severe and terrible
+ disappointment. Sir Miles had then fully determined upon constituting
+ Lucretia his heiress; and with the usual openness of his character, he had
+ plainly said so upon the very first covert and polished allusion to the
+ subject which the earl slyly made. This discovery, in breaking off all
+ hopes of a union with Lady Mary Stanville, had crushed more than mercenary
+ expectations. It affected, through his heart, Vernon&rsquo;s health and spirits;
+ it rankled deep, and was resented at first as a fatal injury. But Vernon&rsquo;s
+ native nobility of disposition gradually softened an indignation which his
+ reason convinced him was groundless and unjust. Sir Miles had never
+ encouraged the expectations which Vernon&rsquo;s family and himself had
+ unthinkingly formed. The baronet was master of his own fortune, and after
+ all, was it not more natural that he should prefer the child he had
+ brought up and reared, to a distant relation, little more than an
+ acquaintance, simply because man succeeded to man in the mouldy pedigree
+ of the St. Johns? And, Mary fairly lost to him, his constitutional
+ indifference to money, a certain French levity of temper, a persuasion
+ that his life was nearing its wasted close, had left him without regret,
+ as without resentment, at his kinsman&rsquo;s decision. His boyish affection for
+ the hearty, generous old gentleman returned, and though he abhorred the
+ country, he had, without a single interested thought or calculation,
+ cordially accepted the baronet&rsquo;s hospitable overtures, and deserted, for
+ the wilds of Hampshire, &ldquo;the sweet shady side of Pall-Mall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may now enter the drawing-room at Laughton, in which were already
+ assembled several of the families residing in the more immediate
+ neighbourhood, and who sociably dropped in to chat around the national
+ tea-table, play a rubber at whist, or make up, by the help of two or three
+ children and two or three grandpapas, a merry country-dance; for in that
+ happy day people were much more sociable than they are now in the houses
+ of our rural Thanes. Our country seats became bustling and animated after
+ the Birthday; many even of the more important families resided, indeed,
+ all the year round on their estates. The Continent was closed to us; the
+ fastidious exclusiveness which comes from habitual residence in cities had
+ not made that demarcation, in castes and in talk, between neighbour and
+ neighbour, which exists now. Our squires were less educated, less refined,
+ but more hospitable and unassuming. In a word, there was what does not
+ exist now, except in some districts remote from London,&mdash;a rural
+ society for those who sought it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party, as we enter, is grouped somewhat thus. But first we must cast a
+ glance at the room itself, which rarely failed to be the first object to
+ attract a stranger&rsquo;s notice. It was a long, and not particularly
+ well-proportioned apartment,&mdash;according, at least, to modern notions,&mdash;for
+ it had rather the appearance of two rooms thrown into one. At the distance
+ of about thirty-five feet, the walls, before somewhat narrow, were met by
+ an arch, supported by carved pilasters, which opened into a space nearly
+ double the width of the previous part of the room, with a domed ceiling
+ and an embayed window of such depth that the recess almost formed a
+ chamber in itself. But both these divisions of the apartment corresponded
+ exactly in point of decoration,&mdash;they had the same small panelling,
+ painted a very light green, which seemed almost white by candlelight, each
+ compartment wrought with an arabesque; the same enriched frieze and
+ cornice; they had the same high mantelpieces, ascending to the ceiling,
+ with the arms of St. John in bold relief. They had, too, the same
+ old-fashioned and venerable furniture, draperies of thick figured velvet,
+ with immense chairs and sofas to correspond,&mdash;interspersed, it is
+ true, with more modern and commodious inventions of the upholsterer&rsquo;s art,
+ in grave stuffed leather or lively chintz. Two windows, nearly as deep as
+ that in the farther division, broke the outline of the former one, and
+ helped to give that irregular and nooky appearance to the apartment which
+ took all discomfort from its extent, and furnished all convenience for
+ solitary study or detached flirtation. With little respect for the carved
+ work of the panels, the walls were covered with pictures brought by Sir
+ Miles from Italy; here and there marble busts and statues gave lightness
+ to the character of the room, and harmonized well with that half-Italian
+ mode of decoration which belongs to the period of James the First. The
+ shape of the chamber, in its divisions, lent itself admirably to that
+ friendly and sociable intermixture of amusements which reconciles the
+ tastes of young and old. In the first division, near the fireplace, Sir
+ Miles, seated in his easy-chair, and sheltered from the opening door by a
+ seven-fold tapestry screen, was still at chess with his librarian. At a
+ little distance a middle-aged gentleman and three turbaned matrons were
+ cutting in at whist, shilling points, with a half-crown bet optional, and
+ not much ventured on. On tables, drawn into the recesses of the windows,
+ were the day&rsquo;s newspapers, Gilray&rsquo;s caricatures, the last new
+ publications, and such other ingenious suggestions to chit-chat. And round
+ these tables grouped those who had not yet found elsewhere their evening&rsquo;s
+ amusement,&mdash;two or three shy young clergymen, the parish doctor, four
+ or five squires who felt great interest in politics, but never dreamed of
+ the extravagance of taking in a daily paper, and who now, monopolizing all
+ the journals they could find, began fairly with the heroic resolution to
+ skip nothing, from the first advertisement to the printer&rsquo;s name. Amidst
+ one of these groups Mainwaring had bashfully ensconced himself. In the
+ farther division, the chandelier, suspended from the domed ceiling, threw
+ its cheerful light over a large circular table below, on which gleamed the
+ ponderous tea-urn of massive silver, with its usual accompaniments. Nor
+ were wanting there, in addition to those airy nothings, sliced
+ infinitesimally, from a French roll, the more substantial and now exiled
+ cheer of cakes,&mdash;plum and seed, Yorkshire and saffron,&mdash;attesting
+ the light hand of the housekeeper and the strong digestion of the guests.
+ Round this table were seated, in full gossip, the maids and the matrons,
+ with a slight sprinkling of the bolder young gentlemen who had been taught
+ to please the fair. The warmth of the evening allowed the upper casement
+ to be opened and the curtains drawn aside, and the July moonlight feebly
+ struggled against the blaze of the lights within. At this table it was
+ Miss Clavering&rsquo;s obvious duty to preside; but that was a complaisance to
+ which she rarely condescended. Nevertheless, she had her own way of doing
+ the honour of her uncle&rsquo;s house, which was not without courtesy and grace;
+ to glide from one to the other, exchange a few friendly words, see that
+ each set had its well-known amusements, and, finally, sit quietly down to
+ converse with some who, from gravity or age, appeared most to neglect or
+ be neglected by the rest, was her ordinary, and not unpopular mode of
+ welcoming the guests at Laughton,&mdash;not unpopular; for she thus
+ avoided all interference with the flirtations and conquests of humbler
+ damsels, whom her station and her endowments might otherwise have crossed
+ or humbled, while she insured the good word of the old, to whom the young
+ are seldom so attentive. But if a stranger of more than provincial repute
+ chanced to be present; if some stray member of parliament, or barrister on
+ the circuit, or wandering artist, accompanied any of the neighbours,&mdash;to
+ him Lucretia gave more earnest and undivided attention. Him she sought to
+ draw into a conversation deeper than the usual babble, and with her calm,
+ searching eyes, bent on him while he spoke, seemed to fathom the intellect
+ she set in play. But as yet, this evening, she had not made her
+ appearance,&mdash;a sin against etiquette very unusual in her. Perhaps her
+ recent conversation with Dalibard had absorbed her thoughts to
+ forgetfulness of the less important demands on her attention. Her absence
+ had not interfered with the gayety at the tea-table, which was frank even
+ to noisiness as it centred round the laughing face of Ardworth, who,
+ though unknown to most or all of the ladies present, beyond a brief
+ introduction to one or two of the first comers from Sir Miles (as the host
+ had risen from his chess to bid them welcome), had already contrived to
+ make himself perfectly at home and outrageously popular. Niched between
+ two bouncing lasses, he had commenced acquaintance with them in a strain
+ of familiar drollery and fun, which had soon broadened its circle, and now
+ embraced the whole group in the happy contagion of good-humour and young
+ animal spirits. Gabriel, allowed to sit up later than his usual hour, had
+ not, as might have been expected, attached himself to this circle, nor
+ indeed to any; he might be seen moving quietly about,&mdash;now
+ contemplating the pictures on the wall with a curious eye; now pausing at
+ the whist-table, and noting the game with the interest of an embryo
+ gamester; now throwing himself on an ottoman, and trying to coax towards
+ him Dash or Ponto,&mdash;trying in vain, for both the dogs abhorred him;
+ yet still, through all this general movement, had any one taken the pains
+ to observe him closely, it might have been sufficiently apparent that his
+ keen, bright, restless eye, from the corner of its long, sly lids, roved
+ chiefly towards the three persons whom he approached the least,&mdash;his
+ father, Mainwaring, and Mr. Vernon. This last had ensconced himself apart
+ from all, in the angle formed by one of the pilasters of the arch that
+ divided the room, so that he was in command, as it were, of both sections.
+ Reclined, with the careless grace that seemed inseparable from every
+ attitude and motion of his person, in one of the great velvet chairs, with
+ a book in his hand, which, to say truth, was turned upside down, but in
+ the lecture of which he seemed absorbed, he heard at one hand the mirthful
+ laughter that circled round young Ardworth, or, in its pauses, caught, on
+ the other side, muttered exclamations from the grave whist-players: &ldquo;If
+ you had but trumped that diamond, ma&rsquo;am!&rdquo; &ldquo;Bless me, sir, it was the best
+ heart!&rdquo; And somehow or other, both the laughter and the exclamations
+ affected him alike with what then was called &ldquo;the spleen,&rdquo;&mdash;for the
+ one reminded him of his own young days of joyless, careless mirth, of
+ which his mechanical gayety now was but a mocking ghost; and the other
+ seemed a satire, a parody, on the fierce but noiseless rapture of gaming,
+ through which his passions had passed, when thousands had slipped away
+ with a bland smile, provoking not one of those natural ebullitions of
+ emotion which there accompanied the loss of a shilling point. And besides
+ this, Vernon had been so accustomed to the success of the drawing-room, to
+ be a somebody and a something in the company of wits and princes, that he
+ felt, for the first time, a sense of insignificance in this provincial
+ circle. Those fat squires had heard nothing of Mr. Vernon, except that he
+ would not have Laughton,&mdash;he had no acres, no vote in their county;
+ he was a nobody to them. Those ruddy maidens, though now and then, indeed,
+ one or two might steal an admiring glance at a figure of elegance so
+ unusual, regarded him not with the female interest he had been accustomed
+ to inspire. They felt instinctively that he could be nothing to them, nor
+ they to him,&mdash;a mere London fop, and not half so handsome as Squires
+ Bluff and Chuff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rousing himself from this little vexation to his vanity with a conscious
+ smile at his own weakness, Vernon turned his looks towards the door,
+ waiting for Lucretia&rsquo;s entrance, and since her uncle&rsquo;s address to him,
+ feeling that new and indescribable interest in her appearance which is apt
+ to steal into every breast when what was before but an indifferent
+ acquaintance, is suddenly enhaloed with the light of a possible wife. At
+ length the door opened, and Lucretia entered. Mr. Vernon lowered his book,
+ and gazed with an earnestness that partook both of doubt and admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia Clavering was tall,&mdash;tall beyond what is admitted to be tall
+ in woman; but in her height there was nothing either awkward or masculine,&mdash;a
+ figure more perfect never served for model to a sculptor. The dress at
+ that day, unbecoming as we now deem it, was not to her&mdash;at least, on
+ the whole disadvantageous. The short waist gave greater sweep to her
+ majestic length of limb, while the classic thinness of the drapery
+ betrayed the exact proportion and the exquisite contour. The arms then
+ were worn bare almost to the shoulder, and Lucretia&rsquo;s arms were not more
+ faultless in shape than dazzling in their snowy colour; the stately neck,
+ the falling shoulders, the firm, slight, yet rounded bust,&mdash;all would
+ have charmed equally the artist and the sensualist. Fortunately, the sole
+ defect of her form was not apparent at a distance: that defect was in the
+ hand; it had not the usual faults of female youthfulness,&mdash;the
+ superfluity of flesh, the too rosy healthfulness of colour,&mdash;on the
+ contrary, it was small and thin; but it was, nevertheless, more the hand
+ of a man than a woman: the shape had a man&rsquo;s nervous distinctness, the
+ veins swelled like sinews, the joints of the fingers were marked and
+ prominent. In that hand it almost seemed as if the iron force of the
+ character betrayed itself. But, as we have said, this slight defect, which
+ few, if seen, would hypercritically notice, could not, of course, be
+ perceptible as she moved slowly up the room; and Vernon&rsquo;s eye, glancing
+ over the noble figure, rested upon the face. Was it handsome? Was it
+ repelling? Strange that in feature it had pretensions to the highest order
+ of beauty, and yet even that experienced connoisseur in female charms was
+ almost as puzzled what sentence to pronounce. The hair, as was the fashion
+ of the day, clustered in profuse curls over the forehead, but could not
+ conceal a slight line or wrinkle between the brows; and this line, rare in
+ women at any age, rare even in men at hers, gave an expression at once of
+ thought and sternness to the whole face. The eyebrows themselves were
+ straight, and not strongly marked, a shade or two perhaps too light,&mdash;a
+ fault still more apparent in the lashes; the eyes were large, full, and
+ though bright, astonishingly calm and deep,&mdash;at least in ordinary
+ moments; yet withal they wanted the charm of that steadfast and open look
+ which goes at once to the heart and invites its trust,&mdash;their
+ expression was rather vague and abstracted. She usually looked aslant
+ while she spoke, and this, which with some appears but shyness, in one so
+ self-collected had an air of falsehood. But when, at times, if earnest,
+ and bent rather on examining those she addressed than guarding herself
+ from penetration, she fixed those eyes upon you with sudden and direct
+ scrutiny, the gaze impressed you powerfully, and haunted you with a
+ strange spell. The eye itself was of a peculiar and displeasing colour,&mdash;not
+ blue, nor gray, nor black, nor hazel, but rather of that cat-like green
+ which is drowsy in the light, and vivid in the shade. The profile was
+ purely Greek, and so seen, Lucretia&rsquo;s beauty seemed incontestable; but in
+ front face, and still more when inclined between the two, all the features
+ took a sharpness that, however regular, had something chilling and severe:
+ the mouth was small, but the lips were thin and pale, and had an
+ expression of effort and contraction which added to the distrust that her
+ sidelong glance was calculated to inspire. The teeth were dazzlingly
+ white, but sharp and thin, and the eye-teeth were much longer than the
+ rest. The complexion was pale, but without much delicacy,&mdash;the
+ paleness seemed not natural to it, but rather that hue which study and
+ late vigils give to men; so that she wanted the freshness and bloom of
+ youth, and looked older than she was,&mdash;an effect confirmed by an
+ absence of roundness in the cheek not noticeable in the profile, but
+ rendering the front face somewhat harsh as well as sharp. In a word, the
+ face and the figure were not in harmony: the figure prevented you from
+ pronouncing her to be masculine; the face took from the figure the charm
+ of feminacy. It was the head of the young Augustus upon the form of
+ Agrippina. One touch more, and we close a description which already
+ perhaps the reader may consider frivolously minute. If you had placed
+ before the mouth and lower part of the face a mask or bandage, the whole
+ character of the upper face would have changed at once,&mdash;the eye lost
+ its glittering falseness, the brow its sinister contraction; you would
+ have pronounced the face not only beautiful, but sweet and womanly. Take
+ that bandage suddenly away and the change would have startled you, and
+ startled you the more because you could detect no sufficient defect or
+ disproportion in the lower part of the countenance to explain it. It was
+ as if the mouth was the key to the whole: the key nothing without the
+ text, the text uncomprehended without the key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, then, was Lucretia Clavering in outward appearance at the age of
+ twenty,&mdash;striking to the most careless eye; interesting and
+ perplexing the student in that dark language never yet deciphered,&mdash;the
+ human countenance. The reader must have observed that the effect every
+ face that he remarks for the first time produces is different from the
+ impression it leaves upon him when habitually seen. Perhaps no two persons
+ differ more from each other than does the same countenance in our earliest
+ recollection of it from the countenance regarded in the familiarity of
+ repeated intercourse. And this was especially the case with Lucretia
+ Clavering&rsquo;s: the first impulse of nearly all who beheld it was distrust
+ that partook of fear; it almost inspired you with a sense of danger. The
+ judgment rose up against it; the heart set itself on its guard. But this
+ uneasy sentiment soon died away, with most observers, in admiration at the
+ chiselled outline, which, like the Grecian sculpture, gained the more the
+ more it was examined, in respect for the intellectual power of the
+ expression, and in fascinated pleasure at the charm of a smile, rarely
+ employed, it is true, but the more attractive both for that reason and for
+ its sudden effect in giving brightness and persuasion to an aspect that
+ needed them so much. It was literally like the abrupt breaking out of a
+ sunbeam; and the repellent impression of the face thus familiarized away,
+ the matchless form took its natural influence; so that while one who but
+ saw Lucretia for a moment might have pronounced her almost plain, and
+ certainly not prepossessing in appearance, those with whom she lived,
+ those whom she sought to please, those who saw her daily, united in
+ acknowledgment of her beauty; and if they still felt awe, attributed it
+ only to the force of her understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she now came midway up the room, Gabriel started from his seat and ran
+ to her caressingly. Lucretia bent down, and placed her hand upon his fair
+ locks. As she did so, he whispered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vernon has been watching for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! Where is your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behind the screen, at chess with Sir Miles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With Sir Miles!&rdquo; and Lucretia&rsquo;s eye fell, with the direct gaze we have
+ before referred to, upon the boy&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been looking over them pretty often,&rdquo; said he, meaningly: &ldquo;they
+ have talked of nothing but the game.&rdquo; Lucretia lifted her head, and
+ glanced round with her furtive eye; the boy divined the search, and with a
+ scarce perceptible gesture pointed her attention to Mainwaring&rsquo;s retreat.
+ Her vivid smile passed over her lips as she bowed slightly to her lover,
+ and then, withdrawing the hand which Gabriel had taken in his own, she
+ moved on, passed Vernon with a commonplace word or two, and was soon
+ exchanging greetings with the gay merry-makers in the farther part of the
+ room. A few minutes afterwards, the servants entered, the tea-table was
+ removed, chairs were thrust back, a single lady of a certain age
+ volunteered her services at the piano, and dancing began within the ample
+ space which the arch fenced off from the whist-players. Vernon had watched
+ his opportunity, and at the first sound of the piano had gained Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ side, and with grave politeness pre-engaged her hand for the opening
+ dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that day, though it is not so very long ago, gentlemen were not ashamed
+ to dance, and to dance well; it was no languid saunter through a
+ quadrille; it was fair, deliberate, skilful dancing amongst the courtly,&mdash;free,
+ bounding movement amongst the gay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vernon, as might be expected, was the most admired performer of the
+ evening; but he was thinking very little of the notice he at last excited,
+ he was employing such ingenuity as his experience of life supplied to the
+ deficiencies of a very imperfect education, limited to the little flogged
+ into him at Eton, in deciphering the character and getting at the heart of
+ his fair partner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder you do not make Sir Miles take you to London, my cousin, if you
+ will allow me to call you so. You ought to have been presented.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no wish to go to London yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet!&rdquo; said Mr. Vernon, with the somewhat fade gallantry of his day;
+ &ldquo;beauty even like yours has little time to spare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hands across, hands across!&rdquo; cried Mr. Ardworth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; continued Mr. Vernon, as soon as a pause was permitted to him,
+ &ldquo;there is a song which the prince sings, written by some sensible
+ old-fashioned fellow, which says,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Gather your rosebuds while you may, For time is still a flying.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have obeyed the moral of the song yourself, I believe, Mr. Vernon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call me cousin, or Charles,&mdash;Charley, if you like, as most of my
+ friends do; nobody ever calls me Mr. Vernon,&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know myself by
+ that name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down the middle; we are all waiting for you,&rdquo; shouted Ardworth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And down the middle, with wondrous grace, glided the exquisite nankeens of
+ Charley Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dance now, thanks to Ardworth, became too animated and riotous to
+ allow more than a few broken monosyllables till Vernon and his partner
+ gained the end of the set, and then, flirting his partner&rsquo;s fan, he
+ recommenced,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seriously, my cousin, you must sometimes feel very much moped here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; answered Lucretia. Not once yet had her eye rested on Mr. Vernon.
+ She felt that she was sounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet I am sure you have a taste for the pomps and vanities. Aha! there is
+ ambition under those careless curls,&rdquo; said Mr. Vernon, with his easy,
+ adorable impertinence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia winced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if I were ambitious, what field for ambition could I find in London?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same as Alexander,&mdash;empire, my cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget that I am not a man. Man, indeed, may hope for an empire. It
+ is something to be a Pitt, or even a Warren Hastings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vernon stared. Was this stupidity, or what?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A woman has an empire more undisputed than Mr. Pitt&rsquo;s, and more pitiless
+ than that of Governor Hastings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, pardon me, Mr. Vernon&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charles, if you please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s brow darkened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; she repeated; &ldquo;but these compliments, if such they are meant
+ to be, meet a very ungrateful return. A woman&rsquo;s empire over gauzes and
+ ribbons, over tea-tables and drums, over fops and coquettes, is not worth
+ a journey from Laughton to London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think you can despise admiration?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you mean by admiration,&mdash;yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And love too?&rdquo; said Vernon, in a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Lucretia at once and abruptly raised her eyes to her partner. Was he
+ aiming at her secret? Was he hinting at intentions of his own? The look
+ chilled Vernon, and he turned away his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, then, in pursuance of a new train of ideas, Lucretia altered her
+ manner to him. She had detected what before she had surmised. This sudden
+ familiarity on his part arose from notions her uncle had instilled,&mdash;the
+ visitor had been incited to become the suitor. Her penetration into
+ character, which from childhood had been her passionate study, told her
+ that on that light, polished, fearless nature scorn would have slight
+ effect; to meet the familiarity would be the best means to secure a
+ friend, to disarm a wooer. She changed then her manner; she summoned up
+ her extraordinary craft; she accepted the intimacy held out to her, not to
+ unguard herself, but to lay open her opponent. It became necessary to her
+ to know this man, to have such power as the knowledge might give her.
+ Insensibly and gradually she led her companion away from his design of
+ approaching her own secrets or character, into frank talk about himself.
+ All unconsciously he began to lay bare to his listener the infirmities of
+ his erring, open heart. Silently she looked down, and plumbed them all,&mdash;the
+ frivolity, the recklessness, the half gay, half mournful sense of waste
+ and ruin. There, blooming amongst the wrecks, she saw the fairest flowers
+ of noble manhood profuse and fragrant still,&mdash;generosity and courage
+ and disregard for self. Spendthrift and gambler on one side the medal;
+ gentleman and soldier on the other. Beside this maimed and imperfect
+ nature she measured her own prepared and profound intellect, and as she
+ listened, her smile became more bland and frequent. She could afford to be
+ gracious; she felt superiority, scorn, and safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this seeming intimacy had matured, Vernon and his partner had quitted
+ the dance, and were conversing apart in the recess of one of the windows,
+ which the newspaper readers had deserted, in the part of the room where
+ Sir Miles and Dalibard, still seated, were about to commence their third
+ game at chess. The baronet&rsquo;s hand ceased from the task of arranging his
+ pawns; his eye was upon the pair; and then, after a long and complacent
+ gaze, it looked round without discovering the object it sought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am about to task your kindness most improperly, Monsieur Dalibard,&rdquo;
+ said Sir Miles, with that politeness so displeasing to Ardworth, &ldquo;but will
+ you do me the favour to move aside that fold of the screen? I wish for a
+ better view of our young people. Thank you very much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles now discovered Mainwaring, and observed that, far from regarding
+ with self-betraying jealousy the apparent flirtation going on between
+ Lucretia and her kinsman, he was engaged in animated conversation with the
+ chairman of the quarter sessions. Sir Miles was satisfied, and ranged his
+ pawns. All this time, and indeed ever since they had sat down to play, the
+ Provencal had been waiting, with the patience that belonged to his
+ character, for some observation from Sir Miles on the subject which, his
+ sagacity perceived, was engrossing his thoughts. There had been about the
+ old gentleman a fidgety restlessness which showed that something was on
+ his mind. His eyes had been frequently turned towards his niece since her
+ entrance; once or twice he had cleared his throat and hemmed,&mdash;his
+ usual prelude to some more important communication; and Dalibard had heard
+ him muttering to himself, and fancied he caught the name of &ldquo;Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ And indeed the baronet had been repeatedly on the verge of sounding his
+ secretary, and as often had been checked both by pride in himself and
+ pride for Lucretia. It seemed to him beneath his own dignity and hers even
+ to hint to an inferior a fear, a doubt, of the heiress of Laughton.
+ Olivier Dalibard could easily have led on his patron, he could easily, if
+ he pleased it, have dropped words to instil suspicion and prompt question;
+ but that was not his object,&mdash;he rather shunned than courted any
+ reference to himself upon the matter; for he knew that Lucretia, if she
+ could suppose that he, however indirectly, had betrayed her to her uncle,
+ would at once declare his own suit to her, and so procure his immediate
+ dismissal; while, aware of her powers of dissimulation and her influence
+ over her uncle, he feared that a single word from her would suffice to
+ remove all suspicion in Sir Miles, however ingeniously implanted, and
+ however truthfully grounded. But all the while, under his apparent calm,
+ his mind was busy and his passions burning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! your old play,&mdash;the bishop again,&rdquo; said Sir Miles, laughing,
+ as he moved a knight to frustrate his adversary&rsquo;s supposed plan; and then,
+ turning back, he once more contemplated the growing familiarity between
+ Vernon and his niece. This time he could not contain his pleasure.
+ &ldquo;Dalibard, my dear sir,&rdquo; he said, rubbing his hands, &ldquo;look yonder: they
+ would make a handsome couple!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, sir?&rdquo; said the Provencal, looking another way, with dogged
+ stupidity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who? Damn it, man! Nay, pray forgive my ill manners, but I felt glad,
+ sir, and proud, sir. Who? Charley Vernon and Lucretia Clavering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly, yes. Do you think that there is a chance of so happy an
+ event?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it depends only on Lucretia; I shall never force her.&rdquo; Here Sir
+ Miles stopped, for Gabriel, unperceived before, picked up his patron&rsquo;s
+ pocket-handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olivier Dalibard&rsquo;s gray eyes rested coldly on his son. &ldquo;You are not
+ dancing to-night, my boy. Go; I like to see you amused.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy obeyed at once, as he always did, the paternal commands. He found
+ a partner, and joined a dance just begun; and in the midst of the dance,
+ Honore Gabriel Varney seemed a new being,&mdash;not Ardworth himself so
+ thoroughly entered into the enjoyment of the exercise, the lights, the
+ music. With brilliant eyes and dilated nostrils, he seemed prematurely to
+ feel all that is exciting and voluptuous in that exhilaration which to
+ childhood is usually so innocent. His glances followed the fairest form;
+ his clasp lingered in the softest hand; his voice trembled as the warm
+ breath of his partner came on his cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the conversation between the chess-players continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the baronet, &ldquo;it depends only on Lucretia. And she seems
+ pleased with Vernon: who would not be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your penetration rarely deceives you, sir. I own I think with you. Does
+ Mr. Vernon know that you would permit the alliance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but&mdash;&rdquo; the baronet stopped short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were saying, but&mdash;But what, Sir Miles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the dog affected diffidence; he had some fear lest he should not win
+ her affections. But luckily, at least, they are disengaged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard looked grave, and his eye, as if involuntarily, glanced towards
+ Mainwaring. As ill-luck would have it, the young man had then ceased his
+ conversation with the chairman of the quarter sessions, and with arms
+ folded, brow contracted, and looks, earnest, anxious, and intent, was
+ contemplating the whispered conference between Lucretia and Vernon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s eye had followed his secretary&rsquo;s, and his face changed. His
+ hand fell on the chess board and upset half the men; he uttered a very
+ audible &ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Sir Miles,&rdquo; said the Provencal, rising, as if conscious that Sir
+ Miles wished to play no more,&mdash;&ldquo;I think that if you spoke soon to
+ Miss Clavering as to your views with regard to Mr. Vernon, it might ripen
+ matters; for I have heard it said by French mothers&mdash;and our
+ Frenchwomen understand the female heart, sir&mdash;that a girl having no
+ other affection is often prepossessed at once in favour of a man whom she
+ knows beforehand is prepared to woo and to win her, whereas without that
+ knowledge he would have seemed but an ordinary acquaintance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is shrewdly said, my dear Monsieur Dalibard; and for more reasons than
+ one, the sooner I speak to her the better. Lend me your arm. It is time
+ for supper; I see the dance is over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing by the place where Mainwaring still leaned, the baronet looked at
+ him fixedly. The young man did not notice the gaze. Sir Miles touched him
+ gently. He started as from a revery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have not danced, Mr. Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dance so seldom, Sir Miles,&rdquo; said Mainwaring, colouring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! you employ your head more than your heels, young gentleman,&mdash;very
+ right; I must speak to you to-morrow. Well, ladies, I hope you have
+ enjoyed yourselves? My dear Mrs. Vesey, you and I are old friends, you
+ know; many a minuet we have danced together, eh? We can&rsquo;t dance now, but
+ we can walk arm-in-arm together still. Honour me. And your little grandson&mdash;vaccinated,
+ eh? Wonderful invention! To supper, ladies, to supper!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The company were gone. The lights were out,&mdash;all save the lights of
+ heaven; and they came bright and still through the casements. Moonbeam and
+ Starbeam, they seemed now to have the old house to themselves. In came the
+ rays, brighter and longer and bolder, like fairies that march, rank upon
+ rank, into their kingdom of solitude. Down the oak stairs, from the
+ casements, blazoned with heraldry, moved the rays, creepingly, fearfully.
+ On the armour in the hall clustered the rays boldly and brightly, till the
+ steel shone out like a mirror. In the library, long and low, they just
+ entered, stopped short: it was no place for their play. In the
+ drawing-room, now deserted, they were more curious and adventurous.
+ Through the large window, still open, they came in freely and archly, as
+ if to spy what had caused such disorder; the stiff chairs out of place,
+ the smooth floor despoiled of its carpet, that flower dropped on the
+ ground, that scarf forgotten on the table,&mdash;the rays lingered upon
+ them all. Up and down through the house, from the base to the roof, roved
+ the children of the air, and found but two spirits awake amidst the
+ slumber of the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that tower to the east, in the tapestry chamber with the large gilded
+ bed in the recess, came the rays, tamed and wan, as if scared by the
+ grosser light on the table. By that table sat a girl, her brow leaning on
+ one hand; in the other she held a rose,&mdash;it is a love-token:
+ exchanged with its sister rose, by stealth, in mute sign of reproach for
+ doubt excited,&mdash;an assurance and a reconciliation. A love-token!&mdash;shrink
+ not, ye rays; there is something akin to you in love. But see,&mdash;the
+ hand closes convulsively on the flower; it hides it not in the breast; it
+ lifts it not to the lip: it throws it passionately aside. &ldquo;How long!&rdquo;
+ muttered the girl, impetuously,&mdash;&ldquo;how long! And to think that will
+ here cannot shorten an hour!&rdquo; Then she rose, and walked to and fro, and
+ each time she gained a certain niche in the chamber she paused, and then
+ irresolutely passed on again. What is in that niche? Only books. What can
+ books teach thee, pale girl? The step treads firmer; this time it halts
+ more resolved. The hand that clasped the flower takes down a volume. The
+ girl sits again before the light. See, O rays! what is the volume? Moon
+ and Starbeam, ye love what lovers read by the lamp in the loneliness. No
+ love-ditty this; no yet holier lesson to patience, and moral to hope. What
+ hast thou, young girl, strong in health and rich in years, with the lore
+ of the leech,&mdash;with prognostics and symptoms and diseases? She is
+ tracing with hard eyes the signs that precede the grim enemy in his most
+ sudden approach,&mdash;the habits that invite him, the warnings that he
+ gives. He whose wealth shall make her free has twice had the visiting
+ shock; he starves not, he lives frae! She closes the volume, and, musing,
+ metes him out the hours and days he has to live. Shrink back, ye rays! The
+ love is disenhallowed; while the hand was on the rose, the thought was on
+ the charnel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yonder, in the opposite tower, in the small casement near the roof, came
+ the rays. Childhood is asleep. Moon and Starbeam, ye love the slumbers of
+ the child! The door opens, a dark figure steals noiselessly in. The father
+ comes to look on the sleep of his son. Holy tenderness, if this be all!
+ &ldquo;Gabriel, wake!&rdquo; said a low, stern voice, and a rough hand shook the
+ sleeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sharpest test of those nerves upon which depends the mere animal
+ courage is to be roused suddenly, in the depth of night, by a violent
+ hand. The impulse of Gabriel, thus startled, was neither of timidity nor
+ surprise. It was that of some Spartan boy not new to danger; with a slight
+ cry and a fierce spring, the son&rsquo;s hand clutched at the father&rsquo;s throat.
+ Dalibard shook him off with an effort, and a smile, half in approval, half
+ in irony, played by the moonlight over his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blood will out, young tiger,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Hush, and hear me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it you, Father?&rdquo; said Gabriel. &ldquo;I thought, I dreamed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No matter; think, dream always that man should be prepared for defence
+ from peril!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; and the pale scholar seated himself on the bed, &ldquo;turn your face
+ to mine,&mdash;nearer; let the moon fall on it; lift your eyes; look at me&mdash;so!
+ Are you not playing false to me? Are you not Lucretia&rsquo;s spy, while you are
+ pretending to be mine? It is so; your eye betrays you. Now, heed me; you
+ have a mind beyond your years. Do you love best the miserable garret in
+ London, the hard fare and squalid dress, or your lodgment here, the sense
+ of luxury, the sight of splendour, the atmosphere of wealth? You have the
+ choice before you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I choose, as you would have me, then,&rdquo; said the boy, &ldquo;the last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you. Attend! You do not love me,&mdash;that is natural; you are
+ the son of Clara Varney! You have supposed that in loving Lucretia
+ Clavering you might vex or thwart me, you scarce knew how; and Lucretia
+ Clavering has gold and gifts and soft words and promises to bribe withal.
+ I now tell you openly my plan with regard to this girl: it is my aim to
+ marry her; to be master of this house and these lands. If I succeed, you
+ share them with me. By betraying me, word or look, to Lucretia, you
+ frustrate this aim; you plot against our rise and to our ruin. Deem not
+ that you could escape my fall; if I am driven hence,&mdash;as you might
+ drive me,&mdash;you share my fate; and mark me, you are delivered up to my
+ revenge! You cease to be my son,&mdash;you are my foe. Child! you know
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy, bold as he was, shuddered; but after a pause so brief that a
+ breath scarce passed between his silence and his words, he replied with
+ emphasis,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father, you have read my heart. I have been persuaded by Lucretia (for
+ she bewitches me) to watch you,&mdash;at least, when you are with Sir
+ Miles. I knew that this was mixed up with Mr. Mainwaring. Now that you
+ have made me understand your own views, I will be true to you,&mdash;true
+ without threats.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father looked hard on him, and seemed satisfied with the gaze.
+ &ldquo;Remember, at least, that your future rests upon your truth; that is no
+ threat,&mdash;that is a thought of hope. Now sleep or muse on it.&rdquo; He
+ dropped the curtain which his hand had drawn aside, and stole from the
+ room as noiselessly as he had entered. The boy slept no more. Deceit and
+ cupidity and corrupt ambition were at work in his brain. Shrink back, Moon
+ and Starbeam! On that child&rsquo;s brow play the demons who had followed the
+ father&rsquo;s step to his bed of sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back to his own room, close at hand, crept Olivier Dalibard. The walls
+ were lined with books,&mdash;many in language and deep in lore. Moon and
+ Starbeam, ye love the midnight solitude of the scholar! The Provencal
+ stole to the casement, and looked forth. All was serene,&mdash;breathless
+ trees and gleaming sculpture and whitened sward, girdled by the mass of
+ shadow. Of what thought the man? Not of the present loveliness which the
+ scene gave to his eye, nor of the future mysteries which the stars should
+ whisper to the soul. Gloomily over a stormy and a hideous past roved the
+ memory, stored with fraud and foul with crime,&mdash;plan upon plan,
+ schemed with ruthless wisdom, followed up by remorseless daring, and yet
+ all now a ruin and a blank; an intellect at war with good, and the good
+ had conquered! But the conviction neither touched the conscience nor
+ enlightened the reason; he felt, it is true, a moody sense of impotence,
+ but it brought rage, not despondency. It was not that he submitted to Good
+ as too powerful to oppose, but that he deemed he had not yet gained all
+ the mastery over the arsenal of Evil. And evil he called it not. Good and
+ evil to him were but subordinate genii at the command of Mind; they were
+ the slaves of the lamp. But had he got at the true secret of the lamp
+ itself? &ldquo;How is it,&rdquo; he thought, as he turned impatiently from the
+ casement, &ldquo;that I am baffled here where my fortunes seemed most assured?
+ Here the mind has been of my own training, and prepared by nature to my
+ hand; here all opportunity has smiled. And suddenly the merest commonplace
+ in the vulgar lives of mortals,&mdash;an unlooked-for rival; rival, too,
+ of the mould I had taught her to despise; one of the stock gallants of a
+ comedy, no character but youth and fair looks,&mdash;yea, the lover of the
+ stage starts up, and the fabric of years is overthrown.&rdquo; As he thus mused,
+ he placed his hand upon a small box on one of the tables. &ldquo;Yet within
+ this,&rdquo; resumed his soliloquy, and he struck the lid, that gave back a dull
+ sound,&mdash;&ldquo;within this I hold the keys of life and death! Fool! the
+ power does not reach to the heart, except to still it. Verily and indeed
+ were the old heathens mistaken? Are there no philters to change the
+ current of desire? But touch one chord in a girl&rsquo;s affection, and all the
+ rest is mine, all, all, lands, station, power, all the rest are in the
+ opening of this lid!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hide in the cloud, O Moon! shrink back, ye Stars! send not your holy,
+ pure, and trouble-lulling light to the countenance blanched and livid with
+ the thoughts of murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. CONFERENCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next day Sir Miles did not appear at breakfast,&mdash;not that he was
+ unwell, but that he meditated holding certain audiences, and on such
+ occasions the good old gentleman liked to prepare himself. He belonged to
+ a school in which, amidst much that was hearty and convivial, there was
+ much also that nowadays would seem stiff and formal, contrasting the other
+ school immediately succeeding him, which Mr. Vernon represented, and of
+ which the Charles Surface of Sheridan is a faithful and admirable type.
+ The room that Sir Miles appropriated to himself was, properly speaking,
+ the state apartment, called, in the old inventories, &ldquo;King James&rsquo;s
+ chamber;&rdquo; it was on the first floor, communicating with the
+ picture-gallery, which at the farther end opened upon a corridor admitting
+ to the principal bedrooms. As Sir Miles cared nothing for holiday state,
+ he had unscrupulously taken his cubiculum in this chamber, which was
+ really the handsomest in the house, except the banquet-hall, placed his
+ bed in one angle with a huge screen before it, filled up the space with
+ his Italian antiquities and curiosities; and fixed his favourite pictures
+ on the faded gilt leather panelled on the walls. His main motive in this
+ was the communication with the adjoining gallery, which, when the weather
+ was unfavourable, furnished ample room for his habitual walk. He knew how
+ many strides by the help of his crutch made a mile, and this was
+ convenient. Moreover, he liked to look, when alone, on those old portraits
+ of his ancestors, which he had religiously conserved in their places,
+ preferring to thrust his Florentine and Venetian masterpieces into
+ bedrooms and parlours, rather than to dislodge from the gallery the stiff
+ ruffs, doublets, and farthingales of his predecessors. It was whispered in
+ the house that the baronet, whenever he had to reprove a tenant or lecture
+ a dependant, took care to have him brought to his sanctum, through the
+ full length of this gallery, so that the victim might be duly prepared and
+ awed by the imposing effect of so stately a journey, and the grave faces
+ of all the generations of St. John, which could not fail to impress him
+ with the dignity of the family, and alarm him at the prospect of the
+ injured frown of its representative. Across this gallery now, following
+ the steps of the powdered valet, strode young Ardworth, staring now and
+ then at some portrait more than usually grim, more often wondering why his
+ boots, that never creaked before, should creak on those particular boards,
+ and feeling a quiet curiosity, without the least mixture of fear or awe as
+ to what old Squaretoes intended to say to him. But all feeling of
+ irreverence ceased when, shown into the baronet&rsquo;s room, and the door
+ closed, Sir Miles rose with a smile, and cordially shaking his hand, said,
+ dropping the punctilious courtesy of Mister: &ldquo;Ardworth, sir, if I had a
+ little prejudice against you before you came, you have conquered it. You
+ are a fine, manly, spirited fellow, sir; and you have an old man&rsquo;s good
+ wishes,&mdash;which are no bad beginning to a young man&rsquo;s good fortune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colour rushed over Ardworth&rsquo;s forehead, and a tear sprang to his eyes.
+ He felt a rising at his throat as he stammered out some not very audible
+ reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wished to see you, young gentleman, that I might judge myself what you
+ would like best, and what would best fit you. Your father is in the army:
+ what say you to a pair of colours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sir Miles, that is my utmost ambition! Anything but law, except the
+ Church; anything but the Church, except the desk and a counter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The baronet, much pleased, gave him a gentle pat on the shoulder. &ldquo;Ha, ha!
+ we gentlemen, you see (for the Ardworths are very well born, very), we
+ gentlemen understand each other! Between you and me, I never liked the
+ law, never thought a man of birth should belong to it. Take money for
+ lying,&mdash;shabby, shocking! Don&rsquo;t let that go any farther! The
+ Church-Mother Church&mdash;I honour her! Church and State go together! But
+ one ought to be very good to preach to others,&mdash;better than you and I
+ are, eh? ha, ha! Well, then, you like the army,&mdash;there&rsquo;s a letter for
+ you to the Horse Guards. Go up to town; your business is done. And, as for
+ your outfit,&mdash;read this little book at your leisure.&rdquo; And Sir Miles
+ thrust a pocketbook into Ardworth&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But pardon me,&rdquo; said the young man, much bewildered. &ldquo;What claim have I,
+ Sir Miles, to such generosity? I know that my uncle offended you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, that&rsquo;s the claim!&rdquo; said Sir Miles, gravely. &ldquo;I cannot live long,&rdquo; he
+ added, with a touch of melancholy in his voice; &ldquo;let me die in peace with
+ all! Perhaps I injured your uncle,&mdash;who knows but, if so, he hears
+ and pardons me now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sir Miles!&rdquo; exclaimed the thoughtless, generous-hearted young man;
+ &ldquo;and my little playfellow, Susan, your own niece!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles drew back haughtily; but the burst that offended him rose so
+ evidently from the heart, was so excusable from its motive and the youth&rsquo;s
+ ignorance of the world, that his frown soon vanished as he said, calmly
+ and gravely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No man, my good sir, can allow to others the right to touch on his family
+ affairs; I trust I shall be just to the poor young lady. And so, if we
+ never meet again, let us think well of each other. Go, my boy; serve your
+ king and your country!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do my best, Sir Miles, if only to merit your kindness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay a moment: you are intimate, I find, with young Mainwaring?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An old college friendship, Sir Miles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The army will not do for him, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is too clever for it, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, he&rsquo;d make a lawyer, I suppose,&mdash;glib tongue enough, and can talk
+ well; and lie, if he&rsquo;s paid for it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how lawyers regard those matters, Sir Miles; but if you
+ don&rsquo;t make him a lawyer, I am sure you must leave him an honest man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really and truly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour I think so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-day to you, and good luck. You must catch the coach at the lodge;
+ for I see by the papers that, in spite of all the talk about peace, they
+ are raising regiments like wildfire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With very different feelings from those with which he had entered the
+ room, Ardworth quitted it. He hurried into his own chamber to thrust his
+ clothes into his portmanteau, and while thus employed, Mainwaring entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joy, my dear fellow, wish me joy! I am going to town,&mdash;into the
+ army; abroad; to be shot at, thank Heaven! That dear old gentleman! Just
+ throw me that coat, will you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very few more words sufficed to explain what had passed to Mainwaring.
+ He sighed when his friend had finished: &ldquo;I wish I were going with you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you? Sir Miles has only got to write another letter to the Horse
+ Guards. But no, you are meant to be something better than food for powder;
+ and, besides, your Lucretia! Hang it, I am sorry I cannot stay to examine
+ her as I had promised; but I have seen enough to know that she certainly
+ loves you. Ah, when she changed flowers with you, you did not think I saw
+ you,&mdash;sly, was not I? Pshaw! She was only playing with Vernon. But
+ still, do you know, Will, now that Sir Miles has spoken to me so, that I
+ could have sobbed, &lsquo;God bless you, my old boy!&rsquo; &lsquo;pon my life, I could!
+ Now, do you know that I feel enraged with you for abetting that girl to
+ deceive him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am enraged with myself; and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here a servant entered, and informed Mainwaring that he had been searching
+ for him; Sir Miles requested to see him in his room. Mainwaring started
+ like a culprit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never fear,&rdquo; whispered Ardworth; &ldquo;he has no suspicion of you, I&rsquo;m sure.
+ Shake hands. When shall we meet again? Is it not odd, I, who am a
+ republican by theory, taking King George&rsquo;s pay to fight against the
+ French? No use stopping now to moralize on such contradictions. John, Tom,&mdash;what&rsquo;s
+ your name?&mdash;here, my man, here, throw that portmanteau on your
+ shoulder and come to the lodge.&rdquo; And so, full of health, hope, vivacity,
+ and spirit, John Walter Ardworth departed on his career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Mainwaring slowly took his way to Sir Miles. As he approached
+ the gallery, he met Lucretia, who was coming from her own room. &ldquo;Sir Miles
+ has sent for me,&rdquo; he said meaningly. He had time for no more, for the
+ valet was at the door of the gallery, waiting to usher him to his host.
+ &ldquo;Ha! you will say not a word that can betray us; guard your looks too!&rdquo;
+ whispered Lucretia, hurriedly; &ldquo;afterwards, join me by the cedars.&rdquo; She
+ passed on towards the staircase, and glanced at the large clock that was
+ placed there. &ldquo;Past eleven! Vernon is never up before twelve. I must see
+ him before my uncle sends for me, as he will send if he suspects&mdash;&rdquo;
+ She paused, went back to her room, rang for her maid, dressed as for
+ walking, and said carelessly, &ldquo;If Sir Miles wants me, I am gone to the
+ rectory, and shall probably return by the village, so that I shall be back
+ about one.&rdquo; Towards the rectory, indeed, Lucretia bent her way; but
+ half-way there, turned back, and passing through the plantation at the
+ rear of the house, awaited Mainwaring on the bench beneath the cedars. He
+ was not long before he joined her. His face was sad and thoughtful; and
+ when he seated himself by her side, it was with a weariness of spirit that
+ alarmed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said she, fearfully, and she placed her hand on his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Lucretia,&rdquo; he exclaimed, as he pressed that hand with an emotion that
+ came from other passions than love, &ldquo;we, or rather I, have done great
+ wrong. I have been leading you to betray your uncle&rsquo;s trust, to convert
+ your gratitude to him into hypocrisy. I have been unworthy of myself. I am
+ poor, I am humbly born, but till I came here, I was rich and proud in
+ honour. I am not so now. Lucretia, pardon me, pardon me! Let the dream be
+ over; we must not sin thus; for it is sin, and the worst of sin,&mdash;treachery.
+ We must part: forget me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forget you! Never, never, never!&rdquo; cried Lucretia, with suppressed but
+ most earnest vehemence, her breast heaving, her hands, as he dropped the
+ one he held, clasped together, her eyes full of tears,&mdash;transformed
+ at once into softness, meekness, even while racked by passion and despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, William, say anything,&mdash;reproach, chide, despise me, for mine is
+ all the fault; say anything but that word &lsquo;part.&rsquo; I have chosen you, I
+ have sought you out, I have wooed you, if you will; be it so. I cling to
+ you, you are my all,&mdash;all that saves me from&mdash;from myself,&rdquo; she
+ added falteringly, and in a hollow voice. &ldquo;Your love&mdash;you know not
+ what it is to me! I scarcely knew it myself before. I feel what it is now,
+ when you say &lsquo;part.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Agitated and tortured, Mainwaring writhed at these burning words, bent his
+ face low, and covered it with his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He felt her clasp struggling to withdraw them, yielded, and saw her
+ kneeling at his feet. His manhood and his gratitude and his heart all
+ moved by that sight in one so haughty, he opened his arms, and she fell on
+ his breast. &ldquo;You will never say &lsquo;part&rsquo; again, William!&rdquo; she gasped
+ convulsively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what are we to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, first, what has passed between you and my uncle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little to relate; for I can repeat words, not tones and looks. Sir Miles
+ spoke to me, at first kindly and encouragingly, about my prospects, said
+ it was time that I should fix myself, added a few words, with menacing
+ emphasis, against what he called &lsquo;idle dreams and desultory ambition,&rsquo; and
+ observing that I changed countenance,&mdash;for I felt that I did,&mdash;his
+ manner became more cold and severe. Lucretia, if he has not detected our
+ secret, he more than suspects my&mdash;my presumption. Finally, he said
+ dryly, that I had better return home, consult with my father, and that if
+ I preferred entering into the service of the Government to any mercantile
+ profession, he thought he had sufficient interest to promote my views.
+ But, clearly and distinctly, he left on my mind one impression,&mdash;that
+ my visits here are over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he allude to me&mdash;to Mr. Vernon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Lucretia! do you know him so little,&mdash;his delicacy, his pride?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia was silent, and Mainwaring continued:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I felt that I was dismissed. I took my leave of your uncle; I came hither
+ with the intention to say farewell forever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! hush! that thought is over. And you return to your father&rsquo;s,&mdash;perhaps
+ better so: it is but hope deferred; and in your absence I can the more
+ easily allay all suspicion, if suspicion exist. But I must write to you;
+ we must correspond. William, dear William, write often,&mdash;write
+ kindly; tell me, in every letter, that you love me,&mdash;that you love
+ only me; that you will be patient, and confide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear Lucretia,&rdquo; said Mainwaring, tenderly, and moved by the pathos of her
+ earnest and imploring voice, &ldquo;but you forget: the bag is always brought
+ first to Sir Miles; he will recognize my hand. And to whom can you trust
+ your own letters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; replied Lucretia, despondingly; and there was a pause. Suddenly
+ she lifted her head, and cried: &ldquo;But your father&rsquo;s house is not far from
+ this,&mdash;not ten miles; we can find a spot at the remote end of the
+ park, near the path through the great wood: there I can leave my letters;
+ there I can find yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it must be seldom. If any of Sir Miles&rsquo;s servants see me, if&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, William, William, this is not the language of love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me,&mdash;I think of you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love thinks of nothing but itself; it is tyrannical, absorbing,&mdash;it
+ forgets even the object loved; it feeds on danger; it strengthens by
+ obstacles,&rdquo; said Lucretia, tossing her hair from her forehead, and with an
+ expression of dark and wild power on her brow and in her eyes. &ldquo;Fear not
+ for me; I am sufficient guard upon myself. Even while I speak, I think,&mdash;yes,
+ I have thought of the very spot. You remember that hollow oak at the
+ bottom of the dell, in which Guy St. John, the Cavalier, is said to have
+ hid himself from Fairfax&rsquo;s soldiers? Every Monday I will leave a letter in
+ that hollow; every Tuesday you can search for it, and leave your own. This
+ is but once a week; there is no risk here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s conscience still smote him, but he had not the strength to
+ resist the energy of Lucretia. The force of her character seized upon the
+ weak part of his own,&mdash;its gentleness, its fear of inflicting pain,
+ its reluctance to say &ldquo;No,&rdquo;&mdash;that simple cause of misery to the
+ over-timid. A few sentences more, full of courage, confidence, and
+ passion, on the part of the woman, of constraint and yet of soothed and
+ grateful affection on that of the man, and the affianced parted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mainwaring had already given orders to have his trunks sent to him at his
+ father&rsquo;s; and, a hardy pedestrian by habit, he now struck across the park,
+ passed the dell and the hollow tree, commonly called &ldquo;Guy&rsquo;s Oak,&rdquo; and
+ across woodland and fields golden with ripening corn, took his way to the
+ town, in the centre of which, square, solid, and imposing, stood the
+ respectable residence of his bustling, active, electioneering father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s eye followed a form as fair as ever captivated maiden&rsquo;s glance,
+ till it was out of sight; and then, as she emerged from the shade of the
+ cedars into the more open space of the garden, her usual thoughtful
+ composure was restored to her steadfast countenance. On the terrace, she
+ caught sight of Vernon, who had just quitted his own room, where he always
+ breakfasted alone, and who was now languidly stretched on a bench, and
+ basking in the sun. Like all who have abused life, Vernon was not the same
+ man in the early part of the day. The spirits that rose to temperate heat
+ the third hour after noon, and expanded into glow when the lights shone
+ over gay carousers, at morning were flat and exhausted. With hollow eyes
+ and that weary fall of the muscles of the cheeks which betrays the votary
+ of Bacchus,&mdash;the convivial three-bottle man,&mdash;Charley Vernon
+ forced a smile, meant to be airy and impertinent, to his pale lips, as he
+ rose with effort, and extended three fingers to his cousin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where have you been hiding? Catching bloom from the roses? You have the
+ prettiest shade of colour,&mdash;just enough; not a hue too much. And
+ there is Sir Miles&rsquo;s valet gone to the rectory, and the fat footman
+ puffing away towards the village, and I, like a faithful warden, from my
+ post at the castle, all looking out for the truant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who wants me, cousin?&rdquo; said Lucretia, with the full blaze of her rare
+ and captivating smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The knight of Laughton confessedly wants thee, O damsel! The knight of
+ the Bleeding Heart may want thee more,&mdash;dare he own it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with a hand that trembled a little, not with love, at least, it
+ trembled always a little before the Madeira at luncheon,&mdash;he lifted
+ hers to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Compliments again,&mdash;words, idle words!&rdquo; said Lucretia, looking down
+ bashfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can I convince thee of my sincerity, unless thou takest my life as
+ its pledge, maid of Laughton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And very much tired of standing, Charley Vernon drew her gently to the
+ bench and seated himself by her side. Lucretia&rsquo;s eyes were still downcast,
+ and she remained silent; Vernon, suppressing a yawn, felt that he was
+ bound to continue. There was nothing very formidable in Lucretia&rsquo;s manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Fore Gad!&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;I suppose I must take the heiress after all; the
+ sooner &lsquo;t is over, the sooner I can get back to Brook Street.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is premature, my fair cousin,&rdquo; said he, aloud,&mdash;&ldquo;premature, after
+ less than a week&rsquo;s visit, and only some fourteen or fifteen hours&rsquo;
+ permitted friendship and intimacy, to say what is uppermost in my
+ thoughts; but we spendthrifts are provokingly handsome! Sir Miles, your
+ good uncle, is pleased to forgive all my follies and faults upon one
+ condition,&mdash;that you will take on yourself the task to reform me.
+ Will you, my fair cousin? Such as I am, you behold me. I am no sinner in
+ the disguise of a saint. My fortune is spent, my health is not strong; but
+ a young widow&rsquo;s is no mournful position. I am gay when I am well,
+ good-tempered when ailing. I never betrayed a trust,&mdash;can you trust
+ me with yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a long speech, and Charley Vernon felt pleased that it was over.
+ There was much in it that would have touched a heart even closed to him,
+ and a little genuine emotion had given light to his eyes, and color to his
+ cheek. Amidst all the ravages of dissipation, there was something
+ interesting in his countenance, and manly in his tone and his gesture. But
+ Lucretia was only sensible to one part of his confession,&mdash;her uncle
+ consented to his suit. This was all of which she desired to be assured,
+ and against this she now sought to screen herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your candour, Mr. Vernon,&rdquo; she said, avoiding his eye, &ldquo;deserves candour
+ in me; I cannot affect to misunderstand you. But you take me by surprise;
+ I was so unprepared for this. Give me time,&mdash;I must reflect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reflection is dull work in the country; you can reflect more amusingly in
+ town, my fair cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will wait, then, till I find myself in town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you make me the happiest, the most grateful of men,&rdquo; cried Mr.
+ Vernon, rising, with a semi-genuflection which seemed to imply, &ldquo;Consider
+ yourself knelt to,&rdquo;&mdash;just as a courteous assailer, with a motion of
+ the hand, implies, &ldquo;Consider yourself horsewhipped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia, who, with all her intellect, had no capacity for humour,
+ recoiled, and looked up in positive surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand you, Mr. Vernon,&rdquo; she said, with austere gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Allow me the bliss of flattering myself that you, at least, are
+ understood,&rdquo; replied Charley Vernon, with imperturbable assurance. &ldquo;You
+ will wait to reflect till you are in town,&mdash;that is to say, the day
+ after our honeymoon, when you awake in Mayfair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Lucretia could reply, she saw the indefatigable valet formally
+ approaching, with the anticipated message that Sir Miles requested to see
+ her. She replied hurriedly to this last, that she would be with her uncle
+ immediately; and when he had again disappeared within the porch, she said,
+ with a constrained effort at frankness,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Vernon, if I have misunderstood your words, I think I do not mistake
+ your character. You cannot wish to take advantage of my affection for my
+ uncle, and the passive obedience I owe to him, to force me into a step of
+ which&mdash;of which&mdash;I have not yet sufficiently considered the
+ results. If you really desire that my feelings should be consulted, that I
+ should not&mdash;pardon me&mdash;consider myself sacrificed to the family
+ pride of my guardian and the interests of my suitor&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; exclaimed Vernon, reddening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleased with the irritating effect her words had produced, Lucretia
+ continued calmly, &ldquo;If, in a word, I am to be a free agent in a choice on
+ which my happiness depends, forbear to urge Sir Miles further at present;
+ forbear to press your suit upon me. Give me the delay of a few months; I
+ shall know how to appreciate your delicacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Clavering,&rdquo; answered Vernon, with a touch of the St. John
+ haughtiness, &ldquo;I am in despair that you should even think so grave an
+ appeal to my honour necessary. I am well aware of your expectations and my
+ poverty. And, believe me, I would rather rot in a prison than enrich
+ myself by forcing your inclinations. You have but to say the word, and I
+ will (as becomes me as a man and gentleman) screen you from all chance of
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s displeasure, by taking it on myself to decline an honour of
+ which I feel, indeed, very undeserving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have offended you,&rdquo; said Lucretia, softly, while she turned aside
+ to conceal the glad light of her eyes,&mdash;&ldquo;pardon me; and to prove that
+ you do so, give me your arm to my uncle&rsquo;s room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vernon, with rather more of Sir Miles&rsquo;s antiquated stiffness than his own
+ rakish ease, offered his arm, with a profound reverence, to his cousin,
+ and they took their way to the house. Not till they had passed up the
+ stairs, and were even in the gallery, did further words pass between them.
+ Then Vernon said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what is your wish, Miss Clavering? On what footing shall I remain
+ here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you suffer me to dictate?&rdquo; replied Lucretia, stopping short with
+ well-feigned confusion, as if suddenly aware that the right to dictate
+ gives the right to hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, consider me at least your slave!&rdquo; whispered Vernon, as, his eye
+ resting on the contour of that matchless neck, partially and
+ advantageously turned from him, he began, with his constitutional
+ admiration of the sex, to feel interested in a pursuit that now seemed,
+ after piquing, to flatter his self-love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will use the privilege when we meet again,&rdquo; answered Lucretia; and
+ drawing her arm gently from his, she passed on to her uncle, leaving
+ Vernon midway in the gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those faded portraits looked down on her with that melancholy gloom which
+ the effigies of our dead ancestors seem mysteriously to acquire. To noble
+ and aspiring spirits, no homily to truth and honour and fair ambition is
+ more eloquent than the mute and melancholy canvas from which our fathers,
+ made, by death, our household gods, contemplate us still. They appear to
+ confide to us the charge of their unblemished names. They speak to us from
+ the grave, and heard aright, the pride of family is the guardian angel of
+ its heirs. But Lucretia, with her hard and scholastic mind, despised as
+ the veriest weakness all the poetry that belongs to the sense of a pure
+ descent. It was because she was proud as the proudest in herself that she
+ had nothing but contempt for the virtue, the valour, or the wisdom of
+ those that had gone before. So, with a brain busy with guile and
+ stratagem, she trod on, beneath the eyes of the simple and spotless Dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vernon, thus left alone, mused a few moments on what had passed between
+ himself and the heiress; and then, slowly retracing his steps, his eye
+ roved along the stately series of his line. &ldquo;Faith!&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;if my
+ boyhood had been passed in this old gallery, his Royal Highness would have
+ lost a good fellow and hard drinker, and his Majesty would have had
+ perhaps a more distinguished soldier,&mdash;certainly a worthier subject.
+ If I marry this lady, and we are blessed with a son, he shall walk through
+ this gallery once a day before he is flogged into Latin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s interview with her uncle was a masterpiece of art. What pity
+ that such craft and subtlety were wasted in our little day, and on such
+ petty objects; under the Medici, that spirit had gone far to the shaping
+ of history. Sure, from her uncle&rsquo;s openness, that he would plunge at once
+ into the subject for which she deemed she was summoned, she evinced no
+ repugnance when, tenderly kissing her, he asked if Charles Vernon had a
+ chance of winning favour in her eyes. She knew that she was safe in saying
+ &ldquo;No;&rdquo; that her uncle would never force her inclinations,&mdash;safe so far
+ as Vernon was concerned; but she desired more: she desired thoroughly to
+ quench all suspicion that her heart was pre-occupied; entirely to remove
+ from Sir Miles&rsquo;s thoughts the image of Mainwaring; and a denial of one
+ suitor might quicken the baronet&rsquo;s eyes to the concealment of the other.
+ Nor was this all; if Sir Miles was seriously bent upon seeing her settled
+ in marriage before his death, the dismissal of Vernon might only expose
+ her to the importunity of new candidates more difficult to deal with.
+ Vernon himself she could use as the shield against the arrows of a host.
+ Therefore, when Sir Miles repeated his question, she answered, with much
+ gentleness and seeming modest sense, that Mr. Vernon had much that must
+ prepossess in his favour; that in addition to his own advantages he had
+ one, the highest in her eyes,&mdash;her uncle&rsquo;s sanction and approval. But&mdash;and
+ she hesitated with becoming and natural diffidence&mdash;were not his
+ habits unfixed and roving? So it was said; she knew not herself,&mdash;she
+ would trust her happiness to her uncle. But if so, and if Mr. Vernon were
+ really disposed to change, would it not be prudent to try him,&mdash;try
+ him where there was temptation, not in the repose of Laughton, but amidst
+ his own haunts of London? Sir Miles had friends who would honestly inform
+ him of the result. She did but suggest this; she was too ready to leave
+ all to her dear guardian&rsquo;s acuteness and experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melted by her docility, and in high approval of the prudence which
+ betokened a more rational judgment than he himself had evinced, the good
+ old man clasped her to his breast and shed tears as he praised and thanked
+ her. She had decided, as she always did, for the best; Heaven forbid that
+ she should be wasted on an incorrigible man of pleasure! &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said the
+ frank-hearted gentleman, unable long to keep any thought concealed,&mdash;&ldquo;and
+ to think that I could have wronged you for a moment, my own noble child;
+ that I could have been dolt enough to suppose that the good looks of that
+ boy Mainwaring might have caused you to forget what&mdash;But you change
+ colour!&rdquo;&mdash;for, with all her dissimulation, Lucretia loved too
+ ardently not to shrink at that name thus suddenly pronounced. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo;
+ continued the baronet, drawing her still nearer towards him, while with
+ one hand he put back her face, that he might read its expression the more
+ closely,&mdash;&ldquo;oh, if it had been so,&mdash;if it be so, I will pity, not
+ blame you, for my neglect was the fault: pity you, for I have known a
+ similar struggle; admire you in pity, for you have the spirit of your
+ ancestors, and you will conquer the weakness. Speak! have I touched on the
+ truth? Speak without fear, child,&mdash;you have no mother; but in age a
+ man sometimes gets a mother&rsquo;s heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Startled and alarmed as the lark when the step nears its nest, Lucretia
+ summoned all the dark wile of her nature to mislead the intruder. &ldquo;No,
+ uncle, no; I am not so unworthy. You misconceived my emotion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you know that he has had the presumption to love you,&mdash;the
+ puppy!&mdash;and you feel the compassion you women always feel for such
+ offenders? Is that it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rapidly Lucretia considered if it would be wise to leave that impression
+ on his mind. On one hand, it might account for a moment&rsquo;s agitation; and
+ if Mainwaring were detected hovering near the domain, in the exchange of
+ their correspondence, it might appear but the idle, if hopeless, romance
+ of youth, which haunts the mere home of its object,&mdash;but no; on the
+ other hand, it left his banishment absolute and confirmed. Her resolution
+ was taken with a promptitude that made her pause not perceptible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my dear uncle,&rdquo; she said, so cheerfully that it removed all doubt
+ from the mind of her listener; &ldquo;but M. Dalibard has rallied me on the
+ subject, and I was so angry with him that when you touched on it, I
+ thought more of my quarrel with him than of poor timid Mr. Mainwaring
+ himself. Come, now, own it, dear sir! M. Dalibard has instilled this
+ strange fancy into your head?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, &lsquo;S life; if he had taken such a liberty, I should have lost my
+ librarian. No, I assure you, it was rather Vernon; you know true love is
+ jealous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vernon!&rdquo; thought Lucretia; &ldquo;he must go, and at once.&rdquo; Sliding from her
+ uncle&rsquo;s arms to the stool at his feet, she then led the conversation more
+ familiarly back into the channel it had lost; and when at last she
+ escaped, it was with the understanding that, without promise or
+ compromise, Mr. Vernon should return to London at once, and be put upon
+ the ordeal through which she felt assured it was little likely he should
+ pass with success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. GUY&rsquo;S OAK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks afterwards, the life at Laughton seemed restored to the
+ cheerful and somewhat monotonous tranquillity of its course, before chafed
+ and disturbed by the recent interruptions to the stream. Vernon had
+ departed, satisfied with the justice of the trial imposed on him, and far
+ too high-spirited to seek to extort from niece or uncle any engagement
+ beyond that which, to a nice sense of honour, the trial itself imposed.
+ His memory and his heart were still faithful to Mary; but his senses, his
+ fancy, his vanity, were a little involved in his success with the heiress.
+ Though so free from all mercenary meanness, Mr. Vernon was still enough
+ man of the world to be sensible of the advantages of the alliance which
+ had first been pressed on him by Sir Miles, and from which Lucretia
+ herself appeared not to be averse. The season of London was over, but
+ there was always a set, and that set the one in which Charley Vernon
+ principally moved, who found town fuller than the country. Besides, he
+ went occasionally to Brighton, which was then to England what Baiae was to
+ Rome. The prince was holding gay court at the Pavilion, and that was the
+ atmosphere which Vernon was habituated to breathe. He was no parasite of
+ royalty; he had that strong personal affection to the prince which it is
+ often the good fortune of royalty to attract. Nothing is less founded than
+ the complaint which poets put into the lips of princes, that they have no
+ friends,&mdash;it is, at least, their own perverse fault if that be the
+ case; a little amiability, a little of frank kindness, goes so far when it
+ emanates from the rays of a crown. But Vernon was stronger than Lucretia
+ deemed him; once contemplating the prospect of a union which was to
+ consign to his charge the happiness of another, and feeling all that he
+ should owe in such a marriage to the confidence both of niece and uncle,
+ he evinced steadier principles than he had ever made manifest when he had
+ only his own fortune to mar, and his own happiness to trifle with. He
+ joined his old companions, but he kept aloof from their more dissipated
+ pursuits. Beyond what was then thought the venial error of too devout
+ libations to Bacchus, Charley Vernon seemed reformed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth had joined a regiment which had departed for the field of action.
+ Mainwaring was still with his father, and had not yet announced to Sir
+ Miles any wish or project for the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olivier Dalibard, as before, passed his mornings alone in his chamber,&mdash;his
+ noons and his evenings with Sir Miles. He avoided all private conferences
+ with Lucretia. She did not provoke them. Young Gabriel amused himself in
+ copying Sir Miles&rsquo;s pictures, sketching from Nature, scribbling in his
+ room prose or verse, no matter which (he never showed his lucubrations),
+ pinching the dogs when he could catch them alone, shooting the cats, if
+ they appeared in the plantation, on pretence of love for the young
+ pheasants, sauntering into the cottages, where he was a favourite because
+ of his good looks, but where he always contrived to leave the trace of his
+ visits in disorder and mischief, upsetting the tea-kettle and scalding the
+ children, or, what he loved dearly, setting two gossips by the ears. But
+ these occupations were over by the hour Lucretia left her apartment. From
+ that time he never left her out of view; and when encouraged to join her
+ at his usual privileged times, whether in the gardens at sunset or in her
+ evening niche in the drawing-room, he was sleek, silken, and caressing as
+ Cupid, after plaguing the Nymphs, at the feet of Psyche. These two strange
+ persons had indeed apparently that sort of sentimental familiarity which
+ is sometimes seen between a fair boy and a girl much older than himself;
+ but the attraction that drew them together was an indefinable instinct of
+ their similarity in many traits of their several characters,&mdash;the
+ whelp leopard sported fearlessly around the she-panther. Before Olivier&rsquo;s
+ midnight conference with his son, Gabriel had drawn close and closer to
+ Lucretia, as an ally against his father; for that father he cherished
+ feelings which, beneath the most docile obedience, concealed horror and
+ hate, and something of the ferocity of revenge. And if young Varney loved
+ any one on earth except himself, it was Lucretia Clavering. She had
+ administered to his ruling passions, which were for effect and display;
+ she had devised the dress which set off to the utmost his exterior, and
+ gave it that picturesque and artistic appearance which he had sighed for
+ in his study of the portraits of Titian and Vandyke. She supplied him (for
+ in money she was generous) with enough to gratify and forestall every
+ boyish caprice; and this liberality now turned against her, for it had
+ increased into a settled vice his natural taste for extravagance, and made
+ all other considerations subordinate to that of feeding his cupidity. She
+ praised his drawings, which, though self-taught, were indeed
+ extraordinary, predicted his fame as an artist, lifted him into
+ consequence amongst the guests by her notice and eulogies, and what,
+ perhaps, won him more than all, he felt that it was to her&mdash;to
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s desire to conceal before her his more cruel propensities&mdash;that
+ he owed his father&rsquo;s change from the most refined severity to the most
+ paternal gentleness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus he had repaid her, as she expected, by a devotion which she
+ trusted to employ against her tutor himself, should the baffled aspirant
+ become the scheming rival and the secret foe. But now,&mdash;thoroughly
+ aware of the gravity of his father&rsquo;s objects, seeing before him the chance
+ of a settled establishment at Laughton, a positive and influential
+ connection with Lucretia; and on the other hand a return to the poverty he
+ recalled with disgust, and the terrors of his father&rsquo;s solitary malice and
+ revenge,&mdash;he entered fully into Dalibard&rsquo;s sombre plans, and without
+ scruple or remorse, would have abetted any harm to his benefactress. Thus
+ craft, doomed to have accomplices in craft, resembles the spider, whose
+ web, spread indeed for the fly, attracts the fellow-spider that shall
+ thrust it forth, and profit by the meshes it has woven for a victim, to
+ surrender to a master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already young Varney, set quietly and ceaselessly to spy every movement of
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s, had reported to his father two visits to the most retired part
+ of the park; but he had not yet ventured near enough to discover the exact
+ spot, and his very watch on Lucretia had prevented the detection of
+ Mainwaring himself in his stealthy exchange of correspondence. Dalibard
+ bade him continue his watch, without hinting at his ulterior intentions,
+ for, indeed, in these he was not decided. Even should he discover any
+ communication between Lucretia and Mainwaring, how reveal it to Sir Miles
+ without forever precluding himself from the chance of profiting by the
+ betrayal? Could Lucretia ever forgive the injury, and could she fail to
+ detect the hand that inflicted it? His only hope was in the removal of
+ Mainwaring from his path by other agencies than his own, and (by an
+ appearance of generosity and self-abandonment, in keeping her secret and
+ submitting to his fate) he trusted to regain the confidence she now
+ withheld from him, and use it to his advantage when the time came to
+ defend himself from Vernon. For he had learned from Sir Miles the passive
+ understanding with respect to that candidate for her hand; and he felt
+ assured that had Mainwaring never existed, could he cease to exist for her
+ hopes, Lucretia, despite her dissimulation, would succumb to one she
+ feared but respected, rather than one she evidently trifled with and
+ despised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the course to be taken must be adopted after the evidence is
+ collected,&rdquo; thought the subtle schemer, and he tranquilly continued his
+ chess with the baronet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before, however, Gabriel could make any further discoveries, an event
+ occurred which excited very different emotions amongst those it more
+ immediately interested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles had, during the last twelve months, been visited by two
+ seizures, seemingly of an apoplectic character. Whether they were
+ apoplexy, or the less alarming attacks that arise from some more gentle
+ congestion, occasioned by free living and indolent habits, was matter of
+ doubt with his physician,&mdash;not a very skilful, though a very formal,
+ man. Country doctors were not then the same able, educated, and scientific
+ class that they are now rapidly becoming. Sir Miles himself so stoutly and
+ so eagerly repudiated the least hint of the more unfavourable
+ interpretation that the doctor, if not convinced by his patient, was awed
+ from expressing plainly a contrary opinion. There are certain persons who
+ will dismiss their physician if he tells them the truth: Sir Miles was one
+ of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his character there was a weakness not uncommon to the proud. He did
+ not fear death, but he shrank from the thought that others should
+ calculate on his dying. He was fond of his power, though he exercised it
+ gently: he knew that the power of wealth and station is enfeebled in
+ proportion as its dependants can foresee the date of its transfer. He
+ dreaded, too, the comments which are always made on those visited by his
+ peculiar disease: &ldquo;Poor Sir Miles! an apoplectic fit. His intellect must
+ be very much shaken; he revoked at whist last night,&mdash;memory sadly
+ impaired!&rdquo; This may be a pitiable foible; but heroes and statesmen have
+ had it most: pardon it in the proud old man! He enjoined the physician to
+ state throughout the house and the neighbourhood that the attacks were
+ wholly innocent and unimportant. The physician did so, and was generally
+ believed; for Sir Miles seemed as lively and as vigorous after them as
+ before. Two persons alone were not deceived,&mdash;Dalibard and Lucretia.
+ The first, at an earlier part of his life, had studied pathology with the
+ profound research and ingenious application which he brought to bear upon
+ all he undertook. He whispered from the first to Lucretia,&mdash;&ldquo;Unless
+ your uncle changes his habits, takes exercise, and forbears wine and the
+ table, his days are numbered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when this intelligence was first conveyed to her, before she had
+ become acquainted with Mainwaring, Lucretia felt the shock of a grief
+ sudden and sincere. We have seen how these better sentiments changed as
+ human life became an obstacle in her way. In her character, what
+ phrenologists call &ldquo;destructiveness,&rdquo; in the comprehensive sense of the
+ word, was superlatively developed. She had not actual cruelty; she was not
+ bloodthirsty: those vices belong to a different cast of character. She was
+ rather deliberately and intellectually unsparing. A goal was before her;
+ she must march to it: all in the way were but hostile impediments. At
+ first, however, Sir Miles was not in the way, except to fortune, and for
+ that, as avarice was not her leading vice, she could well wait; therefore,
+ at this hint of the Provencal&rsquo;s she ventured to urge her uncle to
+ abstinence and exercise. But Sir Miles was touchy on the subject; he
+ feared the interpretations which great change of habits might suggest. The
+ memory of the fearful warning died away, and he felt as well as before;
+ for, save an old rheumatic gout (which had long since left him with no
+ other apparent evil but a lameness in the joints that rendered exercise
+ unwelcome and painful), he possessed one of those comfortable, and often
+ treacherous, constitutions which evince no displeasure at irregularities,
+ and bear all liberties with philosophical composure. Accordingly, he would
+ have his own way; and he contrived to coax or to force his doctor into an
+ authority on his side: wine was necessary to his constitution; much
+ exercise was a dangerous fatigue. The second attack, following four months
+ after the first, was less alarming, and Sir Miles fancied it concealed
+ even from his niece; but three nights after his recovery, the old baronet
+ sat musing alone for some time in his own room before he retired to rest.
+ Then he rose, opened his desk, and read his will attentively, locked it up
+ with a slight sigh, and took down his Bible. The next morning he
+ despatched the letters which summoned Ardworth and Vernon to his house;
+ and as he quitted his room, his look lingered with melancholy fondness
+ upon the portraits in the gallery. No one was by the old man to interpret
+ these slight signs, in which lay a world of meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks after Vernon had left the house, and in the midst of the
+ restored tranquillity we have described, it so happened that Sir Miles&rsquo;s
+ physician, after dining at the Hall, had been summoned to attend one of
+ the children at the neighbouring rectory; and there he spent the night. A
+ little before daybreak his slumbers were disturbed; he was recalled in all
+ haste to Laughton Hall. For the third time, he found Sir Miles speechless.
+ Dalibard was by his bedside. Lucretia had not been made aware of the
+ seizure; for Sir Miles had previously told his valet (who of late slept in
+ the same room) never to alarm Miss Clavering if he was taken ill. The
+ doctor was about to apply his usual remedies; but when he drew forth his
+ lancet, Dalibard placed his hand on the physician&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not this time,&rdquo; he said slowly, and with emphasis; &ldquo;it will be his
+ death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, sir!&rdquo; said the doctor, disdainfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do so, then; bleed him, and take the responsibility. I have studied
+ medicine,&mdash;I know these symptoms. In this case the apoplexy may
+ spare,&mdash;the lancet kills.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The physician drew back dismayed and doubtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would you do, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait three minutes longer the effect of the cataplasms I have applied. If
+ they fail&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A chill bath and vigorous friction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I will never permit it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then murder your patient your own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this while Sir Miles lay senseless, his eyes wide open, his teeth
+ locked. The doctor drew near, looked at the lancet, and said irresolutely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your practice is new to me; but if you have studied medicine, that&rsquo;s
+ another matter. Will you guarantee the success of your plan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mind, I wash my hands of it; I take Mr. Jones to witness;&rdquo; and he
+ appealed to the valet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call up the footman and lift your master,&rdquo; said Dalibard; and the doctor,
+ glancing round, saw that a bath, filled some seven or eight inches deep
+ with water, stood already prepared in the room. Perplexed and irresolute,
+ he offered no obstacle to Dalibard&rsquo;s movements. The body, seemingly
+ lifeless, was placed in the bath; and the servants, under Dalibard&rsquo;s
+ directions, applied vigorous and incessant friction. Several minutes
+ elapsed before any favourable symptom took place. At length Sir Miles
+ heaved a deep sigh, and the eyes moved; a minute or two more, and the
+ teeth chattered; the blood, set in motion, appeared on the surface of the
+ skin; life ebbed back. The danger was passed, the dark foe driven from the
+ citadel. Sir Miles spoke audibly, though incoherently, as he was taken
+ back to his bed, warmly covered up, the lights removed, noise forbidden,
+ and Dalibard and the doctor remained in silence by the bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rich man,&rdquo; thought Dalibard, &ldquo;thine hour is not yet come; thy wealth must
+ not pass to the boy Mainwaring.&rdquo; Sir Miles&rsquo;s recovery, under the care of
+ Dalibard, who now had his own way, was as rapid and complete as before.
+ Lucretia when she heard, the next morning, of the attack, felt, we dare
+ not say a guilty joy, but a terrible and feverish agitation. Sir Miles
+ himself, informed by his valet of Dalibard&rsquo;s wrestle with the doctor, felt
+ a profound gratitude and reverent wonder for the simple means to which he
+ probably owed his restoration; and he listened, with a docility which
+ Dalibard was not prepared to expect, to his learned secretary&rsquo;s urgent
+ admonitions as to the life he must lead if he desired to live at all.
+ Convinced, at last, that wine and good cheer had not blockaded out the
+ enemy, and having to do, in Olivier Dalibard, with a very different temper
+ from the doctor&rsquo;s, he assented with a tolerable grace to the trial of a
+ strict regimen and to daily exercise in the open air. Dalibard now became
+ constantly with him; the increase of his influence was as natural as it
+ was apparent. Lucretia trembled; she divined a danger in his power, now
+ separate from her own, and which threatened to be independent of it. She
+ became abstracted and uneasy; jealousy of the Provencal possessed her. She
+ began to meditate schemes for his downfall. At this time, Sir Miles
+ received the following letter from Mr. Fielden:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SOUTHAMPTON, Aug. 20, 1801.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR SIR MILES,&mdash;You will remember that I informed you when I arrived
+ at Southampton with my dear young charge; and Susan has twice written to
+ her sister, implying the request which she lacked the courage, seeing that
+ she is timid, expressly to urge, that Miss Clavering might again be
+ permitted to visit her. Miss Clavering has answered as might be expected
+ from the propinquity of the relationship; but she has perhaps the same
+ fears of offending you that actuate her sister. But now, since the worthy
+ clergyman who had undertaken my parochial duties has found the air
+ insalubrious, and prays me not to enforce the engagement by which we had
+ exchanged our several charges for the space of a calendar year, I am
+ reluctantly compelled to return home,&mdash;my dear wife, thank Heaven,
+ being already restored to health, which is an unspeakable mercy; and I am
+ sure I cannot be sufficiently grateful to Providence, which has not only
+ provided me with a liberal independence of more than 200 pounds a year,
+ but the best of wives and the most dutiful of children,&mdash;possessions
+ that I venture to call &ldquo;the riches of the heart.&rdquo; Now, I pray you, my dear
+ Sir Miles, to gratify these two deserving young persons, and to suffer
+ Miss Lucretia incontinently to visit her sister. Counting on your consent,
+ thus boldly demanded, I have already prepared an apartment for Miss
+ Clavering; and Susan is busy in what, though I do not know much of such
+ feminine matters, the whole house declares to be a most beautiful and
+ fanciful toilet-cover, with roses and forget-me-nots cut out of muslin,
+ and two large silk tassels, which cost her three shillings and fourpence.
+ I cannot conclude without thanking you from my heart for your noble
+ kindness to young Ardworth. He is so full of ardour and spirit that I
+ remember, poor lad, when I left him, as I thought, hard at work on that
+ well-known problem of Euclid vulgarly called the Asses&rsquo; Bridge,&mdash;I
+ found him describing a figure of 8 on the village pond, which was only
+ just frozen over! Poor lad! Heaven will take care of him, I know, as it
+ does of all who take no care of themselves. Ah, Sir Miles, if you could
+ but see Susan,&mdash;such a nurse, too, in illness! I have the honour to
+ be, Sir Miles,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your most humble, poor servant, to command,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATTHEW FIELDEN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles put this letter in his niece&rsquo;s hand, and said kindly, &ldquo;Why not
+ have gone to see your sister before? I should not have been angry. Go, my
+ child, as soon as you like. To-morrow is Sunday,&mdash;no travelling that
+ day; but the next, the carriage shall be at your order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia hesitated a moment. To leave Dalibard in sole possession of the
+ field, even for a few days, was a thought of alarm; but what evil could he
+ do in that time? And her pulse beat quickly: Mainwaring could come to
+ Southampton; she should see him again, after more than six weeks&rsquo; absence!
+ She had so much to relate and to hear; she fancied his last letter had
+ been colder and shorter; she yearned to hear him say, with his own lips,
+ that he loved her still. This idea banished or prevailed over all others.
+ She thanked her uncle cheerfully and gayly, and the journey was settled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be at watch early on Monday,&rdquo; said Olivier to his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monday came; the baronet had ordered the carriage to be at the door at
+ ten. A little before eight, Lucretia stole out, and took her way to Guy&rsquo;s
+ Oak. Gabriel had placed himself in readiness; he had climbed a tree at the
+ bottom of the park (near the place where hitherto he had lost sight of
+ her); she passed under it,&mdash;on through a dark grove of pollard oaks.
+ When she was at a sufficient distance, the boy dropped from his perch;
+ with the stealth of an Indian he crept on her trace, following from tree
+ to tree, always sheltered, always watchful. He saw her pause at the dell
+ and look round; she descended into the hollow; he slunk through the fern;
+ he gained the marge of the dell, and looked down,&mdash;she was lost to
+ his sight. At length, to his surprise, he saw the gleam of her robe emerge
+ from the hollow of a tree,&mdash;her head stooped as she came through the
+ aperture; he had time to shrink back amongst the fern; she passed on
+ hurriedly, the same way she had taken, back to the house; then into the
+ dell crept the boy. Guy&rsquo;s Oak, vast and venerable, with gnarled green
+ boughs below, and sere branches above, that told that its day of fall was
+ decreed at last, rose high from the abyss of the hollow, high and far-seen
+ amidst the trees that stood on the vantage-ground above,&mdash;even as a
+ great name soars the loftier when it springs from the grave. A dark and
+ irregular fissure gave entrance to the heart of the oak. The boy glided in
+ and looked round; he saw nothing, yet something there must be. The rays of
+ the early sun did not penetrate into the hollow, it was as dim as a cave.
+ He felt slowly in every crevice, and a startled moth or two flew out. It
+ was not for moths that the girl had come to Guy&rsquo;s Oak! He drew back, at
+ last, in despair; as he did so, he heard a low sound close at hand,&mdash;a
+ low, murmuring, angry sound, like a hiss; he looked round, and through the
+ dark, two burning eyes fixed his own: he had startled a snake from its
+ bed. He drew out in time, as the reptile sprang; but now his task, search,
+ and object were forgotten. With the versatility of a child, his thoughts
+ were all on the enemy he had provoked. That zest of prey which is inherent
+ in man&rsquo;s breast, which makes him love the sport and the chase, and maddens
+ boyhood and age with the passion for slaughter, leaped up within him;
+ anything of danger and contest and excitement gave Gabriel Varney a
+ strange fever of pleasure. He sprang up the sides of the dell, climbed the
+ park pales on which it bordered, was in the wood where the young shoots
+ rose green and strong from the underwood. To cut a staff for the strife,
+ to descend again into the dell, creep again through the fissure, look
+ round for those vengeful eyes, was quick done as the joyous play of the
+ impulse. The poor snake had slid down in content and fancied security; its
+ young, perhaps, were not far off; its wrath had been the instinct Nature
+ gives to the mother. It hath done thee no harm yet, boy; leave it in
+ peace! The young hunter had no ear to such whisper of prudence or mercy.
+ Dim and blind in the fissure, he struck the ground and the tree with his
+ stick, shouted out, bade the eyes gleam, and defied them. Whether or not
+ the reptile had spent its ire in the first fruitless spring, and this
+ unlooked-for return of the intruder rather daunted than exasperated, we
+ leave those better versed in natural history to conjecture; but instead of
+ obeying the challenge and courting the contest, it glided by the sides of
+ the oak, close to the very feet of its foe, and emerging into the light,
+ dragged its gray coils through the grass; but its hiss still betrayed it.
+ Gabriel sprang through the fissure and struck at the craven, insulting it
+ with a laugh of scorn as he struck. Suddenly it halted, suddenly reared
+ its crest; the throat swelled with venom, the tongue darted out, and
+ again, green as emeralds, glared the spite of its eyes. No fear felt
+ Gabriel Varney; his arm was averted; he gazed, spelled and admiringly,
+ with the eye of an artist. Had he had pencil and tablet at that moment, he
+ would have dropped his weapon for the sketch, though the snake had been as
+ deadly as the viper of Sumatra. The sight sank into his memory, to be
+ reproduced often by the wild, morbid fancies of his hand. Scarce a moment,
+ however, had he for the gaze; the reptile sprang, and fell, baffled and
+ bruised by the involuntary blow of its enemy. As it writhed on the grass,
+ how its colours came out; how graceful were the movements of its pain! And
+ still the boy gazed, till the eye was sated and the cruelty returned. A
+ blow, a second, a third,&mdash;all the beauty is gone; shapeless, and
+ clotted with gore, that elegant head; mangled and dissevered the airy
+ spires of that delicate shape, which had glanced in its circling
+ involutions, free and winding as a poet&rsquo;s thought through his verse. The
+ boy trampled the quivering relics into the sod, with a fierce animal joy
+ of conquest, and turned once more towards the hollow, for a last almost
+ hopeless survey. Lo, his object was found! In his search for the snake,
+ either his staff or his foot had disturbed a layer of moss in the corner;
+ the faint ray, ere he entered the hollow, gleamed upon something white. He
+ emerged from the cavity with a letter in his hand; he read the address,
+ thrust it into his bosom, and as stealthily, but more rapidly, than he had
+ come, took his way to his father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. HOUSEHOLD TREASON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Provencal took the letter from his son&rsquo;s hand, and looked at him with
+ an approbation half-complacent, half-ironical. &ldquo;Mon fils!&rdquo; said he,
+ patting the boy&rsquo;s head gently, &ldquo;why should we not be friends? We want each
+ other; we have the strong world to fight against.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if you are master of this place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well answered,&mdash;no; then we shall have the strong world on our side,
+ and shall have only rogues and the poor to make war upon.&rdquo; Then, with a
+ quiet gesture, he dismissed his son, and gazed slowly on the letter. His
+ pulse, which was usually low, quickened, and his lips were tightly
+ compressed; he shrank from the contents with a jealous pang; as a light
+ quivers strugglingly in a noxious vault, love descended into that hideous
+ breast, gleamed upon dreary horrors, and warred with the noxious
+ atmosphere: but it shone still. To this dangerous man, every art that
+ gives power to the household traitor was familiar: he had no fear that the
+ violated seals should betray the fraud which gave the contents to the eye
+ that, at length, steadily fell upon the following lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAREST, AND EVER DEAREST,&mdash;Where art thou at this moment? What are
+ thy thoughts,&mdash;are they upon me? I write this at the dead of night. I
+ picture you to myself as my hand glides over the paper. I think I see you,
+ as you look on these words, and envy them the gaze of those dark eyes.
+ Press your lips to the paper. Do you feel the kiss that I leave there?
+ Well, well! it will not be for long now that we shall be divided. Oh, what
+ joy, when I think that I am about to see you! Two days more, at most
+ three, and we shall meet, shall we not? I am going to see my sister. I
+ subjoin my address. Come, come, come; I thirst to see you once more. And I
+ did well to say, &ldquo;Wait, and be patient;&rdquo; we shall not wait long: before
+ the year is out I shall be free. My uncle has had another and more deadly
+ attack. I see its trace in his face, in his step, in his whole form and
+ bearing. The only obstacle between us is fading away. Can I grieve when I
+ think it,&mdash;grieve when life with you spreads smiling beyond the old
+ man&rsquo;s grave? And why should age, that has survived all passion, stand with
+ its chilling frown, and the miserable prejudices the world has not
+ conquered, but strengthened into a creed,&mdash;why should age stand
+ between youth and youth? I feel your mild eyes rebuke me as I write. But
+ chide me not that on earth I see only you. And it will be mine to give you
+ wealth and rank! Mine to see the homage of my own heart reflected from the
+ crowd who bow, not to the statue, but the pedestal. Oh, how I shall enjoy
+ your revenge upon the proud! For I have drawn no pastoral scenes in my
+ picture of the future. No; I see you leading senates, and duping fools. I
+ shall be by your side, your partner, step after step, as you mount the
+ height, for I am ambitious, you know, William; and not less because I
+ love,&mdash;rather ten thousand times more so. I would not have you born
+ great and noble, for what then could we look to,&mdash;what use all my
+ schemes, and my plans, and aspirings? Fortune, accident, would have taken
+ from us the great zest of life, which is desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I see you, I shall tell you that I have some fears of Olivier
+ Dalibard; he has evidently some wily project in view. He, who never
+ interfered before with the blundering physician, now thrusts him aside,
+ affects to have saved the old man, attends him always. Dares he think to
+ win an influence, to turn against me,&mdash;against us? Happily, when I
+ shall come back, my uncle will probably be restored to the false strength
+ which deceives him; he will have less need of Dalibard; and then&mdash;then
+ let the Frenchman beware! I have already a plot to turn his schemes to his
+ own banishment. Come to Southampton, then, as soon as you can,&mdash;perhaps
+ the day you receive this; on Wednesday, at farthest. Your last letter
+ implies blame of my policy with respect to Vernon. Again I say, it is
+ necessary to amuse my uncle to the last. Before Vernon can advance a
+ claim, there will be weeping at Laughton. I shall weep, too, perhaps; but
+ there will be joy in those tears, as well as sorrow,&mdash;for then, when
+ I clasp thy hand, I can murmur, &ldquo;It is mine at last, and forever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adieu! No, not adieu,&mdash;to our meeting, my lover, my beloved! Thy
+ LUCRETIA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour after Miss Clavering had departed on her visit, Dalibard returned
+ the letter to his son, the seal seemingly unbroken, and bade him replace
+ it in the hollow of the tree, but sufficiently in sight to betray itself
+ to the first that entered. He then communicated the plan he had formed for
+ its detection,&mdash;a plan which would prevent Lucretia ever suspecting
+ the agency of his son or himself; and this done, he joined Sir Miles in
+ the gallery. Hitherto, in addition to his other apprehensions in revealing
+ to the baronet Lucretia&rsquo;s clandestine intimacy with Mainwaring, Dalibard
+ had shrunk from the thought that the disclosure would lose her the
+ heritage which had first tempted his avarice or ambition; but now his
+ jealous and his vindictive passions were aroused, and his whole plan of
+ strategy was changed. He must crush Lucretia, or she would crush him, as
+ her threats declared. To ruin her in Sir Miles&rsquo;s eyes, to expel her from
+ his house, might not, after all, weaken his own position, even with regard
+ to power over herself. If he remained firmly established at Laughton, he
+ could affect intercession,&mdash;he could delay, at least, any precipitate
+ union with Mainwaring, by practising on the ambition which he still saw at
+ work beneath her love; he might become a necessary ally; and then&mdash;why,
+ then, his ironical smile glanced across his lips. But beyond this, his
+ quick eye saw fair prospects to self-interest: Lucretia banished; the
+ heritage not hers; the will to be altered; Dalibard esteemed indispensable
+ to the life of the baronet. Come, there was hope here,&mdash;not for the
+ heritage, indeed, but at least for a munificent bequest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At noon, some visitors, bringing strangers from London whom Sir Miles had
+ invited to see the house (which was one of the lions of the neighbourhood,
+ though not professedly a show-place), were expected. Aware of this,
+ Dalibard prayed the baronet to rest quiet till his company arrived, and
+ then he said carelessly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be a healthful diversion to your spirits to accompany them a
+ little in the park; you can go in your garden-chair; you will have new
+ companions to talk with by the way; and it is always warm and sunny at the
+ slope of the hill, towards the bottom of the park.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles assented cheerfully; the guests came, strolled over the house,
+ admired the pictures and the armour and the hall and the staircase, paid
+ due respect to the substantial old-fashioned luncheon, and then,
+ refreshed, and in great good-humour, acquiesced in Sir Miles&rsquo;s proposition
+ to saunter through the park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor baronet was more lively than usual. The younger people clustered
+ gayly round his chair (which was wheeled by his valet), smiling at his
+ jests and charmed with his courteous high-breeding. A little in the rear
+ walked Gabriel, paying special attention to the prettiest and merriest
+ girl of the company, who was a great favourite with Sir Miles,&mdash;perhaps
+ for those reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a delightful old gentleman!&rdquo; said the young lady. &ldquo;How I envy Miss
+ Clavering such an uncle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but you are a little out of favour to-day, I can tell you,&rdquo; said
+ Gabriel, laughingly; &ldquo;you were close by Sir Miles when we went through the
+ picture-gallery, and you never asked him the history of the old knight in
+ the buff doublet and blue sash.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear me, what of that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, that was brave Colonel Guy St. John, the Cavalier, the pride and
+ boast of Sir Miles; you know his weakness. He looked so displeased when
+ you said, &lsquo;What a droll-looking figure!&rsquo; I was on thorns for you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a pity! I would not offend dear Sir Miles for the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s easy to make it up with him. Go and tell him that he must take
+ you to see Guy&rsquo;s Oak, in the dell; that you have heard so much about it;
+ and when you get him on his hobby, it is hard if you can&rsquo;t make your
+ peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll certainly do it, Master Varney;&rdquo; and the young lady lost no time
+ in obeying the hint. Gabriel had set other tongues on the same cry, so
+ that there was a general exclamation when the girl named the subject,&mdash;&ldquo;Oh,
+ Guy&rsquo;s Oak, by all means!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much pleased with the enthusiasm this memorial of his pet ancestor
+ produced, Sir Miles led the way to the dell, and pausing as he reached the
+ verge, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear I cannot do you the honours; it is too steep for my chair to
+ descend safely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel whispered the fair companion whose side he still kept to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my dear Sir Miles,&rdquo; cried the girl, &ldquo;I positively won&rsquo;t stir without
+ you; I am sure we could get down the chair without a jolt. Look there, how
+ nicely the ground slopes! Jane, Lucy, my dears, let us take charge of Sir
+ Miles. Now, then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gallant old gentleman would have marched to the breach in such
+ guidance; he kissed the fair hands that lay so temptingly on his chair,
+ and then, rising with some difficulty, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my dears, you have made me so young again that I think I can walk
+ down the steep with the best of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, leaning partly on his valet, and by the help of the hands extended to
+ him, step after step, Sir Miles, with well-disguised effort, reached the
+ huge roots of the oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hollow then was much smaller,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;so he was not so easily
+ detected as a man would be now, the damned crop-ears&mdash;I beg pardon,
+ my dears; the rascally rebels&mdash;poked their swords through the
+ fissure, and two went, one through his jerkin, one through his arm; but he
+ took care not to swear at the liberty, and they went away, not suspecting
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus speaking, the young people were already playfully struggling
+ which should first enter the oak. Two got precedence, and went in and out,
+ one after the other. Gabriel breathed hard. &ldquo;The blind owlets!&rdquo; thought
+ he; &ldquo;and I put the letter where a mole would have seen it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know the spell when you enter an oak-tree where the fairies have
+ been,&rdquo; he whispered to the fair object of his notice. &ldquo;You must turn round
+ three times, look carefully on the ground, and you will see the face you
+ love best. If I was but a little older, how I should pray&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; said the girl, blushing, as she now slid through the crowd,
+ and went timidly in; presently she uttered a little exclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gallant Sir Miles stooped down to see what was the matter, and
+ offering his hand as she came out, was startled to see her holding a
+ letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only think what I have found!&rdquo; said the girl. &ldquo;What a strange place for a
+ post-office! Bless me! It is directed to Mr. Mainwaring!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Mainwaring!&rdquo; cried three or four voices; but the baronet&rsquo;s was mute.
+ His eye recognized Lucretia&rsquo;s hand; his tongue clove to the roof of his
+ mouth; the blood surged, like a sea, in his temples; his face became
+ purple. Suddenly Gabriel, peeping over the girl&rsquo;s shoulder, snatched away
+ the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my letter,&mdash;it is mine! What a shame in Mainwaring not to have
+ come for it as he promised!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles looked round and breathed more freely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yours, Master Varney!&rdquo; said the young lady, astonished. &ldquo;What can make
+ your letters to Mr. Mainwaring such a secret?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! you&rsquo;ll laugh at me; but&mdash;but&mdash;I wrote a poem on Guy&rsquo;s Oak,
+ and Mr. Mainwaring promised to get it into the county paper for me; and as
+ he was to pass close by the park pales, through the wood yonder, on his
+ way to D&mdash;&mdash; last Saturday, we agreed that I should leave it
+ here; but he has forgotten his promise, I see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Miles grasped the boy&rsquo;s arm with a convulsive pressure of gratitude.
+ There was a general cry for Gabriel to read his poem on the spot; but the
+ boy looked sheepish, and hung down his head, and seemed rather more
+ disposed to cry than to recite. Sir Miles, with an effort at simulation
+ that all his long practice of the world never could have nerved him to,
+ unexcited by a motive less strong than the honour of his blood and house,
+ came to the relief of the young wit that had just come to his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said, almost calmly, &ldquo;I know our young poet is too shy to oblige
+ you. I will take charge of your verses, Master Gabriel;&rdquo; and with a grave
+ air of command, he took the letter from the boy and placed it in his
+ pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The return to the house was less gay than the visit to the oak. The
+ baronet himself made a feverish effort to appear blithe and debonair as
+ before; but it was not successful. Fortunately, the carriages were all at
+ the door as they reached the house, and luncheon being over, nothing
+ delayed the parting compliments of the guests. As the last carriage drove
+ away, Sir Miles beckoned to Gabriel, and bade him follow him into his
+ room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When there, he dismissed his valet and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know, then, who wrote this letter. Have you been in the secret of the
+ correspondence? Speak the truth, my dear boy; it shall cost you nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Sir Miles!&rdquo; cried Gabriel, earnestly, &ldquo;I know nothing whatever beyond
+ this,&mdash;that I saw the hand of my dear, kind Miss Lucretia; that I
+ felt, I hardly knew why, that both you and she would not have those people
+ discover it, which they would if the letter had been circulated from one
+ to the other, for some one would have known the hand as well as myself,
+ and therefore I spoke, without thinking, the first thing that came into my
+ head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&mdash;you have obliged me and my niece, sir,&rdquo; said the baronet,
+ tremulously; and then, with a forced and sickly smile, he added: &ldquo;Some
+ foolish vagary of Lucretia, I suppose; I must scold her for it. Say
+ nothing about it, however, to any one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-by, my dear Gabriel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that boy saved the honour of my niece&rsquo;s name,&mdash;my mother&rsquo;s
+ grandchild! O God! this is bitter,&mdash;in my old age too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed his head over his hands, and tears forced themselves through his
+ fingers. He was long before he had courage to read the letter, though he
+ little foreboded all the shock that it would give him. It was the first
+ letter, not destined to himself, of which he had ever broken the seal.
+ Even that recollection made the honourable old man pause; but his duty was
+ plain and evident, as head of the house and guardian to his niece. Thrice
+ he wiped his spectacles; still they were dim, still the tears would come.
+ He rose tremblingly, walked to the window, and saw the stately deer
+ grouped in the distance, saw the church spire that rose above the burial
+ vault of his ancestors, and his heart sank deeper and deeper as he
+ muttered: &ldquo;Vain pride! pride!&rdquo; Then he crept to the door and locked it,
+ and at last, seating himself firmly, as a wounded man to some terrible
+ operation, he read the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heaven support thee, old man! thou hast to pass through the bitterest
+ trial which honour and affection can undergo,&mdash;household treason.
+ When the wife lifts high the blushless front and brazens out her guilt;
+ when the child, with loud voice, throws off all control and makes boast of
+ disobedience,&mdash;man revolts at the audacity; his spirit arms against
+ his wrong: its face, at least, is bare; the blow, if sacrilegious, is
+ direct. But when mild words and soft kisses conceal the worst foe Fate can
+ arm; when amidst the confidence of the heart starts up the form of
+ Perfidy; when out from the reptile swells the fiend in its terror; when
+ the breast on which man leaned for comfort has taken counsel to deceive
+ him; when he learns that, day after day, the life entwined with his own
+ has been a lie and a stage-mime,&mdash;he feels not the softness of grief,
+ nor the absorption of rage; it is mightier than grief, and more withering
+ than rage,&mdash;it is a horror that appalls. The heart does not bleed,
+ the tears do not flow, as in woes to which humanity is commonly subjected;
+ it is as if something that violates the course of nature had taken place,&mdash;something
+ monstrous and out of all thought and forewarning; for the domestic traitor
+ is a being apart from the orbit of criminals: the felon has no fear of his
+ innocent children; with a price on his head, he lays it in safety on the
+ bosom of his wife. In his home, the ablest man, the most subtle and
+ suspecting, can be as much a dupe as the simplest. Were it not so as the
+ rule, and the exceptions most rare, this world were the riot of a hell!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And therefore it is that to the household perfidy, in all lands, in all
+ ages, God&rsquo;s curse seems to cleave, and to God&rsquo;s curse man abandons it; he
+ does not honour it by hate, still less will he lighten and share the guilt
+ by descending to revenge. He turns aside with a sickness and loathing, and
+ leaves Nature to purify from the earth the ghastly phenomenon she abhors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old man, that she wilfully deceived thee, that she abused thy belief and
+ denied to thy question and profaned maidenhood to stealth,&mdash;all this
+ might have galled thee; but to these wrongs old men are subjected,&mdash;they
+ give mirth to our farces; maid and lover are privileged impostors. But to
+ have counted the sands in thine hour-glass, to have sat by thy side,
+ marvelling when the worms should have thee, and looked smiling on thy face
+ for the signs of the death-writ&mdash;Die quick, old man; the executioner
+ hungers for the fee!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were no tears in those eyes when they came to the close; the letter
+ fell noiselessly to the floor, and the head sank on the breast, and the
+ hands drooped upon the poor crippled limbs, whose crawl in the sunshine
+ hard youth had grudged. He felt humbled, stunned, crushed; the pride was
+ clean gone from him; the cruel words struck home. Worse than a cipher, did
+ he then but cumber the earth? At that moment old Ponto, the setter, shook
+ himself, looked up, and laid his head in his master&rsquo;s lap; and Dash,
+ jealous, rose also, and sprang, not actively, for Dash was old, too, upon
+ his knees, and licked the numbed, drooping hands. Now, people praise the
+ fidelity of dogs till the theme is worn out; but nobody knows what a dog
+ is, unless he has been deceived by men,&mdash;then, that honest face;
+ then, that sincere caress; then, that coaxing whine that never lied! Well,
+ then,&mdash;what then? A dog is long-lived if he live to ten years,&mdash;small
+ career this to truth and friendship! Now, when Sir Miles felt that he was
+ not deserted, and his look met those four fond eyes, fixed with that
+ strange wistfulness which in our hours of trouble the eyes of a dog
+ sympathizingly assume, an odd thought for a sensible man passed into him,
+ showing, more than pages of sombre elegy, how deep was the sudden
+ misanthropy that blackened the world around. &ldquo;When I am dead,&rdquo; ran that
+ thought, &ldquo;is there one human being whom I can trust to take charge of the
+ old man&rsquo;s dogs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, let the scene close!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE WILL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next day, or rather the next evening, Sir Miles St. John was seated
+ before his unshared chicken,&mdash;seated alone, and vaguely surprised at
+ himself, in a large, comfortable room in his old hotel, Hanover Square.
+ Yes, he had escaped. Hast thou, O Reader, tasted the luxury of escape from
+ a home where the charm is broken,&mdash;where Distrust looks askant from
+ the Lares? In vain had Dalibard remonstrated, conjured up dangers, and
+ asked at least to accompany him. Excepting his dogs and his old valet, who
+ was too like a dog in his fond fidelity to rank amongst bipeds, Sir Miles
+ did not wish to have about him a single face familiar at Laughton,
+ Dalibard especially. Lucretia&rsquo;s letter had hinted at plans and designs in
+ Dalibard. It might be unjust, it might be ungrateful; but he grew sick at
+ the thought that he was the centre-stone of stratagems and plots. The
+ smooth face of the Provencal took a wily expression in his eyes; nay, he
+ thought his very footmen watched his steps as if to count how long before
+ they followed his bier. So, breaking from all roughly, with a shake of his
+ head and a laconic assertion of business in London, he got into his
+ carriage,&mdash;his own old bachelor&rsquo;s lumbering travelling-carriage,&mdash;and
+ bade the post-boys drive fast, fast! Then, when he felt alone,&mdash;quite
+ alone,&mdash;and the gates of the lodge swung behind him, he rubbed his
+ hands with a schoolboy&rsquo;s glee, and chuckled aloud, as if he enjoyed, not
+ only the sense, but the fun of his safety; as if he had done something
+ prodigiously cunning and clever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when he saw himself snug in his old, well-remembered hotel, in the same
+ room as of yore, when returned, brisk and gay, from the breezes of
+ Weymouth or the brouillards of Paris, he thought he shook hands again with
+ his youth. Age and lameness, apoplexy and treason, all were forgotten for
+ the moment. And when, as the excitement died, those grim spectres came
+ back again to his thoughts, they found their victim braced and prepared,
+ standing erect on that hearth for whose hospitality he paid his guinea a
+ day,&mdash;his front proud and defying. He felt yet that he had fortune
+ and power, that a movement of his hand could raise and strike down, that
+ at the verge of the tomb he was armed, to punish or reward, with the
+ balance and the sword. Tripped in the smug waiter, and announced &ldquo;Mr.
+ Parchmount.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set a chair, and show him in.&rdquo; The lawyer entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sir Miles, this is indeed a surprise! What has brought you to
+ town?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The common whim of the old, sir. I would alter my will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days did lawyer and client devote to the task; for Sir Miles was
+ minute, and Mr. Parchmount was precise, and little difficulties arose, and
+ changes in the first outline were made, and Sir Miles, from the very depth
+ of his disgust, desired not to act only from passion. In that last deed of
+ his life, the old man was sublime. He sought to rise out of the mortal,
+ fix his eyes on the Great Judge, weigh circumstances and excuses, and keep
+ justice even and serene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, unconscious of the train laid afar, Lucretia reposed on the
+ mine,&mdash;reposed, indeed, is not the word; for she was agitated and
+ restless that Mainwaring had not obeyed her summons. She wrote to him
+ again from Southampton the third day of her arrival; but before his answer
+ came she received this short epistle from London:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Parchmount presents his compliments to Miss Clavering, and, by desire
+ of Sir Miles St. John, requests her not to return to Laughton. Miss
+ Clavering will hear further in a few days, when Sir Miles has concluded
+ the business that has brought him to London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This letter, if it excited much curiosity, did not produce alarm. It was
+ natural that Sir Miles should be busy in winding up his affairs; his
+ journey to London for that purpose was no ill omen to her prospects, and
+ her thoughts flew back to the one subject that tyrannized over them.
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s reply, which came two days afterwards, disquieted her much
+ more. He had not found the letter she had left for him in the tree. He was
+ full of apprehensions; he condemned the imprudence of calling on her at
+ Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s; he begged her to renounce the idea of such a risk. He would
+ return again to Guy&rsquo;s Oak and search more narrowly: had she changed the
+ spot where the former letters were placed? Yet now, not even the
+ non-receipt of her letter, which she ascribed to the care with which she
+ had concealed it amidst the dry leaves and moss, disturbed her so much as
+ the evident constraint with which Mainwaring wrote,&mdash;the cautious and
+ lukewarm remonstrance which answered her passionate appeal. It may be that
+ her very doubts, at times, of Mainwaring&rsquo;s affection had increased the
+ ardour of her own attachment; for in some natures the excitement of fear
+ deepens love more than the calmness of trust. Now with the doubt for the
+ first time flashed the resentment, and her answer to Mainwaring was
+ vehement and imperious. But the next day came a messenger express from
+ London, with a letter from Mr. Parchmount that arrested for the moment
+ even the fierce current of love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the task had been completed,&mdash;the will signed, sealed, and
+ delivered,&mdash;the old man had felt a load lifted from his heart. Three
+ or four of his old friends, bons vivants like himself, had seen his
+ arrival duly proclaimed in the newspapers, and had hastened to welcome
+ him. Warmed by the genial sight of faces associated with the frank joys of
+ his youth, Sir Miles, if he did not forget the prudent counsels of
+ Dalibard, conceived a proud bitterness of joy in despising them. Why take
+ such care of the worn-out carcass? His will was made. What was left to
+ life so peculiarly attractive? He invited his friends to a feast worthy of
+ old. Seasoned revellers were they, with a free gout for a vent to all
+ indulgence. So they came; and they drank, and they laughed, and they
+ talked back their young days. They saw not the nervous irritation, the
+ strain on the spirits, the heated membrane of the brain, which made Sir
+ Miles the most jovial of all. It was a night of nights; the old fellows
+ were lifted back into their chariots or sedans. Sir Miles alone seemed as
+ steady and sober as if he had supped with Diogenes. His servant, whose
+ respectful admonitions had been awed into silence, lent him his arm to
+ bed, but Sir Miles scarcely touched it. The next morning, when the servant
+ (who slept in the same room) awoke, to his surprise the glare of a candle
+ streamed on his eyes. He rubbed them: could he see right? Sir Miles was
+ seated at the table; he must have got up and lighted a candle to write,&mdash;noiselessly,
+ indeed. The servant looked and looked, and the stillness of Sir Miles awed
+ him: he was seated on an armchair, leaning back. As awe succeeded to
+ suspicion, he sprang up, approached his master, took his hand: it was
+ cold, and fell heavily from his clasp. Sir Miles must have been dead for
+ hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pen lay on the ground, where it had dropped from the hand; the letter
+ on the table was scarcely commenced: the words ran thus,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;LUCRETIA,&mdash;You will return no more to my house. You are free as if I
+ were dead; but I shall be just. Would that I had been so to your mother,
+ to your sister! But I am old now, as you say, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To one who could have seen into that poor proud heart at the moment the
+ hand paused forever, what remained unwritten would have been clear. There
+ was, first, the sharp struggle to conquer loathing repugnance, and address
+ at all the false and degraded one; then came the sharp sting of
+ ingratitude; then the idea of the life grudged and the grave desired; then
+ the stout victory over scorn, the resolution to be just; then the reproach
+ of the conscience that for so far less an offence the sister had been
+ thrown aside, the comfort, perhaps, found in her gentle and neglected
+ child obstinately repelled; then the conviction of all earthly vanity and
+ nothingness,&mdash;the look on into life, with the chilling sentiment that
+ affection was gone, that he could never trust again, that he was too old
+ to open his arms to new ties; and then, before felt singly, all these
+ thoughts united, and snapped the cord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In announcing his mournful intelligence, with more feeling than might have
+ been expected from a lawyer (but even his lawyer loved Sir Miles), Mr.
+ Parchmount observed that &ldquo;as the deceased lay at a hotel, and as Miss
+ Clavering&rsquo;s presence would not be needed in the performance of the last
+ rites, she would probably forbear the journey to town. Nevertheless, as it
+ was Sir Miles&rsquo;s wish that the will should be opened as soon as possible
+ after his death, and it would doubtless contain instructions as to his
+ funeral, it would be well that Miss Clavering and her sister should
+ immediately depute some one to attend the reading of the testament on
+ their behalf. Perhaps Mr. Fielden would kindly undertake that melancholy
+ office.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do justice to Lucretia, it must be said that her first emotions, on the
+ receipt of this letter, were those of a poignant and remorseful grief, for
+ which she was unprepared. But how different it is to count on what shall
+ follow death, and to know that death has come! Susan&rsquo;s sobbing sympathy
+ availed not, nor Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s pious and tearful exhortations; her own
+ sinful thoughts and hopes came back to her, haunting and stern as furies.
+ She insisted at first upon going to London, gazing once more on the clay,&mdash;nay,
+ the carriage was at the door, for all yielded to her vehemence; but then
+ her heart misgave her: she did not dare to face the dead. Conscience waved
+ her back from the solemn offices of nature; she hid her face with her
+ hands, shrank again into her room; and Mr. Fielden, assuming unbidden the
+ responsibility, went alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only Vernon (summoned from Brighton), the good clergyman, and the lawyer,
+ to whom, as sole executor, the will was addressed, and in whose custody it
+ had been left, were present when the seal of the testament was broken. The
+ will was long, as is common when the dust that it disposes of covers some
+ fourteen or fifteen thousand acres. But out of the mass of technicalities
+ and repetitions these points of interest rose salient: To Charles Vernon,
+ of Vernon Grange, Esq., and his heirs by him lawfully begotten, were left
+ all the lands and woods and manors that covered that space in the
+ Hampshire map known by the name of the &ldquo;Laughton property,&rdquo; on condition
+ that he and his heirs assumed the name and arms of St. John; and on the
+ failure of Mr. Vernon&rsquo;s issue, the estate passed, first (with the same
+ conditions) to the issue of Susan Mivers; next to that of Lucretia
+ Clavering. There the entail ceased; and the contingency fell to the rival
+ ingenuity of lawyers in hunting out, amongst the remote and forgotten
+ descendants of some ancient St. John, the heir-at-law. To Lucretia
+ Clavering, without a word of endearment, was bequeathed 10,000 pounds,&mdash;the
+ usual portion which the house of St. John had allotted to its daughters;
+ to Susan Mivers the same sum, but with the addition of these words,
+ withheld from her sister: &ldquo;and my blessing!&rdquo; To Olivier Dalibard an
+ annuity of 200 pounds a year; to Honore Gabriel Varney, 3,000 pounds; to
+ the Rev. Matthew Fielden, 4,000 pounds; and the same sum to John Walter
+ Ardworth. To his favourite servant, Henry Jones, an ample provision, and
+ the charge of his dogs Dash and Ponto, with an allowance therefor, to be
+ paid weekly, and cease at their deaths. Poor old man! he made it the
+ interest of their guardian not to grudge their lease of life. To his other
+ attendants, suitable and munificent bequests, proportioned to the length
+ of their services. For his body, he desired it to be buried in the vault
+ of his ancestors without pomp, but without a pretence to a humility which
+ he had not manifested in life; and he requested that a small miniature in
+ his writing-desk should be placed in his coffin. That last injunction was
+ more than a sentiment,&mdash;it bespoke the moral conviction of the
+ happiness the original might have conferred on his life. Of that happiness
+ his pride had deprived him; nor did he repent, for he had deemed pride a
+ duty. But the mute likeness, buried in his grave,&mdash;that told the
+ might of the sacrifice he had made! Death removes all distinctions, and in
+ the coffin the Lord of Laughton might choose his partner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the will had been read, Mr. Parchmount produced two letters, one
+ addressed, in the hand of the deceased, to Mr. Vernon, the other in the
+ lawyer&rsquo;s own hand to Miss Clavering. The last enclosed the fragment found
+ on Sir Miles&rsquo;s table, and her own letter to Mainwaring, redirected to her
+ in Sir Miles&rsquo;s boldest and stateliest autograph. He had, no doubt, meant
+ to return it in the letter left uncompleted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter to Vernon contained a copy of Lucretia&rsquo;s fatal epistle, and the
+ following lines to Vernon himself:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR CHARLES,&mdash;With much deliberation, and with natural reluctance
+ to reveal to you my niece&rsquo;s shame, I feel it my duty to transmit to you
+ the accompanying enclosure, copied from the original with my own hand,
+ which the task sullied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do so first, because otherwise you might, as I should have done in your
+ place, feel bound in honour to persist in the offer of your hand,&mdash;feel
+ bound the more, because Miss Clavering is not my heiress; secondly,
+ because had her attachment been stronger than her interest, and she had
+ refused your offer, you might still have deemed her hardly and
+ capriciously dealt with by me, and not only sought to augment her portion,
+ but have profaned the house of my ancestors by receiving her there as an
+ honoured and welcome relative and guest. Now, Charles Vernon, I believe,
+ to the utmost of my poor judgment, I have done what is right and just. I
+ have taken into consideration that this young person has been brought up
+ as a daughter of my house, and what the daughters of my house have
+ received, I bequeath her. I put aside, as far as I can, all resentment of
+ mere family pride; I show that I do so, when I repair my harshness to my
+ poor sister, and leave both her children the same provision. And if you
+ exceed what I have done for Lucretia, unless, on more dispassionate
+ consideration than I can give, you conscientiously think me wrong, you
+ insult my memory&mdash;and impugn my justice. Be it in this as your
+ conscience dictates; but I entreat, I adjure, I command, at least that you
+ never knowingly admit by a hearth, hitherto sacred to unblemished truth
+ and honour, a person who has desecrated it with treason. As gentleman to
+ gentleman, I impose on you this solemn injunction. I could have wished to
+ leave that young woman&rsquo;s children barred from the entail; but our old tree
+ has so few branches! You are unwedded; Susan too. I must take my chance
+ that Miss Clavering&rsquo;s children, if ever they inherit, do not imitate the
+ mother. I conclude she will wed that Mainwaring; her children will have a
+ low-born father. Well, her race at least is pure,&mdash;Clavering and St.
+ John are names to guarantee faith and honour; yet you see what she is!
+ Charles Vernon, if her issue inherit the soul of gentlemen, it must come,
+ after all, not from the well-born mother! I have lived to say this,&mdash;I
+ who&mdash;But perhaps if we had looked more closely into the pedigree of
+ those Claverings&mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marry yourself,&mdash;marry soon, Charles Vernon, my dear kinsman; keep
+ the old house in the old line, and true to its old fame. Be kind and good
+ to my poor; don&rsquo;t strain on the tenants. By the way, Farmer Strongbow owes
+ three years&rsquo; rent,&mdash;I forgive him. Pension him off; he can do no good
+ to the land, but he was born on it, and must not fall on the parish. But
+ to be kind and good to the poor, not to strain the tenants, you must learn
+ not to waste, my dear Charles. A needy man can never be generous without
+ being unjust. How give, if you are in debt? You will think of this now,&mdash;now,&mdash;while
+ your good heart is soft, while your feelings are moved. Charley Vernon, I
+ think you will shed a tear when you see my armchair still and empty. And I
+ would have left you the care of my dogs, but you are thoughtless, and will
+ go much to London, and they are used to the country now. Old Jones will
+ have a cottage in the village,&mdash;he has promised to live there; drop
+ in now and then, and see poor Ponto and Dash. It is late, and old friends
+ come to dine here. So, if anything happens to me, and we don&rsquo;t meet again,
+ good-by, and God bless you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your affectionate kinsman, MILES ST. JOHN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. THE ENGAGEMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is somewhat less than three months after the death of Sir Miles St.
+ John; November reigns in London. And &ldquo;reigns&rdquo; seems scarcely a
+ metaphorical expression as applied to the sullen, absolute sway which that
+ dreary month (first in the dynasty of Winter) spreads over the passive,
+ dejected city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere in England, November is no such gloomy, grim fellow as he is
+ described. Over the brown glebes and changed woods in the country, his
+ still face looks contemplative and mild; and he has soft smiles, too, at
+ times,&mdash;lighting up his taxed vassals the groves; gleaming where the
+ leaves still cling to the boughs, and reflected in dimples from the waves
+ which still glide free from his chains. But as a conqueror who makes his
+ home in the capital, weighs down with hard policy the mutinous citizens
+ long ere his iron influence is felt in the province, so the first tyrant
+ of Winter has only rigour and frowns for London. The very aspect of the
+ wayfarers has the look of men newly enslaved: cloaked and muffled, they
+ steal to and fro through the dismal fogs. Even the children creep timidly
+ through the streets; the carriages go cautious and hearse-like along;
+ daylight is dim and obscure; the town is not filled, nor the brisk mirth
+ of Christmas commenced; the unsocial shadows flit amidst the mist, like
+ men on the eve of a fatal conspiracy. Each other month in London has its
+ charms for the experienced. Even from August to October, when The Season
+ lies dormant, and Fashion forbids her sons to be seen within hearing of
+ Bow, the true lover of London finds pleasure still at hand, if he search
+ for her duly. There are the early walks through the parks and green
+ Kensington Gardens, which now change their character of resort, and seem
+ rural and countrylike, but yet with more life than the country; for on the
+ benches beneath the trees, and along the sward, and up the malls, are
+ living beings enough to interest the eye and divert the thoughts, if you
+ are a guesser into character, and amateur of the human face,&mdash;fresh
+ nursery-maid and playful children; and the old shabby-genteel, buttoned-up
+ officer, musing on half-pay, as he sits alone in some alcove of Kenna, or
+ leans pensive over the rail of the vacant Ring; and early tradesman, or
+ clerk from the suburban lodging, trudging brisk to his business,&mdash;for
+ business never ceases in London. Then at noon, what delight to escape to
+ the banks at Putney or Richmond,&mdash;the row up the river; the fishing
+ punt; the ease at your inn till dark! or if this tempt not, still Autumn
+ shines clear and calm over the roofs, where the smoke has a holiday; and
+ how clean gleam the vistas through the tranquillized thoroughfares; and as
+ you saunter along, you have all London to yourself, Andrew Selkirk, but
+ with the mart of the world for your desert. And when October comes on, it
+ has one characteristic of spring,&mdash;life busily returns to the city;
+ you see the shops bustling up, trade flowing back. As birds scent the
+ April, so the children of commerce plume their wings and prepare for the
+ first slack returns of the season. But November! Strange the taste, stout
+ the lungs, grief-defying the heart, of the visitor who finds charms and
+ joy in a London November.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a small lodging-house in Bulstrode Street, Manchester Square, grouped a
+ family in mourning who had had the temerity to come to town in November,
+ for the purpose, no doubt, of raising their spirits. In the dull, small
+ drawing-room of the dull, small house we introduce to you, first, a
+ middle-aged gentleman whose dress showed what dress now fails to show,&mdash;his
+ profession. Nobody could mistake the cut of the cloth and the shape of the
+ hat, for he had just come in from a walk, and not from discourtesy, but
+ abstraction, the broad brim still shadowed his pleasant, placid face.
+ Parson spoke out in him, from beaver to buckle. By the coal fire, where,
+ through volumes of smoke, fussed and flickered a pretension to flame, sat
+ a middle-aged lady, whom, without being a conjurer, you would pronounce at
+ once to be wife to the parson; and sundry children sat on stools all about
+ her, with one book between them, and a low whispered murmur from their two
+ or three pursed-up lips, announcing that that book was superfluous. By the
+ last of three dim-looking windows, made dimmer by brown moreen draperies,
+ edged genteelly with black cotton velvet, stood a girl of very soft and
+ pensive expression of features,&mdash;pretty unquestionably, excessively
+ pretty; but there was something so delicate and elegant about her,&mdash;the
+ bend of her head, the shape of her slight figure, the little fair hands
+ crossed one on each other, as the face mournfully and listlessly turned to
+ the window, that &ldquo;pretty&rdquo; would have seemed a word of praise too often
+ proffered to milliner and serving-maid. Nevertheless, it was perhaps the
+ right one: &ldquo;handsome&rdquo; would have implied something statelier and more
+ commanding; &ldquo;beautiful,&rdquo; greater regularity of feature, or richness of
+ colouring. The parson, who since his entrance had been walking up and down
+ the small room with his hands behind him, glanced now and then at the
+ young lady, but not speaking, at length paused from that monotonous
+ exercise by the chair of his wife, and touched her shoulder. She stopped
+ from her work, which, more engrossing than elegant, was nothing less than
+ what is technically called &ldquo;the taking in&rdquo; of a certain blue jacket, which
+ was about to pass from Matthew, the eldest born, to David, the second, and
+ looked up at her husband affectionately. Her husband, however, spoke not;
+ he only made a sign, partly with his eyebrow, partly with a jerk of his
+ thumb over his right shoulder, in the direction of the young lady we have
+ described, and then completed the pantomime with a melancholy shake of the
+ head. The wife turned round and looked hard, the scissors horizontally
+ raised in one hand, while the other reposed on the cuff of the jacket. At
+ this moment a low knock was heard at the street-door. The worthy pair saw
+ the girl shrink back, with a kind of tremulous movement; presently there
+ came the sound of a footstep below, the creak of a hinge on the
+ ground-floor, and again all was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is Mr. Mainwaring&rsquo;s knock,&rdquo; said one of the children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl left the room abruptly, and, light as was her step, they heard
+ her steal up the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dears,&rdquo; said the parson, &ldquo;it wants an hour yet to dark; you may go and
+ walk in the square.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;T is so dull in that ugly square, and they won&rsquo;t let us into the green.
+ I am sure we&rsquo;d rather stay here,&rdquo; said one of the children, as spokesman
+ for the rest; and they all nestled closer round the hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dears,&rdquo; said the parson, simply, &ldquo;I want to talk alone with your
+ mother. However, if you like best to go and keep quiet in your own room,
+ you may do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or we can go into Susan&rsquo;s?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the parson; &ldquo;you must not disturb Susan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never used to care about being disturbed. I wonder what&rsquo;s come to
+ her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parson made no rejoinder to this half-petulant question. The children
+ consulted together a moment, and resolved that the square, though so dull,
+ was less dull than their own little attic. That being decided, it was the
+ mother&rsquo;s turn to address them. And though Mr. Fielden was as anxious and
+ fond as most fathers, he grew a little impatient before comforters,
+ kerchiefs, and muffettees were arranged, and minute exordiums as to the
+ danger of crossing the street, and the risk of patting strange dogs, etc.,
+ were half-way concluded; with a shrug and a smile, he at length fairly
+ pushed out the children, shut the door, and drew his chair close to his
+ wife&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; he began at once, &ldquo;I am extremely uneasy about that poor girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, Miss Clavering? Indeed, she eats almost nothing at all, and sits so
+ moping alone; but she sees Mr. Mainwaring every day. What can we do? She
+ is so proud, I&rsquo;m afraid of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, I was not thinking of Miss Clavering, though I did not interrupt
+ you, for it is very true that she is much to be pitied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am sure it was for her sake alone that you agreed to Susan&rsquo;s
+ request, and got Blackman to do duty for you at the vicarage, while we all
+ came up here, in hopes London town would divert her. We left all at sixes
+ and sevens; and I should not at all wonder if John made away with the
+ apples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, I say,&rdquo; resumed the parson, without heeding that mournful
+ foreboding,&mdash;&ldquo;I say, I was then only thinking of Susan. You see how
+ pale and sad she is grown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, she is so very soft-hearted, and she must feel for her sister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But her sister, though she thinks much, and keeps aloof from us, is not
+ sad herself, only reserved. On the contrary. I believe she has now got
+ over even poor Sir Miles&rsquo;s death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the loss of the great property!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie, Mary!&rdquo; said Mr. Fielden, almost austerely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mary looked down, rebuked, for she was not one of the high-spirited wives
+ who despise their husbands for goodness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon, my dear,&rdquo; she said meekly; &ldquo;it was very wrong in me; but I
+ cannot&mdash;do what I will&mdash;I cannot like that Miss Clavering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more need to judge her with charity. And if what I fear is the case,
+ I&rsquo;m sure we can&rsquo;t feel too much compassion for the poor blinded young
+ lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless my heart, Mr. Fielden, what is it you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parson looked round, to be sure the door was quite closed, and
+ replied, in a whisper: &ldquo;I mean, that I fear William Mainwaring loves, not
+ Lucretia, but Susan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scissors fell from the hand of Mrs. Fielden; and though one point
+ stuck in the ground, and the other point threatened war upon flounces and
+ toes, strange to say, she did not even stoop to remove the
+ chevaux-de-frise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, he&rsquo;s a most false-hearted young man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To blame, certainly,&rdquo; said Fielden; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t say to the contrary,&mdash;though
+ I like the young man, and am sure that he&rsquo;s more timid than false. I may
+ now tell you&mdash;for I want your advice, Mary&mdash;what I kept secret
+ before. When Mainwaring visited us, many months ago, at Southampton, he
+ confessed to me that he felt warmly for Susan, and asked if I thought Sir
+ Miles would consent. I knew too well how proud the poor old gentleman was,
+ to give him any such hopes. So he left, very honourably. You remember,
+ after he went, that Susan&rsquo;s spirits were low,&mdash;you remarked it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, indeed, I remember. But when the first shock of Sir Miles&rsquo;s death
+ was over, she got back her sweet colour, and looked cheerful enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because, perhaps, then she felt that she had a fortune to bestow on Mr.
+ Mainwaring, and thought all obstacle was over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how clever you are! How did you get at her thoughts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My own folly,&mdash;my own rash folly,&rdquo; almost groaned Mr. Fielden. &ldquo;For
+ not guessing that Mr. Mainwaring could have got engaged meanwhile to
+ Lucretia, and suspecting how it was with Susan&rsquo;s poor little heart, I let
+ out, in a jest&mdash;Heaven forgive me!&mdash;what William had said; and
+ the dear child blushed, and kissed me, and&mdash;why, a day or two after,
+ when it was fixed that we should come up to London, Lucretia informed me,
+ with her freezing politeness, that she was to marry Mainwaring herself as
+ soon as her first mourning was over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor, dear, dear Susan!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Susan behaved like an angel; and when I broached it to her, I thought she
+ was calm; and I am sure she prayed with her whole heart that both might be
+ happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure she did. What is to be done? I understand it all now. Dear me,
+ dear me! a sad piece of work indeed.&rdquo; And Mrs. Fielden abstractedly picked
+ up the scissors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not till our coming to town, and Mr. Mainwaring&rsquo;s visits to
+ Lucretia, that her strength gave way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A hard sight to bear,&mdash;I never could have borne it, my love. If I
+ had seen you paying court to another, I should have&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know
+ what I should have done! But what an artful wretch this young Mainwaring
+ must be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not very artful; for you see that he looks even sadder than Susan. He got
+ entangled somehow, to be sure. Perhaps he had given up Susan in despair;
+ and Miss Clavering, if haughty, is no doubt a very superior young lady;
+ and, I dare say, it is only now in seeing them both together, and
+ comparing the two, that he feels what a treasure he has lost. Well, what
+ do you advise, Mary? Mainwaring, no doubt, is bound in honour to Miss
+ Clavering; but she will be sure to discover, sooner or later, the state of
+ his feelings, and then I tremble for both. I&rsquo;m sure she will never be
+ happy, while he will be wretched; and Susan&mdash;I dare not think upon
+ Susan; she has a cough that goes to my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she has; that cough&mdash;you don&rsquo;t know the money I spend on
+ black-currant jelly! What&rsquo;s my advice? Why, I&rsquo;d speak to Miss Clavering at
+ once, if I dared. I&rsquo;m sure love will never break her heart; and she&rsquo;s so
+ proud, she&rsquo;d throw him off without a sigh, if she knew how things stood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you are right,&rdquo; said Mr. Fielden; &ldquo;for truth is the best
+ policy, after all. Still, it&rsquo;s scarce my business to meddle; and if it
+ were not for Susan&mdash;Well, well, I must think of it, and pray Heaven
+ to direct me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conference suffices to explain to the reader the stage to which the
+ history of Lucretia had arrived. Willingly we pass over what it were
+ scarcely possible to describe,&mdash;her first shock at the fall from the
+ expectations of her life; fortune, rank, and what she valued more than
+ either, power, crushed at a blow. From the dark and sullen despair into
+ which she was first plunged, she was roused into hope, into something like
+ joy, by Mainwaring&rsquo;s letters. Never had they been so warm and so tender;
+ for the young man felt not only poignant remorse that he had been the
+ cause of her downfall (though she broke it to him with more delicacy than
+ might have been expected from the state of her feelings and the hardness
+ of her character), but he felt also imperiously the obligations which her
+ loss rendered more binding than ever. He persuaded, he urged, he forced
+ himself into affection; and probably without a murmur of his heart, he
+ would have gone with her to the altar, and, once wedded, custom and duty
+ would have strengthened the chain imposed on himself, had it not been for
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s fatal eagerness to see him, to come up to London, where she
+ induced him to meet her,&mdash;for with her came Susan; and in Susan&rsquo;s
+ averted face and trembling hand and mute avoidance of his eye, he read all
+ which the poor dissembler fancied she concealed. But the die was cast, the
+ union announced, the time fixed, and day by day he came to the house, to
+ leave it in anguish and despair. A feeling they shared in common caused
+ these two unhappy persons to shun each other. Mainwaring rarely came into
+ the usual sitting-room of the family; and when he did so, chiefly in the
+ evening, Susan usually took refuge in her own room. If they met, it was by
+ accident, on the stairs, or at the sudden opening of a door; then not only
+ no word, but scarcely even a look was exchanged: neither had the courage
+ to face the other. Perhaps, of the two, this reserve weighed most on
+ Susan; perhaps she most yearned to break the silence,&mdash;for she
+ thought she divined the cause of Mainwaring&rsquo;s gloomy and mute constraint
+ in the upbraidings of his conscience, which might doubtless recall, if no
+ positive pledge to Susan, at least those words and tones which betray the
+ one heart, and seek to allure the other; and the profound melancholy
+ stamped on his whole person, apparent even to her hurried glance, touched
+ her with a compassion free from all the bitterness of selfish reproach.
+ She fancied she could die happy if she could remove that cloud from his
+ brow, that shadow from his conscience. Die; for she thought not of life.
+ She loved gently, quietly,&mdash;not with the vehement passion that
+ belongs to stronger natures; but it was the love of which the young and
+ the pure have died. The face of the Genius was calm and soft; and only by
+ the lowering of the hand do you see that the torch burns out, and that the
+ image too serene for earthly love is the genius of loving Death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Absorbed in the egotism of her passion (increased, as is ever the case
+ with women, even the worst, by the sacrifices it had cost her), and if
+ that passion paused, by the energy of her ambition, which already began to
+ scheme and reconstruct new scaffolds to repair the ruined walls of the
+ past,&mdash;Lucretia as yet had not detected what was so apparent to the
+ simple sense of Mr. Fielden. That Mainwaring was grave and thoughtful and
+ abstracted, she ascribed only to his grief at the thought of her loss, and
+ his anxieties for her altered future; and in her efforts to console him,
+ her attempts to convince him that greatness in England did not consist
+ only in lands and manors,&mdash;that in the higher walks of life which
+ conduct to the Temple of Renown, the leaders of the procession are the
+ aristocracy of knowledge and of intellect,&mdash;she so betrayed, not
+ generous emulation and high-souled aspiring, but the dark, unscrupulous,
+ tortuous ambition of cunning, stratagem, and intrigue, that instead of
+ feeling grateful and encouraged, he shuddered and revolted. How,
+ accompanied and led by a spirit which he felt to be stronger and more
+ commanding than his own,&mdash;how preserve the whiteness of his soul, the
+ uprightness of his honour? Already he felt himself debased. But in the
+ still trial of domestic intercourse, with the daily, hourly dripping on
+ the stone, in the many struggles between truth and falsehood, guile and
+ candour, which men&mdash;and, above all, ambitious men&mdash;must wage,
+ what darker angel would whisper him in his monitor? Still, he was bound,&mdash;bound
+ with an iron band; he writhed, but dreamed not of escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day after that of Fielden&rsquo;s conference with his wife, an unexpected
+ visitor came to the house. Olivier Dalibard called. He had not seen
+ Lucretia since she had left Laughton, nor had any correspondence passed
+ between them. He came at dusk, just after Mainwaring&rsquo;s daily visit was
+ over, and Lucretia was still in the parlour, which she had appropriated to
+ herself. Her brow contracted as his name was announced, and the
+ maid-servant lighted the candle on the table, stirred the fire, and gave a
+ tug at the curtains. Her eye, glancing from his, round the mean room, with
+ its dingy horsehair furniture, involuntarily implied the contrast between
+ the past state and the present, which his sight could scarcely help to
+ impress on her. But she welcomed him with her usual stately composure, and
+ without reference to what had been. Dalibard was secretly anxious to
+ discover if she suspected himself of any agency in the detection of the
+ eventful letter; and assured by her manner that no such thought was yet
+ harboured, he thought it best to imitate her own reserve. He assumed,
+ however, a manner that, far more respectful than he ever before observed
+ to his pupil, was nevertheless sufficiently kind and familiar to restore
+ them gradually to their old footing; and that he succeeded was apparent,
+ when, after a pause, Lucretia said abruptly: &ldquo;How did Sir Miles St. John
+ discover my correspondence with Mr. Mainwaring?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible that you are ignorant? Ah, how&mdash;how should you know
+ it?&rdquo; And Dalibard so simply explained the occurrence, in which, indeed, it
+ was impossible to trace the hand that had moved springs which seemed so
+ entirely set at work by an accident, that despite the extreme
+ suspiciousness of her nature, Lucretia did not see a pretence for accusing
+ him. Indeed, when he related the little subterfuge of Gabriel, his attempt
+ to save her by taking the letter on himself, she felt thankful to the boy,
+ and deemed Gabriel&rsquo;s conduct quite in keeping with his attachment to
+ herself. And this accounted satisfactorily for the only circumstance that
+ had ever troubled her with a doubt,&mdash;namely, the legacy left to
+ Gabriel. She knew enough of Sir Miles to be aware that he would be
+ grateful to any one who had saved the name of his niece, even while most
+ embittered against her, from the shame attached to clandestine
+ correspondence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is strange, nevertheless,&rdquo; said she, thoughtfully, after a pause,
+ &ldquo;that the girl should have detected the letter, concealed as it was by the
+ leaves that covered it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; answered Dalibard, readily, &ldquo;you see two or three persons had
+ entered before, and their feet must have displaced the leaves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly; the evil is now past recall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Mr. Mainwaring? Do you still adhere to one who has cost you so much,
+ poor child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In three months more I shall be his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard sighed deeply, but offered no remonstrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, taking her hand with mingled reverence and affection,&mdash;&ldquo;well,
+ I oppose your inclinations no more, for now there is nothing to risk; you
+ are mistress of your own fortune; and since Mainwaring has talents, that
+ fortune will suffice for a career. Are you at length convinced that I have
+ conquered my folly; that I was disinterested when I incurred your
+ displeasure? If so, can you restore to me your friendship? You will have
+ some struggle with the world, and, with my long experience of men and
+ life, even I, the poor exile, may assist you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so thought Lucretia; for with some dread of Dalibard&rsquo;s craft, she yet
+ credited his attachment to herself, and she felt profound admiration for
+ an intelligence more consummate and accomplished than any ever yet
+ submitted to her comprehension. From that time, Dalibard became an
+ habitual visitor at the house; he never interfered with Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ interviews with Mainwaring; he took the union for granted, and conversed
+ with her cheerfully on the prospects before her; he ingratiated himself
+ with the Fieldens, played with the children, made himself at home, and in
+ the evenings when Mainwaring, as often as he could find the excuse,
+ absented himself from the family circle, he contrived to draw Lucretia
+ into more social intercourse with her homely companions than she had
+ before condescended to admit. Good Mr. Fielden rejoiced; here was the very
+ person,&mdash;the old friend of Sir Miles, the preceptor of Lucretia
+ herself, evidently most attached to her, having influence over her,&mdash;the
+ very person to whom to confide his embarrassment. One day, therefore, when
+ Dalibard had touched his heart by noticing the paleness of Susan, he took
+ him aside and told him all. &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; concluded the pastor, hoping he had
+ found one to relieve him of his dreaded and ungracious task, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t you
+ think that I&mdash;or rather you&mdash;as so old a friend, should speak
+ frankly to Miss Clavering herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed,&rdquo; said the Provencal, quickly; &ldquo;if we spoke to her, she would
+ disbelieve us. She would no doubt appeal to Mainwaring, and Mainwaring
+ would have no choice but to contradict us. Once put on his guard, he would
+ control his very sadness. Lucretia, offended, might leave your house, and
+ certainly she would regard her sister as having influenced your
+ confession,&mdash;a position unworthy Miss Mivers. But do not fear: if the
+ evil be so, it carries with it its inevitable remedy. Let Lucretia
+ discover it herself; but, pardon me, she must have seen, at your first
+ reception of Mainwaring, that he had before been acquainted with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was not in the room when we first received Mainwaring; and I have
+ always been distant to him, as you may suppose, for I felt disappointed
+ and displeased. Of course, however, she is aware that we knew him before
+ she did. What of that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, do you think, then, he told her at Laughton of this acquaintance,&mdash;that
+ he spoke of Susan? I suspect not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say, I am sure,&rdquo; said Mr. Fielden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask her that question accidentally; and for the rest, be discreet, my
+ dear sir. I thank you for your confidence. I will watch well over my poor
+ young pupil. She must not, indeed, be sacrificed to a man whose affections
+ are engaged elsewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard trod on air as he left the house; his very countenance had
+ changed; he seemed ten years younger. It was evening; and suddenly, as he
+ came into Oxford Street, he encountered a knot of young men&mdash;noisy
+ and laughing loud&mdash;obstructing the pavement, breaking jests on the
+ more sober passengers, and attracting the especial and admiring attention
+ of sundry ladies in plumed hats and scarlet pelisses; for the streets then
+ enjoyed a gay liberty which has vanished from London with the lanterns of
+ the watchmen. Noisiest and most conspicuous of these descendants of the
+ Mohawks, the sleek and orderly scholar beheld the childish figure of his
+ son. Nor did Gabriel shrink from his father&rsquo;s eye, stern and scornful as
+ it was, but rather braved the glance with an impudent leer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Right, however, in the midst of the group, strode the Provencal, and
+ laying his hand very gently on the boy&rsquo;s shoulder, he said: &ldquo;My son, come
+ with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel looked irresolute, and glanced at his companions. Delighted at the
+ prospect of a scene, they now gathered round, with countenances and
+ gestures that seemed little disposed to acknowledge the parental
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said Dalibard, turning a shade more pale, for though morally
+ most resolute, physically he was not brave,&mdash;&ldquo;gentlemen, I must beg
+ you to excuse me; this child is my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Art is his mother,&rdquo; replied a tall, raw-boned young man, with long
+ tawny hair streaming down from a hat very much battered. &ldquo;At the juvenile
+ age, the child is consigned to the mother! Have I said it?&rdquo; and he turned
+ round theatrically to his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; cried the rest, clapping their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down with all tyrants and fathers! hip, hip, Hurrah!&rdquo; and the hideous
+ diapason nearly split the drum of the ears into which it resounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; whispered the father, &ldquo;you had better follow me, had you not?
+ Reflect!&rdquo; So saying, he bowed low to the unpropitious assembly, and as if
+ yielding the victory, stepped aside and crossed over towards Bond Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the din of derision and triumph died away, Dalibard looked back,
+ and saw Gabriel behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Approach, sir,&rdquo; he said; and as the boy stood still, he added, &ldquo;I promise
+ peace if you will accept it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, then,&rdquo; answered Gabriel, and he joined his father&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; said Dalibard, &ldquo;when I consented to your studying Art, as you call
+ it, under your mother&rsquo;s most respectable brother, I ought to have
+ contemplated what would be the natural and becoming companions of the
+ rising Raphael I have given to the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I own, sir,&rdquo; replied Gabriel, demurely, &ldquo;that they are riotous fellows;
+ but some of them are clever, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And excessively drunk,&rdquo; interrupted Dalibard, examining the gait of his
+ son. &ldquo;Do you learn that accomplishment also, by way of steadying your hand
+ for the easel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir; I like wine well enough, but I would not be drunk for the world.
+ I see people when they are drunk are mere fools,&mdash;let out their
+ secrets, and show themselves up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said,&rdquo; replied the father, almost admiringly. &ldquo;But a truce with this
+ bantering, Gabriel. Can you imagine that I will permit you any longer to
+ remain with that vagabond Varney and yon crew of vauriens? You will come
+ home with me; and if you must be a painter, I will look out for a more
+ trustworthy master.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall stay where I am,&rdquo; answered Gabriel, firmly, and compressing his
+ lips with a force that left them bloodless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, boy? Do I hear right? Dare you disobey me? Dare you defy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in your house, so I will not enter it again.&rdquo; Dalibard laughed
+ mockingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peste! but this is modest! You are not of age yet, Mr. Varney; you are
+ not free from a father&rsquo;s tyrannical control.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The law does not own you as my father, I am told, sir. You have said my
+ name rightly,&mdash;it is Varney, not Dalibard. We have no rights over
+ each other; so at least says Tom Passmore, and his father&rsquo;s a lawyer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s hand griped his son&rsquo;s arm fiercely. Despite his pain, which was
+ acute, the child uttered no cry; but he growled beneath his teeth,
+ &ldquo;Beware! beware! or my mother&rsquo;s son may avenge her death!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard removed his hand, and staggered as if struck. Gliding from his
+ side, Gabriel seized the occasion to escape; he paused, however, midway in
+ the dull, lamp-lit kennel when he saw himself out of reach, and then
+ approaching cautiously, said: &ldquo;I know. I am a boy, but you have made me
+ man enough to take care of myself. Mr. Varney, my uncle, will maintain me;
+ when of age, old Sir Miles has provided for me. Leave me in peace, treat
+ me as free, and I will visit you, help you when you want me, obey you
+ still,&mdash;yes, follow your instructions; for I know you are,&rdquo; he
+ paused, &ldquo;you are wise. But if you seek again to make me your slave, you
+ will only find your foe. Good-night; and remember that a bastard has no
+ father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words he moved on, and hurrying down the street, turned the
+ corner and vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard remained motionless for some minutes; at length he muttered: &ldquo;Ay,
+ let him go, he is dangerous! What son ever revolted even from the worst
+ father, and throve in life? Food for the gibbet! What matters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When next Dalibard visited Lucretia, his manner was changed; the
+ cheerfulness he had before assumed gave place to a kind of melancholy
+ compassion; he no longer entered into her plans for the future, but would
+ look at her mournfully, start up, and walk away. She would have attributed
+ the change to some return of his ancient passion, but she heard him once
+ murmur with unspeakable pity, &ldquo;Poor child, poor child!&rdquo; A vague
+ apprehension seized her,&mdash;first, indeed, caught from some remarks
+ dropped by Mr. Fielden, which were less discreet than Dalibard had
+ recommended. A day or two afterwards, she asked Mainwaring, carelessly,
+ why he had never spoken to her at Laughton of his acquaintance with
+ Fielden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You asked me that before,&rdquo; he said, somewhat sullenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I? I forget! But how was it? Tell me again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I scarcely know,&rdquo; he replied confusedly; &ldquo;we were always talking of each
+ other or poor Sir Miles,&mdash;our own hopes and fears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was true, and a lover&rsquo;s natural excuse. In the present of love all
+ the past is forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still,&rdquo; said Lucretia, with her sidelong glance,&mdash;&ldquo;still, as you
+ must have seen much of my own sister&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mainwaring, while she spoke, was at work on a button on his gaiter
+ (gaiters were then worn tight at the ankle); the effort brought the blood
+ to his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he said, still stooping at his occupation, &ldquo;you were so little
+ intimate with your sister; I feared to offend. Family differences are so
+ difficult to approach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia was satisfied at the moment; for so vast was her stake in
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s heart, so did her whole heart and soul grapple to the rock
+ left serene amidst the deluge, that she habitually and resolutely thrust
+ from her mind all the doubts that at times invaded it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; she would often say to herself,&mdash;&ldquo;I know he does not love
+ as I do; but man never can, never ought to love as woman! Were I a man, I
+ should scorn myself if I could be so absorbed in one emotion as I am proud
+ to be now,&mdash;I, poor woman! I know,&rdquo; again she would think,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ know how suspicious and distrustful I am; I must not distrust him,&mdash;I
+ shall only irritate, I may lose him: I dare not distrust,&mdash;it would
+ be too dreadful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, as a system vigorously embraced by a determined mind, she had
+ schooled and forced herself into reliance on her lover. His words now, we
+ say, satisfied her at the moment; but afterwards, in absence, they were
+ recalled, in spite of herself,&mdash;in the midst of fears, shapeless and
+ undefined. Involuntarily she began to examine the countenance, the
+ movements, of her sister,&mdash;to court Susan&rsquo;s society more than she had
+ done; for her previous indifference had now deepened into bitterness.
+ Susan, the neglected and despised, had become her equal,&mdash;nay, more
+ than her equal: Susan&rsquo;s children would have precedence to her own in the
+ heritage of Laughton! Hitherto she had never deigned to talk to her in the
+ sweet familiarity of sisters so placed; never deigned to confide to her
+ those feelings for her future husband which burned lone and ardent in the
+ close vault of her guarded heart. Now, however, she began to name him,
+ wind her arm into Susan&rsquo;s, talk of love and home, and the days to come;
+ and as she spoke, she read the workings of her sister&rsquo;s face. That part of
+ the secret grew clear almost at the first glance. Susan loved,&mdash;loved
+ William Mainwaring; but was it not a love hopeless and unreturned? Might
+ not this be the cause that had made Mainwaring so reserved? He might have
+ seen, or conjectured, a conquest he had not sought; and hence, with manly
+ delicacy, he had avoided naming Susan to Lucretia; and now, perhaps,
+ sought the excuses which at times had chafed and wounded her for not
+ joining the household circle. If one of those who glance over these pages
+ chances to be a person more than usually able and acute,&mdash;a person
+ who has loved and been deceived,&mdash;he or she, no matter which, will
+ perhaps recall those first moments when the doubt, long put off, insisted
+ to be heard. A weak and foolish heart gives way to the doubt at once; not
+ so the subtler and more powerful,&mdash;it rather, on the contrary,
+ recalls all the little circumstances that justify trust and make head
+ against suspicion; it will not render the citadel at the mere sound of the
+ trumpet; it arms all its forces, and bars its gates on the foe. Hence it
+ is that the persons most easy to dupe in matters of affection are usually
+ those most astute in the larger affairs of life. Moliere, reading every
+ riddle in the vast complexities of human character, and clinging, in
+ self-imposed credulity, to his profligate wife, is a type of a striking
+ truth. Still, a foreboding, a warning instinct withheld Lucretia from
+ plumbing farther into the deeps of her own fears. So horrible was the
+ thought that she had been deceived, that rather than face it, she would
+ have preferred to deceive herself. This poor, bad heart shrank from
+ inquiry, it trembled at the idea of condemnation. She hailed, with a
+ sentiment of release that partook of rapture, Susan&rsquo;s abrupt announcement
+ one morning that she had accepted an invitation from some relations of her
+ father to spend some time with them at their villa near Hampstead; she was
+ to go the end of the week. Lucretia hailed it, though she saw the cause,&mdash;Susan
+ shrank from the name of Mainwaring on Lucretia&rsquo;s lips; shrank from the
+ familiar intercourse so ruthlessly forced on her! With a bright eye, that
+ day, Lucretia met her lover; yet she would not tell him of Susan&rsquo;s
+ intended departure, she had not the courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard was foiled. This contradiction in Lucretia&rsquo;s temper, so
+ suspicious, so determined, puzzled even his penetration. He saw that
+ bolder tactics were required. He waylaid Mainwaring on the young man&rsquo;s way
+ to his lodgings, and after talking to him on indifferent matters, asked
+ him carelessly whether he did not think Susan far gone in a decline.
+ Affecting not to notice the convulsive start with which the question was
+ received, he went on,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is evidently something on her mind; I observe that her eyes are
+ often red, as with weeping, poor girl. Perhaps some silly love-affair.
+ However, we shall not see her again before your marriage; she is going
+ away in a day or two. The change of air may possibly yet restore her,&mdash;I
+ own, though, I fear the worst. At this time of the year, and in your
+ climate, such complaints as I take hers to be are rapid. Good-day. We may
+ meet this evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terror-stricken at these barbarous words, Mainwaring no sooner reached his
+ lodging than he wrote and despatched a note to Fielden, entreating him to
+ call.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vicar obeyed the summons, and found Mainwaring in a state of mind
+ bordering on distraction. Nor when Susan was named did Fielden&rsquo;s words
+ take the shape of comfort; for he himself was seriously alarmed for her
+ health. The sound of her low cough rang in his ears, and he rather
+ heightened than removed the picture which haunted Mainwaring,&mdash;Susan
+ stricken, dying, broken-hearted!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tortured both in heart and conscience, Mainwaring felt as if he had but
+ one wish left in the world,&mdash;to see Susan once more. What to say, he
+ scarce knew; but for her to depart,&mdash;depart perhaps to her grave,
+ believing him coldly indifferent,&mdash;for her not to know at least his
+ struggles, and pronounce his pardon, was a thought beyond endurance. After
+ such an interview both would have new fortitude,&mdash;each would unite in
+ encouraging the other in the only step left to honour. And this desire he
+ urged upon Fielden with all the eloquence of passionate grief as he
+ entreated him to permit and procure one last conference with Susan. But
+ this, the plain sense and straightforward conscience of the good man long
+ refused. If Mainwaring had been left in the position to explain his heart
+ to Lucretia, it would not have been for Fielden to object; but to have a
+ clandestine interview with one sister while betrothed to the other, bore
+ in itself a character too equivocal to meet with the simple vicar&rsquo;s
+ approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can you apprehend?&rdquo; exclaimed the young man, almost fiercely; for,
+ harassed and tortured, his mild nature was driven to bay. &ldquo;Can you suppose
+ that I shall encourage my own misery by the guilty pleadings of unavailing
+ love? All that I ask is the luxury&mdash;yes, the luxury, long unknown to
+ me, of candour&mdash;to place fairly and manfully before Susan the
+ position in which fate has involved me. Can you suppose that we shall not
+ both take comfort and strength from each other? Our duty is plain and
+ obvious; but it grows less painful, encouraged by the lips of a companion
+ in suffering. I tell you fairly that see Susan I will and must. I will
+ watch round her home, wherever it be, hour after hour; come what may, I
+ will find my occasion. Is it not better that the interview should be under
+ your roof, within the same walls which shelter her sister? There, the
+ place itself imposes restraint on despair. Oh, sir, this is no time for
+ formal scruples; be merciful, I beseech you, not to me, but to Susan. I
+ judge of her by myself. I know that I shall go to the altar more resigned
+ to the future if for once I can give vent to what weighs upon my heart.
+ She will then see, as I do, that the path before me is inevitable; she
+ will compose herself to face the fate that compels us. We shall swear
+ tacitly to each other, not to love, but to conquer love. Believe me, sir,
+ I am not selfish in this prayer; an instinct, the intuition which human
+ grief has into the secrets of human grief, assures me that that which I
+ ask is the best consolation you can afford to Susan. You own she is ill,&mdash;suffering.
+ Are not your fears for her very life&mdash;O Heaven? for her very life&mdash;gravely
+ awakened? And yet you see we have been silent to each other! Can speech be
+ more fatal in its results than silence? Oh, for her sake, hear me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good man&rsquo;s tears fell fast. His scruples were shaken; there was truth
+ in what Mainwaring urged. He did not yield, but he promised to reflect,
+ and inform Mainwaring, by a line, in the evening. Finding this was all he
+ could effect, the young man at last suffered him to leave the house, and
+ Fielden hastened to take counsel of Dalibard; that wily persuader soon
+ reasoned away Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s last faint objection. It now only remained to
+ procure Susan&rsquo;s assent to the interview, and to arrange that it should be
+ undisturbed. Mr. Fielden should take out the children the next morning.
+ Dalibard volunteered to contrive the absence of Lucretia at the hour
+ appointed. Mrs. Fielden alone should remain within, and might, if it were
+ judged proper, be present at the interview, which was fixed for the
+ forenoon in the usual drawing-room. Nothing but Susan&rsquo;s consent was now
+ necessary, and Mr. Fielden ascended to her room. He knocked twice,&mdash;no
+ sweet voice bade him enter; he opened the door gently,&mdash;Susan was in
+ prayer. At the opposite corner of the room, by the side of her bed, she
+ knelt, her face buried in her hands, and he heard, low and indistinct, the
+ murmur broken by the sob. But gradually, as he stood unperceived, sob and
+ murmur ceased,&mdash;prayer had its customary and blessed effect with the
+ pure and earnest. And when Susan rose, though the tears yet rolled down
+ her cheeks, the face was serene as an angel&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pastor approached and took her hand; a blush then broke over her
+ countenance,&mdash;she trembled, and her eyes fell on the ground. &ldquo;My
+ child,&rdquo; he said solemnly, &ldquo;God will hear you!&rdquo; And after those words there
+ was a long silence. He then drew her passively towards a seat, and sat
+ down by her, embarrassed how to begin. At length he said, looking somewhat
+ aside, &ldquo;Mr. Mainwaring has made me a request,&mdash;a prayer which relates
+ to you, and which I refer to you. He asks you to grant him an interview
+ before you leave us,&mdash;to-morrow, if you will. I refused at first,&mdash;I
+ am in doubt still; for, my dear, I have always found that when the
+ feelings move us, our duty becomes less clear to the human heart,&mdash;corrupt,
+ we know, but still it is often a safer guide than our reason. I never knew
+ reason unerring, except in mathematics; we have no Euclid,&rdquo; and the good
+ man smiled mournfully, &ldquo;in the problems of real life. I will not urge you
+ one way or the other; I put the case before you: Would it, as the young
+ man says, give you comfort and strength to see him once again while, while&mdash;in
+ short, before your sister is&mdash;I mean before&mdash;that is, would it
+ soothe you now, to have an unreserved communication with him? He implores
+ it. What shall I answer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This trial, too!&rdquo; muttered Susan, almost inaudibly,&mdash;&ldquo;this trial
+ which I once yearned for;&rdquo; and the hand clasped in Fielden&rsquo;s was as cold
+ as ice. Then, turning her eyes to her guardian somewhat wildly, she cried:
+ &ldquo;But to what end, what object? Why should he wish to see me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To take greater courage to do his duty; to feel less unhappy at&mdash;at&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will see him,&rdquo; interrupted Susan, firmly,&mdash;&ldquo;he is right; it will
+ strengthen both. I will see him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But human nature is weak, my child; if my heart be so now, what will be
+ yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear me not,&rdquo; answered Susan, with a sad, wandering smile; and she
+ repeated vacantly: &ldquo;I will see him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good man looked at her, threw his arms round her wasted form, and
+ lifting up his eyes, his lips stirred with such half-syllabled words as
+ fathers breathe on high.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE DISCOVERY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard had undertaken to get Lucretia from the house,&mdash;in fact, her
+ approaching marriage rendered necessary a communication with Mr.
+ Parchmount, as executor to her uncle&rsquo;s will, relative to the transfer of
+ her portion; and she had asked Dalibard to accompany her thither; for her
+ pride shrank from receiving the lawyer in the shabby parlour of the shabby
+ lodging-house; she therefore, that evening, fixed the next day, before
+ noon, for the visit. A carriage was hired for the occasion, and when it
+ drove off, Mr. Fielden took his children a walk to Primrose Hill, and
+ called, as was agreed, on Mainwaring by the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carriage had scarcely rattled fifty yards through the street when
+ Dalibard fixed his eyes with deep and solemn commiseration on Lucretia.
+ Hitherto, with masterly art, he had kept aloof from direct explanations
+ with his pupil; he knew that she would distrust no one like himself. The
+ plot was now ripened, and it was time for the main agent to conduct the
+ catastrophe. The look was so expressive that Lucretia felt a chill at her
+ heart, and could not, help exclaiming, &ldquo;What has happened? You have some
+ terrible tidings to communicate!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have indeed to say that which may, perhaps, cause you to hate me
+ forever; as we hate those who report our afflictions. I must endure this;
+ I have struggled long between my indignation and my compassion. Rouse up
+ your strong mind, and hear me. Mainwaring loves your sister!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia uttered a cry that seemed scarcely to come from a human voice,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; she gasped out; &ldquo;do not tell me. I will hear no more; I will not
+ believe you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an inexpressible pity and softness in his tone, this man, whose
+ career had given him such profound experience in the frailties of the
+ human heart, continued: &ldquo;I do not ask you to believe me, Lucretia; I would
+ not now speak, if you had not the opportunity to convince yourself. Even
+ those with whom you live are false to you; at this moment they have
+ arranged all, for Mainwaring to steal, in your absence, to your sister. In
+ a few moments more he will be with her; if you yourself would learn what
+ passes between them, you have the power.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have&mdash;I have not&mdash;not&mdash;the courage; drive on&mdash;faster&mdash;faster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard again was foiled. In this strange cowardice there was something
+ so terrible, yet so touching, that it became sublime,&mdash;it was the
+ grasp of a drowning soul at the last plank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right perhaps,&rdquo; he said, after a pause; and wisely forbearing all
+ taunt and resistance, he left the heart to its own workings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, Lucretia caught at the check-string. &ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; she exclaimed,&mdash;&ldquo;stop!
+ I will not, I cannot, endure this suspense to last through a life! I will
+ learn the worst. Bid him drive back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must descend and walk; you forget we must enter unsuspected;&rdquo; and
+ Dalibard, as the carriage stopped, opened the door and let down the steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia recoiled, then pressing one hand to her heart, she descended,
+ without touching the arm held out to her. Dalibard bade the coachman wait,
+ and they walked back to the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he may see her,&rdquo; exclaimed Lucretia, her face brightening. &ldquo;Ah,
+ there you have not deceived me; I see your stratagem,&mdash;I despise it;
+ I know she loves him; she has sought this interview. He is so mild and
+ gentle, so fearful to give pain; he has consented, from pity,&mdash;that
+ is all. Is he not pledged to me? He, so candid, so ingenuous! There must
+ be truth somewhere in the world. If he is false, where find truth? Dark
+ man, must I look for it in you,&mdash;you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not my truth I require you to test; I pretend not to truth
+ universal; I can be true to one, as you may yet discover. But I own your
+ belief is not impossible; my interest in you may have made me rash and
+ unjust,&mdash;what you may overhear, far from destroying, may confirm
+ forever your happiness. Would that it may be so!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be so,&rdquo; returned Lucretia, with a fearful gloom on her brow and
+ in her accent; &ldquo;I will interpret every word to my own salvation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s countenance changed, despite his usual control over it. He had
+ set all his chances upon this cast, and it was more hazardous than he had
+ deemed. He had counted too much upon the jealousy of common natures. After
+ all, how little to the ear of one resolved to deceive herself might pass
+ between these two young persons, meeting not to avow attachment, but to
+ take courage from each other! What restraint might they impose on their
+ feelings! Still, the game must be played out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they now neared the house, Dalibard looked carefully round, lest they
+ should encounter Mainwaring on his way to it. He had counted on arriving
+ before the young man could get there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Lucretia, breaking silence, with an ironical smile,&mdash;&ldquo;but&mdash;for
+ your tender anxiety for me has, no doubt, provided all means and
+ contrivance, all necessary aids to baseness and eavesdropping, that can
+ assure my happiness&mdash;how am I to be present at this interview?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have provided, as you say,&rdquo; answered Dalibard, in the tone of a man
+ deeply hurt, &ldquo;those means which I, who have found the world one foe and
+ one traitor, deemed the best to distinguish falsehood from truth. I have
+ arranged that we shall enter the house unsuspected. Mainwaring and your
+ sister will be in the drawing-room; the room next to it will be vacant, as
+ Mr. Fielden is from home: there is but a glass-door between the two
+ chambers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, enough!&rdquo; and Lucretia turned round and placed her hand lightly on
+ the Provencal&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;The next hour will decide whether the means you
+ suggest to learn truth and defend safety will be familiar or loathsome to
+ me for life,&mdash;will decide whether trust is a madness; whether you, my
+ youth&rsquo;s teacher, are the wisest of men, or only the most dangerous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Believe me, or not, when I say I would rather the decision should condemn
+ me; for I, too, have need of confidence in men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing further was said; the dull street was quiet and desolate as usual.
+ Dalibard had taken with him the key of the house-door. The door opened
+ noiselessly; they were in the house. Mainwaring&rsquo;s cloak was in the hall;
+ he had arrived a few moments before them. Dalibard pointed silently to
+ that evidence in favour of his tale. Lucretia bowed her head but with a
+ look that implied defiance; and (still without a word) she ascended the
+ stairs, and entered the room appointed for concealment. But as she
+ entered, at the farther corner of the chamber she saw Mrs. Fielden seated,&mdash;seated,
+ remote and out of hearing. The good-natured woman had yielded to
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s prayer, and Susan&rsquo;s silent look that enforced it, to let
+ their interview be unwitnessed. She did not perceive Lucretia till the
+ last walked glidingly, but firmly, up to her, placed a burning hand on her
+ lips, and whispered: &ldquo;Hush, betray me not; my happiness for life&mdash;Susan&rsquo;s&mdash;his&mdash;are
+ at stake; I must hear what passes: it is my fate that is deciding. Hush! I
+ command; for I have the right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Fielden was awed and startled; and before she could recover even
+ breath, Lucretia had quitted her side and taken her post at the fatal
+ door. She lifted the corner of the curtain from the glass panel, and
+ looked in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mainwaring was seated at a little distance from Susan, whose face was
+ turned from her. Mainwaring&rsquo;s countenance was in full view. But it was
+ Susan&rsquo;s voice that met her ear; and though sweet and low, it was distinct,
+ and even firm. It was evident from the words that the conference had but
+ just begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, Mr. Mainwaring, you have nothing to explain, nothing of which to
+ accuse yourself. It was not for this, believe me,&rdquo;&mdash;and here Susan
+ turned her face, and its aspect of heavenly innocence met the dry, lurid
+ eye of the unseen witness,&mdash;&ldquo;not for this, believe me, that I
+ consented to see you. If I did so, it was only because I thought, because
+ I feared from your manner, when we met at times, still more from your
+ evident avoidance to meet me at all, that you were unhappy (for I know you
+ kind and honest),&mdash;unhappy at the thought that you had wounded me,
+ and my heart could not bear that, nor, perhaps, my pride either. That you
+ should have forgotten me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgotten you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you should have been captivated,&rdquo; continued Susan, in a more hurried
+ tone, &ldquo;by one so superior to me in all things as Lucretia, is very
+ natural. I thought, then&mdash;thought only&mdash;that nothing could cloud
+ your happiness but some reproach of a conscience too sensitive. For this I
+ have met you,&mdash;met you without a thought which Lucretia would have a
+ right to blame, could she read my heart; met you,&rdquo; and the voice for the
+ first time faltered, &ldquo;that I might say, &lsquo;Be at peace; it is your sister
+ that addresses you. Requite Lucretia&rsquo;s love,&mdash;it is deep and strong;
+ give her, as she gives to you, a whole heart; and in your happiness I,
+ your sister&mdash;sister to both&mdash;I shall be blest.&rsquo;&rdquo; With a smile
+ inexpressibly touching and ingenuous, she held out her hand as she ceased.
+ Mainwaring sprang forward, and despite her struggle, pressed it to his
+ lips, his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; he exclaimed, in broken accents, which gradually became more clear
+ and loud, &ldquo;what&mdash;what have I lost!&mdash;lost forever! No, no, I will
+ be worthy of you! I do not, I dare not, say that I love you still! I feel
+ what I owe to Lucretia. How I became first ensnared, infatuated; how, with
+ your image graven so deeply here&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mainwaring&mdash;Mr. Mainwaring&mdash;I must not hear you. Is this your
+ promise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you must hear me yet. How I became engaged to your sister,&mdash;so
+ different indeed from you,&mdash;I start in amaze and bewilderment when I
+ seek to conjecture. But so it was. For me she has forfeited fortune, rank,
+ all which that proud, stern heart so prized and coveted. Heaven is my
+ witness how I have struggled to repay her affection with my own! If I
+ cannot succeed, at least all that faith and gratitude can give are hers.
+ Yes, when I leave you, comforted by your forgiveness, your prayers, I
+ shall have strength to tear you from my heart; it is my duty, my fate.
+ With a firm step I will go to these abhorred nuptials. Oh, shudder not,
+ turn not away. Forgive the word; but I must speak,&mdash;my heart will
+ out; yes, abhorred nuptials! Between my grave and the altar, would&mdash;would
+ that I had a choice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this burst, which in vain from time to time Susan had sought to
+ check, Mainwaring was startled by an apparition which froze his veins, as
+ a ghost from the grave. The door was thrown open, and Lucretia stood in
+ the aperture,&mdash;stood, gazing on him, face to face; and her own was so
+ colourless, so rigid, so locked in its livid and awful solemnity of aspect
+ that it was, indeed, as one risen from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dismayed by the abrupt cry and the changed face of her lover, Susan turned
+ and beheld her sister. With the impulse of the pierced and loving heart,
+ which divined all the agony inflicted, she sprang to Lucretia&rsquo;s side, she
+ fell to the ground and clasped her knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not heed, do not believe him; it is but the frenzy of a moment. He
+ spoke but to deceive me,&mdash;me, who loved him once! Mine alone, mine is
+ the crime. He knows all your worth. Pity&mdash;pity&mdash;pity on
+ yourself, on him, on me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s eyes fell with the glare of a fiend upon the imploring face
+ lifted to her own. Her lips moved, but no sound was audible. At length she
+ drew herself from her sister&rsquo;s clasp, and walked steadily up to
+ Mainwaring. She surveyed him with a calm and cruel gaze, as if she enjoyed
+ his shame and terror. Before, however, she spoke, Mrs. Fielden, who had
+ watched, as one spellbound, Lucretia&rsquo;s movements, and, without hearing
+ what had passed, had the full foreboding of what would ensue, but had not
+ stirred till Lucretia herself terminated the suspense and broke the charm
+ of her awe,&mdash;before she spoke, Mrs. Fielden rushed in, and giving
+ vent to her agitation in loud sobs, as she threw her arms round Susan, who
+ was still kneeling on the floor, brought something of grotesque to the
+ more tragic and fearful character of the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My uncle was right; there is neither courage nor honour in the low-born!
+ He, the schemer, too, is right. All hollow,&mdash;all false!&rdquo; Thus said
+ Lucretia, with a strange sort of musing accent, at first scornful, at last
+ only quietly abstracted. &ldquo;Rise, sir,&rdquo; she then added, with her most
+ imperious tone; &ldquo;do you not hear your Susan weep? Do you fear in my
+ presence to console her? Coward to her, as forsworn to me! Go, sir, you
+ are free!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me,&rdquo; faltered Mainwaring, attempting to seize her hand; &ldquo;I do not
+ ask you to forgive; but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive, sir!&rdquo; interrupted Lucretia, rearing her head, and with a look of
+ freezing and unspeakable majesty. &ldquo;There is only one person here who needs
+ a pardon; but her fault is inexpiable: it is the woman who stooped beneath
+ her&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words, hurled from her with a scorn which crushed while it
+ galled, she mechanically drew round her form her black mantle; her eye
+ glanced on the deep mourning of the garment, and her memory recalled all
+ that love had cost her; but she added no other reproach. Slowly she turned
+ away. Passing Susan, who lay senseless in Mrs. Fielden&rsquo;s arms, she paused,
+ and kissed her forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When she recovers, madam,&rdquo; she said to Mrs. Fielden, who was moved and
+ astonished by this softness, &ldquo;say that Lucretia Clavering uttered a vow
+ when she kissed the brow of William Mainwaring&rsquo;s future wife!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olivier Dalibard was still seated in the parlour below when Lucretia
+ entered. Her face yet retained its almost unearthly rigidity and calm; but
+ a sort of darkness had come over its ashen pallor,&mdash;that shade so
+ indescribable, which is seen in the human face, after long illness, a day
+ or two before death. Dalibard was appalled; for he had too often seen that
+ hue in the dying not to recognize it now. His emotion was sufficiently
+ genuine to give more than usual earnestness to his voice and gesture, as
+ he poured out every word that spoke sympathy and soothing. For a long time
+ Lucretia did not seem to hear him; at last her face softened,&mdash;the
+ ice broke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Motherless, friendless, lone, alone forever, undone, undone!&rdquo; she
+ murmured. Her head sank upon the shoulder of her fearful counsellor,
+ unconscious of its resting-place, and she burst into tears,&mdash;tears
+ which perhaps saved her reason or her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. A SOUL WITHOUT HOPE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Mr. Fielden returned home, Lucretia had quitted the house. She left a
+ line for him in her usual bold, clear handwriting, referring him to his
+ wife for explanation of the reasons that forbade a further residence
+ beneath his roof. She had removed to an hotel until she had leisure to
+ arrange her plans for the future. In a few months she should be of age;
+ and in the meanwhile, who now living claimed authority over her? For the
+ rest, she added, &ldquo;I repeat what I told Mr. Mainwaring: all engagement
+ between us is at an end; he will not insult me either by letter or by
+ visit. It is natural that I should at present shrink from seeing Susan
+ Mivers. Hereafter, if permitted, I will visit Mrs. Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though all had chanced as Mr. Fielden had desired (if, as he once half
+ meditated, he had spoken to Lucretia herself); though a marriage that
+ could have brought happiness to none, and would have made the misery of
+ two, was at an end,&mdash;he yet felt a bitter pang, almost of remorse,
+ when he learned what had occurred. And Lucretia, before secretly disliked
+ (if any one he could dislike), became dear to him at once, by sorrow and
+ compassion. Forgetting every other person, he hurried to the hotel
+ Lucretia had chosen; but her coldness deceived and her pride repelled him.
+ She listened dryly to all he said, and merely replied: &ldquo;I feel only
+ gratitude at my escape. Let this subject now close forever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Fielden left her presence with less anxious and commiserating
+ feelings,&mdash;perhaps all had chanced for the best. And on returning
+ home, his whole mind became absorbed in alarm for Susan. She was
+ delirious, and in great danger; it was many weeks before she recovered.
+ Meanwhile, Lucretia had removed into private apartments, of which she
+ withheld the address. During this time, therefore, they lost sight of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If amidst the punishments with which the sombre imagination of poets has
+ diversified the Realm of the tortured Shadows, it had depicted some soul
+ condemned to look evermore down into an abyss, all change to its gaze
+ forbidden, chasm upon chasm yawning deeper and deeper, darker and darker,
+ endless and infinite, so that, eternally gazing, the soul became, as it
+ were, a part of the abyss,&mdash;such an image would symbol forth the
+ state of Lucretia&rsquo;s mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the mere desolation of one whom love has abandoned and
+ betrayed. In the abyss were mingled inextricably together the gloom of the
+ past and of the future,&mdash;there, the broken fortunes, the crushed
+ ambition, the ruin of the worldly expectations long inseparable from her
+ schemes; and amidst them, the angry shade of the more than father, whose
+ heart she had wrung, and whose old age she had speeded to the grave. These
+ sacrifices to love, while love was left to her, might have haunted her at
+ moments; but a smile, a word, a glance, banished the regret and the
+ remorse. Now, love being razed out of life, the ruins of all else loomed
+ dismal amidst the darkness; and a voice rose up, whispering: &ldquo;Lo, fool,
+ what thou hast lost because thou didst believe and love!&rdquo; And this thought
+ grasped together the two worlds of being,&mdash;the what has been, and the
+ what shall be. All hope seemed stricken from the future, as a man strikes
+ from the calculations of his income the returns from a property
+ irrevocably lost. At her age but few of her sex have parted with religion;
+ but even such mechanical faith as the lessons of her childhood, and the
+ constrained conformities with Christian ceremonies, had instilled, had
+ long since melted away in the hard scholastic scepticism of her fatal
+ tutor,&mdash;a scepticism which had won, with little effort, a reason
+ delighting in the maze of doubt, and easily narrowed into the cramped and
+ iron logic of disbelief by an intellect that scorned to submit where it
+ failed to comprehend. Nor had faith given place to those large moral
+ truths from which philosophy has sought to restore the proud statue of
+ Pagan Virtue as a substitute for the meek symbol of the Christian cross.
+ By temperament unsocial, nor readily moved to the genial and benevolent,
+ that absolute egotism in which Olivier Dalibard centred his dreary ethics
+ seemed sanctioned to Lucretia by her studies into the motives of man and
+ the history of the world. She had read the chronicles of States and the
+ memoirs of statesmen, and seen how craft carries on the movements of an
+ age. Those Viscontis, Castruccios, and Medici; those Richelieus and
+ Mazarins and De Retzs; those Loyolas and Mohammeds and Cromwells; those
+ Monks and Godolphins; those Markboroughs and Walpoles; those founders of
+ history and dynasties and sects; those leaders and dupers of men, greater
+ or lesser, corrupters or corrupt, all standing out prominent and renowned
+ from the guiltless and laurelless obscure,&mdash;seemed to win, by the
+ homage of posterity, the rewards that attend the deceivers of their time.
+ By a superb arrogance of generalization, she transferred into private
+ life, and the rule of commonplace actions, the policy that, to the
+ abasement of honour, has so often triumphed in the guidance of States.
+ Therefore, betimes, the whole frame of society was changed to her eye,
+ from the calm aspect it wears to those who live united with their kind;
+ she viewed all seemings with suspicion; and before she had entered the
+ world, prepared to live in it as a conspirator in a city convulsed, spying
+ and espied, schemed against and scheming,&mdash;here the crown for the
+ crafty, there the axe for the outwitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her love&mdash;for love is trust&mdash;had led her half way forth from
+ this maze of the intellect. That fair youth of inexperience and candour
+ which seemed to bloom out in the face of her betrothed; his very shrinking
+ from the schemes so natural to her that to her they seemed even innocent;
+ his apparent reliance on mere masculine ability, with the plain aids of
+ perseverance and honesty,&mdash;all had an attraction that plucked her
+ back from herself. If she clung to him firmly, blindly, credulously, it
+ was not as the lover alone. In the lover she beheld the good angel. Had he
+ only died to her, still the angel smile would have survived and warned.
+ But the man had not died; the angel itself had deceived; the wings could
+ uphold her no more,&mdash;they had touched the mire, and were sullied with
+ the soil; with the stain, was forfeited the strength. All was deceit and
+ hollowness and treachery. Lone again in the universe rose the eternal I.
+ So down into the abyss she looked, depth upon depth, and the darkness had
+ no relief, and the deep had no end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olivier Dalibard alone, of all she knew, was admitted to her seclusion. He
+ played his part as might be expected from the singular patience and
+ penetration which belonged to the genius of his character. He forbore the
+ most distant allusion to his attachment or his hopes. He evinced sympathy
+ rather by imitating her silence, than attempts to console. When he spoke,
+ he sought to interest her mind more than to heal directly the deep wounds
+ of her heart. There is always, to the afflicted, a certain charm in the
+ depth and bitterness of eloquent misanthropy. And Dalibard, who professed
+ not to be a man-hater, but a world-scorner, had powers of language and of
+ reasoning commensurate with his astute intellect and his profound
+ research. His society became not only a relief, it grew almost a want, to
+ that stern sorrower. But whether alarmed or not by the influence she felt
+ him gradually acquiring, or whether, through some haughty desire to rise
+ once more aloft from the state of her rival and her lover, she made one
+ sudden effort to grasp at the rank from which she had been hurled. The
+ only living person whose connection could re-open to her the great world,
+ with its splendours and its scope to ambition, was Charles Vernon. She
+ scarcely admitted to her own mind the idea that she would now accept, if
+ offered, the suit she had before despised; she did not even contemplate
+ the renewal of that suit,&mdash;though there was something in the gallant
+ and disinterested character of Vernon which should have made her believe
+ he would regard their altered fortunes rather as a claim on his honour
+ than a release to his engagements. But hitherto no communication had
+ passed between them; and this was strange if he retained the same
+ intentions which he had announced at Laughton. Putting aside, we say,
+ however, all such considerations, Vernon had sought her friendship, called
+ her &ldquo;cousin,&rdquo; enforced the distant relationship between them. Not as
+ lover, but as kinsman,&mdash;the only kinsman of her own rank she
+ possessed,&mdash;his position in the world, his connections, his brilliant
+ range of acquaintance, made his counsel for her future plans, his aid in
+ the re-establishment of her consequence (if not&mdash;as wealthy, still as
+ well-born), and her admission amongst her equals, of price and value. It
+ was worth sounding the depth of the friendship he had offered, even if his
+ love had passed away with the fortune on which doubtless it had been
+ based.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took a bold step,&mdash;she wrote to Vernon: not even to allude to
+ what had passed between them; her pride forbade such unwomanly vulgarity.
+ The baseness that was in her took at least a more delicate exterior. She
+ wrote to him simply and distantly, to state that there were some books and
+ trifles of hers left at Laughton, which she prized beyond their trivial
+ value, and to request, as she believed him to be absent from the Hall,
+ permission to call at her old home, in her way to a visit in a
+ neighbouring county, and point out to whomsoever he might appoint to meet
+ her, the effects she deemed herself privileged to claim. The letter was
+ one merely of business, but it was a sufficient test of the friendly
+ feelings of her former suitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sent this letter to Vernon&rsquo;s house in London, and the next day came
+ the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vernon, we must own, entirely sympathized with Sir Miles in the solemn
+ injunctions the old man had bequeathed. Immediately after the death of one
+ to whom we owe gratitude and love, all his desires take a sanctity
+ irresistible and ineffable; we adopt his affection, his dislikes, his
+ obligations, and his wrongs. And after he had read the copy of Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ letter, inclosed to him by Sir Miles, the conquest the poor baronet had
+ made over resentment and vindictive emotion, the evident effort at
+ passionless justice with which he had provided becomingly for his niece,
+ while he cancelled her claims as his heiress, had filled Vernon with a
+ reverence for his wishes and decisions that silenced all those
+ inclinations to over-generosity which an unexpected inheritance is apt to
+ create towards the less fortunate expectants. Nevertheless, Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ direct application, her formal appeal to his common courtesy as host and
+ kinsman, perplexed greatly a man ever accustomed to a certain chivalry
+ towards the sex; the usual frankness of his disposition suggested,
+ however, plain dealing as the best escape from his dilemma, and therefore
+ he answered thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MADAM,&mdash;Under other circumstances it would have given me no common
+ pleasure to place the house that you so long inhabited again at your
+ disposal; and I feel so painfully the position which my refusal of your
+ request inflicts upon me, that rather than resort to excuses and pretexts,
+ which, while conveying an impression of my sincerity, would seem almost
+ like an insult to yourself, I venture frankly to inform you that it was
+ the dying wish of my lamented kinsman, in consequence of a letter which
+ came under his eye, that the welcome you had hitherto received at Laughton
+ should be withdrawn. Pardon me, Madam, if I express myself thus bluntly;
+ it is somewhat necessary to the vindication of my character in your eyes,
+ both as regards the honour of your request and my tacit resignation of
+ hopes fervently but too presumptuously entertained. In this most painful
+ candour, Heaven forbid that I should add wantonly to your self-reproaches
+ for the fault of youth and inexperience, which I should be the last person
+ to judge rigidly, and which, had Sir Miles&rsquo;s life been spared, you would
+ doubtless have amply repaired. The feelings which actuated Sir Miles in
+ his latter days might have changed; but the injunction those feelings
+ prompted I am bound to respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the mere matter of business on which you have done me the honour to
+ address me, I have only to say that any orders you may give to the
+ steward, or transmit through any person you may send to the Hall, with
+ regard to the effects you so naturally desire to claim, shall be
+ implicitly obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And believe me, Madam (though I do not presume to add those expressions
+ which might rather heighten the offence I fear this letter will give you),
+ that the assurance of your happiness in the choice you have made, and
+ which now no obstacle can oppose, will considerably&mdash;lighten the pain
+ with which I shall long recall my ungracious reply to your communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have the honour to be, etc., C. VERNON ST. JOHN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BROOK STREET, Dec. 28, 18&mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The receipt of such a letter could hardly add to the profounder grief
+ which preyed in the innermost core of Lucretia&rsquo;s heart; but in repelling
+ the effort she had made to distract that grief by ambition, it blackened
+ the sullen despondency with which she regarded the future. As the insect
+ in the hollow snare of the ant-lion, she felt that there was no footing up
+ the sides of the cave into which she had fallen; the sand gave way to the
+ step. But despondency in her brought no meekness; the cloud did not
+ descend in rain; resting over the horizon, its darkness was tinged with
+ the fires which it fed. The heart, already so embittered, was stung and
+ mortified into intolerable shame and wrath. From the home that should have
+ been hers, in which, as acknowledged heiress, she had smiled down on the
+ ruined Vernon, she was banished by him who had supplanted her, as one
+ worthless and polluted. Though, from motives of obvious delicacy, Vernon
+ had not said expressly that he had seen the letter to Mainwaring, the
+ unfamiliar and formal tone which he assumed indirectly declared it, and
+ betrayed the impression it had made, in spite of his reserve. A living man
+ then was in possession of a secret which justified his disdain, and that
+ man was master of Laughton! The suppressed rage which embraced the lost
+ lover extended darkly over this witness to that baffled and miserable
+ love. But what availed rage against either? Abandoned and despoiled, she
+ was powerless to avenge. It was at this time, when her prospects seemed
+ most dark, her pride was most crushed, and her despair of the future at
+ its height, that she turned to Dalibard as the only friend left to her
+ under the sun. Even the vices she perceived in him became merits, for they
+ forbade him to despise her. And now, this man rose suddenly into another
+ and higher aspect of character. Of late, though equally deferential to
+ her, there had been something more lofty in his mien, more assured on his
+ brow; gleams of a secret satisfaction, even of a joy, that he appeared
+ anxious to suppress, as ill in harmony with her causes for dejection,
+ broke out in his looks and words. At length, one day, after some
+ preparatory hesitation, he informed her that he was free to return to
+ France; that even without the peace between England and France, which
+ (known under the name of the Peace of Amiens) had been just concluded, he
+ should have crossed the Channel. The advocacy and interest of friends whom
+ he had left at Paris had already brought him under the special notice of
+ the wonderful man who then governed France, and who sought to unite in its
+ service every description and variety of intellect. He should return to
+ France, and then&mdash;why, then, the ladder was on the walls of Fortune
+ and the foot planted on the step! As he spoke, confidently and sanguinely,
+ with the verve and assurance of an able man who sees clear the path to his
+ goal, as he sketched with rapid precision the nature of his prospects and
+ his hopes, all that subtle wisdom which had before often seemed but vague
+ and general, took practical shape and interest, thus applied to the actual
+ circumstances of men; the spirit of intrigue, which seemed mean when
+ employed on mean things, swelled into statesmanship and masterly genius to
+ the listener when she saw it linked with the large objects of masculine
+ ambition. Insensibly, therefore, her attention became earnest, her mind
+ aroused. The vision of a field, afar from the scenes of her humiliation
+ and despair,&mdash;a field for energy, stratagem, and contest,&mdash;invited
+ her restless intelligence. As Dalibard had profoundly calculated, there
+ was no new channel for her affections,&mdash;the source was dried up, and
+ the parched sands heaped over it; but while the heart lay dormant, the
+ mind rose sleepless, chafed, and perturbed. Through the mind, he
+ indirectly addressed and subtly wooed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such,&rdquo; he said, as he rose to take leave, &ldquo;such is the career to which I
+ could depart with joy if I did not depart alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone!&rdquo; that word, more than once that day, Lucretia repeated to herself&mdash;&ldquo;alone!&rdquo;
+ And what career was left to her?&mdash;she, too, alone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In certain stages of great grief our natures yearn for excitement. This
+ has made some men gamblers; it has made even women drunkards,&mdash;it had
+ effect over the serene calm and would-be divinity of the poet-sage. When
+ his son dies, Goethe does not mourn, he plunges into the absorption of a
+ study uncultivated before. But in the great contest of life, in the
+ whirlpool of actual affairs, the stricken heart finds all,&mdash;the
+ gambling, the inebriation, and the study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We pause here. We have pursued long enough that patient analysis, with all
+ the food for reflection that it possibly affords, to which we were
+ insensibly led on by an interest, dark and fascinating, that grew more and
+ more upon us as we proceeded in our research into the early history of a
+ person fated to pervert no ordinary powers into no commonplace guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charm is concluded, the circle closed round; the self-guided seeker
+ after knowledge has gained the fiend for the familiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. THE RECONCILIATION BETWEEN FATHER AND SON.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ We pass over an interval of some months.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A painter stood at work at the easel, his human model before him. He was
+ employed on a nymph,&mdash;the Nymph Galatea. The subject had been taken
+ before by Salvator, whose genius found all its elements in the wild rocks,
+ gnarled, fantastic trees, and gushing waterfalls of the landscape; in the
+ huge ugliness of Polyphemus the lover; in the grace and suavity and
+ unconscious abandonment of the nymph, sleeking her tresses dripping from
+ the bath. The painter, on a larger canvas (for Salvator&rsquo;s picture, at
+ least the one we have seen, is among the small sketches of the great
+ artistic creator of the romantic and grotesque), had transferred the
+ subject of the master; but he had left subordinate the landscape and the
+ giant, to concentrate all his art on the person of the nymph. Middle-aged
+ was the painter, in truth; but he looked old. His hair, though long, was
+ gray and thin; his face was bloated by intemperance; and his hand trembled
+ much, though, from habit, no trace of the tremor was visible in his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A boy, near at hand, was also employed on the same subject, with a rough
+ chalk and a bold freedom of touch. He was sketching his design of a
+ Galatea and Polyphemus on the wall; for the wall was only whitewashed, and
+ covered already with the multiform vagaries whether of master or pupils,&mdash;caricatures
+ and demigods, hands and feet, torsos and monsters, and Venuses. The rude
+ creations, all mutilated, jarring, and mingled, gave a cynical, mocking,
+ devil-may-care kind of aspect to the sanctum of art. It was like the
+ dissection-room of the anatomist. The boy&rsquo;s sketch was more in harmony
+ with the walls of the studio than the canvas of the master. His nymph,
+ accurately drawn, from the undressed proportions of the model, down to the
+ waist, terminated in the scales of a fish. The forked branches of the
+ trees stretched weird and imp-like as the hands of skeletons. Polyphemus,
+ peering over the rocks, had the leer of a demon; and in his gross features
+ there was a certain distorted, hideous likeness of the grave and
+ symmetrical lineaments of Olivier Dalibard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All around was slovenly, squalid, and poverty-stricken,&mdash;rickety,
+ worn-out, rush-bottom chairs; unsold, unfinished pictures, pell-mell in
+ the corner, covered with dust; broken casts of plaster; a lay-figure
+ battered in its basket-work arms, with its doll-like face all smudged and
+ besmeared. A pot of porter and a noggin of gin on a stained deal table,
+ accompanied by two or three broken, smoke-blackened pipes, some tattered
+ song-books, and old numbers of the &ldquo;Covent Garden Magazine,&rdquo; betrayed the
+ tastes of the artist, and accounted for the shaking hand and the bloated
+ form. A jovial, disorderly, vagrant dog of a painter was Tom Varney. A
+ bachelor, of course; humorous and droll; a boon companion, and a terrible
+ borrower. Clever enough in his calling; with pains and some method, he had
+ easily gained subsistence and established a name; but he had one trick
+ that soon ruined him in the business part of his profession. He took a
+ fourth of his price in advance; and having once clutched the money, the
+ poor customer might go hang for his picture. The only things Tom Varney
+ ever fairly completed were those for which no order had been given; for in
+ them, somehow or other, his fancy became interested, and on them he
+ lavished the gusto which he really possessed. But the subjects were rarely
+ salable. Nymphs and deities undraperied have few worshippers in England
+ amongst the buyers of &ldquo;furniture pictures.&rdquo; And, to say truth, nymph and
+ deity had usually a very equivocal look; and if they came from the gods,
+ you would swear it was the gods of the galleries of Drury. When Tom Varney
+ sold a picture, he lived upon clover till the money was gone. But the
+ poorer and less steady alumni of the rising school, especially those at
+ war with the Academy, from which Varney was excluded, pitied, despised,
+ yet liked and courted him withal. In addition to his good qualities of
+ blithe song-singer, droll story-teller, and stanch Bacchanalian, Tom
+ Varney was liberally good-natured in communicating instruction really
+ valuable to those who knew how to avail themselves of a knowledge he had
+ made almost worthless to himself. He was a shrewd, though good-natured
+ critic, had many little secrets of colouring and composition, which an
+ invitation to supper, or the loan of ten shillings, was sufficient to
+ bribe from him. Ragged, out of elbows, unshaven, and slipshod, he still
+ had his set amongst the gay and the young,&mdash;a precious master, a
+ profitable set for his nephew, Master Honore Gabriel! But the poor
+ rapscallion had a heart larger than many honest, painstaking men. As soon
+ as Gabriel had found him out, and entreated refuge from his fear of his
+ father, the painter clasped him tight in his great slovenly arms, sold a
+ Venus half-price to buy him a bed and a washstand, and swore a tremendous
+ oath that the son of his poor guillotined sister should share the last
+ shilling in his pocket, the last drop in his can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel, fresh from the cheer of Laughton, and spoiled by the prodigal
+ gifts of Lucretia, had little gratitude for shillings and porter.
+ Nevertheless, he condescended to take what he could get, while he sighed,
+ from the depths of a heart in which cupidity and vanity had become the
+ predominant rulers, for a destiny more worthy his genius, and more in
+ keeping with the sphere from which he had descended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy finished his sketch, with an impudent wink at the model, flung
+ himself back on his chair, folded his arms, cast a discontented glance at
+ the whitened seams of the sleeves, and soon seemed lost in his own
+ reflections. The painter worked on in silence. The model, whom Gabriel&rsquo;s
+ wink had aroused, half-flattered, half-indignant for a moment, lapsed into
+ a doze. Outside the window, you heard the song of a canary,&mdash;a dingy,
+ smoke-coloured canary that seemed shedding its plumes, for they were as
+ ragged as the garments of its master; still, it contrived to sing,
+ trill-trill-trill-trill-trill, as blithely as if free in its native woods,
+ or pampered by fair hands in a gilded cage. The bird was the only true
+ artist there, it sang as the poet sings,&mdash;to obey its nature and vent
+ its heart. Trill-trill-trillela-la-la-trill-trill, went the song,&mdash;louder,
+ gayer than usual; for there was a gleam of April sunshine struggling over
+ the rooftops. The song at length roused up Gabriel; he turned his chair
+ round, laid his head on one side, listened, and looked curiously at the
+ bird.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length an idea seemed to cross him; he rose, opened the window, drew in
+ the cage, placed it on the chair, then took up one of his uncle&rsquo;s pipes,
+ walked to the fireplace, and thrust the shank of the pipe into the bars.
+ When it was red-hot he took it out by the bowl, having first protected his
+ hand from the heat by wrapping round it his handkerchief; this done, he
+ returned to the cage. His movements had wakened up the dozing model. She
+ eyed them at first with dull curiosity, then with lively suspicion; and
+ presently starting up with an exclamation such as no novelist but Fielding
+ dare put into the mouth of a female,&mdash;much less a nymph of such
+ renown as Galatea,&mdash;she sprang across the room, wellnigh upsetting
+ easel and painter, and fastened firm hold on Gabriel&rsquo;s shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The varment!&rdquo; she cried vehemently; &ldquo;the good-for-nothing varment! If it
+ had been a jay, or a nasty raven, well and good; but a poor little
+ canary!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hoity-toity! what are you about, nephew? What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; said Tom
+ Varney, coming up to the strife. And, indeed, it was time; for Gabriel&rsquo;s
+ teeth were set in his catlike jaws, and the glowing point of the
+ pipe-shank was within an inch of the cheek of the model.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; replied Gabriel, suddenly; &ldquo;why, I was only going to
+ try a little experiment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An experiment? Not on my canary, poor dear little thing! The hours and
+ hours that creature has strained its throat to say &lsquo;Sing and be merry,&rsquo;
+ when I had not a rap in my pocket! It would have made a stone feel to hear
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I think I can make it sing much better than ever,&mdash;only just let
+ me try! They say that if you put out the eyes of a canary, it&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel was not allowed to conclude his sentence; for here rose that
+ clamour of horror and indignation from both painter and model which
+ usually greets the announcement of every philosophical discovery,&mdash;at
+ least, when about to be practically applied; and in the midst of the
+ hubbub, the poor little canary, who had been fluttering about the cage to
+ escape the hand of the benevolent operator, set up no longer the cheerful
+ trill-trillela-la-trill, but a scared and heart-breaking chirp,&mdash;a
+ shrill, terrified twit-twit-twitter-twit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn the bird! Hold your tongues!&rdquo; cried Gabriel Varney, reluctantly
+ giving way, but still eying the bird with the scientific regret with which
+ the illustrious Majendie might contemplate a dog which some brute of a
+ master refused to disembowel for the good of the colics of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The model seized on the cage, shut the door of the wires, and carried it
+ off. Tom Varney drained the rest of his porter, and wiped his forehead
+ with the sleeve of his coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to use my pipe for such cruelty! Boy, boy, I could not have believed
+ it! But you were not in earnest; oh, no, impossible! Sukey, my love&mdash;Galatea
+ the divine&mdash;calm thy breast; Cupid did but jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &lsquo;Cupid is the God of Laughter, Quip and jest and joke, sir.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t whip the little wretch within an inch of his life, he&rsquo;ll
+ have a gallows end on&rsquo;t,&rdquo; replied Galatea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, Cupid, go and kiss Galatea, and make your peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ `Oh, leave a kiss within the cup, And I&rsquo;ll not ask for wine.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And &lsquo;t is no use asking for wine, or for gin either,&mdash;not a drop in
+ the noggin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this while Gabriel, disdaining the recommendations held forth to him,
+ was employed in brushing his jacket with a very mangy-looking brush; and
+ when he had completed that operation he approached his uncle, and coolly
+ thrust his hands into that gentleman&rsquo;s waistcoat-pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle, what have you done with those seven shillings? I am going out to
+ spend the day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you give them to him, Tom, I&rsquo;ll scratch your eyes out,&rdquo; cried the
+ model; &ldquo;and then we&rsquo;ll see how you&rsquo;ll sing. Whip him, I say, whip him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, strange to say, this liberty of the boy quite reopened the heart of
+ his uncle,&mdash;it was a pleasure to him, who put his hands so habitually
+ into other people&rsquo;s pockets, to be invested with the novel grandeur of the
+ man sponged upon. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Cupid, son of Cytherea; all&rsquo;s common
+ property amongst friends. Seven shillings, I have &lsquo;em not. &lsquo;They now are
+ five who once were seven;&rsquo; but such as they are, we&rsquo;ll share.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &lsquo;Let old Timotheus yield the prize, Or both divide the crown.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Crowns bear no division, my uncle,&rdquo; said Gabriel, dryly; and he pocketed
+ the five shillings. Then, having first secured his escape by gaining the
+ threshold, he suddenly seized one of the rickety chairs by its leg, and
+ regardless of the gallantries due to the sex, sent it right against the
+ model, who was shaking her fist at him. A scream and a fall and a sharp
+ twit from the cage, which was hurled nearly into the fireplace, told that
+ the missive had taken effect. Gabriel did not wait for the probable
+ reaction; he was in the streets in an instant. &ldquo;This won&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; he
+ muttered to himself; &ldquo;there is no getting on here. Foolish drunken
+ vagabond! no good to be got from him. My father is terrible, but he will
+ make his way in the world. Umph! if I were but his match,&mdash;and why
+ not? I am brave, and he is not. There&rsquo;s fun, too, in danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus musing, he took his way to Dalibard&rsquo;s lodgings. His father was at
+ home. Now, though they were but lodgings, and the street not in fashion,
+ Olivier Dalibard&rsquo;s apartments had an air of refinement, and even elegance,
+ that contrasted both the wretched squalor of the abode Gabriel had just
+ left and the meanness of Dalibard&rsquo;s former quarters in London, The change
+ seemed to imply that the Provencal had already made some way in the world.
+ And, truth to say, at all times, even in the lowest ebb of his fortunes,
+ there was that indescribable neatness and formality of precision about all
+ the exterior seemings of the ci-devant friend of the prim Robespierre
+ which belong to those in whom order and method are strongly developed,&mdash;qualities
+ which give even to neediness a certain dignity. As the room and its owner
+ met the eye of Gabriel, on whose senses all externals had considerable
+ influence, the ungrateful young ruffian recalled the kind, tattered,
+ slovenly uncle, whose purse he had just emptied, without one feeling
+ milder than disgust. Olivier Dalibard, always careful, if simple, in his
+ dress, with his brow of grave intellectual power, and his mien imposing,
+ not only from its calm, but from that nameless refinement which rarely
+ fails to give to the student the air of a gentleman,&mdash;Olivier
+ Dalibard he might dread, he might even detest; but he was not ashamed of
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said I would visit you, sir, if you would permit me,&rdquo; said Gabriel, in
+ a tone of respect, not unmingled with some defiance, as if in doubt of his
+ reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father&rsquo;s slow full eye, so different from the sidelong, furtive glance
+ of Lucretia, turned on the son, as if to penetrate his very heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You look pale and haggard, child; you are fast losing your health and
+ beauty. Good gifts these, not to be wasted before they can be duly
+ employed. But you have taken your choice. Be an artist,&mdash;copy Tom
+ Varney, and prosper.&rdquo; Gabriel remained silent, with his eyes on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You come in time for my farewell,&rdquo; resumed Dalibard. &ldquo;It is a comfort, at
+ least, that I leave your youth so honourably protected. I am about to
+ return to my country; my career is once more before me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your country,&mdash;to Paris?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are fine pictures in the Louvre,&mdash;a good place to inspire an
+ artist!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go alone, Father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget, young gentleman, you disown me as father! Go alone! I thought
+ I told you in the times of our confidence, that I should marry Lucretia
+ Clavering. I rarely fail in my plans. She has lost Laughton, it is true;
+ but 10,000 pounds will make a fair commencement to fortune, even at Paris.
+ Well, what do you want with me, worthy godson of Honore Gabriel Mirabeau?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, if you will let me, I will go with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dalibard shaded his brow with his hand, and reflected on the filial
+ proposal. On the one hand, it might be convenient, and would certainly be
+ economical, to rid himself evermore of the mutinous son who had already
+ thrown off his authority; on the other hand, there was much in Gabriel,
+ mutinous and even menacing as he had lately become, that promised an
+ unscrupulous tool or a sharp-witted accomplice, with interests that every
+ year the ready youth would more and more discover were bound up in his
+ plotting father&rsquo;s. This last consideration, joined, if not to affection,
+ still to habit,&mdash;to the link between blood and blood, which even the
+ hardest find it difficult to sever,&mdash;prevailed. He extended his pale
+ hand to Gabriel, and said gently,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will take you, if we rightly understand each other. Once again in my
+ power, I might constrain you to my will, it is true. But I rather confer
+ with you as man to man than as man to boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the best way,&rdquo; said Gabriel, firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will use no harshness, inflict no punishment,&mdash;unless, indeed,
+ amply merited by stubborn disobedience or wilful deceit. But if I meet
+ with these, better rot on a dunghill than come with me! I ask implicit
+ confidence in all my suggestions, prompt submission to all my requests.
+ Grant me but these, and I promise to consult your fortune as my own, to
+ gratify your tastes as far as my means will allow, to grudge not your
+ pleasures, and when the age for ambition comes, to aid your rise if I rise
+ myself,&mdash;nay, if well contented with you, to remove the blot from
+ your birth, by acknowledging and adopting you formally as my son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed! and I thank you,&rdquo; said Gabriel. &ldquo;And Lucretia is going? Oh, I so
+ long to see her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See her&mdash;not yet; but next week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not fear that I should let out about the letter. I should betray
+ myself if I did,&rdquo; said the boy, bluntly betraying his guess at his
+ father&rsquo;s delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evil scholar smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will do well to keep it secret for your own sake; for mine, I should
+ not fear. Gabriel, go back now to your master,&mdash;you do right, like
+ the rats, to run from the falling house. Next week I will send for you,
+ Gabriel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not, however, back to the studio went the boy. He sauntered leisurely
+ through the gayest streets, eyed the shops and the equipages, the fair
+ women and the well-dressed men,&mdash;eyed with envy and longings and
+ visions of pomps and vanities to come; then, when the day began to close,
+ he sought out a young painter, the wildest and maddest of the crew to whom
+ his uncle had presented their future comrade and rival, and went with this
+ youth, at half-price, to the theatre, not to gaze on the actors or study
+ the play, but to stroll in the saloon. A supper in the Finish completed
+ the void in his pockets, and concluded his day&rsquo;s rank experience of life.
+ By the gray dawn he stole back to his bed, and as he laid himself down, he
+ thought with avid pleasure of Paris, its gay gardens and brilliant shops
+ and crowded streets; he thought, too, of his father&rsquo;s calm confidence of
+ success, of the triumph that already had attended his wiles,&mdash;a
+ confidence and a triumph which, exciting his reverence and rousing his
+ emulation, had decided his resolution. He thought, too, of Lucretia with
+ something of affection, recalled her praises and bribes, her frequent
+ mediation with his father, and felt that they should have need of each
+ other. Oh, no, he never would tell her of the snare laid at Guy&rsquo;s Oak,&mdash;never,
+ not even if incensed with his father. An instinct told him that that
+ offence could never be forgiven, and that, henceforth, Lucretia&rsquo;s was a
+ destiny bound up in his own. He thought, too, of Dalibard&rsquo;s warning and
+ threat. But with fear itself came a strange excitement of pleasure,&mdash;to
+ grapple, if necessary, he a mere child, with such a man! His heart swelled
+ at the thought. So at last he fell asleep, and dreamed that he saw his
+ mother&rsquo;s trunkless face dripping gore and frowning on him,&mdash;dreamed
+ that he heard her say: &ldquo;Goest thou to the scene of my execution only to
+ fawn upon my murderer?&rdquo; Then a nightmare of horrors, of scaffolds and
+ executioners and grinning mobs and agonized faces, came on him,&mdash;dark,
+ confused, and indistinct. And he woke, with his hair standing on end, and
+ beard below, in the rising sun, the merry song of the poor canary,&mdash;trill-lill-lill,
+ trill-trill-lill-lill-la! Did he feel glad that his cruel hand had been
+ stayed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_EPIL" id="link2H_EPIL">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EPILOGUE TO PART THE FIRST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a year since the November day on which Lucretia Clavering quitted
+ the roof of Mr. Fielden. And first we must recall the eye of the reader to
+ the old-fashioned terrace at Laughton,&mdash;the jutting porch, the quaint
+ balustrades, the broad, dark, changeless cedars on the lawn beyond. The
+ day is calm, clear, and mild, for November in the country is often a
+ gentle month. On that terrace walked Charles Vernon, now known by his new
+ name of St. John. Is it the change of name that has so changed the person?
+ Can the wand of the Herald&rsquo;s Office have filled up the hollows of the
+ cheek, and replaced by elastic vigour the listless languor of the tread?
+ No; there is another and a better cause for that healthful change. Mr.
+ Vernon St. John is not alone,&mdash;a fair companion leans on his arm.
+ See, she pauses to press closer to his side, gaze on his face, and
+ whisper, &ldquo;We did well to have hope and faith!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The husband&rsquo;s faith had not been so unshaken as his Mary&rsquo;s, and a slight
+ blush passed over his cheek as he thought of his concession to Sir Miles&rsquo;s
+ wishes, and his overtures to Lucretia Clavering. Still, that fault had
+ been fairly acknowledged to his wife, and she felt, the moment she had
+ spoken, that she had committed an indiscretion; nevertheless, with an arch
+ touch of womanly malice she added softly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Miss Clavering, you persist in saying, was not really handsome?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My love,&rdquo; replied the husband, gravely, &ldquo;you would oblige me by not
+ recalling the very painful recollections connected with that name. Let it
+ never be mentioned in this house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Mary bowed her graceful head in submission; she understood Charles&rsquo;s
+ feelings. For though he had not shown her Sir Miles&rsquo;s letter and its
+ enclosure, he had communicated enough to account for the unexpected
+ heritage, and to lessen his wife&rsquo;s compassion for the disappointed
+ heiress. Nevertheless, she comprehended that her husband felt an uneasy
+ twinge at the idea that he was compelled to act hardly to the one whose
+ hopes he had supplanted. Lucretia&rsquo;s banishment from Laughton was a just
+ humiliation, but it humbled a generous heart to inflict the sentence.
+ Thus, on all accounts, the remembrance of Lucretia was painful and
+ unwelcome to the successor of Sir Miles. There was a silence; Lady Mary
+ pressed her husband&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is strange,&rdquo; said he, giving vent to his thoughts at that tender sign
+ of sympathy in his feeling,&mdash;&ldquo;strange that, after all, she did not
+ marry Mainwaring, but fixed her choice on that subtle Frenchman. But she
+ has settled abroad now, perhaps for life; a great relief to my mind. Yes,
+ let us never recur to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fortunately,&rdquo; said Lady Mary, with some hesitation, &ldquo;she does not seem to
+ have created much interest here. The poor seldom name her to me, and our
+ neighbours only with surprise at her marriage. In another year she will be
+ forgotten!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. St. John sighed. Perhaps he felt how much more easily he had been
+ forgotten, were he the banished one, Lucretia the possessor! His light
+ nature, however, soon escaped from all thoughts and sources of annoyance,
+ and he listened with complacent attention to Lady Mary&rsquo;s gentle plans for
+ the poor, and the children&rsquo;s school, and the cottages that ought to be
+ repaired, and the labourers that ought to be employed. For though it may
+ seem singular, Vernon St. John, insensibly influenced by his wife&rsquo;s meek
+ superiority, and corrected by her pure companionship, had begun to feel
+ the charm of innocent occupations,&mdash;more, perhaps, than if he had
+ been accustomed to the larger and loftier excitements of life, and missed
+ that stir of intellect which is the element of those who have warred in
+ the democracy of letters, or contended for the leadership of States. He
+ had begun already to think that the country was no such exile after all.
+ Naturally benevolent, he had taught himself to share the occupations his
+ Mary had already found in the busy &ldquo;luxury of doing good,&rdquo; and to conceive
+ that brotherhood of charity which usually unites the lord of the village
+ with its poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, what with hunting once a week,&mdash;I will not venture more
+ till my pain in the side is quite gone,&mdash;and with the help of some
+ old friends at Christmas, we can get through the winter very well, Mary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, those old friends, I dread them more than the hunting!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we&rsquo;ll have your grave father and your dear, precise, excellent mother
+ to keep us in order. And if I sit more than half an hour after dinner, the
+ old butler shall pull me out by the ears. Mary, what do you say to
+ thinning the grove yonder? We shall get a better view of the landscape
+ beyond. No, hang it! dear old Sir Miles loved his trees better than the
+ prospect; I won&rsquo;t lop a bough. But that avenue we are planting will be
+ certainly a noble improvement&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fifty years hence, Charles!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is our duty to think of posterity,&rdquo; answered the ci-devant
+ spendthrift, with a gravity that was actually pompous. &ldquo;But hark! is that
+ two o&rsquo;clock? Three, by Jove! How time flies! and my new bullocks that I
+ was to see at two! Come down to the farm, that&rsquo;s my own Mary. Ah, your
+ fine ladies are not such bad housewives after all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your fine gentlemen&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Capital farmers! I had no idea till last week that a prize ox was so
+ interesting an animal. One lives to learn. Put me in mind, by the by, to
+ write to Coke about his sheep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This way, dear Charles; we can go round by the village,&mdash;and see
+ poor Ponto and Dash.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears rushed to Mr. St. John&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;If poor Sir Miles could have
+ known you!&rdquo; he said, with a sigh; and though the gardeners were at work on
+ the lawn, he bowed his head and kissed the blushing cheek of his wife as
+ heartily as if he had been really a farmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the terrace at Laughton, turn to the humbler abode of our old friend
+ the vicar,&mdash;the same day, the same hour. Here also the scene is
+ without doors,&mdash;we are in the garden of the vicarage; the children
+ are playing at hide-and-seek amongst the espaliers which screen the
+ winding gravel-walks from the esculents more dear to Ceres than to Flora.
+ The vicar is seated in his little parlour, from which a glazed door admits
+ into the garden. The door is now open, and the good man has paused from
+ his work (he had just discovered a new emendation in the first chorus of
+ the &ldquo;Medea&rdquo;) to look out at the rosy faces that gleam to and fro across
+ the scene. His wife, with a basket in her hand, is standing without the
+ door, but a little aside, not to obstruct the view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does one&rsquo;s heart good to see them,&rdquo; said the vicar, &ldquo;little dears!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, they ought to be dear at this time of the year,&rdquo; observed Mrs.
+ Fielden, who was absorbed in the contents of the basket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so fresh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fresh, indeed,&mdash;how different from London! In London they were not
+ fit to be seen,&mdash;as old as&mdash;-I am sure I can&rsquo;t guess how old
+ they were. But you see here they are new laid every morning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; said Mr. Fielden, opening his eyes,&mdash;&ldquo;new laid every
+ morning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two dozen and four.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two dozen and four! What on earth are you talking about, Mrs. Fielden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the eggs, to be sure, my love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the vicar, &ldquo;two dozen and four! You alarmed me a little; &lsquo;t is
+ of no consequence,&mdash;only my foolish mistake. Always prudent and
+ saving, my dear Sarah,&mdash;just as if poor Sir Miles had not left us
+ that munificent fortune, I may call it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will not go very far when we have our young ones to settle. And David
+ is very extravagant already; he has torn such a hole in his jacket!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment up the gravel-walk two young persons came in sight. The
+ children darted across them, whooping and laughing, and vanished in the
+ further recess of the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All is for the best, blind mortals that we are; all is for the best,&rdquo;
+ said the vicar, musingly, as his eyes rested upon the approaching pair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, my love; you are always right, and it is wicked to grumble.
+ Still, if you saw what a hole it was,&mdash;past patching, I fear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look round,&rdquo; said Mr. Fielden, benevolently. &ldquo;How we grieved for them
+ both; how wroth we were with William,&mdash;how sad for Susan! And now see
+ them; they will be the better man and wife for their trial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has Susan then consented? I was almost afraid she never would consent.
+ How often have I been almost angry with her, poor lamb, when I have heard
+ her accuse herself of causing her sister&rsquo;s unhappiness, and declare with
+ sobs that she felt it a crime to think of William Mainwaring as a
+ husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust I have reasoned her out of a morbid sensibility which, while it
+ could not have rendered Lucretia the happier, must have insured the
+ wretchedness of herself and William. But if Lucretia had not married, and
+ so forever closed the door on William&rsquo;s repentance (that is, supposing he
+ did repent), I believe poor Susan would rather have died of a broken heart
+ than have given her hand to Mainwaring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was an odd marriage of that proud young lady&rsquo;s, after all,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Fielden,&mdash;&ldquo;so much older than she; a foreigner, too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he is a very pleasant man, and they have known each other so long. I
+ did not, however, quite like a sort of cunning he showed, when I came to
+ reflect on it, in bringing Lucretia back to the house; it looks as if he
+ had laid a trap for her from the first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten thousand pounds,&mdash;a great catch for a foreigner!&rdquo; observed Mrs.
+ Fielden, with the shrewd instinct of her sex; and then she added, in the
+ spirit of a prudent sympathy equally characteristic: &ldquo;But I think you say
+ Mr. Parchmount persuaded her to allow half to be settled on herself. That
+ will be a hold on him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A bad hold, if that be all, Sarah. There is a better,&mdash;he is a
+ learned man and a scholar. Scholars are naturally domestic, and make good
+ husbands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you know he must be a papist!&rdquo; said Mrs. Fielden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; muttered the vicar, irresolutely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the worthy couple were thus conversing, Susan and her lover, not
+ having finished their conference, had turned back through the winding
+ walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; said William, drawing her arm closer to his side, &ldquo;these
+ scruples, these fears, are cruel to me as well as to yourself. If you were
+ no longer existing, I could be nothing to your sister. Nay, even were she
+ not married, you must know enough of her pride to be assured that I can
+ retain no place in her affections. What has chanced was not our crime.
+ Perhaps Heaven designed to save not only us, but herself, from the certain
+ misery of nuptials so inauspicious!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If she would but answer one of my letters!&rdquo; sighed Susan; &ldquo;or if I could
+ but know that she were happy and contented!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your letters must have miscarried,&mdash;you are not sure even of her
+ address. Rely upon it, she is happy. Do you think that she would a second
+ time have &lsquo;stooped beneath her&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;Mainwaring&rsquo;s lip writhed as he
+ repeated that phrase&mdash;&ldquo;if her feelings had not been involved? I would
+ not wrong your sister,&mdash;I shall ever feel gratitude for the past, and
+ remorse for my own shameful weakness; still, I must think that the nature
+ of her attachment to me was more ardent than lasting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, William, how can you know her heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By comparing it with yours. Oh, there indeed I may anchor my faith!
+ Susan, we were formed for each other! Our natures are alike, save that
+ yours, despite its surpassing sweetness, has greater strength in its
+ simple candour. You will be my guide to good. Without you I should have no
+ aim in life, no courage to front the contests of this world. Ah, this hand
+ trembles still!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;William, William, I cannot repress a foreboding, a superstition! At night
+ I am haunted with that pale face as I saw it last,&mdash;pale with
+ suppressed despair. Oh, if ever Lucretia could have need of us,&mdash;need
+ of our services, our affections,&mdash;if we could but repair the grief we
+ have caused her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Susan&rsquo;s head sank on her lover&rsquo;s shoulder. She had said &ldquo;need of us,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;need of our services.&rdquo; In those simple monosyllables the union was
+ pledged, the identity of their lots in the dark urn was implied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this scene turn again; the slide shifts in the lantern,&mdash;we are
+ at Paris. In the antechamber at the Tuileries a crowd of expectant
+ courtiers and adventurers gaze upon a figure who passes with modest and
+ downcast eyes through the throng; he has just left the closet of the First
+ Consul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dieu!&rdquo; said B&mdash;&mdash;, &ldquo;power, like misery, makes us acquainted
+ with strange bedfellows. I should like to hear what the First Consul can
+ have to say to Olivier Dalibard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fouche, who at that period was scheming for the return to his old
+ dignities of minister of police, smiled slightly, and answered: &ldquo;In a time
+ when the air is filled with daggers, one who was familiar with Robespierre
+ has his uses. Olivier Dalibard is a remarkable man. He is one of those
+ children of the Revolution whom that great mother is bound to save.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By betraying his brethren?&rdquo; said B&mdash;&mdash;, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not allow the inference. The simple fact is that Dalibard has spent
+ many years in England; he has married an Englishwoman of birth and
+ connections; he knows well the English language and the English people;
+ and just now when the First Consul is so anxious to approfondir the
+ popular feelings of that strange nation, with whose government he is
+ compelled to go to war, he may naturally have much to say to so acute an
+ observer as Olivier Dalibard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Um!&rdquo; said B&mdash;&mdash;; &ldquo;with such patronage, Robespierre&rsquo;s friend
+ should hold his head somewhat higher!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Olivier Dalibard, crossing the gardens of the palace, took his
+ way to the Faubourg St. Germain. There was no change in the aspect of this
+ man: the same meditative tranquillity characterized his downward eyes and
+ bonded brow; the same precise simplicity of dress which had pleased the
+ prim taste of Robespierre gave decorum to his slender, stooping form. No
+ expression more cheerful, no footstep more elastic, bespoke the exile&rsquo;s
+ return to his native land, or the sanguine expectations of Intellect
+ restored to a career. Yet, to all appearance, the prospects of Dalibard
+ were bright and promising. The First Consul was at that stage of his
+ greatness when he sought to employ in his service all such talent as the
+ Revolution had made manifest, provided only that it was not stained with
+ notorious bloodshed, or too strongly associated with the Jacobin clubs.
+ His quick eye seemed to have discovered already the abilities of Dalibard,
+ and to have appreciated the sagacity and knowledge of men which had
+ enabled this subtle person to obtain the friendship of Robespierre,
+ without sharing in his crimes. He had been frequently closeted with
+ Bonaparte; he was in the declared favour of Fouche, who, though not at
+ that period at the head of the police, was too necessary amidst the
+ dangers of the time, deepened as they were by the rumours of some terrible
+ and profound conspiracy, to be laid aside, as the First Consul had at one
+ moment designed. One man alone, of those high in the State, appeared to
+ distrust Olivier Dalibard,&mdash;the celebrated Cambaceres. But with his
+ aid the Provencal could dispense. What was the secret of Dalibard&rsquo;s power?
+ Was it, in truth, owing solely to his native talent, and his acquired
+ experience, especially of England? Was it by honourable means that he had
+ won the ear of the First Consul? We may be sure of the contrary; for it is
+ a striking attribute of men once thoroughly tainted by the indulgence of
+ vicious schemes and stratagems that they become wholly blinded to those
+ plain paths of ambition which common-sense makes manifest to ordinary
+ ability. If we regard narrowly the lives of great criminals, we are often
+ very much startled by the extraordinary acuteness, the profound
+ calculation, the patient, meditative energy which they have employed upon
+ the conception and execution of a crime. We feel inclined to think that
+ such intellectual power would have commanded great distinction, worthily
+ used and guided; but we never find that these great criminals seem to have
+ been sensible of the opportunities to real eminence which they have thrown
+ away. Often we observe that there have been before them vistas into
+ worldly greatness which, by no uncommon prudence and exertion, would have
+ conducted honest men half as clever to fame and power; but, with a strange
+ obliquity of vision, they appear to have looked from these broad clear
+ avenues into some dark, tangled defile, in which, by the subtlest
+ ingenuity, and through the most besetting perils, they might attain at
+ last to the success of a fraud or the enjoyment of a vice. In crime once
+ indulged there is a wonderful fascination, and the fascination is, not
+ rarely, great in proportion to the intellect of the criminal. There is
+ always hope of reform for a dull, uneducated, stolid man, led by accident
+ or temptation into guilt; but where a man of great ability, and highly
+ educated, besots himself in the intoxication of dark and terrible
+ excitements, takes impure delight in tortuous and slimy ways, the good
+ angel abandons him forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olivier Dalibard walked musingly on, gained a house in one of the most
+ desolate quarters of the abandoned faubourg, mounted the spacious stairs,
+ and rang at the door of an attic next the roof. After some moments the
+ door was slowly and cautiously opened, and two small, fierce eyes, peering
+ through a mass of black, tangled curls, gleamed through the aperture. The
+ gaze seemed satisfactory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enter, friend,&rdquo; said the inmate, with a sort of complacent grunt; and as
+ Dalibard obeyed, the man reclosed and barred the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The room was bare to beggary; the ceiling, low and sloping, was blackened
+ with smoke. A wretched bed, two chairs, a table, a strong chest, a small
+ cracked looking-glass, completed the inventory. The dress of the occupier
+ was not in keeping with the chamber; true that it was not such as was worn
+ by the wealthier classes, but it betokened no sign of poverty. A blue coat
+ with high collar, and half of military fashion, was buttoned tight over a
+ chest of vast girth; the nether garments were of leather, scrupulously
+ clean, and solid, heavy riding-boots came half-way up the thigh. A more
+ sturdy, stalwart, strong-built knave never excited the admiration which
+ physical power always has a right to command; and Dalibard gazed on him
+ with envy. The pale scholar absolutely sighed as he thought what an
+ auxiliary to his own scheming mind would have been so tough a frame!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even less in form than face did the man of thews and sinews contrast
+ the man of wile and craft. Opposite that high forehead, with its massive
+ development of organs, scowled the low front of one to whom thought was
+ unfamiliar,&mdash;protuberant, indeed, over the shaggy brows, where
+ phrenologists place the seats of practical perception, strongly marked in
+ some of the brutes, as in the dog, but almost literally void of those
+ higher organs by which we reason and imagine and construct. But in rich
+ atonement for such deficiency, all the animal reigned triumphant in the
+ immense mass and width of the skull behind. And as the hair, long before,
+ curled in close rings to the nape of the bull-like neck, you saw before
+ you one of those useful instruments to ambition and fraud which recoil at
+ no danger, comprehend no crime, are not without certain good qualities,
+ under virtuous guidance,&mdash;for they have the fidelity, the obedience,
+ the stubborn courage of the animal,&mdash;but which, under evil control,
+ turn those very qualities to unsparing evil: bull-dogs to rend the foe, as
+ bull-dogs to defend the master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some moments the two men gazed, silently at each other. At length
+ Dalibard said, with an air of calm superiority,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My friend, it is time that I should be presented to the chiefs of your
+ party!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chiefs, par tous les diables!&rdquo; growled the other; &ldquo;we Chouans are all
+ chiefs, when it comes to blows. You have seen my credentials; you know
+ that I am a man to be trusted: what more do you need?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For myself nothing; but my friends are more scrupulous. I have sounded,
+ as I promised, the heads of the old Jacobin party, and they are
+ favourable. This upstart soldier, who has suddenly seized in his iron
+ grasp all the fruits of the Revolution, is as hateful to them as to you.
+ But que voulez vous, mon cher? men are men! It is one thing to destroy
+ Bonaparte; it is another thing to restore the Bourbons. How can the
+ Jacobin chiefs depend on your assurance, or my own, that the Bourbons will
+ forget the old offences and reward the new service? You apprise me&mdash;so
+ do your credentials&mdash;that a prince of the blood is engaged in this
+ enterprise, that he will appear at the proper season. Put me in direct
+ communication with this representative of the Bourbons, and I promise in
+ return, if his assurances are satisfactory, that you shall have an emeute,
+ to be felt from Paris to Marseilles. If you cannot do this, I am useless;
+ and I withdraw&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Withdraw! Garde a vous, Monsieur le Savant! No man withdraws alive from a
+ conspiracy like ours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have said before that Olivier Dalibard was not physically brave; and
+ the look of the Chouan, as those words were said, would have frozen the
+ blood of many a bolder man. But the habitual hypocrisy of Dalibard enabled
+ him to disguise his fear, and he replied dryly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monsieur le Chouan, it is not by threats that you will gain adherents to
+ a desperate cause, which, on the contrary, requires mild words and
+ flattering inducements. If you commit a violence,&mdash;a murder,&mdash;mon
+ cher, Paris is not Bretagne; we have a police: you will be discovered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, ha! What then? Do you think I fear the guillotine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For yourself, no; but for your leaders, yes! If you are discovered, and
+ arrested for crime, do you fancy that the police will not recognize the
+ right arm of the terrible George Cadoudal; that they will not guess that
+ Cadoudal is at Paris; that Cadoudal will not accompany you to the
+ guillotine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chouan&rsquo;s face fell. Olivier watched him, and pursued his advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I asked you to introduce to me this shadow of a prince, under which you
+ would march to a counter-revolution. But I will be more easily contented.
+ Present me to George Cadoudal, the hero of Morbihan; he is a man in whom I
+ can trust, and with whom I can deal. What, you hesitate? How do you
+ suppose enterprises of this nature can be carried on? If, from fear and
+ distrust of each other, the man you would employ cannot meet the chief who
+ directs him, there will be delay, confusion, panic, and you will all
+ perish by the executioner. And for me, Pierre Guillot, consider my
+ position. I am in some favour with the First Consul; I have a station of
+ respectability,&mdash;a career lies before me. Can you think that I will
+ hazard these, with my head to boot, like a rash child? Do you suppose
+ that, in entering into this terrible contest, I would consent to treat
+ only with subordinates? Do not deceive yourself. Again, I say, tell your
+ employers that they must confer with me directly, or je m&rsquo;en lave les
+ mains.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will repeat what you say,&rdquo; answered Guillot, sullenly, &ldquo;Is this all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All for the present,&rdquo; said Dalibard, slowly drawing on his gloves, and
+ retreating towards the door. The Chouan watched him with a suspicious and
+ sinister eye; and as the Provencal&rsquo;s hand was on the latch, he laid his
+ own rough grasp on Dalibard&rsquo;s shoulder,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not how it is, Monsieur Dalibard, but I mistrust you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Distrust is natural and prudent to all who conspire,&rdquo; replied the
+ scholar, quietly. &ldquo;I do not ask you to confide in me. Your employers bade
+ you seek me: I have mentioned my conditions; let them decide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You carry it off well, Monsieur Dalibard, and I am under a solemn oath,
+ which poor George made me take, knowing me to be a hot-headed, honest
+ fellow,&mdash;mauvaise tete, if you will,&mdash;that I will keep my hand
+ off pistol and knife upon mere suspicion; that nothing less than his word,
+ or than clear and positive proof of treachery, shall put me out of good
+ humour and into warm blood. But bear this with you, Monsieur Dalibard: if
+ I once discover that you use our secrets to betray them; should George see
+ you, and one hair of his head come to injury through your hands,&mdash;I
+ will wring your neck as a housewife wrings a pullet&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t doubt your strength or your ferocity, Pierre Guillot; but my neck
+ will be safe: you have enough to do to take care of your own. Au revoir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a tone and look of calm and fearless irony, the scholar thus spoke,
+ and left the room; but when he was on the stairs, he paused, and caught at
+ the balustrade,&mdash;the sickness as of terror at some danger past, or to
+ be, came over him; and this contrast between the self-command, or
+ simulation, which belongs to moral courage, and the feebleness of natural
+ and constitutional cowardice, would have been sublime if shown in a noble
+ cause. In one so corrupt, it but betrayed a nature doubly formidable; for
+ treachery and murder hatch their brood amidst the folds of a hypocrite&rsquo;s
+ cowardice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus the interview is going on between Dalibard and the conspirator,
+ we must bestow a glance upon the Provencal&rsquo;s home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an apartment in one of the principal streets between the Boulevards and
+ the Rue St. Honore, a boy and a woman sat side by side, conversing in
+ whispers. The boy was Gabriel Varney, the woman Lucretia Dalibard. The
+ apartment was furnished in the then modern taste, which affected classical
+ forms; and though not without a certain elegance, had something meagre and
+ comfortless in its splendid tripods and thin-legged chairs. There was in
+ the apartment that air which bespeaks the struggle for appearances,&mdash;that
+ struggle familiar to those of limited income and vain aspirings, who want
+ the taste which smooths all inequalities and gives a smile to home; that
+ taste which affection seems to prompt, if not to create, which shows
+ itself in a thousand nameless, costless trifles, each a grace. No sign was
+ there of the household cares or industry of women. No flowers, no music,
+ no embroidery-frame, no work-table. Lucretia had none of the sweet
+ feminine habits which betray so lovelily the whereabout of women. All was
+ formal and precise, like rooms which we enter and leave,&mdash;not those
+ in which we settle and dwell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia herself is changed; her air is more assured, her complexion more
+ pale, the evil character of her mouth more firm and pronounced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel, still a mere boy in years, has a premature look of man. The down
+ shades his lip. His dress, though showy and theatrical, is no longer that
+ of boyhood. His rounded cheek has grown thin, as with the care and thought
+ which beset the anxious step of youth on entering into life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both, as before remarked, spoke in whispers; both from time to time
+ glanced fearfully at the door; both felt that they belonged to a hearth
+ round which smile not the jocund graces of trust and love and the heart&rsquo;s
+ open ease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Gabriel,&mdash;&ldquo;but if you would be safe, my father must have
+ no secrets hid from you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not know that he has. He speaks to me frankly of his hopes, of the
+ share he has in the discovery of the plot against the First Consul, of his
+ interviews with Pierre Guillot, the Breton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, because there your courage supports him, and your acuteness assists
+ his own. Such secrets belong to his public life, his political schemes;
+ with those he will trust you. It is his private life, his private
+ projects, you must know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what does he conceal from me? Apart from politics, his whole mind
+ seems bent on the very natural object of securing intimacy with his rich
+ cousin, M. Bellanger, from whom he has a right to expect so large an
+ inheritance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bellanger is rich, but he is not much older than my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has bad health.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Gabriel, with a downcast eye and a strange smile, &ldquo;he has not
+ bad health; but he may not be long-lived.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you mean?&rdquo; asked Lucretia, sinking her voice into a still lower
+ whisper, while a shudder, she scarce knew why, passed over her frame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does my father do,&rdquo; resumed Gabriel, &ldquo;in that room at the top of the
+ house? Does he tell you that secret?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He makes experiments in chemistry. You know that that was always his
+ favourite study. You smile again! Gabriel, do not smile so; it appalls me.
+ Do you think there is some mystery in that chamber?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It matters not what we think, belle-mere; it matters much what we know.
+ If I were you, I would know what is in that chamber. I repeat, to be safe,
+ you must have all his secrets, or none. Hush, that is his step!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door-handle turned noiselessly, and Olivier entered. His look fell on
+ his son&rsquo;s face, which betrayed only apparent surprise at his unexpected
+ return. He then glanced at Lucretia&rsquo;s, which was, as usual, cold and
+ impenetrable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; said Dalibard, gently, &ldquo;I have come in for you. I have promised
+ to take you to spend the day at M. Bellanger&rsquo;s; you are a great favourite
+ with Madame. Come, my boy. I shall be back soon, Lucretia. I shall but
+ drop in to leave Gabriel at my cousin&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel rose cheerfully, as if only alive to the expectation of the
+ bon-bons and compliments he received habitually from Madame Bellanger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you can take your drawing implements with you,&rdquo; continued Dalibard.
+ &ldquo;This good M. Bellanger has given you permission to copy his Poussin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His Poussin! Ah, that is placed in his bedroom [It is scarcely necessary
+ to observe that bedchambers in Paris, when forming part of the suite of
+ reception-rooms, are often decorated no less elaborately than the other
+ apartments], is it not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Dalibard, briefly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel lifted his sharp, bright eyes to his father&rsquo;s face. Dalibard
+ turned away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; he said with some impatience; and the boy took up his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another minute Lucretia was alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone,&rdquo; in an English home, is a word implying no dreary solitude to an
+ accomplished woman; but alone in that foreign land, alone in those
+ half-furnished, desolate apartments,&mdash;few books, no musical
+ instruments, no companions during the day to drop in,&mdash;that
+ loneliness was wearying. And that mind so morbidly active! In the old
+ Scottish legend, the spirit that serves the wizard must be kept constantly
+ employed; suspend its work for a moment, and it rends the enchanter. It is
+ so with minds that crave for excitement, and live, without relief of heart
+ and affection, on the hard tasks of the intellect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia mused over Gabriel&rsquo;s words and warning: &ldquo;To be safe, you must
+ know all his secrets, or none.&rdquo; What was the secret which Dalibard had not
+ communicated to her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose, stole up the cold, cheerless stairs, and ascended to the attic
+ which Dalibard had lately hired. It was locked; and she observed that the
+ lock was small,&mdash;so small that the key might be worn in a ring. She
+ descended, and entered her husband&rsquo;s usual cabinet, which adjoined the
+ sitting-room. All the books which the house contained were there,&mdash;a
+ few works on metaphysics, Spinoza in especial, the great Italian
+ histories, some volumes of statistics, many on physical and mechanical
+ philosophy, and one or two works of biography and memoirs. No light
+ literature,&mdash;that grace and flower of human culture, that best
+ philosophy of all, humanizing us with gentle art, making us wise through
+ the humours, elevated through the passions, tender in the affections of
+ our kind. She took out one of the volumes that seemed less arid than the
+ rest, for she was weary of her own thoughts, and began to read. To her
+ surprise, the first passage she opened was singularly interesting, though
+ the title was nothing more seductive than the &ldquo;Life of a Physician of
+ Padua in the Sixteenth Century.&rdquo; It related to that singular epoch of
+ terror in Italy when some mysterious disease, varying in a thousand
+ symptoms, baffled all remedy, and long defied all conjecture,&mdash;a
+ disease attacking chiefly the heads of families, father and husband;
+ rarely women. In one city, seven hundred husbands perished, but not one
+ wife! The disease was poison. The hero of the memoir was one of the
+ earlier discoverers of the true cause of this household epidemic. He had
+ been a chief authority in a commission of inquiry. Startling were the
+ details given in the work,&mdash;the anecdotes, the histories, the
+ astonishing craft brought daily to bear on the victim, the wondrous
+ perfidy of the subtle means, the variation of the certain murder,&mdash;here
+ swift as epilepsy, there slow and wasting as long decline. The lecture was
+ absorbing; and absorbed in the book Lucretia still was, when she heard
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s voice behind: he was looking over her shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A strange selection for so fair a student! En fant, play not with such
+ weapons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is this all true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, though scarce a fragment of the truth. The physician was a sorry
+ chemist and a worse philosopher. He blundered in his analysis of the
+ means; and if I remember rightly, he whines like a priest at the motives,&mdash;for
+ see you not what was really the cause of this spreading pestilence? It was
+ the Saturnalia of the Weak,&mdash;a burst of mocking license against the
+ Strong; it was more,&mdash;it was the innate force of the individual
+ waging war against the many.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not understand you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No? In that age, husbands were indeed lords of the household; they
+ married mere children for their lands; they neglected and betrayed them;
+ they were inexorable if the wife committed the faults set before her for
+ example. Suddenly the wife found herself armed against her tyrant. His
+ life was in her hands. So the weak had no mercy on the strong. But man,
+ too, was then, even more than now, a lonely wrestler in a crowded arena.
+ Brute force alone gave him distinction in courts; wealth alone brought him
+ justice in the halls, or gave him safety in his home. Suddenly the frail
+ puny lean saw that he could reach the mortal part of his giant foe. The
+ noiseless sling was in his hand,&mdash;it smote Goliath from afar.
+ Suddenly the poor man, ground to the dust, spat upon by contempt, saw
+ through the crowd of richer kinsmen, who shunned and bade him rot; saw
+ those whose death made him heir to lordship and gold and palaces and power
+ and esteem. As a worm through a wardrobe, that man ate through velvet and
+ ermine, and gnawed out the hearts that beat in his way. No. A great
+ intellect can comprehend these criminals, and account for the crime. It is
+ a mighty thing to feel in one&rsquo;s self that one is an army,&mdash;more than
+ an army! What thousands and millions of men, with trumpet and banner, and
+ under the sanction of glory, strive to do,&mdash;destroy a foe,&mdash;that,
+ with little more than an effort of the will,&mdash;with a drop, a grain,
+ for all his arsenal,&mdash;one man can do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a horrible enthusiasm about this reasoning devil as he spoke
+ thus; his crest rose, his breast expanded. That animation which a noble
+ thought gives to generous hearts kindled in the face of the apologist for
+ the darkest and basest of human crimes. Lucretia shuddered; but her gloomy
+ imagination was spelled; there was an interest mingled with her terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! you appall me,&rdquo; she said at last, timidly. &ldquo;But, happily, this
+ fearful art exists no more to tempt and destroy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a more philosophical discovery, it might be amusing to a chemist to
+ learn exactly what were the compounds of those ancient poisons,&rdquo; said
+ Dalibard, not directly answering the implied question. &ldquo;Portions of the
+ art are indeed lost, unless, as I suspect, there is much credulous
+ exaggeration in the accounts transmitted to us. To kill by a flower, a
+ pair of gloves, a soap-ball,&mdash;kill by means which elude all possible
+ suspicion,&mdash;is it credible? What say you? An amusing research,
+ indeed, if one had leisure! But enough of this now; it grows late. We dine
+ with M. de&mdash;&mdash;; he wishes to let his hotel. Why, Lucretia, if we
+ knew a little of this old art, par Dieu! we could soon hire the hotel!
+ Well, well; perhaps we may survive my cousin Jean Bellanger!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days afterwards, Lucretia stood by her husband&rsquo;s side in the secret
+ chamber. From the hour when she left it, a change was perceptible in her
+ countenance, which gradually removed from it the character of youth. Paler
+ the cheek could scarce become, nor more cold the discontented, restless
+ eye. But it was as if some great care had settled on her brow, and
+ contracted yet more the stern outline of the lips. Gabriel noted the
+ alteration, but he did not attempt to win her confidence. He was occupied
+ rather in considering, first, if it were well for him to sound deeper into
+ the mystery he suspected; and, secondly, to what extent, and on what
+ terms, it became his interest to aid the designs in which, by Dalibard&rsquo;s
+ hints and kindly treatment, he foresaw that he was meant to participate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A word now on the rich kinsman of the Dalibards. Jean Bellanger had been
+ one of those prudent Republicans who had put the Revolution to profit. By
+ birth a Marseillais, he had settled in Paris, as an epicier, about the
+ year 1785, and had distinguished himself by the adaptability and finesse
+ which become those who fish in such troubled waters. He had sided with
+ Mirabeau, next with Vergniaud and the Girondins. These he forsook in time
+ for Danton, whose facile corruptibility made him a seductive patron. He
+ was a large purchaser in the sale of the emigrant property; he obtained a
+ contract for the supply of the army in the Netherlands; he abandoned
+ Danton as he had abandoned the Girondins, but without taking any active
+ part in the after-proceedings of the Jacobins. His next connection was
+ with Tallien and Barras, and he enriched himself yet more under the
+ Directory than he had done in the earlier stages of the Revolution. Under
+ cover of an appearance of bonhomie and good humour, a frank laugh and an
+ open countenance, Jean Bellanger had always retained general popularity
+ and good-will, and was one of those whom the policy of the First Consul
+ led him to conciliate. He had long since retired from the more vulgar
+ departments of trade, but continued to flourish as an army contractor. He
+ had a large hotel and a splendid establishment; he was one of the great
+ capitalists of Paris. The relationship between Dalibard and Bellanger was
+ not very close,&mdash;it was that of cousins twice removed; and during
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s previous residence at Paris, each embracing different parties,
+ and each eager in his career, the blood-tie between them had not been much
+ thought of, though they were good friends, and each respected the other
+ for the discretion with which he had kept aloof from the more sanguinary
+ excesses of the time. As Bellanger was not many years older than Dalibard;
+ as the former had but just married in the year 1791, and had naturally
+ before him the prospect of a family; as his fortunes at that time, though
+ rising, were unconfirmed; and as some nearer relations stood between them,
+ in the shape of two promising, sturdy nephews,&mdash;Dalibard had not then
+ calculated on any inheritance from his cousin. On his return,
+ circumstances were widely altered: Bellanger had been married some years,
+ and no issue had blessed his nuptials. His nephews, draughted into the
+ conscription, had perished in Egypt. Dalibard apparently became his
+ nearest relative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avarice or to worldly ambition there was undoubtedly something very
+ dazzling in the prospect thus opened to the eyes of Olivier Dalibard. The
+ contractor&rsquo;s splendid mode of living, vying with that of the
+ fermier-general of old, the colossal masses of capital by which he backed
+ and supported speculations that varied with an ingenuity rendered
+ practical and profound by experience, inflamed into fever the morbid
+ restlessness of fancy and intellect which characterized the evil scholar;
+ for that restlessness seemed to supply to his nature vices not
+ constitutional to it. Dalibard had not the avarice that belongs either to
+ a miser or a spendthrift. In his youth, his books and the simple desires
+ of an abstract student sufficed to his wants, and a habit of method and
+ order, a mechanical calculation which accompanied all his acts, from the
+ least to the greatest, preserved him, even when most poor, from neediness
+ and want. Nor was he by nature vain and ostentatious,&mdash;those
+ infirmities accompany a larger and more luxurious nature. His philosophy
+ rather despised, than inclined to, show. Yet since to plot and to scheme
+ made his sole amusement, his absorbing excitement, so a man wrapped in
+ himself, and with no generous ends in view, has little to plot or to
+ scheme for but objects of worldly aggrandizement. In this Dalibard
+ resembled one whom the intoxication of gambling has mastered, who neither
+ wants nor greatly prizes the stake, but who has grown wedded to the
+ venture for it. It was a madness like that of a certain rich nobleman in
+ our own country who, with more money than he could spend, and with a skill
+ in all games where skill enters that would have secured him success of
+ itself, having learned the art of cheating, could not resist its
+ indulgence. No hazard, no warning, could restrain him,&mdash;cheat he
+ must; the propensity became iron-strong as a Greek destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the possible chance of an inheritance so magnificent should dazzle
+ Lucretia and Gabriel, was yet more natural; for in them it appealed to
+ more direct and eloquent, though not more powerful, propensities. Gabriel
+ had every vice which the greed of gain most irritates and excites. Intense
+ covetousness lay at the core of his heart; he had the sensual temperament,
+ which yearns for every enjoyment, and takes pleasure in every pomp and
+ show of life. Lucretia, with a hardness of mind that disdained luxury, and
+ a certain grandeur (if such a word may be applied to one so perverted)
+ that was incompatible with the sordid infirmities of the miser, had a
+ determined and insatiable ambition, to which gold was a necessary
+ instrument. Wedded to one she loved, like Mainwaring, the ambition, as we
+ have said in a former chapter, could have lived in another, and become
+ devoted to intellectual efforts, in the nobler desire for power based on
+ fame and genius. But now she had the gloomy cravings of one fallen, and
+ the uneasy desire to restore herself to a lost position; she fed as an
+ aliment upon scorn to bitterness of all beings and all things around her.
+ She was gnawed by that false fever which riots in those who seek by
+ outward seemings and distinctions to console themselves for the want of
+ their own self-esteem, or who, despising the world with which they are
+ brought in contact, sigh for those worldly advantages which alone justify
+ to the world itself their contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these diseased infirmities of vanity or pride, whether exhibited in
+ Gabriel or Lucretia, Dalibard administered without apparent effort, not
+ only by his conversation, but his habits of life. He mixed with those much
+ wealthier than himself, but not better born; those who, in the hot and
+ fierce ferment of that new society, were rising fast into new aristocracy,&mdash;the
+ fortunate soldiers, daring speculators, plunderers of many an argosy that
+ had been wrecked in the Great Storm. Every one about them was actuated by
+ the keen desire &ldquo;to make a fortune;&rdquo; the desire was contagious. They were
+ not absolutely poor in the proper sense of the word &ldquo;poverty,&rdquo; with
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s annuity and the interest of Lucretia&rsquo;s fortune; but they were
+ poor compared to those with whom they associated,&mdash;poor enough for
+ discontent. Thus, the image of the mighty wealth from which, perhaps, but
+ a single life divided them, became horribly haunting. To Gabriel&rsquo;s sensual
+ vision the image presented itself in the shape of unlimited pleasure and
+ prodigal riot; to Lucretia it wore the solemn majesty of power; to
+ Dalibard himself it was but the Eureka of a calculation,&mdash;the
+ palpable reward of wile and scheme and dexterous combinations. The devil
+ had temptations suited to each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Dalibards were more and more with the Bellangers. Olivier
+ glided in to talk of the chances and changes of the State and the market.
+ Lucretia sat for hours listening mutely to the contractor&rsquo;s boasts of past
+ frauds, or submitting to the martyrdom of his victorious games at
+ tric-trac. Gabriel, a spoiled darling, copied the pictures on the walls,
+ complimented Madame, flattered Monsieur, and fawned on both for trinkets
+ and crowns. Like three birds of night and omen, these three evil natures
+ settled on the rich man&rsquo;s roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was the rich man himself blind to the motives which budded forth into such
+ attentive affection? His penetration was too acute, his ill opinion of
+ mankind too strong, perhaps, for such amiable self-delusions. But he took
+ all in good part; availed himself of Dalibard&rsquo;s hints and suggestions as
+ to the employment of his capital; was polite to Lucretia, and readily
+ condemned her to be beaten at tric-trac; while he accepted with bonhomie
+ Gabriel&rsquo;s spirited copies of his pictures. But at times there was a gleam
+ of satire and malice in his round gray eyes, and an inward chuckle at the
+ caresses and flatteries he received, which perplexed Dalibard and humbled
+ Lucretia. Had his wealth been wholly at his own disposal, these signs
+ would have been inauspicious; but the new law was strict, and the bulk of
+ Bellanger&rsquo;s property could not be alienated from his nearest kin. Was not
+ Dalibard the nearest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These hopes and speculations did not, as we have seen, absorb the restless
+ and rank energies of Dalibard&rsquo;s crooked, but capacious and grasping
+ intellect. Patiently and ingeniously he pursued his main political object,&mdash;the
+ detection of that audacious and complicated conspiracy against the First
+ Consul, which ended in the tragic deaths of Pichegru, the Duc d&rsquo;Enghien,
+ and the erring but illustrious hero of La Vendee, George Cadoudal. In the
+ midst of these dark plots for personal aggrandizement and political
+ fortune, we leave, for the moment, the sombre, sullen soul of Olivier
+ Dalibard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time has passed on, and spring is over the world. The seeds buried in the
+ earth burst to flower; but man&rsquo;s breast knoweth not the sweet division of
+ the seasons. In winter or summer, autumn or spring alike, his thoughts sow
+ the germs of his actions, and day after day his destiny gathers in her
+ harvests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The joy-bells ring clear through the groves of Laughton,&mdash;an heir is
+ born to the old name and fair lands of St. John. And, as usual, the
+ present race welcomes merrily in that which shall succeed and replace it,&mdash;that
+ which shall thrust the enjoyers down into the black graves, and wrest from
+ them the pleasant goods of the world. The joy-bell of birth is a note of
+ warning to the knell for the dead; it wakes the worms beneath the mould:
+ the new-born, every year that it grows and flourishes, speeds the parent
+ to their feast. Yet who can predict that the infant shall become the heir?
+ Who can tell that Death sits not side by side with the nurse at the
+ cradle? Can the mother&rsquo;s hand measure out the woof of the Parcae, or the
+ father&rsquo;s eye detect through the darkness of the morrow the gleam of the
+ fatal shears?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is market-day at a town in the midland districts of England. There
+ Trade takes its healthiest and most animated form. You see not the stunted
+ form and hollow eye of the mechanic,&mdash;poor slave of the capitalist,
+ poor agent and victim of the arch disequalizer, Civilization. There
+ strides the burly form of the farmer; there waits the ruddy hind with his
+ flock; there, patient, sits the miller with his samples of corn; there, in
+ the booths, gleam the humble wares which form the luxuries of cottage and
+ farm. The thronging of men, and the clacking of whips, and the dull sound
+ of wagon or dray, that parts the crowd as it passes, and the lowing of
+ herds and the bleating of sheep,&mdash;all are sounds of movement and
+ bustle, yet blend with the pastoral associations of the primitive
+ commerce, when the link between market and farm was visible and direct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards one large house in the centre of the brisk life ebbing on, you
+ might see stream after stream pour its way. The large doors swinging light
+ on their hinges, the gilt letters that shine above the threshold, the
+ windows, with their shutters outside cased in iron and studded with nails,
+ announce that that house is the bank of the town. Come in with that yeoman
+ whose broad face tells its tale, sheepish and down-eyed,&mdash;he has
+ come, not to invest, but to borrow. What matters? War is breaking out
+ anew, to bring the time of high prices and paper money and credit. Honest
+ yeoman, you will not be refused. He scratches his rough head, pulls a leg,
+ as he calls it, when the clerk leans over the counter, and asks to see
+ &ldquo;Muster Mawnering hisself.&rdquo; The clerk points to the little office-room of
+ the new junior partner, who has brought 10,000 pounds and a clear head to
+ the firm. And the yeoman&rsquo;s great boots creak heavily in. I told you so,
+ honest yeoman; you come out with a smile on your brown face, and your
+ hand, that might fell an ox, buttons up your huge breeches pocket. You
+ will ride home with a light heart; go and dine, and be merry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The yeoman tramps to the ordinary; plates clatter, tongues wag, and the
+ borrower&rsquo;s full heart finds vent in a good word for that kind &ldquo;Muster
+ Mawnering.&rdquo; For a wonder, all join in the praise. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s an honour to the
+ town; he&rsquo;s a pride to the country. Thof he&rsquo;s such a friend at a pinch,
+ he&rsquo;s a rale mon of business. He&rsquo;ll make the baunk worth a million! And how
+ well he spoke at the great county meeting about the war, and the laund,
+ and them bloodthirsty Mounseers! If their members were loike him, Muster
+ Fox would look small!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day declines; the town empties; whiskeys, horses, and carts are giving
+ life to the roads and the lanes; and the market is deserted, and the bank
+ is shut up, and William Mainwaring walks back to his home at the skirts of
+ the town. Not villa nor cottage, that plain English house, with its
+ cheerful face of red brick, and its solid squareness of shape,&mdash;a
+ symbol of substance in the fortunes of the owner! Yet as he passes, he
+ sees through the distant trees the hall of the member for the town. He
+ pauses a moment, and sighs unquietly. That pause and that sigh betray the
+ germ of ambition and discontent. Why should not he, who can speak so well,
+ be member for the town, instead of that stammering squire? But his reason
+ has soon silenced the querulous murmur. He hastens his step,&mdash;he is
+ at home! And there, in the neat-furnished drawing-room, which looks on the
+ garden behind, hisses the welcoming tea-urn; and the piano is open, and
+ there is a packet of new books on the table; and, best of all, there is
+ the glad face of the sweet English wife. The happy scene was
+ characteristic of the time, just when the simpler and more innocent
+ luxuries of the higher class spread, not to spoil, but refine the middle.
+ The dress, air, mien, movements of the young couple; the unassuming,
+ suppressed, sober elegance of the house; the flower-garden, the books, and
+ the music, evidences of cultivated taste, not signals of display,&mdash;all
+ bespoke the gentle fusion of ranks before rude and uneducated wealth, made
+ in looms and lucky hits, rushed in to separate forever the gentleman from
+ the parvenu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spring smiles over Paris, over the spires of Notre Dame and the crowded
+ alleys of the Tuileries, over thousands and thousands eager, joyous,
+ aspiring, reckless,&mdash;the New Race of France, bound to one man&rsquo;s
+ destiny, children of glory and of carnage, whose blood the wolf and the
+ vulture scent, hungry, from afar!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conspiracy against the life of the First Consul has been detected and
+ defeated. Pichegru is in prison, George Cadoudal awaits his trial, the Duc
+ d&rsquo;Enghien sleeps in his bloody grave; the imperial crown is prepared for
+ the great soldier, and the great soldier&rsquo;s creatures bask in the noonday
+ sun. Olivier Dalibard is in high and lucrative employment; his rise is
+ ascribed to his talents, his opinions. No service connected with the
+ detection of the conspiracy is traced or traceable by the public eye. If
+ such exist, it is known but to those who have no desire to reveal it. The
+ old apartments are retained, but they are no longer dreary and comfortless
+ and deserted. They are gay with draperies and ormolu and mirrors; and
+ Madame Dalibard has her nights of reception, and Monsieur Dalibard has
+ already his troops of clients. In that gigantic concentration of egotism
+ which under Napoleon is called the State, Dalibard has found his place. He
+ has served to swell the power of the unit, and the cipher gains importance
+ by its position in the sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jean Bellanger is no more. He died, not suddenly, and yet of some quick
+ disease,&mdash;nervous exhaustion; his schemes, they said, had worn him
+ out. But the state of Dalibard, though prosperous, is not that of the heir
+ to the dead millionnaire. What mistake is this? The bulk of that wealth
+ must go to the nearest kin,&mdash;so runs the law. But the will is read;
+ and, for the first time, Olivier Dalibard learns that the dead man had a
+ son,&mdash;a son by a former marriage,&mdash;the marriage undeclared,
+ unknown, amidst the riot of the Revolution; for the wife was the daughter
+ of a proscrit. The son had been reared at a distance, put to school at
+ Lyons, and unavowed to the second wife, who had brought an ample dower,
+ and whom that discovery might have deterred from the altar. Unacknowledged
+ through life, in death at least the son&rsquo;s rights are proclaimed; and
+ Olivier Dalibard feels that Jean Bellanger has died in vain! For days has
+ the pale Provencal been closeted with lawyers; but there is no hope in
+ litigation. The proofs of the marriage, the birth, the identity, come out
+ clear and clearer; and the beardless schoolboy at Lyons reaps all the
+ profit of those nameless schemes and that mysterious death. Olivier
+ Dalibard desires the friendship, the intimacy of the heir; but the heir is
+ consigned to the guardianship of a merchant at Lyons, near of kin to his
+ mother, and the guardian responds but coldly to Olivier&rsquo;s letters.
+ Suddenly the defeated aspirant seems reconciled to his loss. The widow
+ Bellanger has her own separate fortune, and it is large beyond
+ expectation. In addition to the wealth she brought the deceased, his
+ affection had led him to invest vast sums in her name. The widow then is
+ rich,&mdash;rich as the heir himself. She is still fair. Poor woman, she
+ needs consolation! But, meanwhile, the nights of Olivier Dalibard are
+ disturbed and broken. His eye in the daytime is haggard and anxious; he is
+ seldom seen on foot in the streets. Fear is his companion by day, and sits
+ at night on his pillow. The Chouan, Pierre Guillot, who looked to George
+ Cadoudal as a god, knows that George Cadoudal has been betrayed, and
+ suspects Olivier Dalibard; and the Chouan has an arm of iron, and a heart
+ steeled against all mercy. Oh, how the pale scholar thirsted for that
+ Chouan&rsquo;s blood! With what relentless pertinacity, with what ingenious
+ research, he had set all the hounds of the police upon the track of that
+ single man! How notably he had failed! An avenger lived; and Olivier
+ Dalibard started at his own shadow on the wall. But he did not the less
+ continue to plot and to intrigue&mdash;nay, such occupation became more
+ necessary, as an escape from himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the mean while, Olivier Dalibard sought to take courage from the
+ recollection that the Chouan had taken an oath (and he knew that oaths are
+ held sacred with the Bretons) that he would keep his hand from his knife
+ unless he had clear evidence of treachery; such evidence existed, but only
+ in Dalibard&rsquo;s desk or the archives of Fouche. Tush, he was safe! And so,
+ when from dreams of fear he started at the depth of night, so his bolder
+ wife would whisper to him with firm, uncaressing lips: &ldquo;Olivier Dalibard,
+ thou fearest the living: dost thou never fear the dead? Thy dreams are
+ haunted with a spectre. Why takes it not the accusing shape of thy
+ mouldering kinsman?&rdquo; and Dalibard would answer, for he was a philosopher
+ in his cowardice: &ldquo;Il n&rsquo;y a que les morts qui ne reviennent pas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the notable convenience of us narrators to represent, by what is
+ called &ldquo;soliloquy,&rdquo; the thoughts, the interior of the personages we
+ describe. And this is almost the master-work of the tale-teller,&mdash;that
+ is, if the soliloquy be really in words, what self-commune is in the dim
+ and tangled recesses of the human heart! But to this privilege we are
+ rarely admitted in the case of Olivier Dalibard, for he rarely communed
+ with himself. A sort of mental calculation, it is true, eternally went on
+ within him, like the wheels of a destiny; but it had become a mechanical
+ operation, seldom disturbed by that consciousness of thought, with its
+ struggles of fear and doubt, conscience and crime, which gives its
+ appalling interest to the soliloquy of tragedy. Amidst the tremendous
+ secrecy of that profound intellect, as at the bottom of a sea, only
+ monstrous images of terror, things of prey, stirred in cold-blooded and
+ devouring life; but into these deeps Olivier himself did not dive. He did
+ not face his own soul; his outer life and his inner life seemed separate
+ individualities, just as, in some complicated State, the social machine
+ goes on through all its numberless cycles of vice and dread, whatever the
+ acts of the government, which is the representative of the State, and
+ stands for the State in the shallow judgment of history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before this time Olivier Dalibard&rsquo;s manner to his son had greatly changed
+ from the indifference it betrayed in England,&mdash;it was kind and
+ affectionate, almost caressing; while, on the other hand, Gabriel, as if
+ in possession of some secret which gave him power over his father, took a
+ more careless and independent tone, often absented himself from the house
+ for days together, joined the revels of young profligates older than
+ himself, with whom he had formed acquaintance, indulged in spendthrift
+ expenses, and plunged prematurely into the stream of vicious pleasure that
+ oozed through the mud of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning Dalibard, returning from a visit to Madame Bellanger, found
+ Gabriel alone in the salon, contemplating his fair face and gay dress in
+ one of the mirrors, and smoothing down the hair, which he wore long and
+ sleek, as in the portraits of Raphael. Dalibard&rsquo;s lip curled at the boy&rsquo;s
+ coxcombry,&mdash;though such tastes he himself had fostered, according to
+ his ruling principles, that to govern, you must find a foible, or instil
+ it; but the sneer changed into a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you satisfied with yourself, joli garcon?&rdquo; he said, with saturnine
+ playfulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least, sir, I hope that you will not be ashamed of me when you
+ formally legitimatize me as your son. The time has come, you know, to keep
+ your promise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it shall be kept, do not fear. But first I have an employment for
+ you,&mdash;a mission; your first embassy, Gabriel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I listen, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have to send to England a communication of the utmost importance&mdash;public
+ importance&mdash;to the secret agent of the French government. We are on
+ the eve of a descent on England. We are in correspondence with some in
+ London on whom we count for support. A man might be suspected and
+ searched,&mdash;mind, searched. You, a boy, with English name and speech,
+ will be my safest envoy. Bonaparte approves my selection. On your return,
+ he permits me to present you to him. He loves the rising generation. In a
+ few days you will be prepared to start.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite the calm tone of the father, so had the son, from the instinct of
+ fear and self-preservation, studied every accent, every glance of Olivier,&mdash;so
+ had he constituted himself a spy upon the heart whose perfidy was ever
+ armed, that he detected at once in the proposal some scheme hostile to his
+ interests. He made, however, no opposition to the plan suggested; and
+ seemingly satisfied with his obedience, the father dismissed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he was in the streets, Gabriel went straight to the house of
+ Madame Bellanger. The hotel had been purchased in her name, and she
+ therefore retained it. Since her husband&rsquo;s death he had avoided that
+ house, before so familiar to him; and now he grew pale and breathed hard
+ as he passed by the porter&rsquo;s lodge up the lofty stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew of his father&rsquo;s recent and constant visits at the house; and
+ without conjecturing precisely what were Olivier&rsquo;s designs, he connected
+ them, in the natural and acquired shrewdness he possessed, with the
+ wealthy widow. He resolved to watch, observe, and draw his own
+ conclusions. As he entered Madame Bellanger&rsquo;s room rather abruptly, he
+ observed her push aside amongst her papers something she had been gazing
+ on,&mdash;something which sparkled to his eyes. He sat himself down close
+ to her with the caressing manner he usually adopted towards women; and in
+ the midst of the babbling talk with which ladies generally honour boys, he
+ suddenly, as if by accident, displaced the papers, and saw his father&rsquo;s
+ miniature set in brilliants. The start of the widow, her blush, and her
+ exclamation strengthened the light that flashed upon his mind. &ldquo;Oh, ho! I
+ see now,&rdquo; he said laughing, &ldquo;why my father is always praising black hair;
+ and&mdash;nay, nay&mdash;gentlemen may admire ladies in Paris, surely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, my dear child, your father is an old friend of my poor husband, and
+ a near relation too! But, Gabriel, mon petit ange, you had better not say
+ at home that you have seen this picture; Madame Dalibard might be foolish
+ enough to be angry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure not. I have kept a secret before now!&rdquo; and again the boy&rsquo;s
+ cheek grew pale, and he looked hurriedly round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are very fond of Madame Dalibard too; so you must not vex her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who says I&rsquo;m fond of Madame Dalibard? A stepmother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, your father, of course,&mdash;il est si bon, ce pauvre Dalibard; and
+ all men like cheerful faces. But then, poor lady,&mdash;an Englishwoman,
+ so strange here; very natural she should fret, and with bad health, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad health! Ah, I remember! She, also, does not seem likely to live
+ long!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So your poor father apprehends. Well, well; how uncertain life is! Who
+ would have thought dear Bellanger would have&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel rose hastily, and interrupted the widow&rsquo;s pathetic reflections. &ldquo;I
+ only ran in to say Bon jour. I must leave you now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Adieu, my dear boy,&mdash;not a word on the miniature! By the by, here&rsquo;s
+ a shirt-pin for you,&mdash;tu es joli comme un amour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was clear now to Gabriel; it was necessary to get rid of him, and
+ forever. Dalibard might dread his attachment to Lucretia,&mdash;he would
+ dread still more his closer intimacy with the widow of Bellanger, should
+ that widow wed again, and Dalibard, freed like her (by what means?), be
+ her choice! Into that abyss of wickedness, fathomless to the innocent, the
+ young villanous eye plunged, and surveyed the ground; a terror seized on
+ him,&mdash;a terror of life and death. Would Dalibard spare even his own
+ son, if that son had the power to injure? This mission, was it exile only,&mdash;only
+ a fall back to the old squalor of his uncle&rsquo;s studio; only the laying
+ aside of a useless tool? Or was it a snare to the grave? Demon as Dalibard
+ was, doubtless the boy wronged him. But guilt construes guilt for the
+ worst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel had formerly enjoyed the thought to match himself, should danger
+ come, with Dalibard; the hour had come, and he felt his impotence. Brave
+ his father, and refuse to leave France! From that, even his reckless
+ hardihood shrank, as from inevitable destruction. But to depart,&mdash;be
+ the poor victim and dupe; after having been let loose amongst the riot of
+ pleasure, to return to labour and privation,&mdash;from that option his
+ vanity and his senses vindictively revolted. And Lucretia, the only being
+ who seemed to have a human kindness to him! Through all the vicious
+ egotism of his nature, he had some grateful sentiments for her; and even
+ the egotism assisted that unwonted amiability, for he felt that, Lucretia
+ gone, he had no hold on his father&rsquo;s house, that the home of her successor
+ never would be his. While thus brooding, he lifted his eyes, and saw
+ Dalibard pass in his carriage towards the Tuileries. The house, then, was
+ clear; he could see Lucretia alone. He formed his resolution at once, and
+ turned homewards. As he did so, he observed a man at the angle of the
+ street, whose eyes followed Dalibard&rsquo;s carriage with an expression of
+ unmistakable hate and revenge; but scarcely had he marked the countenance,
+ before the man, looking hurriedly round, darted away, and was lost amongst
+ the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, that countenance was not quite unfamiliar to Gabriel. He had seen it
+ before, as he saw it now,&mdash;hastily, and, as it were, by fearful
+ snatches. Once he had marked, on returning home at twilight, a figure
+ lurking by the house; and something, in the quickness with which it turned
+ from his gaze, joined to his knowledge of Dalibard&rsquo;s apprehensions, made
+ him mention the circumstance to his father when he entered. Dalibard bade
+ him hasten with a note, written hurriedly, to an agent of the police, whom
+ he kept lodged near at hand. The man was still on the threshold when the
+ boy went out on this errand, and he caught a glimpse of his face; but
+ before the police-agent reached the spot, the ill-omened apparition had
+ vanished. Gabriel now, as his eye rested full upon that threatening brow
+ and those burning eyes, was convinced that he saw before him the terrible
+ Pierre Guillot, whose very name blenched his father&rsquo;s cheek. When the
+ figure retreated, he resolved at once to pursue. He hurried through the
+ crowd amidst which the man had disappeared, and looked eagerly into the
+ faces of those he jostled; sometimes at the distance he caught sight of a
+ figure which appeared to resemble the one which he pursued, but the
+ likeness faded on approach. The chase, however, vague and desultory as it
+ was, led him on till his way was lost amongst labyrinths of narrow and
+ unfamiliar streets. Heated and thirsty, he paused, at last, before a small
+ cafe, entered to ask for a draught of lemonade, and behold, chance had
+ favoured him! The man he sought was seated there before a bottle of wine,
+ and intently reading the newspaper. Gabriel sat himself down at the
+ adjoining table. In a few moments the man was joined by a newcomer; the
+ two conversed, but in whispers so low that Gabriel was unable to hear
+ their conversation, though he caught more than once the name of &ldquo;George.&rdquo;
+ Both the men were violently excited, and the expression of their
+ countenances was menacing and sinister. The first comer pointed often to
+ the newspaper, and read passages from it to his companion. This suggested
+ to Gabriel the demand for another journal. When the waiter brought it to
+ him, his eye rested upon a long paragraph, in which the name of George
+ Cadoudal frequently occurred. In fact, all the journals of the day were
+ filled with speculations on the conspiracy and trial of that fiery martyr
+ to an erring adaptation of a noble principle. Gabriel knew that his father
+ had had a principal share in the detection of the defeated enterprise; and
+ his previous persuasions were confirmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His sense of hearing grew sharper by continued effort, and at length he
+ heard the first comer say distinctly, &ldquo;If I were but sure that I had
+ brought this fate upon George by introducing to him that accursed
+ Dalibard; if my oath did but justify me, I would&mdash;&rdquo; The concluding
+ sentence was lost. A few moments after, the two men rose, and from the
+ familiar words that passed between them and the master of the cafe, who
+ approached, himself, to receive the reckoning, the shrewd boy perceived
+ that the place was no unaccustomed haunt. He crept nearer and nearer; and
+ as the landlord shook hands with his customer, he heard distinctly the
+ former address him by the name of &ldquo;Guillot.&rdquo; When the men withdrew,
+ Gabriel followed them at a distance (taking care first to impress on his
+ memory the name of the cafe, and the street in which it was placed) and,
+ as he thought, unobserved; he was mistaken. Suddenly, in one street more
+ solitary than the rest, the man whom he was mainly bent on tracking turned
+ round, advanced to Gabriel, who was on the other side of the street, and
+ laid his hand upon him so abruptly that the boy was fairly taken by
+ surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who bade you follow us?&rdquo; said he, with so dark and fell an expression of
+ countenance that even Gabriel&rsquo;s courage failed him. &ldquo;No evasion, no lies;
+ speak out, and at once;&rdquo; and the grasp tightened on the boy&rsquo;s throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel&rsquo;s readiness of resource and presence of mind did not long forsake
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loose your hold, and I will tell you&mdash;you stifle me.&rdquo; The man
+ slightly relaxed his grasp, and Gabriel said quickly &ldquo;My mother perished
+ on the guillotine in the Reign of Terror; I am for the Bourbons. I thought
+ I overheard words which showed sympathy for poor George, the brave Chouan.
+ I followed you; for I thought I was following friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man smiled as he fixed his steady eye upon the unflinching child. &ldquo;My
+ poor lad,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;I believe you,&mdash;pardon me; but follow us
+ no more,&mdash;we are dangerous!&rdquo; He waved his hand, and strode away and
+ rejoined his companion, and Gabriel reluctantly abandoned the pursuit and
+ went homeward. It was long before he reached his father&rsquo;s house, for he
+ had strayed into a strange quarter of Paris, and had frequently to inquire
+ the way. At length he reached home, and ascended the stairs to a small
+ room in which Lucretia usually sat, and which was divided by a narrow
+ corridor from the sleeping-chamber of herself and Dalibard. His
+ stepmother, leaning her cheek upon her hand, was seated by the window, so
+ absorbed in some gloomy thoughts, which cast over her rigid face a shade,
+ intense and solemn as despair, that she did not perceive the approach of
+ the boy till he threw his arms round her neck, and then she started as in
+ alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You! only you,&rdquo; she said, with a constrained smile; &ldquo;see, my nerves are
+ not so strong as they were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are disturbed, belle-mere,&mdash;has he been vexing you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&mdash;Dalibard? No, indeed; we were only this morning discussing
+ matters of business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Business,&mdash;that means money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly,&rdquo; said Lucretia, &ldquo;money does make the staple of life&rsquo;s business. In
+ spite of his new appointment, your father needs some sums in hand,&mdash;favours
+ are to be bought, opportunities for speculation occur, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And my father,&rdquo; interrupted Gabriel, &ldquo;wishes your consent to raise the
+ rest of your portion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia looked surprised, but answered quietly: &ldquo;He had my consent long
+ since; but the trustees to the marriage-settlement&mdash;mere men of
+ business, my uncle&rsquo;s bankers; for I had lost all claim on my kindred&mdash;refuse,
+ or at least interpose such difficulties as amount to refusal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that reply came some days since,&rdquo; said Gabriel, musingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know,&mdash;did your father tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor belle-mere!&rdquo; said Gabriel, almost with pity; &ldquo;can you live in this
+ house and not watch all that passes,&mdash;every stranger, every message,
+ every letter? But what, then, does he wish with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has suggested my returning to England and seeing the trustees myself.
+ His interest can obtain my passport.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you have refused?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not consented.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Consent!&mdash;hush!&mdash;your maid; Marie is not waiting without;&rdquo; and
+ Gabriel rose and looked forth. &ldquo;No, confound these doors! none close as
+ they ought in this house. Is it not a clause in your settlement that the
+ half of your fortune now invested goes to the survivor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; replied Lucretia, struck and thrilled at the question. &ldquo;How,
+ again, did you know this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw my father reading the copy. If you die first, then, he has all. If
+ he merely wanted the money, he would not send you away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a terrible pause. Gabriel resumed: &ldquo;I trust you, it may be, with
+ my life; but I will speak out. My father goes much to Bellanger&rsquo;s widow;
+ she is rich and weak. Come to England! Yes, come; for he is about to
+ dismiss me. He fears that I shall be in the way, to warn you, perhaps, or
+ to&mdash;to&mdash;In short, both of us are in his way. He gives you an
+ escape. Once in England, the war which is breaking out will prevent your
+ return. He will twist the laws of divorce to his favour; he will marry
+ again! What then? He spares you what remains of your fortune; he spares
+ your life. Remain here,&mdash;cross his schemes, and&mdash;No, no; come to
+ England,&mdash;safer anywhere than here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, great changes had passed over Lucretia&rsquo;s countenance. At
+ first it was the flash of conviction, then the stunned shock of horror;
+ now she rose, rose to her full height, and there was a livid and deadly
+ light in her eyes,&mdash;the light of conscious courage and power and
+ revenge. &ldquo;Fool,&rdquo; she muttered, &ldquo;with all his craft! Fool, fool! As if, in
+ the war of household perfidy, the woman did not always conquer! Man&rsquo;s only
+ chance is to be mailed in honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Gabriel, overhearing her, &ldquo;but you do not remember what it is.
+ There is nothing you can see and guard against. It is not like an enemy
+ face to face; it is death in the food, in the air, in the touch. You
+ stretch out your arms in the dark, you feel nothing, and you die! Oh, do
+ not fancy that I have not thought well (for I am almost a man now) if
+ there were no means to resist,&mdash;there are none! As well make head
+ against the plague,&mdash;it is in the atmosphere. Come to England, and
+ return. Live poorly, if you must, but live&mdash;but live!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Return to England poor and despised, and bound still to him, or a
+ disgraced and divorced wife,&mdash;disgraced by the low-born dependant on
+ my kinsman&rsquo;s house,&mdash;and fawn perhaps upon my sister and her husband
+ for bread! Never! I am at my post, and I will not fly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brave, brave!&rdquo; said the boy, clapping his hands, and sincerely moved by a
+ daring superior to his own; &ldquo;I wish I could help you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s eye rested on him with the full gaze, so rare in its looks. She
+ drew him to her and kissed his brow. &ldquo;Boy, through life, whatever our
+ guilt and its doom, we are bound to each other. I may yet live to have
+ wealth; if so, it is yours as a son&rsquo;s. I may be iron to others,&mdash;never
+ to you. Enough of this; I must reflect!&rdquo; She passed her hands over her
+ eyes a moment, and resumed: &ldquo;You would help me in my self-defence; I think
+ you can. You have been more alert in your watch than I have. You must have
+ means I have not secured. Your father guards well all his papers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have keys to every desk. My foot passed the threshold of that room
+ under the roof before yours. But no; his powers can never be yours! He has
+ never confided to you half his secrets. He has antidotes for every&mdash;every&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! what noise is that? Only the shower on the casements. No, no,
+ child, that is not my object. Cadoudal&rsquo;s conspiracy! Your father has
+ letters from Fouche which show how he has betrayed others who are stronger
+ to avenge than a woman and a boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would have those letters. Give me the keys. But hold! Gabriel, Gabriel,
+ you may yet misjudge him. This woman&mdash;wife to the dead man&mdash;his
+ wife! Horror! Have you no proofs of what you imply?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Proofs!&rdquo; echoed Gabriel, in a tone of wonder; &ldquo;I can but see and
+ conjecture. You are warned, watch and decide for yourself. But again I
+ say, come to England; I shall go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without reply, Lucretia took the keys from Gabriel&rsquo;s half-reluctant hand,
+ and passed into her husband&rsquo;s writing-room. When she had entered, she
+ locked the door. She passed at once to a huge secretary, of which the key
+ was small as a fairy&rsquo;s work. She opened it with ease by one of the
+ counterfeits. No love-correspondence&mdash;the first object of her search,
+ for she was woman&mdash;met her eye. What need of letters, when interviews
+ were so facile? But she soon found a document that told all which
+ love-letters could tell,&mdash;it was an account of the moneys and
+ possessions of Madame Bellanger; and there were pencil notes on the
+ margin: &ldquo;Vautran will give four hundred thousand francs for the lands in
+ Auvergne,&mdash;to be accepted. Consult on the power of sale granted to a
+ second husband. Query, if there is no chance of the heir-at-law disputing
+ the moneys invested in Madame B.&lsquo;s name,&rdquo;&mdash;and such memoranda as a
+ man notes down in the schedule of properties about to be his own. In these
+ inscriptions there was a hideous mockery of all love; like the blue lights
+ of corruption, they showed the black vault of the heart. The pale reader
+ saw what her own attractions had been, and, fallen as she was, she smiled
+ superior in her bitterness of scorn. Arranged methodically with the
+ precision of business, she found the letters she next looked for; one
+ recognizing Dalibard&rsquo;s services in the detection of the conspiracy, and
+ authorizing him to employ the police in the search of Pierre Guillot,
+ sufficed for her purpose. She withdrew, and secreted it. She was about to
+ lock up the secretary, when her eye fell on the title of a small
+ manuscript volume in a corner; and as shet read, she pressed one hand
+ convulsively to her heart, while twice with the other she grasped the
+ volume, and twice withdrew the grasp. The title ran harmlessly thus:
+ &ldquo;Philosophical and Chemical Inquiries into the Nature and Materials of the
+ Poisons in Use between the Fourteenth and Sixteenth Centuries.&rdquo; Hurriedly,
+ and at last as if doubtful of herself, she left the manuscript, closed the
+ secretary, and returned to Gabriel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have got the paper you seek?&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then whatever you do, you must be quick; he will soon discover the loss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will be quick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is I whom he will suspect,&rdquo; said Gabriel, in alarm, as that thought
+ struck him. &ldquo;No, for my sake do not take the letter till I am gone. Do not
+ fear in the mean time; he will do nothing against you while I am here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will replace the letter till then,&rdquo; said Lucretia, meekly. &ldquo;You have a
+ right to my first thoughts.&rdquo; So she went back, and Gabriel (suspicious
+ perhaps) crept after her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she replaced the document, he pointed to the manuscript which had
+ tempted her. &ldquo;I have seen that before; how I longed for it! If anything
+ ever happens to him, I claim that as my legacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their hands met as he said this, and grasped each other convulsively;
+ Lucretia relocked the secretary, and when she gained the next room, she
+ tottered to a chair. Her strong nerves gave way for the moment; she
+ uttered no cry, but by the whiteness of her face, Gabriel saw that she was
+ senseless,&mdash;senseless for a minute or so; scarcely more. But the
+ return to consciousness with a clenched hand, and a brow of defiance, and
+ a stare of mingled desperation and dismay, seemed rather the awaking from
+ some frightful dream of violence and struggle than the slow, languid
+ recovery from the faintness of a swoon. Yes, henceforth, to sleep was to
+ couch by a serpent,&mdash;to breathe was to listen for the avalanche! Thou
+ who didst trifle so wantonly with Treason, now gravely front the grim
+ comrade thou hast won; thou scheming desecrator of the Household Gods, now
+ learn, to the last page of dark knowledge, what the hearth is without
+ them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel was strangely moved as he beheld that proud and solitary despair.
+ An instinct of nature had hitherto checked him from actively aiding
+ Lucretia in that struggle with his father which could but end in the
+ destruction of one or the other. He had contented himself with
+ forewarnings, with hints, with indirect suggestions; but now all his
+ sympathy was so strongly roused on her behalf that the last faint scruple
+ of filial conscience vanished into the abyss of blood over which stood
+ that lonely Titaness. He drew near, and clasping her hand, said, in a
+ quick and broken voice,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen! You know where to find proof of my fa&mdash;that is, of
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s treason to the conspirators, you know the name of the man he
+ dreads as an avenger, and you know that he waits but the proof to strike;
+ but you do not know where to find that man, if his revenge is wanting for
+ yourself. The police have not hunted him out: how can you? Accident has
+ made me acquainted with one of his haunts. Give me a single promise, and I
+ will put you at least upon that clew,&mdash;weak, perhaps, but as yet the
+ sole one to be followed. Promise me that, only in defence of your own
+ life, not for mere jealousy, you will avail yourself of the knowledge, and
+ you shall know all I do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think,&rdquo; said Lucretia, in a calm, cold voice, &ldquo;that it is for
+ jealousy, which is love, that I would murder all hope, all peace? For we
+ have here&rdquo;&mdash;and she smote her breast&mdash;&ldquo;here, if not elsewhere, a
+ heaven and a hell! Son, I will not harm your father, except in
+ self-defence. But tell me nothing that may make the son a party in the
+ father&rsquo;s doom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The father slew the mother,&rdquo; muttered Gabriel, between his clenched
+ teeth; &ldquo;and to me, you have wellnigh supplied her place. Strike, if need
+ be, in her name! If you are driven to want the arm of Pierre Guillot, seek
+ news of him at the Cafe Dufour, Rue S&mdash;&mdash;, Boulevard du Temple.
+ Be calm now; I hear your husband&rsquo;s step.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days more, and Gabriel is gone! Wife and husband are alone with each
+ other. Lucretia has refused to depart. Then that mute coma of horror, that
+ suspense of two foes in the conflict of death; for the subtle, prying eye
+ of Olivier Dalibard sees that he himself is suspected,&mdash;further he
+ shuns from sifting! Glance fastens on glance, and then hurries smilingly
+ away. From the cup grins a skeleton, at the board warns a spectre. But how
+ kind still the words, and how gentle the tone; and they lie down side by
+ side in the marriage-bed,&mdash;brain plotting against brain, heart
+ loathing heart. It is a duel of life and death between those sworn through
+ life and beyond death at the altar. But it is carried on with all the
+ forms and courtesies of duel in the age of chivalry. No conjugal
+ wrangling, no slip of the tongue; the oil is on the surface of the wave,&mdash;the
+ monsters in the hell of the abyss war invisibly below. At length, a dull
+ torpor creeps over the woman; she feels the taint in her veins,&mdash;the
+ slow victory is begun. What mattered all her vigilance and caution? Vainly
+ glide from the fangs of the serpent,&mdash;his very breath suffices to
+ destroy! Pure seems the draught and wholesome the viand,&mdash;that master
+ of the science of murder needs not the means of the bungler! Then, keen
+ and strong from the creeping lethargy started the fierce instinct of self
+ and the ruthless impulse of revenge. Not too late yet to escape; for those
+ subtle banes, that are to defy all detection, work but slowly to their
+ end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening a woman, closely mantled, stood at watch by the angle of a
+ wall. The light came dim and muffled from the window of a cafe hard at
+ hand; the reflection slept amidst the shadows on the dark pavement, and
+ save a solitary lamp swung at distance in the vista over the centre of the
+ narrow street, no ray broke the gloom. The night was clouded and starless,
+ the wind moaned in gusts, and the rain fell heavily; but the gloom and the
+ loneliness did not appall the eye, and the wind did not chill the heart,
+ and the rain fell unheeded on the head of the woman at her post. At times
+ she paused in her slow, sentry-like pace to and fro, to look through the
+ window of the cafe, and her gaze fell always on one figure seated apart
+ from the rest. At length her pulse beat more quickly, and the patient lips
+ smiled sternly. The figure had risen to depart. A man came out and walked
+ quickly up the street; the woman approached, and when the man was under
+ the single lamp swung aloft, he felt his arm touched: the woman was at his
+ side, and looking steadily into his face&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are Pierre Guillot, the Breton, the friend of George Cadoudal. Will
+ you be his avenger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chouan&rsquo;s first impulse had been to place his hand in his vest, and
+ something shone bright in the lamp-light, clasped in those iron fingers.
+ The voice and the manner reassured him, and he answered readily,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am he whom you seek, and I only live to avenge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Read, then, and act,&rdquo; answered the woman, as she placed a paper in his
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Laughton the babe is on the breast of the fair mother, and the father
+ sits beside the bed; and mother and father dispute almost angrily whether
+ mother or father those soft, rounded features of slumbering infancy
+ resemble most. At the red house, near the market-town, there is a
+ hospitable bustle. William is home earlier than usual. Within the last
+ hour, Susan has been thrice into every room. Husband and wife are now
+ watching at the window. The good Fieldens, with a coach full of children,
+ are expected, every moment, on a week&rsquo;s visit at least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the cafe in the Boulevard du Temple sit Pierre Guillot, the Chouan, and
+ another of the old band of brigands whom George Cadoudal had mustered in
+ Paris. There is an expression of content on Guillot&rsquo;s countenance,&mdash;it
+ seems more open than usual, and there is a complacent smile on his lips.
+ He is whispering low to his friend in the intervals of eating,&mdash;an
+ employment pursued with the hearty gusto of a hungry man. But his friend
+ does not seem to sympathize with the cheerful feelings of his comrade; he
+ is pale, and there is terror on his face; and you may see that the journal
+ in his hand trembles like a leaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the gardens of the Tuileries some score or so of gossips group
+ together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And no news of the murderer?&rdquo; asked one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but the man who had been friend to Robespierre must have made secret
+ enemies enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ce pauvre Dalibard! He was not mixed up with the Terrorists,
+ nevertheless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but the more deadly for that, perhaps; a sly man was Olivier
+ Dalibard!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; said an employee, lounging up to the group. &ldquo;Are you
+ talking of Olivier Dalibard? It is but the other day he had Marsan&rsquo;s
+ appointment. He is now to have Pleyel&rsquo;s. I heard it two days ago; a
+ capital thing! Peste! il ira loin. We shall have him a senator soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak for yourself,&rdquo; quoth a ci-devant abbe, with a laugh; &ldquo;I should be
+ sorry to see him again soon, wherever he be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Plait-il? I don&rsquo;t understand you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know that Olivier Dalibard is murdered, found stabbed,&mdash;in
+ his own house, too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ciel! Pray tell me all you know. His place, then, is vacant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it seems that Dalibard, who had been brought up to medicine, was
+ still fond of chemical experiments. He hired a room at the top of the
+ house for such scientific amusements. He was accustomed to spend part of
+ his nights there. They found him at morning bathed in his blood, with
+ three ghastly wounds in his side, and his fingers cut to the bone. He had
+ struggled hard with the knife that butchered him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In his own house!&rdquo; said a lawyer. &ldquo;Some servant or spendthrift heir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has no heir but young Bellanger, who will be riche a millions, and is
+ now but a schoolboy at Lyons. No; it seems that the window was left open,
+ and that it communicates with the rooftops. There the murderer had
+ entered, and by that way escaped; for they found the leads of the gutter
+ dabbled with blood. The next house was uninhabited,&mdash;easy enough to
+ get in there, and lie perdu till night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo; said the lawyer. &ldquo;But the assassin could only have learned
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s habits from some one in the house. Was the deceased married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&mdash;to an Englishwoman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She had lovers, perhaps?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, lovers! The happiest couple ever known; you should have seen them
+ together! I dined there last week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is strange,&rdquo; said the lawyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he was getting on so well,&rdquo; muttered a hungry-looking man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And his place is vacant!&rdquo; repeated the employee, as he quitted the crowd
+ abstractedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the house of Olivier Dalibard sits Lucretia alone, and in her own usual
+ morning-room. The officer appointed to such tasks by the French law has
+ performed his visit, and made his notes, and expressed condolence with the
+ widow, and promised justice and retribution, and placed his seal on the
+ locks till the representatives of the heir-at-law shall arrive; and the
+ heir-at-law is the very boy who had succeeded so unexpectedly to the
+ wealth of Jean Bellanger the contractor! But Lucretia has obtained
+ beforehand all she wishes to save from the rest. An open box is on the
+ floor, into which her hand drops noiselessly a volume in manuscript. On
+ the forefinger of that hand is a ring, larger and more massive than those
+ usually worn by women,&mdash;by Lucretia never worn before. Why should
+ that ring have been selected with such care from the dead man&rsquo;s hoards?
+ Why so precious the dull opal in that cumbrous setting? From the hand the
+ volume drops without sound into the box, as those whom the secrets of the
+ volume instruct you to destroy may drop without noise into the grave. The
+ trace of some illness, recent and deep, nor conquered yet, has ploughed
+ lines in that young countenance, and dimmed the light of those searching
+ eyes. Yet courage! the poison is arrested, the poisoner is no more. Minds
+ like thine, stern woman, are cased in coffers of steel, and the rust as
+ yet has gnawed no deeper than the surface. So over that face, stamped with
+ bodily suffering, plays a calm smile of triumph. The schemer has baffled
+ the schemer! Turn now to the right, pass by that narrow corridor: you are
+ in the marriage-chamber; the windows are closed; tall tapers burn at the
+ foot of the bed. Now go back to that narrow corridor. Disregarded, thrown
+ aside, are a cloth and a besom: the cloth is wet still; but here and there
+ the red stains are dry, and clotted as with bloody glue; and the hairs of
+ the besom start up, torn and ragged, as if the bristles had a sense of
+ some horror, as if things inanimate still partook of men&rsquo;s dread at men&rsquo;s
+ deeds. If you passed through the corridor and saw in the shadow of the
+ wall that homeliest of instruments cast away and forgotten, you would
+ smile at the slatternly housework. But if you knew that a corpse had been
+ borne down those stairs to the left,&mdash;borne along those floors to
+ that marriage-bed,&mdash;with the blood oozing and gushing and plashing
+ below as the bearers passed with their burden, then straight that dead
+ thing would take the awe of the dead being; it told its own tale of
+ violence and murder; it had dabbled in the gore of the violated clay; it
+ had become an evidence of the crime. No wonder that its hairs bristled up,
+ sharp and ragged, in the shadow of the wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first part of the tragedy ends; let fall the curtain. When next it
+ rises, years will have passed away, graves uncounted will have wrought
+ fresh hollows in our merry sepulchre,&mdash;sweet earth! Take a sand from
+ the shore, take a drop from the ocean,&mdash;less than sand-grain and drop
+ in man&rsquo;s planet one Death and one Crime! On the map, trace all oceans, and
+ search out every shore,&mdash;more than seas, more than lands, in God&rsquo;s
+ balance shall weigh one Death and one Crime!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2H_PART2" id="Blink2H_PART2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART THE SECOND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2H_PROL" id="Blink2H_PROL">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PROLOGUE TO PART THE SECOND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The century has advanced. The rush of the deluge has ebbed back; the old
+ landmarks have reappeared; the dynasties Napoleon willed into life have
+ crumbled to the dust; the plough has passed over Waterloo; autumn after
+ autumn the harvests have glittered on that grave of an empire. Through the
+ immense ocean of universal change we look back on the single track which
+ our frail boat has cut through the waste. As a star shines impartially
+ over the measureless expanse, though it seems to gild but one broken line
+ into each eye, so, as our memory gazes on the past, the light spreads not
+ over all the breadth of the waste where nations have battled and argosies
+ gone down,&mdash;it falls narrow and confined along the single course we
+ have taken; we lean over the small raft on which we float, and see the
+ sparkles but reflected from the waves that it divides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the terrace at Laughton but one step paces slowly. The bride clings not
+ now to the bridegroom&rsquo;s arm. Though pale and worn, it is still the same
+ gentle face; but the blush of woman&rsquo;s love has gone from it evermore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Vernon (to call him still by the name in which he is best known to
+ us) sleeps in the vault of the St. Johns. He had lived longer than he
+ himself had expected, than his physician had hoped,&mdash;lived, cheerful
+ and happy, amidst quiet pursuits and innocent excitements. Three sons had
+ blessed his hearth, to mourn over his grave. But the two elder were
+ delicate and sickly. They did not long survive him, and died within a few
+ months of each other. The third seemed formed of a different mould and
+ constitution from his brethren. To him descended the ancient heritage of
+ Laughton, and he promised to enjoy it long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is Vernon&rsquo;s widow who walks alone in the stately terrace; sad still,
+ for she loved well the choice of her youth, and she misses yet the
+ children in the grave. From the date of Vernon&rsquo;s death, she wore mourning
+ without and within; and the sorrows that came later broke more the bruised
+ reed,&mdash;sad still, but resigned. One son survives, and earth yet has
+ the troubled hopes and the holy fears of affection. Though that son be
+ afar, in sport or in earnest, in pleasure or in toil, working out his
+ destiny as man, still that step is less solitary than it seems. When does
+ the son&rsquo;s image not walk beside the mother? Though she lives in seclusion,
+ though the gay world tempts no more, the gay world is yet linked to her
+ thoughts. From the distance she hears its murmurs in music. Her fancy
+ still mingles with the crowd, and follows on, to her eye, outshining all
+ the rest. Never vain in herself, she is vain now of another; and the small
+ triumphs of the young and well-born seem trophies of renown to the eyes so
+ tenderly deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the old-fashioned market-town still the business goes on, still the
+ doors of the bank open and close every moment on the great day of the
+ week; but the names over the threshold are partially changed. The junior
+ partner is busy no more at the desk; not wholly forgotten, if his name
+ still is spoken, it is not with thankfulness and praise. A something rests
+ on the name,&mdash;that something which dims and attaints; not proven, not
+ certain, but suspected and dubious. The head shakes, the voice whispers;
+ and the attorney now lives in the solid red house at the verge of the
+ town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the vicarage, Time, the old scythe-bearer, has not paused from his
+ work. Still employed on Greek texts, little changed, save that his hair is
+ gray and that some lines in his kindly face tell of sorrows as of years,
+ the vicar sits in his parlour; but the children no longer, blithe-voiced
+ and rose-cheeked, dart through the rustling espaliers. Those children,
+ grave men or staid matrons (save one whom Death chose, and therefore now
+ of all best beloved!) are at their posts in the world. The young ones are
+ flown from the nest, and, with anxious wings, here and there, search food
+ in their turn for their young. But the blithe voice and rose-cheek of the
+ child make not that loss which the hearth misses the most. From childhood
+ to manhood, and from manhood to departure, the natural changes are gradual
+ and prepared. The absence most missed is that household life which
+ presided, which kept things in order, and must be coaxed if a chair were
+ displaced. That providence in trifles, that clasp of small links, that
+ dear, bustling agency,&mdash;now pleased, now complaining,&mdash;dear
+ alike in each change of its humour; that active life which has no self of
+ its own; like the mind of a poet, though its prose be the humblest,
+ transferring self into others, with its right to be cross, and its charter
+ to scold; for the motive is clear,&mdash;it takes what it loves too
+ anxiously to heart. The door of the parlour is open, the garden-path still
+ passes before the threshold; but no step now has full right to halt at the
+ door and interrupt the grave thought on Greek texts; no small talk on
+ details and wise sayings chimes in with the wrath of &ldquo;Medea.&rdquo; The Prudent
+ Genius is gone from the household; and perhaps as the good scholar now
+ wearily pauses, and looks out on the silent garden, he would have given
+ with joy all that Athens produced, from Aeschylus to Plato, to hear again
+ from the old familiar lips the lament on torn jackets, or the statistical
+ economy of eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But see, though the wife is no more, though the children have departed,
+ the vicar&rsquo;s home is not utterly desolate. See, along the same walk on
+ which William soothed Susan&rsquo;s fears and won her consent,&mdash;see, what
+ fairy advances? Is it Susan returned to youth? How like! Yet look again,
+ and how unlike! The same, the pure, candid regard; the same, the clear,
+ limpid blue of the eye; the same, that fair hue of the hair,&mdash;light,
+ but not auburn; more subdued, more harmonious than that equivocal colour
+ which too nearly approaches to red. But how much more blooming and joyous
+ than Susan&rsquo;s is that exquisite face in which all Hebe smiles forth; how
+ much airier the tread, light with health; how much rounder, if slighter
+ still, the wave of that undulating form! She smiles, her lips move, she is
+ conversing with herself; she cannot be all silent, even when alone, for
+ the sunny gladness of her nature must have vent like a bird&rsquo;s. But do not
+ fancy that that gladness speaks the levity which comes from the absence of
+ thought; it is rather from the depth of thought that it springs, as from
+ the depth of a sea comes its music. See, while she pauses and listens,
+ with her finger half-raised to her lip, as amidst that careless jubilee of
+ birds she hears a note more grave and sustained,&mdash;the nightingale
+ singing by day (as sometimes, though rarely, he is heard,&mdash;perhaps
+ because he misses his mate; perhaps because he sees from his bower the
+ creeping form of some foe to his race),&mdash;see, as she listens now to
+ that plaintive, low-chanted warble, how quickly the smile is sobered, how
+ the shade, soft and pensive, steals over the brow. It is but the mystic
+ sympathy with Nature that bestows the smile or the shade. In that heart
+ lightly moved beats the fine sense of the poet. It is the exquisite
+ sensibility of the nerves that sends its blithe play to those spirits, and
+ from the clearness of the atmosphere comes, warm and ethereal, the ray of
+ that light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And does the roof of the pastor give shelter to Helen Mainwaring&rsquo;s youth?
+ Has Death taken from her the natural protectors? Those forms which we saw
+ so full of youth and youth&rsquo;s heart in that very spot, has the grave closed
+ on them yet? Yet! How few attain to the age of the Psalmist! Twenty-seven
+ years have passed since that date: how often, in those years, have the
+ dark doors opened for the young as for the old! William Mainwaring died
+ first, careworn and shamebowed; the blot on his name had cankered into his
+ heart. Susan&rsquo;s life, always precarious, had struggled on, while he lived,
+ by the strong power of affection and will; she would not die, for who then
+ could console him? But at his death the power gave way. She lingered, but
+ lingered dyingly, for three years; and then, for the first time since
+ William&rsquo;s death, she smiled: that smile remained on the lips of the
+ corpse. They had had many trials, that young couple whom we left so
+ prosperous and happy. Not till many years after their marriage had one
+ sweet consoler been born to them. In the season of poverty and shame and
+ grief it came; and there was no pride on Mainwaring&rsquo;s brow when they
+ placed his first-born in his arms. By her will, the widow consigned Helen
+ to the joint guardianship of Mr. Fielden and her sister; but the latter
+ was abroad, her address unknown, so the vicar for two years had had sole
+ charge of the orphan. She was not unprovided for. The sum that Susan
+ brought to her husband had been long since gone, it is true,&mdash;lost in
+ the calamity which had wrecked William Mainwaring&rsquo;s name and blighted his
+ prospects; but Helen&rsquo;s grandfather, the landagent, had died some time
+ subsequent to that event, and, indeed, just before William&rsquo;s death. He had
+ never forgiven his son the stain on his name,&mdash;never assisted, never
+ even seen him since that fatal day; but he left to Helen a sum of about
+ 8,000 pounds; for she, at least, was innocent. In Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s eyes,
+ Helen was therefore an heiress. And who amongst his small range of
+ acquaintance was good enough for her?&mdash;not only so richly portioned,
+ but so lovely,&mdash;accomplished, too; for her parents had of late years
+ lived chiefly in France, and languages there are easily learned, and
+ masters cheap. Mr. Fielden knew but one, whom Providence had also
+ consigned to his charge,&mdash;the supposed son of his old pupil Ardworth;
+ but though a tender affection existed between the two young persons, it
+ seemed too like that of brother and sister to afford much ground for Mr.
+ Fielden&rsquo;s anxiety or hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From his window the vicar observed the still attitude of the young orphan
+ for a few moments; then he pushed aside his books, rose, and approached
+ her. At the sound of his tread she woke from her revery and bounded
+ lightly towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you would not see me before!&rdquo; she said, in a voice in which there was
+ the slightest possible foreign accent, which betrayed the country in which
+ her childhood had been passed; &ldquo;I peeped in twice at the window. I wanted
+ you so much to walk to the village. But you will come now, will you not?&rdquo;
+ added the girl, coaxingly, as she looked up at him under the shade of her
+ straw hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what do you want in the village, my pretty Helen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you know it is fair day, and you promised Bessie that you would buy
+ her a fairing,&mdash;to say nothing of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true, and I ought to look in; it will help to keep the poor people
+ from drinking. A clergyman should mix with his parishioners in their
+ holidays. We must not associate our office only with grief and sickness
+ and preaching. We will go. And what fairing are you to have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, something very brilliant, I promise you! I have formed grand notions
+ of a fair. I am sure it must be like the bazaars we read of last night in
+ that charming &lsquo;Tour in the East.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vicar smiled, half benignly, half anxiously. &ldquo;My dear child, it is so
+ like you to suppose a village fair must be an Eastern bazaar. If you
+ always thus judge of things by your fancy, how this sober world will
+ deceive you, poor Helen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not my fault; ne me grondez pas, mechant,&rdquo; answered Helen, hanging
+ her head. &ldquo;But come, sir, allow, at least, that if I let my romance, as
+ you call it, run away with me now and then, I can still content myself
+ with the reality. What, you shake your head still? Don&rsquo;t you remember the
+ sparrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! ha! yes,&mdash;the sparrow that the pedlar sold you for a goldfinch;
+ and you were so proud of your purchase, and wondered so much why you could
+ not coax the goldfinch to sing, till at last the paint wore away, and it
+ was only a poor little sparrow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on! Confess: did I fret then? Was I not as pleased with my dear
+ sparrow as I should have been with the prettiest goldfinch that ever sang?
+ Does not the sparrow follow me about and nestle on my shoulder, dear
+ little thing? And I was right after all; for if I had not fancied it a
+ goldfinch, I should not have bought it, perhaps. But now I would not
+ change it for a goldfinch,&mdash;no, not even for that nightingale I heard
+ just now. So let me still fancy the poor fair a bazaar; it is a double
+ pleasure, first to fancy the bazaar, and then to be surprised at the
+ fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You argue well,&rdquo; said the vicar, as they now entered the village; &ldquo;I
+ really think, in spite of all your turn for poetry and Goldsmith and
+ Cowper, that you would take as kindly to mathematics as your cousin John
+ Ardworth, poor lad!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if mathematics have made him so grave, and so churlish, I was going
+ to say; but that word does him wrong, dear cousin, so kind and so rough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not mathematics that are to blame if he is grave and absorbed,&rdquo;
+ said the vicar, with a sigh; &ldquo;it is the two cares that gnaw most,&mdash;poverty
+ and ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, do not sigh; it must be such a pleasure to feel, as he does, that
+ one must triumph at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph! John must have nearly reached London by this time,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Fielden, &ldquo;for he is a stout walker, and this is the third day since he
+ left us. Well, now that he is about fairly to be called to the Bar, I hope
+ that his fever will cool, and he will settle calmly to work. I have felt
+ great pain for him during this last visit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pain! But why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear, do you remember what I read to you both from Sir William Temple
+ the night before John left us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen put her hand to her brow, and with a readiness which showed a memory
+ equally quick and retentive, replied, &ldquo;Yes; was it not to this effect? I
+ am not sure of the exact words: &lsquo;To have something we have not, and be
+ something we are not, is the root of all evil.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well remembered, my darling!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but,&rdquo; said Helen, archly, &ldquo;I remember too what my cousin replied: &lsquo;If
+ Sir William Temple had practised his theory, he would not have been
+ ambassador at the Hague, or&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! the boy&rsquo;s always ready enough with his answers,&rdquo; interrupted Mr.
+ Fielden, rather petulantly. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the fair, my dear,&mdash;more in your
+ way, I see, than Sir William Temple&rsquo;s philosophy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Helen was right; the fair was no Eastern bazaar, but how delighted
+ that young, impressionable mind was, notwithstanding,&mdash;delighted with
+ the swings and the roundabouts, the shows, the booths, even down to the
+ gilt gingerbread kings and queens! All minds genuinely poetical are
+ peculiarly susceptible to movement,&mdash;that is, to the excitement of
+ numbers. If the movement is sincerely joyous, as in the mirth of a village
+ holiday, such a nature shares insensibly in the joy; but if the movement
+ is a false and spurious gayety, as in a state ball, where the impassive
+ face and languid step are out of harmony with the evident object of the
+ scene, then the nature we speak of feels chilled and dejected. Hence it
+ really is that the more delicate and ideal order of minds soon grow
+ inexpressibly weary of the hack routine of what are called fashionable
+ pleasures. Hence the same person most alive to a dance on the green, would
+ be without enjoyment at Almack&rsquo;s. It was not because one scene is a
+ village green, and the other a room in King Street, nor is it because the
+ actors in the one are of the humble, in the others of the noble class; but
+ simply because the enjoyment in the first is visible and hearty, because
+ in the other it is a listless and melancholy pretence. Helen fancied it
+ was the swings and the booths that gave her that innocent exhilaration,&mdash;it
+ was not so; it was the unconscious sympathy with the crowd around her.
+ When the poetical nature quits its own dreams for the actual world, it
+ enters and transfuses itself into the hearts and humours of others. The
+ two wings of that spirit which we call Genius are revery and sympathy. But
+ poor little Helen had no idea that she had genius. Whether chasing the
+ butterfly or talking fond fancies to her birds, or whether with earnest,
+ musing eyes watching the stars come forth, and the dark pine-trees gleam
+ into silver; whether with airy daydreams and credulous wonder poring over
+ the magic tales of Mirglip or Aladdin, or whether spellbound to awe by the
+ solemn woes of Lear, or following the blind great bard into &ldquo;the heaven of
+ heavens, an earthly guest, to draw empyreal air,&rdquo;&mdash;she obeyed but the
+ honest and varying impulse in each change of her pliant mood, and would
+ have ascribed with genuine humility to the vagaries of childhood that
+ prompt gathering of pleasure, that quick-shifting sport of the fancy by
+ which Nature binds to itself, in chains undulating as melody, the lively
+ senses of genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Helen, leaning on the vicar&rsquo;s arm, thus surrendered herself to the
+ innocent excitement of the moment, the vicar himself smiled and nodded to
+ his parishioners, or paused to exchange a friendly word or two with the
+ youngest or the eldest loiterers (those two extremes of mortality which
+ the Church so tenderly unites) whom the scene drew to its tempting vortex,
+ when a rough-haired lad, with a leather bag strapped across his waist,
+ turned from one of the gingerbread booths, and touching his hat, said,
+ &ldquo;Please you, sir, I was a coming to your house with a letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vicar&rsquo;s correspondence was confined and rare, despite his distant
+ children, for letters but a few years ago were costly luxuries to persons
+ of narrow income, and therefore the juvenile letter-carrier who plied
+ between the post-town and the village failed to excite in his breast that
+ indignation for being an hour or more behind his time which would have
+ animated one to whom the post brings the usual event of the day. He took
+ the letter from the boy&rsquo;s hand, and paid for it with a thrifty sigh as he
+ glanced at a handwriting unfamiliar to him,&mdash;perhaps from some
+ clergyman poorer than himself. However, that was not the place to read
+ letters, so he put the epistle into his pocket, until Helen, who watched
+ his countenance to see when he grew tired of the scene, kindly proposed to
+ return home. As they gained a stile half-way, Mr. Fielden remembered his
+ letter, took it forth, and put on his spectacles. Helen stooped over the
+ bank to gather violets; the vicar seated himself on the stile. As he again
+ looked at the address, the handwriting, before unfamiliar, seemed to grow
+ indistinctly on his recollection. That bold, firm hand&mdash;thin and fine
+ as woman&rsquo;s, but large and regular as man&rsquo;s&mdash;was too peculiar to be
+ forgotten. He uttered a brief exclamation of surprise and recognition, and
+ hastily broke the seal. The contents ran thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR SIR,&mdash;So many years have passed since any communication has
+ taken place between us that the name of Lucretia Dalibard will seem more
+ strange to you than that of Lucretia Clavering. I have recently returned
+ to England after long residence abroad. I perceive by my deceased sister&rsquo;s
+ will that she has confided her only daughter to my guardianship,
+ conjointly with yourself. I am anxious to participate in that tender
+ charge. I am alone in the world,&mdash;an habitual sufferer; afflicted
+ with a partial paralysis that deprives me of the use of my limbs. In such
+ circumstances, it is the more natural that I should turn to the only
+ relative left me. My journey to England has so exhausted my strength, and
+ all movement is so painful, that I must request you to excuse me for not
+ coming in person for my niece. Your benevolence, however, will, I am sure,
+ prompt you to afford me the comfort of her society, and as soon as you
+ can, contrive some suitable arrangement for her journey. Begging you to
+ express to Helen, in my name, the assurance of such a welcome as is due
+ from me to my sister&rsquo;s child, and waiting with great anxiety your reply, I
+ am, dear Sir, Your very faithful servant, LUCRETIA DALIBARD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P. S. I can scarcely venture to ask you to bring Helen yourself to town,
+ but I should be glad if other inducements to take the journey afforded me
+ the pleasure of seeing you once again. I am anxious, in addition to such
+ details of my late sister as you may be enabled to give me, to learn
+ something of the history of her connection with Mr. Ardworth, in whom I
+ felt much interested years ago, and who, I am recently informed, left an
+ infant, his supposed son, under your care. So long absent from England,
+ how much have I to learn, and how little the mere gravestones tell us of
+ the dead!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the vicar is absorbed in this letter, equally unwelcome and
+ unexpected; while, unconscious as the daughter of Ceres, gathering flowers
+ when the Hell King drew near, of the change that awaited her and the grim
+ presence that approached on her fate, Helen bends still over the bank
+ odorous with shrinking violets,&mdash;we turn where the new generation
+ equally invites our gaze, and make our first acquaintance with two persons
+ connected with the progress of our tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The britzska stopped. The servant, who had been gradually accumulating
+ present dust and future rheumatisms on the &ldquo;bad eminence&rdquo; of a
+ rumble-tumble, exposed to the nipping airs of an English sky, leaped to
+ the ground and opened the carriage-door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the best place for the view, sir,&mdash;a little to the right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival St. John threw aside his book (a volume of Voyages), whistled to
+ a spaniel dozing by his side, and descended lightly. Light was the step of
+ the young man, and merry was the bark of the dog, as it chased from the
+ road the startled sparrow, rising high into the clear air,&mdash;favourites
+ of Nature both, man and dog. You had but to glance at Percival St. John to
+ know at once that he was of the race that toils not; the assured step
+ spoke confidence in the world&rsquo;s fair smile. No care for the morrow dimmed
+ the bold eye and the radiant bloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle height,&mdash;his slight figure, yet undeveloped, seemed
+ not to have attained to its full growth,&mdash;the darkening down only
+ just shaded a cheek somewhat sunburned, though naturally fair, round which
+ locks black as jet played sportively in the fresh air; about him
+ altogether there was the inexpressible charm of happy youth. He scarcely
+ looked sixteen, though above four years older; but for his firm though
+ careless step, and the open fearlessness of his frank eye, you might have
+ almost taken him for a girl in men&rsquo;s clothes,&mdash;not from effeminacy of
+ feature, but from the sparkling bloom of his youth, and from his
+ unmistakable newness to the cares and sins of man. A more delightful
+ vision of ingenuous boyhood opening into life under happy auspices never
+ inspired with pleased yet melancholy interest the eye of half-envious,
+ half-pitying age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that,&rdquo; mused Percival St. John,&mdash;&ldquo;that is London! Oh for the
+ Diable Boiteux to unroof me those distant houses, and show me the
+ pleasures that lurk within! Ah, what long letters I shall have to write
+ home! How the dear old captain will laugh over them, and how my dear good
+ mother will put down her work and sigh! Home!&mdash;um, I miss it already.
+ How strange and grim, after all, the huge city seems!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His glove fell to the ground, and his spaniel mumbled it into shreds. The
+ young man laughed, and throwing himself on the grass, played gayly with
+ the dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie, Beau, sir, fie! gloves are indigestible. Restrain your appetite, and
+ we&rsquo;ll lunch together at the Clarendon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment there arrived at the same patch of greensward a pedestrian
+ some years older than Percival St. John,&mdash;a tall, muscular,
+ raw-boned, dust-covered, travel-stained pedestrian; one of your
+ pedestrians in good earnest,&mdash;no amateur in neat gambroon
+ manufactured by Inkson, who leaves his carriage behind him and walks on
+ with his fishing-rod by choice, but a sturdy wanderer, with thick shoes
+ and strapless trousers, a threadbare coat and a knapsack at his back. Yet,
+ withal, the young man had the air of a gentleman,&mdash;not gentleman as
+ the word is understood in St. James&rsquo;s, the gentleman of the noble and idle
+ class, but the gentleman as the title is accorded, by courtesy, to all to
+ whom both education and the habit of mixing with educated persons gives a
+ claim to the distinction and imparts an air of refinement. The new-comer
+ was strongly built, at once lean and large,&mdash;far more strongly built
+ than Percival St. John, but without his look of cheerful and comely
+ health. His complexion had not the florid hues that should have
+ accompanied that strength of body; it was pale, though not sickly; the
+ expression grave, the lines deep, the face strongly marked. By his side
+ trotted painfully a wiry, yellowish, footsore Scotch terrier. Beau sprang
+ from his master&rsquo;s caress, cocked his handsome head on one side, and
+ suspended in silent halt his right fore-paw. Percival cast over his left
+ shoulder a careless glance at the intruder. The last heeded neither Beau
+ nor Percival. He slipped his knapsack to the ground, and the Scotch
+ terrier sank upon it, and curled himself up into a ball. The wayfarer
+ folded his arms tightly upon his breast, heaved a short, unquiet sigh, and
+ cast over the giant city, from under deep-pent, lowering brows, a look so
+ earnest, so searching, so full of inexpressible, dogged, determined power,
+ that Percival, roused out of his gay indifference, rose and regarded him
+ with curious interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean while Beau had very leisurely approached the bilious-looking
+ terrier; and after walking three times round him, with a stare and a small
+ sniff of superb impertinence, halted with great composure, and lifting his
+ hind leg&mdash;O Beau, Beau, Beau! your historian blushes for your
+ breeding, and, like Sterne&rsquo;s recording angel, drops a tear upon the stain
+ which washes it from the register&mdash;but not, alas, from the back of
+ the bilious terrier! The space around was wide, Beau; you had all the
+ world to choose: why select so specially for insult the single spot on
+ which reposed the wornout and unoffending? O dainty Beau! O dainty world!
+ Own the truth, both of ye. There is something irresistibly provocative of
+ insult in the back of a shabby-looking dog! The poor terrier, used to
+ affronts, raised its heavy eyelids, and shot the gleam of just indignation
+ from its dark eyes. But it neither stirred nor growled, and Beau,
+ extremely pleased with his achievement, wagged his tail in triumph and
+ returned to his master,&mdash;perhaps, in parliamentary phrase, to &ldquo;report
+ proceedings and ask leave to sit again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; soliloquized Percival St. John, &ldquo;what that poor fellow is
+ thinking of? Perhaps he is poor; indeed, no doubt of it, now I look again.
+ And I so rich! I should like to&mdash;Hem! let&rsquo;s see what he&rsquo;s made of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith Percival approached, and with all a boy&rsquo;s half-bashful,
+ half-saucy frankness, said: &ldquo;A fine prospect, sir.&rdquo; The pedestrian
+ started, and threw a rapid glance over the brilliant figure that accosted
+ him. Percival St. John was not to be abashed by stern looks; but that
+ glance might have abashed many a more experienced man. The glance of a
+ squire upon a corn-law missionary, of a Crockford dandy upon a Regent
+ Street tiger, could not have been more disdainful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tush!&rdquo; said the pedestrian, rudely, and turned upon his heel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival coloured, and&mdash;shall we own it?&mdash;was boy enough to
+ double his fist. Little would he have been deterred by the brawn of those
+ great arms and the girth of that Herculean chest, if he had been quite
+ sure that it was a proper thing to resent pugilistically so discourteous a
+ monosyllable. The &ldquo;tush!&rdquo; stuck greatly in his throat. But the man, now
+ removed to the farther verge of the hill, looked so tranquil and so lost
+ in thought that the short-lived anger died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And after all, if I were as poor as he looks, I dare say I should be just
+ as proud,&rdquo; muttered Percival. &ldquo;However, it&rsquo;s his own fault if he goes to
+ London on foot, when I might at least have given him a lift. Come, Beau,
+ sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his face still a little flushed, and his hat unconsciously cocked
+ fiercely on one side, Percival sauntered back to his britzska.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in a whirl of dust the light carriage was borne by the four posters
+ down the hill, the pedestrian turned for an instant from the view before
+ to the cloud behind, and muttered: &ldquo;Ay, a fine prospect for the rich,&mdash;a
+ noble field for the poor!&rdquo; The tone in which those words were said told
+ volumes; there spoke the pride, the hope, the energy, the ambition which
+ make youth laborious, manhood prosperous, age renowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger then threw himself on the sward, and continued his silent and
+ intent contemplation till the clouds grew red in the west. When, then, he
+ rose, his eye was bright, his mien erect, and a smile, playing round his
+ firm, full lips, stole the moody sternness from his hard face. Throwing
+ his knapsack once more on his back, John Ardworth went resolutely on to
+ the great vortex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0011" id="Blink2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. THE CORONATION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The 8th of September, 1831, was a holiday in London. William the Fourth
+ received the crown of his ancestors in that mighty church in which the
+ most impressive monitors to human pomp are the monuments of the dead. The
+ dust of conquerors and statesmen, of the wise heads and the bold hands
+ that had guarded the thrones of departed kings, slept around; and the
+ great men of the Modern time were assembled in homage to the monarch to
+ whom the prowess and the liberty of generations had bequeathed an empire
+ in which the sun never sets. In the Abbey&mdash;thinking little of the
+ past, caring little for the future&mdash;the immense audience gazed
+ eagerly on the pageant that occurs but once in that division of history,&mdash;the
+ lifetime of a king. The assemblage was brilliant and imposing. The
+ galleries sparkled with the gems of women who still upheld the celebrity
+ for form and feature which, from the remotest times, has been awarded to
+ the great English race. Below, in their robes and coronets, were men who
+ neither in the senate nor the field have shamed their fathers. Conspicuous
+ amongst all for grandeur of mien and stature towered the brothers of the
+ king; while, commanding yet more the universal gaze, were seen, here the
+ eagle features of the old hero of Waterloo, and there the majestic brow of
+ the haughty statesman who was leading the people (while the last of the
+ Bourbons, whom Waterloo had restored to the Tuileries, had left the orb
+ and purple to the kindred house so fatal to his name) through a stormy and
+ perilous transition to a bloodless revolution and a new charter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tier upon tier, in the division set apart for them, the members of the
+ Lower House moved and murmured above the pageant; and the coronation of
+ the new sovereign was connected in their minds with the great measure
+ which, still undecided, made at that time a link between the People and
+ the King, and arrayed against both, if not, indeed, the real Aristocracy,
+ at least the Chamber recognized by the Constitution as its representative.
+ Without the space was one dense mass. Houses, from balcony to balcony,
+ window to window, were filled as some immense theatre. Up, through the
+ long thoroughfare to Whitehall, the eye saw that audience,&mdash;A PEOPLE;
+ and the gaze was bounded at the spot where Charles the First had passed
+ from the banquet-house to the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ceremony was over, the procession had swept slowly by, the last huzza
+ had died away; and after staring a while upon Orator Hunt, who had
+ clambered up the iron palisade near Westminster Hall, to exhibit his
+ goodly person in his court attire, the serried crowds, hurrying from the
+ shower which then unseasonably descended, broke into large masses or
+ lengthening columns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that part of London which may be said to form a boundary between its
+ old and its new world, by which, on the one hand, you pass to Westminster,
+ or through that gorge of the Strand which leads along endless rows of
+ shops that have grown up on the sites of the ancient halls of the
+ Salisburys and the Exeters, the Buckinghams and Southamptons; to the heart
+ of the City built around the primeval palace of the &ldquo;Tower;&rdquo; while, on the
+ other hand, you pass into the new city of aristocracy and letters, of art
+ and fashion, embracing the whilom chase of Marylebone, and the once
+ sedge-grown waters of Pimlico,&mdash;by this ignoble boundary (the
+ crossing from the Opera House, at the bottom of the Haymarket, to the
+ commencement of Charing Cross) stood a person whose discontented
+ countenance was in singular contrast with the general gayety and animation
+ of the day. This person, O gentle reader, this sour, querulous,
+ discontented person, was a king, too, in his own walk! None might dispute
+ it. He feared no rebel; he was harassed by no reform; he ruled without
+ ministers. Tools he had; but when worn out, he replaced them without a
+ pension or a sigh. He lived by taxes, but they were voluntary; and his
+ Civil List was supplied without demand for the redress of grievances. This
+ person, nevertheless, not deposed, was suspended from his empire for the
+ day. He was pushed aside; he was forgotten. He was not distinct from the
+ crowd. Like Titus, he had lost a day,&mdash;his vocation was gone. This
+ person was the Sweeper of the Crossing!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a character. He was young, in the fairest prime of youth; but it
+ was the face of an old man on young shoulders. His hair was long, thin,
+ and prematurely streaked with gray; his face was pale and deeply furrowed;
+ his eyes were hollow, and their stare gleamed, cold and stolid, under his
+ bent and shaggy brows. The figure was at once fragile and ungainly, and
+ the narrow shoulders curved in a perpetual stoop. It was a person, once
+ noticed, that you would easily remember, and associate with some
+ undefined, painful impression. The manner was humble, but not meek; the
+ voice was whining, but without pathos. There was a meagre, passionless
+ dulness about the aspect, though at times it quickened into a kind of avid
+ acuteness. No one knew by what human parentage this personage came into
+ the world. He had been reared by the charity of a stranger, crept through
+ childhood and misery and rags mysteriously; and suddenly succeeded an old
+ defunct negro in the profitable crossing whereat he is now standing. All
+ education was unknown to him, so was all love. In those festive haunts at
+ St. Giles&rsquo;s where he who would see &ldquo;life in London&rdquo; may often discover the
+ boy who has held his horse in the morning dancing merrily with his chosen
+ damsel at night, our sweeper&rsquo;s character was austere as Charles the
+ Twelfth&rsquo;s. And the poor creature had his good qualities. He was
+ sensitively alive to kindness,&mdash;little enough had been shown him to
+ make the luxury the more prized from its rarity! Though fond of money, he
+ would part with it (we do not say cheerfully, but part with it still),&mdash;not
+ to mere want, indeed (for he had been too pinched and starved himself, and
+ had grown too obtuse to pinching and to starving for the sensitiveness
+ that prompts to charity), but to any of his companions who had done him a
+ good service, or who had even warmed his dull heart by a friendly smile.
+ He was honest, too,&mdash;honest to the backbone. You might have trusted
+ him with gold untold. Through the heavy clod which man&rsquo;s care had not
+ moulded, nor books enlightened, nor the priest&rsquo;s solemn lore informed,
+ still natural rays from the great parent source of Deity struggled, fitful
+ and dim. He had no lawful name; none knew if sponsors had ever stood
+ security for his sins at the sacred fount. But he had christened himself
+ by the strange, unchristian like name of &ldquo;Beck.&rdquo; There he was, then,
+ seemingly without origin, parentage, or kindred tie,&mdash;a lonesome,
+ squalid, bloodless thing, which the great monster, London, seemed to have
+ spawned forth of its own self; one of its sickly, miserable, rickety
+ offspring, whom it puts out at nurse to Penury, at school to Starvation,
+ and, finally, and literally, gives them stones for bread, with the option
+ of the gallows or the dunghill when the desperate offspring calls on the
+ giant mother for return and home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this creature did love something,&mdash;loved, perhaps, some
+ fellow-being; of that hereafter, when we dive into the secrets of his
+ privacy. Meanwhile, openly and frankly, he loved his crossing; he was
+ proud of his crossing; he was grateful to his crossing. God help thee, son
+ of the street, why not? He had in it a double affection,&mdash;that of
+ serving and being served. He kept the crossing, if the crossing kept him.
+ He smiled at times to himself when he saw it lie fair and brilliant amidst
+ the mire around; it bestowed on him a sense of property! What a man may
+ feel for a fine estate in a ring fence, Beck felt for that isthmus of the
+ kennel which was subject to his broom. The coronation had made one
+ rebellious spirit when it swept the sweeper from his crossing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood, then, half under the colonnade of the Opera House as the crowd
+ now rapidly grew thinner and more scattered: and when the last carriage of
+ a long string of vehicles had passed by, he muttered audibly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;ll take a deal of pains to make she right agin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you be&rsquo;s &lsquo;ere to-day, Beck!&rdquo; said a ragamuffin boy, who, pushing and
+ scrambling through his betters, now halted, and wiped his forehead as he
+ looked at the sweeper. &ldquo;Vy, ve are all out pleasuring. Vy von&rsquo;t you come
+ with ve? Lots of fun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweeper scowled at the urchin, and made no answer, but began
+ sedulously to apply himself to the crossing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vy, there isn&rsquo;t another sweep in the streets, Beck. His Majesty King
+ Bill&rsquo;s currynation makes all on us so &lsquo;appy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has made she unkimmon dirty!&rdquo; returned Beck, pointing to the dingy
+ crossing, scarce distinguished from the rest of the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ragamuffin laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But ve be&rsquo;s goin&rsquo; to &lsquo;ave Reform now, Beck. The peopul&rsquo;s to have their
+ rights and libties, hand the luds is to be put down, hand beefsteaks is to
+ be a penny a pound, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What good will that do to she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vy, man, ve shall take turn about, and sum vun helse will sveep the
+ crossings, and ve shall ride in sum vun helse&rsquo;s coach and four, p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps,&mdash;cos
+ vy? ve shall hall be hequals!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hequals! I tells you vot, if you keeps jawing there, atween me and she, I
+ shall vop you, Joe,&mdash;cos vy? I be&rsquo;s the biggest!&rdquo; was the answer of
+ Beck the sweeper to Joe the ragamuffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jovial Joe laughed aloud, snapped his fingers, threw up his ragged cap
+ with a shout for King Bill, and set off scampering and whooping to join
+ those festivities which Beck had so churlishly disdained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time crept on; evening began to close in, and Beck was still at his
+ crossing, when a young gentleman on horseback, who, after seeing the
+ procession, had stolen away for a quiet ride in the suburbs, reined in
+ close by the crossing, and looking round, as for some one to hold his
+ horse, could discover no loiterer worthy that honour except the solitary
+ Beck. So young was the rider that he seemed still a boy. On his smooth
+ countenance all that most prepossesses in early youth left its witching
+ stamp. A smile, at once gay and sweet, played on his lips. There was a
+ charm, even in a certain impatient petulance, in his quick eye and the
+ slight contraction of his delicate brows. Almaviva might well have been
+ jealous of such a page. He was the beau-ideal of Cherubino. He held up his
+ whip, with an arch sign, to the sweeper. &ldquo;Follow, my man,&rdquo; he said, in a
+ tone the very command of which sounded gentle, so blithe was the movement
+ of the lips, and so silvery the easy accent; and without waiting, he
+ cantered carelessly down Pall Mall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweeper cast a rueful glance at his melancholy domain. But he had
+ gained but little that day, and the offer was too tempting to be rejected.
+ He heaved a sigh, shouldered his broom, and murmuring to himself that he
+ would give her a last brush before he retired for the night, he put his
+ long limbs into that swinging, shambling trot which characterizes the
+ motion of those professional jackals who, having once caught sight of a
+ groomless rider, fairly hunt him down, and appear when he least expects
+ it, the instant he dismounts. The young rider lightly swung himself from
+ his sleek, high-bred gray at the door of one of the clubs in St. James&rsquo;s
+ Street, patted his horse&rsquo;s neck, chucked the rein to the sweeper, and
+ sauntered into the house, whistling musically,&mdash;if not from want of
+ thought, certainly from want of care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he entered the club, two or three men, young indeed, but much older, to
+ appearance at least, than himself, who were dining together at the same
+ table, nodded to him their friendly greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Perce,&rdquo; said one, &ldquo;we have only just sat down; here is a seat for
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy blushed shyly as he accepted the proposal, and the young men made
+ room for him at the table, with a smiling alacrity which showed that his
+ shyness was no hindrance to his popularity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who,&rdquo; said an elderly dandy, dining apart with one of his contemporaries,&mdash;&ldquo;who
+ is that lad? One ought not to admit such mere boys into the club.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is the only surviving son of an old friend of ours,&rdquo; answered the
+ other, dropping his eyeglass,&mdash;&ldquo;young Percival St. John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;St. John! What! Vernon St. John&rsquo;s son?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has not his father&rsquo;s good air. These young fellows have a tone, a
+ something,&mdash;a want of self-possession, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true. The fact is, that Percival was meant for the navy, and even
+ served as a mid for a year or so. He was a younger son, then,&mdash;third,
+ I think. The two elder ones died, and Master Percival walked into the
+ inheritance. I don&rsquo;t think he is quite of age yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of age! he does not look seventeen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he is more than that; I remember him in his jacket at Laughton. A
+ fine property!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, I don&rsquo;t wonder those fellows are so civil to him. This claret is
+ corked! Everything is so bad at this d&mdash;&mdash;d club,&mdash;no
+ wonder, when a troop of boys are let in! Enough to spoil any club; don&rsquo;t
+ know Larose from Lafitte! Waiter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the talk round the table at which sat Percival St. John was
+ animated, lively, and various,&mdash;the talk common with young idlers; of
+ horses, and steeplechases, and opera-dancers, and reigning beauties, and
+ good-humoured jests at each other. In all this babble there was a
+ freshness about Percival St. John&rsquo;s conversation which showed that, as
+ yet, for him life had the zest of novelty. He was more at home about
+ horses and steeplechases than about opera-dancers and beauties and the
+ small scandals of town. Talk on these latter topics did not seem to
+ interest him, on the contrary, almost to pain. Shy and modest as a girl,
+ he coloured or looked aside when his more hardened friends boasted of
+ assignations and love-affairs. Spirited, gay, and manly enough in all
+ really manly points, the virgin bloom of innocence was yet visible in his
+ frank, charming manner; and often, out of respect for his delicacy, some
+ hearty son of pleasure stopped short in his narrative, or lost the point
+ of his anecdote. And yet so lovable was Percival in his good humour, his
+ naivete, his joyous entrance into innocent joy, that his companions were
+ scarcely conscious of the gene and restraint he imposed on them. Those
+ merry, dark eyes and that flashing smile were conviviality of themselves.
+ They brought with them a contagious cheerfulness which compensated for the
+ want of corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night had set in. St. John&rsquo;s companions had departed to their several
+ haunts, and Percival himself stood on the steps of the club, resolving
+ that he would join the crowds that swept through the streets to gaze on
+ the illuminations, when he perceived Beck (still at the rein of his dozing
+ horse), whom he had quite forgotten till that moment. Laughing at his own
+ want of memory, Percival put some silver into Beck&rsquo;s hand,&mdash;more
+ silver than Beck had ever before received for similar service,&mdash;and
+ said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my man, I suppose I can trust you to take my horse to his stables,&mdash;No.&mdash;&mdash;,
+ the Mews, behind Curzon Street. Poor fellow, he wants his supper,&mdash;and
+ you, too, I suppose!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck smiled a pale, hungry smile, and pulled his forelock politely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can take the &lsquo;oss werry safely, your &lsquo;onor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take him, then, and good evening; but don&rsquo;t get on, for your life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no, sir; I never gets on,&mdash;&lsquo;t aint in my ways.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Beck slowly led the horse through the crowd, till he vanished from
+ Percival&rsquo;s eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then a man passing through the street paused as he saw the young
+ gentleman on the steps of the club, and said gayly, &ldquo;Ah! how do you do?
+ Pretty faces in plenty out to-night. Which way are you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is more than I can tell you, Mr. Varney. I was just thinking which
+ turn to take,&mdash;the right or the left.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then let me be your guide;&rdquo; and Varney offered his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival accepted the courtesy, and the two walked on towards Piccadilly.
+ Many a kind glance from the milliners&mdash;and maid-servants whom the
+ illuminations drew abroad, roved, somewhat impartially, towards St. John
+ and his companion; but they dwelt longer on the last, for there at least
+ they were sure of a return. Varney, if not in his first youth, was still
+ in the prime of life, and Time had dealt with him so leniently that he
+ retained all the personal advantages of youth itself. His complexion still
+ was clear; and as only his upper lip, decorated with a slight silken and
+ well-trimmed mustache, was unshaven, the contour of the face added to the
+ juvenility of his appearance by the rounded symmetry it betrayed. His hair
+ escaped from his hat in fair unchanged luxuriance. And the nervous figure,
+ agile as a panther&rsquo;s, though broad-shouldered and deep-chested, denoted
+ all the slightness and elasticity of twenty-five, combined with the
+ muscular power of forty. His dress was rather fantastic,&mdash;too showy
+ for the good taste which is habitual to the English gentleman,&mdash;and
+ there was a peculiarity in his gait, almost approaching to a strut, which
+ bespoke a desire of effect, a consciousness of personal advantages,
+ equally opposed to the mien and manner of Percival&rsquo;s usual companions; yet
+ withal, even the most fastidious would have hesitated to apply to Gabriel
+ Varney the epithet of &ldquo;vulgar.&rdquo; Many turned to look again, but it was not
+ to remark the dress or the slight swagger; an expression of reckless,
+ sinister power in the countenance, something of vigour and determination
+ even in that very walk, foppish as it would have been in most, made you
+ sink all observation of the mere externals, in a sentiment of curiosity
+ towards the man himself. He seemed a somebody,&mdash;not a somebody of
+ conventional rank, but a somebody of personal individuality; an artist,
+ perhaps a poet, or a soldier in some foreign service, but certainly a man
+ whose name you would expect to have heard of. Amongst the common mob of
+ passengers he stood out in marked and distinct relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feel at home in a crowd,&rdquo; said Varney. &ldquo;Do you understand me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think so,&rdquo; answered Percival. &ldquo;If ever I could become distinguished, I,
+ too, should feel at home in a crowd.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have ambition, then; you mean to become distinguished?&rdquo; asked Varney,
+ with a sharp, searching look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a deeper and steadier flash than usual from Percival&rsquo;s dark
+ eyes, and a manlier glow over his cheek, at Varney&rsquo;s question. But he was
+ slow in answering; and when he did so, his manner had all its wonted
+ mixture of graceful bashfulness and gay candour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our rise does not always depend on ourselves. We are not all born great,
+ nor do we all have &lsquo;greatness thrust on us.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One can be what one likes, with your fortune,&rdquo; said Varney; and there was
+ a growl of envy in his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, be a painter like you! Ha, ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith,&rdquo; said Varney, &ldquo;at least, if you could paint at all, you would have
+ what I have not,&mdash;praise and fame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival pressed kindly on Varney&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;Courage! you will get justice
+ some day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney shook his head. &ldquo;Bah! there is no such thing as justice; all are
+ underrated or overrated. Can you name one man who you think is estimated
+ by the public at his precise value? As for present popularity, it depends
+ on two qualities, each singly, or both united,&mdash;cowardice and
+ charlatanism; that is, servile compliance with the taste and opinion of
+ the moment, or a quack&rsquo;s spasmodic efforts at originality. But why bore
+ you on such matters? There are things more attractive round us. A good
+ ankle that, eh? Why, pardon me, it is strange, but you don&rsquo;t seem to care
+ much for women?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes, I do,&rdquo; said Percival, with a sly demureness. &ldquo;I am very fond of&mdash;my
+ mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very proper and filial,&rdquo; said Varney, laughing; &ldquo;and does your love for
+ the sex stop there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and in truth I fancy so,&mdash;pretty nearly. You know my
+ grandmother is not alive! But that is something really worth looking at!&rdquo;
+ And Percival pointed, almost with a child&rsquo;s delight, at an illumination
+ more brilliant than the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose, when you come of age, you will have all the cedars at Laughton
+ hung with coloured lamps. Ah, you must ask me there some day; I should so
+ like to see the old place again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You never saw it, I think you say, in my poor father&rsquo;s time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you knew him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But slightly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you never saw my mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but she seems to have such influence over you that I am sure she must
+ be a very superior person,&mdash;rather proud, I suppose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Proud, no,&mdash;that is, not exactly proud, for she is very meek and
+ very affable. But yet&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But yet&mdash;&rsquo; You hesitate: she would not like you to be seen,
+ perhaps, walking in Piccadilly with Gabriel Varney, the natural son of old
+ Sir Miles&rsquo;s librarian,&mdash;Gabriel Varney the painter; Gabriel Varney
+ the adventurer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As long as Gabriel Varney is a man without stain on his character and
+ honour, my mother would only be pleased that I should know an able and
+ accomplished person, whatever his origin or parentage. But my mother would
+ be sad if she knew me intimate with a Bourbon or a Raphael, the first in
+ rank or the first in genius, if either prince or artist had lost, or even
+ sullied, his scutcheon of gentleman. In a word, she is most sensitive as
+ to honour and conscience; all else she disregards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; Varney stooped down, as if examining the polish of his boot, while
+ he continued carelessly: &ldquo;Impossible to walk the streets and keep one&rsquo;s
+ boots out of the mire. Well&mdash;and you agree with your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be strange if I did not. When I was scarcely four years old, my
+ poor father used to lead me through the long picture-gallery at Laughton
+ and say: &lsquo;Walk through life as if those brave gentlemen looked down on
+ you.&rsquo; And,&rdquo; added St. John, with his ingenuous smile, &ldquo;my mother would put
+ in her word,&mdash;&lsquo;And those unstained women too, my Percival.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something noble and touching in the boy&rsquo;s low accents as he said
+ this; it gave the key to his unusual modesty and his frank, healthful
+ innocence of character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The devil in Varney&rsquo;s lip sneered mockingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My young friend, you have never loved yet. Do you think you ever shall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have dreamed that I could love one day. But I can wait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney was about to reply, when he was accosted abruptly by three men of
+ that exaggerated style of dress and manner which is implied by the vulgar
+ appellation of &ldquo;Tigrish.&rdquo; Each of the three men had a cigar in his mouth,
+ each seemed flushed with wine. One wore long brass spurs and immense
+ mustaches; another was distinguished by an enormous surface of black satin
+ cravat, across which meandered a Pactolus of gold chain; a third had his
+ coat laced and braided a la Polonaise, and pinched and padded a la Russe,
+ with trousers shaped to the calf of a sinewy leg, and a glass screwed into
+ his right eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Gabriel! ah, Varney! ah, prince of good fellows, well met! You sup
+ with us to-night at little Celeste&rsquo;s; we were just going in search of
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s your friend,&mdash;one of us?&rdquo; whispered a second. And the third
+ screwed his arm tight and lovingly into Varney&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gabriel, despite his habitual assurance, looked abashed foz a moment, and
+ would have extricated himself from cordialities not at that moment
+ welcome; but he saw that his friends were too far gone in their cups to be
+ easily shaken off, and he felt relieved when Percival, after a
+ dissatisfied glance at the three, said quietly: &ldquo;I must detain you no
+ longer; I shall soon look in at your studio;&rdquo; and without waiting for an
+ answer, slid off, and was lost among the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney walked on with his new-found friends, unheeding for some moments
+ their loose remarks and familiar banter. At length he shook off his
+ abstraction, and surrendering himself to the coarse humours of his
+ companions, soon eclipsed them all by the gusto of his slang and the
+ mocking profligacy of his sentiments; for here he no longer played a part,
+ or suppressed his grosser instincts. That uncurbed dominion of the senses,
+ to which his very boyhood had abandoned itself, found a willing slave in
+ the man. Even the talents themselves that he displayed came from the
+ cultivation of the sensual. His eye, studying externals, made him a
+ painter,&mdash;his ear, quick and practised, a musician. His wild,
+ prodigal fancy rioted on every excitement, and brought him in a vast
+ harvest of experience in knowledge of the frailties and the vices on which
+ it indulged its vagrant experiments. Men who over-cultivate the art that
+ connects itself with the senses, with little counterpoise from the reason
+ and pure intellect, are apt to be dissipated and irregular in their lives.
+ This is frequently noticeable in the biographies of musicians, singers,
+ and painters; less so in poets, because he who deals with words, not signs
+ and tones, must perpetually compare his senses with the pure images of
+ which the senses only see the appearances,&mdash;in a word, he must employ
+ his intellect, and his self-education must be large and comprehensive. But
+ with most real genius, however fed merely by the senses,&mdash;most really
+ great painters, singers, and musicians, however easily led astray into
+ temptation,&mdash;the richness of the soil throws up abundant good
+ qualities to countervail or redeem the evil; they are usually
+ compassionate, generous, sympathizing. That Varney had not such beauties
+ of soul and temperament it is unnecessary to add,&mdash;principally, it is
+ true, because of his nurture, education, parental example, the utter
+ corruption in which his childhood and youth had passed; partly because he
+ had no real genius,&mdash;-it was a false apparition of the divine spirit,
+ reflected from the exquisite perfection of his frame (which rendered all
+ his senses so vigorous and acute) and his riotous fancy and his fitful
+ energy, which was capable at times of great application, but not of
+ definite purpose or earnest study. All about him was flashy and hollow. He
+ had not the natural subtlety and depth of mind that had characterized his
+ terrible father. The graft of the opera-dancer was visible on the stock of
+ the scholar; wholly without the habits of method and order, without the
+ patience, without the mathematical calculating brain of Dalibard, he
+ played wantonly with the horrible and loathsome wickedness of which
+ Olivier had made dark and solemn study. Extravagant and lavish, he spent
+ money as fast as he gained it; he threw away all chances of eminence and
+ career. In the midst of the direst plots of his villany or the most
+ energetic pursuit of his art, the poorest excitement, the veriest bauble
+ would draw him aside. His heart was with Falri in the sty, his fancy with
+ Aladdin in the palace. To make a show was his darling object; he loved to
+ create effect by his person, his talk, his dress, as well as by his
+ talents. Living from hand to mouth, crimes through which it is not our
+ intention to follow him had at times made him rich to-day, for vices to
+ make him poor again to-morrow. What he called &ldquo;luck,&rdquo; or &ldquo;his star,&rdquo; had
+ favoured him,&mdash;he was not hanged!&mdash;he lived; and as the greater
+ part of his unscrupulous career had been conducted in foreign lands and
+ under other names, in his own name and in his own country, though
+ something scarcely to be defined, but equivocal and provocative of
+ suspicion, made him displeasing to the prudent, and vaguely alarmed the
+ experience of the sober, still, no positive accusation was attached to the
+ general integrity of his character, and the mere dissipation of his habits
+ was naturally little known out of his familiar circle. Hence he had the
+ most presumptuous confidence in himself,&mdash;a confidence native to his
+ courage, and confirmed by his experience. His conscience was so utterly
+ obtuse that he might almost be said to present the phenomenon of a man
+ without conscience at all. Unlike Conrad, he did not &ldquo;know himself a
+ villain;&rdquo; all that he knew of himself was that he was a remarkably clever
+ fellow, without prejudice or superstition. That, with all his gifts, he
+ had not succeeded better in life, he ascribed carelessly to the surpassing
+ wisdom of his philosophy. He could have done better if he had enjoyed
+ himself less; but was not enjoyment the be-all and end-all of this little
+ life? More often, indeed, in the moods of his bitter envy, he would lay
+ the fault upon the world. How great he could have been, if he had been
+ rich and high-born! Oh, he was made to spend, not to save,&mdash;to
+ command, not to fawn! He was not formed to plod through the dull
+ mediocrities of fortune; he must toss up for the All or the Nothing! It
+ was no control over himself that made Varney now turn his thoughts from
+ certain grave designs on Percival St. John to the brutal debauchery of his
+ three companions,&mdash;rather, he then yielded most to his natural self.
+ And when the morning star rose over the night he passed with low
+ profligates and venal nymphs; when over the fragments on the board and
+ emptied bottles and drunken riot dawn gleamed and saw him in all the pride
+ of his magnificent organization and the cynicism of his measured vice,
+ fair, fresh, and blooming amidst those maudlin eyes and flushed cheeks and
+ reeling figures, laughing hideously over the spectacle he had provoked,
+ and kicking aside, with a devil&rsquo;s scorn, the prostrate form of the
+ favoured partner whose head had rested on his bosom, as alone with a
+ steady step, he passed the threshold and walked into the fresh, healthful
+ air,&mdash;Gabriel Varney enjoyed the fell triumph of his hell-born
+ vanity, and revelled in his sentiment of superiority and power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, on quitting Varney young Percival strolled on as the whim
+ directed him. Turning down the Haymarket, he gained the colonnade of the
+ Opera House. The crowd there was so dense that his footsteps were
+ arrested, and he leaned against one of the columns in admiration of the
+ various galaxies in view. In front blazed the rival stars of the United
+ Service Club and the Athenaeum; to the left, the quaint and peculiar
+ device which lighted up Northumberland House; to the right, the anchors,
+ cannons, and bombs which typified ingeniously the martial attributes of
+ the Ordnance Office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment there were three persons connected with this narrative
+ within a few feet of each other, distinguished from the multitude by the
+ feelings with which each regarded the scene, and felt the jostle of the
+ crowd. Percival St. John, in whom the harmless sense of pleasure was yet
+ vivid and unsatiated, caught from the assemblage only that physical
+ hilarity which heightened his own spirits. If in a character as yet so
+ undeveloped, to which the large passions and stern ends of life were as
+ yet unknown, stirred some deeper and more musing thoughts and
+ speculations, giving gravity to the habitual smile on his rosy lip, and
+ steadying the play of his sparkling eyes, he would have been at a loss
+ himself to explain the dim sentiment and the vague desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Screened by another column from the pressure of the mob, with his arms
+ folded on his breast, a man some few years older in point of time,&mdash;many
+ years older in point of character,&mdash;gazed (with thoughts how
+ turbulent,&mdash;with ambition how profound!) upon the dense and dark
+ masses that covered space and street far as the eye could reach. He,
+ indeed, could not have said, with Varney, that he was &ldquo;at home in a
+ crowd.&rdquo; For a crowd did not fill him with the sense of his own individual
+ being and importance, but grappled him to its mighty breast with the
+ thousand tissues of a common destiny. Who shall explain and disentangle
+ those high and restless and interwoven emotions with which intellectual
+ ambition, honourable and ardent, gazes upon that solemn thing with which,
+ in which, for which it lives and labours,&mdash;the Human Multitude? To
+ that abstracted, solitary man, the illumination, the festivity, the
+ curiosity, the holiday, were nothing, or but as fleeting phantoms and vain
+ seemings. In his heart&rsquo;s eye he saw before him but the PEOPLE, the shadow
+ of an everlasting audience,&mdash;audience at once and judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And literally touching him as he stood, the ragged sweeper, who had
+ returned in vain to devote a last care to his beloved charge, stood
+ arrested with the rest, gazing joylessly on the blazing lamps, dead as the
+ stones he heeded, to the young vivacity of the one man, the solemn visions
+ of the other. So, O London, amidst the universal holiday to monarch and to
+ mob, in those three souls lived the three elements which, duly mingled and
+ administered, make thy vice and thy virtue, thy glory and thy shame, thy
+ labour and thy luxury; pervading the palace and the street, the hospital
+ and the prison,&mdash;enjoyment, which is pleasure; energy, which is
+ action; torpor, which is want!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0012" id="Blink2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly across the gaze of Percival St. John there flashed a face that
+ woke him from his abstraction, as a light awakes the sleeper. It was as a
+ recognition of something seen dimly before,&mdash;a truth coming out from
+ a dream. It was not the mere beauty of that face (and beautiful it was)
+ that arrested his eye and made his heart beat more quickly, it was rather
+ that nameless and inexplicable sympathy which constitutes love at first
+ sight,&mdash;a sort of impulse and instinct common to the dullest as the
+ quickest, the hardest reason as the liveliest fancy. Plain Cobbett, seeing
+ before the cottage-door, at her homeliest of house-work, the girl of whom
+ he said, &ldquo;That girl should be my wife,&rdquo; and Dante, first thrilled by the
+ vision of Beatrice,&mdash;are alike true types of a common experience.
+ Whatever of love sinks the deepest is felt at first sight; it streams on
+ us abrupt from the cloud, a lightning flash,&mdash;a destiny revealed to
+ us face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, there was nothing poetical in the place or the circumstance, still
+ less in the companionship in which this fair creature startled the virgin
+ heart of that careless boy; she was leaning on the arm of a stout,
+ rosy-faced matron in a puce-coloured gown, who was flanked on the other
+ side by a very small, very spare man, with a very wee face, the lower part
+ of which was enveloped in an immense belcher. Besides these two
+ incumbrances, the stout lady contrived to carry in her hands an umbrella,
+ a basket, and a pair of pattens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of the strange, unfamiliar emotion which his eye conveyed to
+ his heart, Percival&rsquo;s ear was displeasingly jarred by the loud, bluff,
+ hearty voice of the girl&rsquo;s female companion&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious me! if that is not John Ardworth. Who&rsquo;d have thought it? Why,
+ John,&mdash;I say, John!&rdquo; and lifting her umbrella horizontally, she poked
+ aside two city clerks in front of her, wheeled round the little man on her
+ left, upon whom the clerks simultaneously bestowed the appellation of
+ &ldquo;feller,&rdquo; and driving him, as being the sharpest and thinnest wedge at
+ hand, through a dense knot of some half-a-dozen gapers, while, following
+ his involuntary progress, she looked defiance on the malcontents, she
+ succeeded in clearing her way to the spot where stood the young man she
+ had discovered. The ambitious dreamer, for it was he, thus detected and
+ disturbed, looked embarrassed for a moment as the stout lady, touching him
+ with the umbrella, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I declare if this is not too bad! You sent word that you should not
+ be able to come out with us to see the &lsquo;luminations, and here you are as
+ large as life!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not think, at the moment you wrote to me, that-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, stuff!&rdquo; interrupted the stout woman, with a significant,
+ good-humoured shake of her head; &ldquo;I know what&rsquo;s what. Tell the truth, and
+ shame the gentleman who objects to showing his feet. You are a wild
+ fellow, John Ardworth, you are! You like looking after the pretty faces,
+ you do, you do&mdash;ha, ha, ha! very natural! So did you once,&mdash;did
+ not you, Mr. Mivers, did not you, eh? Men must be men,&mdash;they always
+ are men, and it&rsquo;s my belief that men they always will be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this sage conjecture into the future, the lady turned to Mr. Mivers,
+ who, thus appealed to, extricated with some difficulty his chin from the
+ folds of his belcher, and putting up his small face, said, in a small
+ voice, &ldquo;Yes, I was a wild fellow once; but you have tamed me, you have,
+ Mrs. M.!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And therewith the chin sank again into the belcher, and the small voice
+ died into a small sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stout lady glanced benignly at her spouse, and then resuming her
+ address, to which Ardworth listened with a half-frown and a half-smile,
+ observed encouragingly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, there&rsquo;s nothing like a lawful wife to break a man in, as you will
+ find some day. Howsomever, your time&rsquo;s not come for the altar, so suppose
+ you give Helen your arm, and come with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do,&rdquo; said Helen, in a sweet, coaxing voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth bent down his rough, earnest face to Helen&rsquo;s, and an evident
+ pleasure relaxed its thoughtful lines. &ldquo;I cannot resist you,&rdquo; he began,
+ and then he paused and frowned. &ldquo;Pish!&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;I was talking folly;
+ but what head would not you turn? Resist you I must, for I am on my way
+ now to my drudgery. Ask me anything some years hence, when I have time to
+ be happy, and then see if I am the bear you now call me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mrs. Mivers, emphatically, &ldquo;are you coming, or are you not?
+ Don&rsquo;t stand there shilly-shally.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Mivers,&rdquo; returned Ardworth, with a kind of sly humour, &ldquo;I am sure
+ you would be very angry with your husband&rsquo;s excellent shopmen if that was
+ the way they spoke to your customers. If some unhappy dropper-in,&mdash;some
+ lady who came to buy a yard or so of Irish,&mdash;was suddenly dazzled, as
+ I am, by a luxury wholly unforeseen and eagerly coveted,&mdash;a splendid
+ lace veil, or a ravishing cashmere, or whatever else you ladies
+ desiderate,&mdash;and while she was balancing between prudence and
+ temptation, your foreman exclaimed: `Don&rsquo;t stand shilly-shally&rsquo;&mdash;come,
+ I put it to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stuff!&rdquo; said Mrs. Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! unlike your imaginary customer (I hope so, at least, for the sake
+ of your till), prudence gets the better of me; unless,&rdquo; added Ardworth,
+ irresolutely, and glancing at Helen,&mdash;&ldquo;unless, indeed, you are not
+ sufficiently protected, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Purtected!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Mivers, in an indignant tone of astonishment,
+ and agitating the formidable umbrella; &ldquo;as if I was not enough, with the
+ help of this here domestic commodity, to purtect a dozen such. Purtected,
+ indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John is right, Mrs. M.,&mdash;business is business,&rdquo; said Mr. Mivers.
+ &ldquo;Let us move on; we stop the way, and those idle lads are listening to us,
+ and sniggering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sniggering!&rdquo; exclaimed the gentle helpmate. &ldquo;I should like to see those
+ who presume for to snigger;&rdquo; and as she spoke, she threw a look of
+ defiance around her. Then, having thus satisfied her resentment, she
+ prepared to obey, as no doubt she always did, her lord and master.
+ Suddenly, with a practised movement, she wheeled round Mr. Mivers, and
+ taking care to protrude before him the sharp point of the umbrella, cut
+ her way through the crowd like the scythed car of the Ancient Britons, and
+ was soon lost amidst the throng, although her way might be guessed by a
+ slight ripple of peculiar agitation along the general stream, accompanied
+ by a prolonged murmur of reproach or expostulation which gradually died in
+ the distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth gazed after the fair form of Helen with a look of regret; and
+ when it vanished, with a slight start and a suppressed sigh he turned
+ away, and with the long, steady stride of a strong man, cleared his path
+ through the Strand towards the printing-office of a journal on which he
+ was responsibly engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Percival, who had caught much of the conversation that took place so
+ near him,&mdash;Percival, happy child of idleness and whim,&mdash;had no
+ motive of labour and occupation to stay the free impulse of his heart, and
+ his heart drew him on, with magnetic attraction, in the track of the first
+ being that had ever touched the sweet instincts of youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Mrs. Mivers was destined to learn&mdash;though perhaps the
+ lesson little availed her&mdash;that to get smoothly through this world it
+ is necessary to be supple as well as strong; and though, up to a certain
+ point, man or woman may force the way by poking umbrellas into people&rsquo;s
+ ribs and treading mercilessly upon people&rsquo;s toes, yet the endurance of
+ ribs and toes has its appointed limits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen, half terrified, also half amused by her companion&rsquo;s robust
+ resolution of purpose, had in Mrs. Mivers&rsquo;s general courage and success
+ that confidence which the weak repose in the strong; and though whenever
+ she turned her eyes from the illuminations, she besought Mrs. Mivers to be
+ more gentle, yet, seeing that they had gone safely from St. Paul&rsquo;s to St.
+ James&rsquo;s, she had no distinct apprehension of any practically ill results
+ from the energies she was unable to mitigate. But now, having just gained
+ the end of St. James&rsquo;s Street, Mrs. Mivers at last found her match. The
+ crowd here halted, thick and serried, to gaze in peace upon the brilliant
+ vista which the shops and clubs of that street presented. Coaches and
+ carriages had paused in their line, and immediately before Mrs. Mivers
+ stood three very thin, small women, whose dress bespoke them to be of the
+ humblest class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make way, there; make way, my good women, make way!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Mivers,
+ equally disdainful of the size and the rank of the obstructing parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Arrah, and what shall we make way for the like of you, you old busybody?&rdquo;
+ said one of the dames, turning round, and presenting a very formidable
+ squint to the broad optics of Mrs. Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without deigning a reply, Mrs. Mivers had recourse to her usual tactics.
+ Umbrella and husband went right between two of the feminine obstructives;
+ and to the inconceivable astonishment and horror of the assailant, husband
+ and umbrella instantly vanished. The three small furies had pounced upon
+ both. They were torn from their natural owner; they were hurried away; the
+ stream behind, long fretted at the path so abruptly made amidst it, closed
+ in, joyous, with a thousand waves. Mrs. Mivers and Helen were borne
+ forward in one way, the umbrella and the husband in the other; in the
+ distance a small voice was heard: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you! don&rsquo;t! Be quiet! Mrs.&mdash;Mrs.
+ M.! Oh, oh, Mrs. M.!&rdquo; At that last repetition of the beloved and familiar
+ initial, uttered in a tone of almost superhuman anguish, the conjugal
+ heart of Mrs. Mivers was afflicted beyond control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait here a moment, my dear; I&rsquo;ll just give it them, that&rsquo;s all!&rdquo; And in
+ another moment Mrs. Mivers was heard bustling, scolding, till all trace of
+ her whereabout was gone from the eyes of Helen. Thus left alone, in
+ exceeding shame and dismay, the poor girl cast a glance around. The glance
+ was caught by two young men, whose station, in these days when dress is an
+ equivocal designator of rank, could not be guessed by their exterior. They
+ might be dandies from the west,&mdash;they might be clerks from the east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Jove,&rdquo; exclaimed one, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s a sweet pretty girl!&rdquo; and, by a sudden
+ movement of the crowd, they both found themselves close to Helen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you alone, my dear?&rdquo; said a voice rudely familiar. Helen made no
+ reply; the tone of the voice frightened her. A gap in the mob showed the
+ space towards Cleveland Row, which, leading to no illuminations, was
+ vacant and solitary. She instantly made towards this spot; the two men
+ followed her, the bolder and elder one occasionally trying to catch hold
+ of her arm. At last, as she passed the last house to the left, a house
+ then owned by one who, at once far-sighted and impetuous, affable and
+ haughty, characterized alike by solid virtues and brilliant faults, would,
+ but for hollow friends, have triumphed over countless foes, and enjoyed at
+ last that brief day of stormy power for which statesmen resign the health
+ of manhood and the hope of age,&mdash;as she passed that memorable
+ mansion, she suddenly perceived that the space before her had no
+ thoroughfare; and, while she paused in dismay, her pursuers blockaded her
+ escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them now fairly seized her hand. &ldquo;Nay, pretty one, why so cruel?
+ But one kiss,&mdash;only one!&rdquo; He endeavoured to pass his arm round her
+ waist while he spoke. Helen eluded him, and darted forward, to find her
+ way stopped by her persecutor&rsquo;s companion, when, to her astonishment, a
+ third person gently pushed aside the form that impeded her path,
+ approached, and looking mute defiance at the unchivalric molesters,
+ offered her his arm. Helen gave but one timid, hurrying glance to her
+ unexpected protector; something in his face, his air, his youth, appealed
+ at once to her confidence. Mechanically, and scarce knowing what she did,
+ she laid her trembling hand on the arm held out to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two Lotharios looked foolish. One pulled up his shirt-collar, and the
+ other turned, with a forced laugh, on his heel. Boy as Percival seemed,
+ and little more than boy as he was, there was a dangerous fire in his eye,
+ and an expression of spirit and ready courage in his whole countenance,
+ which, if it did not awe his tall rivals, made them at least unwilling to
+ have a scene and provoke the interference of a policeman; one of whom was
+ now seen walking slowly up to the spot. They therefore preserved a
+ discomfited silence; and Percival St. John, with his heart going ten knots
+ a beat, sailed triumphantly off with his prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely knowing whither he went, certainly forgetful of Mr. Mivers, in
+ his anxiety to escape at least from the crowd, Percival walked on till he
+ found himself with his fair charge under the trees of St. James&rsquo;s Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Helen, recovering herself, paused, and said, alarmed: &ldquo;But this is
+ not my way; I must go back to the street!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How foolish I am! That is true,&rdquo; said Percival, looking confused. &ldquo;I&mdash;I
+ felt so happy to be with you, feel your hand on my arm, and think that we
+ were all by ourselves, that&mdash;that&mdash;-But you have dropped your
+ flowers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as a bouquet Helen wore, dislodged somehow or other, fell to the
+ ground, both stooped to pick it up, and their hands met. At that touch,
+ Percival felt a strange tremble, which perhaps communicated itself (for
+ such things are contagious) to his fair companion. Percival had got the
+ nosegay, and seemed willing to detain it; for he bent his face lingeringly
+ over the flowers. At length he turned his bright, ingenuous eyes to Helen,
+ and singling one rose from the rest, said beseechingly: &ldquo;May I keep this?
+ See, it is not so fresh as the others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure, sir,&rdquo; said Helen, colouring, and looking down, &ldquo;I owe you so
+ much that I should be glad if a poor flower could repay it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A poor flower! You don&rsquo;t know what a prize this is to me!&rdquo; Percival
+ placed the rose reverently in his bosom, and the two moved back slowly, as
+ if reluctant both, through the old palace-court into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that lady related to you?&rdquo; asked Percival, looking another way, and
+ dreading the reply,&mdash;&ldquo;not your mother, surely!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no! I have no mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me!&rdquo; said Percival; for the tone of Helen&rsquo;s voice told him that
+ he had touched the spring of a household sorrow. &ldquo;And,&rdquo; he added, with a
+ jealousy that he could scarcely restrain from making itself evident in his
+ accent, &ldquo;that gentleman who spoke to you under the Colonnade,&mdash;I have
+ seen him before, but where I cannot remember. In fact, you have put
+ everything but yourself out of my head. Is he related to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is my cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin!&rdquo; repeated Percival, pouting a little; and again there was
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how it is,&rdquo; said Percival at last, and very gravely, as if
+ much perplexed by some abstruse thought, &ldquo;but I feel as if I had known you
+ all my life. I never felt this for any one before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something so irresistibly innocent in the boy&rsquo;s serious,
+ wondering tone as he said these words that a smile, in spite of herself,
+ broke out amongst the thousand dimples round Helen&rsquo;s charming lips.
+ Perhaps the little witch felt a touch of coquetry for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival, who was looking sidelong into her face, saw the smile, and said,
+ drawing up his head, and shaking back his jetty curls: &ldquo;I dare say you are
+ laughing at me as a mere boy; but I am older than I look. I am sure I am
+ much older than you are. Let me see, you are seventeen, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen, getting more and more at her ease, nodded playful assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am not far from twenty-one. Ah, you may well look surprised, but so
+ it is. An hour ago I felt a mere boy; now I shall never feel a boy again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more there was a long pause, and before it was broken, they had
+ gained the very spot in which Helen had lost her friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, bless us and save us!&rdquo; exclaimed a voice &ldquo;loud as a trumpet,&rdquo; but
+ not &ldquo;with a silver sound,&rdquo; &ldquo;there you are, after all;&rdquo; and Mrs. Mivers
+ (husband and umbrella both regained) planted herself full before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, a pretty fright I have been in! And now to see you coming along as
+ cool as if nothing had happened; as if the humbrella had not lost its
+ hivory &lsquo;andle,&mdash;it&rsquo;s quite purvoking. Dear, dear, what we have gone
+ through! And who is this young gentleman, pray?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen whispered some hesitating explanation, which Mrs. Mivers did not
+ seem to receive as graciously as Percival, poor fellow, had a right to
+ expect. She stared him full in the face, and shook her head suspiciously
+ when she saw him a little confused by the survey. Then, tucking Helen
+ tightly under her arm, she walked back towards the Haymarket, merely
+ saying to Percival,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much obligated, and good-night. I have a long journey to take to set down
+ this here young lady; and the best thing we can all do is to get home as
+ fast as we can, and have a refreshing cup of tea&mdash;that&rsquo;s my mind,
+ sir. Excuse me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus abruptly dismissed, poor Percival gazed wistfully on his Helen as she
+ was borne along, and was somewhat comforted at seeing her look back with
+ (as he thought) a touch of regret in her parting smile. Then suddenly it
+ flashed across him how sadly he had wasted his time. Novice that he was,
+ he had not even learned the name and address of his new acquaintance. At
+ that thought he hurried on through the crowd, but only reached the object
+ of his pursuit just in time to see her placed in a coach, and to catch a
+ full view of the luxuriant proportions of Mrs. Mivers as she followed her
+ into the vehicle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the lumbering conveyance (the only coach on the stand) heaved itself
+ into motion, Percival&rsquo;s eye fell on the sweeper, who was still leaning on
+ his broom, and who, in grateful recognition of the unwonted generosity
+ that had repaid his service, touched his ragged hat, and smiled drowsily
+ on his young customer. Love sharpens the wit and animates the timid; a
+ thought worthy of the most experienced inspired Percival St. John; he
+ hurried to the sweeper, laid his hand on his patchwork coat, and said
+ breathlessly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see that coach turning into the square? Follow it,&mdash;find out
+ where it sets down. There&rsquo;s a sovereign for you; another if you succeed.
+ Call and tell me your success. Number &mdash;&mdash; Curzon Street! Off,
+ like a shot!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweeper nodded and grinned; it was possibly not his first commission
+ of a similar kind. He darted down the street; and Percival, following him
+ with equal speed, had the satisfaction to see him, as the coach traversed
+ St. James&rsquo;s Square, comfortably seated on the footboard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck, dull clod, knew nothing, cared nothing, felt nothing as to the
+ motives or purpose of his employer. Honest love or selfish vice, it was
+ the same to him. He saw only the one sovereign which, with astounded eyes,
+ he still gazed at on his palm, and the vision of the sovereign that was
+ yet to come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Scandit aeratas vitiosa naves Cura; nee turmas equitum relinquit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the Selfishness of London, calm and stolid, whether on the track of
+ innocence or at the command of guile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past ten o&rsquo;clock Percival St. John was seated in his room, and the
+ sweeper stood at the threshold. Wealth and penury seemed brought into
+ visible contact in the persons of the visitor and the host. The dwelling
+ is held by some to give an index to the character of the owner; if so,
+ Percival&rsquo;s apartments differed much from those generally favoured by young
+ men of rank and fortune. On the one hand, it had none of that affectation
+ of superior taste evinced in marqueterie and gilding, or the more
+ picturesque discomfort of high-backed chairs and mediaeval curiosities
+ which prevails in the daintier abodes of fastidious bachelors; nor, on the
+ other hand, had it the sporting character which individualizes the ruder
+ juveniles qui gaudent equis, betrayed by engravings of racers and
+ celebrated fox-hunts, relieved, perhaps, if the Nimrod condescend to a
+ cross of the Lovelace, with portraits of figurantes, and ideals of French
+ sentiment entitled, &ldquo;Le Soir,&rdquo; or &ldquo;La Reveillee,&rdquo; &ldquo;L&rsquo;Espoir,&rdquo; or
+ &ldquo;L&rsquo;Abandon.&rdquo; But the rooms had a physiognomy of their own, from their
+ exquisite neatness and cheerful simplicity. The chintz draperies were
+ lively with gay flowers; books filled up the niches; here and there were
+ small pictures, chiefly sea-pieces,&mdash;well chosen, well placed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There might, indeed, have been something almost effeminate in a certain
+ inexpressible purity of taste, and a cleanliness of detail that seemed
+ actually brilliant, had not the folding-doors allowed a glimpse of a
+ plainer apartment, with fencing-foils and boxing-gloves ranged on the
+ wall, and a cricket-bat resting carelessly in the corner. These gave a
+ redeeming air of manliness to the rooms; but it was the manliness of a
+ boy,&mdash;half-girl, if you please, in the purity of thought that
+ pervaded one room, all boy in the playful pursuits that were made manifest
+ in the other. Simple, however, as this abode really was, poor Beck had
+ never been admitted to the sight of anything half so fine. He stood at the
+ door for a moment, and stared about him, bewildered and dazzled. But his
+ natural torpor to things that concerned him not soon brought to him the
+ same stoicism that philosophy gives the strong; and after the first
+ surprise, his eye quietly settled on his employer. St. John rose eagerly
+ from the sofa, on which he had been contemplating the starlit treetops of
+ Chesterfield Gardens,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well?&rdquo; said Percival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold Brompton,&rdquo; said Beck, with a brevity of word and clearness of
+ perception worthy a Spartan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Brompton?&rdquo; repeated Percival, thinking the reply the most natural in
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a big &lsquo;ous by hisself,&rdquo; continued Beck, &ldquo;with a &lsquo;igh vall in front.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would know it again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In course; he&rsquo;s so wery peculiar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He,&mdash;who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vy, the &lsquo;ous. The young lady got out, and the hold folks driv back. I did
+ not go arter them!&rdquo; and Beck looked sly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So! I must find out the name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I axed at the public,&rdquo; said Beck, proud of his diplomacy. &ldquo;They keeps a
+ sarvant vot takes half a pint at her meals. The young lady&rsquo;s mabe a
+ foriner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A foreigner! Then she lives there with her mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So they s&rsquo;pose at the public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck shook his head. &ldquo;&lsquo;T is a French &lsquo;un, your honour; but the sarvant&rsquo;s
+ is Martha.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must meet me at Brompton, near the turnpike, tomorrow, and show me
+ the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vy, I&rsquo;s in bizness all day, please your honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In business?&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;s the place of the crossing,&rdquo; said Beck, with much dignity; &ldquo;but arter
+ eight I goes vere I likes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow evening, then, at half-past eight, by the turnpike.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck pulled his forelock assentingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s the sovereign I promised you, my poor fellow; much good may it do
+ you. Perhaps you have some father or mother whose heart it will glad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never had no such thing,&rdquo; replied Beck, turning the coin in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, don&rsquo;t spend it in drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never drinks nothing but svipes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Percival, laughingly, &ldquo;what, my good friend, will you ever do
+ with your money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck put his finger to his nose, sunk his voice into a whisper, and
+ replied solemnly: &ldquo;I &lsquo;as a mattris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mistress,&rdquo; said Percival. &ldquo;Oh, a sweetheart. Well, but if she&rsquo;s a good
+ girl, and loves you, she&rsquo;ll not let you spend your money on her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I haint such a ninny as that,&rdquo; said Beck, with majestic contempt. &ldquo;I
+ &lsquo;spises the flat that is done brown by the blowens. I &lsquo;as a mattris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mattress! a mattress! Well, what has that to do with the money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vy, I lines it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival looked puzzled. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said he, after a thoughtful pause, and in a
+ tone of considerable compassion, &ldquo;I understand: you sew your money in your
+ mattress. My poor, poor lad, you can do better than that! There are the
+ savings banks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck looked frightened. &ldquo;I &lsquo;opes your honour von&rsquo;t tell no vun. I &lsquo;opes no
+ vun von&rsquo;t go for to put my tin vere I shall know nothing vatsomever about
+ it. Now, I knows vere it is, and I lays on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you sleep more soundly when you lie on your treasure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. It&rsquo;s hodd,&rdquo; said Beck, musingly, &ldquo;but the more I lines it, the vorse
+ I sleeps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival laughed, but there was melancholy in his laughter; something in
+ the forlorn, benighted, fatherless, squalid miser went to the core of his
+ open, generous heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you ever read your Bible,&rdquo; said he, after a pause, &ldquo;or even the
+ newspaper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I does not read nothing; cos vy? I haint been made a scholard, like swell
+ Tim, as was lagged for a forgery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You go to church on a Sunday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I &lsquo;as a weekly hingagement at the New Road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To see arter the gig of a gemman vot comes from &lsquo;Igate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival lifted his brilliant eyes, and they were moistened with a
+ heavenly dew, on the dull face of his fellow-creature. Beck made a scrape,
+ looked round, shambled back to the door, and ran home, through the
+ lamp-lit streets of the great mart of the Christian universe, to sew the
+ gold in his mattress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0013" id="Blink2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. EARLY TRAINING FOR AN UPRIGHT GENTLEMAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Percival St. John had been brought up at home under the eye of his mother
+ and the care of an excellent man who had been tutor to himself and his
+ brothers. The tutor was not much of a classical scholar, for in great
+ measure he had educated himself; and he who does so, usually lacks the
+ polish and brilliancy of one whose footsteps have been led early to the
+ Temple of the Muses. In fact, Captain Greville was a gallant soldier, with
+ whom Vernon St. John had been acquainted in his own brief military career,
+ and whom circumstances had so reduced in life as to compel him to sell his
+ commission and live as he could. He had always been known in his regiment
+ as a reading man, and his authority looked up to in all the disputes as to
+ history and dates, and literary anecdotes, which might occur at the
+ mess-table. Vernon considered him the most learned man of his
+ acquaintance; and when, accidentally meeting him in London, he learned his
+ fallen fortunes, he congratulated himself on a very brilliant idea when he
+ suggested that Captain Greville should assist him in the education of his
+ boys and the management of his estate. At first, all that Greville
+ modestly undertook, with respect to the former, and, indeed, was expected
+ to do, was to prepare the young gentlemen for Eton, to which Vernon, with
+ the natural predilection of an Eton man, destined his sons. But the sickly
+ constitutions of the two elder justified Lady Mary in her opposition to a
+ public school; and Percival conceived early so strong an affection for a
+ sailor&rsquo;s life that the father&rsquo;s intentions were frustrated. The two elder
+ continued their education at home, and Percival, at an earlier age than
+ usual, went to sea. The last was fortunate enough to have for his captain
+ one of that new race of naval officers who, well educated and
+ accomplished, form a notable contrast to the old heroes of Smollett.
+ Percival, however, had not been long in the service before the deaths of
+ his two elder brothers, preceded by that of his father, made him the head
+ of his ancient house, and the sole prop of his mother&rsquo;s earthly hopes. He
+ conquered with a generous effort the passion for his noble profession,
+ which service had but confirmed, and returned home with his fresh,
+ childlike nature uncorrupted, his constitution strengthened, his lively
+ and impressionable mind braced by the experience of danger and the habits
+ of duty, and quietly resumed his reading under Captain Greville, who moved
+ from the Hall to a small house in the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, the education he had received, from first to last, was less adapted
+ prematurely to quicken his intellect and excite his imagination than to
+ warm his heart and elevate, while it chastened, his moral qualities; for
+ in Lady Mary there was, amidst singular sweetness of temper, a high cast
+ of character and thought. She was not what is commonly called clever, and
+ her experience of the world was limited, compared to that of most women of
+ similar rank who pass their lives in the vast theatre of London. But she
+ became superior by a certain single-heartedness which made truth so
+ habitual to her that the light in which she lived rendered all objects
+ around her clear. One who is always true in the great duties of life is
+ nearly always wise. And Vernon, when he had fairly buried his faults, had
+ felt a noble shame for the excesses into which they had led him. Gradually
+ more and more wedded to his home, he dropped his old companions. He set
+ grave guard on his talk (his habits now required no guard), lest any of
+ the ancient levity should taint the ears of his children. Nothing is more
+ common in parents than their desire that their children should escape
+ their faults. We scarcely know ourselves till we have children; and then,
+ if we love them duly, we look narrowly into failings that become vices,
+ when they serve as examples to the young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inborn gentleman, with the native courage and spirit and horror of
+ trick and falsehood which belong to that chivalrous abstraction, survived
+ almost alone in Vernon St. John; and his boys sprang up in the atmosphere
+ of generous sentiments and transparent truth. The tutor was in harmony
+ with the parents,&mdash;a soldier every inch of him; not a mere
+ disciplinarian, yet with a profound sense of duty, and a knowledge that
+ duty is to be found in attention to details. In inculcating the habit of
+ subordination, so graceful to the young, he knew how to make himself
+ beloved, and what is harder still, to be understood. The soul of this poor
+ soldier was white and unstained, as the arms of a maiden knight; it was
+ full of suppressed but lofty enthusiasm. He had been ill used, whether by
+ Fate or the Horse Guards; his career had been a failure; but he was as
+ loyal as if his hand held the field-marshal&rsquo;s truncheon, and the garter
+ bound his knee. He was above all querulous discontent. From him, no less
+ than from his parents, Percival caught, not only a spirit of honour worthy
+ the antiqua fides of the poets, but that peculiar cleanliness of thought,
+ if the expression may be used, which belongs to the ideal of youthful
+ chivalry. In mere booklearning, Percival, as may be supposed, was not very
+ extensively read; but his mind, if not largely stored, had a certain unity
+ of culture, which gave it stability and individualized its operations.
+ Travels, voyages, narratives of heroic adventure, biographies of great
+ men, had made the favourite pasture of his enthusiasm. To this was added
+ the more stirring, and, perhaps, the more genuine order of poets who make
+ you feel and glow, rather than doubt and ponder. He knew at least enough
+ of Greek to enjoy old Homer; and if he could have come but ill through a
+ college examination into Aeschylus and Sophocles, he had dwelt with fresh
+ delight on the rushing storm of spears in the &ldquo;Seven before Thebes,&rdquo; and
+ wept over the heroic calamities of Antigone. In science, he was no adept;
+ but his clear good sense and quick appreciation of positive truths had led
+ him easily through the elementary mathematics, and his somewhat martial
+ spirit had made him delight in the old captain&rsquo;s lectures on military
+ tactics. Had he remained in the navy, Percival St. John would doubtless
+ have been distinguished. His talents fitted him for straightforward, manly
+ action; and he had a generous desire of distinction, vague, perhaps, the
+ moment he was taken from his profession, and curbed by his diffidence in
+ himself and his sense of deficiencies in the ordinary routine of purely
+ classical education. Still, he had in him all the elements of a true man,&mdash;a
+ man to go through life with a firm step and a clear conscience and a
+ gallant hope. Such a man may not win fame,&mdash;that is an accident; but
+ he must occupy no despicable place in the movement of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at first intended to send Percival to Oxford; but for some reason
+ or other that design was abandoned. Perhaps Lady Mary, over cautious, as
+ mothers left alone sometimes are, feared the contagion to which a young
+ man of brilliant expectations and no studious turn is necessarily exposed
+ in all places of miscellaneous resort. So Percival was sent abroad for two
+ years, under the guardianship of Captain Greville. On his return, at the
+ age of nineteen, the great world lay before him, and he longed ardently to
+ enter. For a year Lady Mary&rsquo;s fears and fond anxieties detained him at
+ Laughton; but though his great tenderness for his mother withheld Percival
+ from opposing her wishes by his own, this interval of inaction affected
+ visibly his health and spirits. Captain Greville, a man of the world, saw
+ the cause sooner than Lady Mary, and one morning, earlier than usual, he
+ walked up to the Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain, with all his deference to the sex, was a plain man enough
+ when business was to be done. Like his great commander, he came to the
+ point in a few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Lady Mary, our boy must go to London,&mdash;we are killing him
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Greville!&rdquo; cried Lady Mary, turning pale and putting aside her
+ embroidery,&mdash;&ldquo;killing him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Killing the man in him. I don&rsquo;t mean to alarm you; I dare say his lungs
+ are sound enough, and that his heart would bear the stethoscope to the
+ satisfaction of the College of Surgeons. But, my dear ma&rsquo;am, Percival is
+ to be a man; it is the man you are killing by keeping him tied to your
+ apron-string.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Greville, I am sure you don&rsquo;t wish to wound me, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg ten thousand pardons. I am rough, but truth is rough sometimes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not for my sake,&rdquo; said the mother, warmly, and with tears in her
+ eyes, &ldquo;that I have wished him to be here. If he is dull, can we not fill
+ the house for him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fill a thimble, my dear Lady Mary. Percival should have a plunge in the
+ ocean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he is so young yet,&mdash;that horrid London; such temptations,&mdash;fatherless,
+ too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no fear of the result if Percival goes now, while his principles
+ are strong and his imagination is not inflamed; but if we keep him here
+ much longer against his bent, he will learn to brood and to muse, write
+ bad poetry perhaps, and think the world withheld from him a thousand times
+ more delightful than it is. This very dread of temptation will provoke his
+ curiosity, irritate his fancy, make him imagine the temptation must be a
+ very delightful thing. For the first time in my life, ma&rsquo;am, I have caught
+ him sighing over fashionable novels, and subscribing to the Southampton
+ Circulating Library. Take my word for it, it is time that Percival should
+ begin life, and swim without corks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Mary had a profound confidence in Greville&rsquo;s judgment and affection
+ for Percival, and, like a sensible woman, she was aware of her own
+ weakness. She remained silent for a few moments, and then said, with an
+ effort,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know how hateful London is to me now,&mdash;how unfit I am to return
+ to the hollow forms of its society; still, if you think it right, I will
+ take a house for the season, and Percival can still be under our eye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma&rsquo;am,&mdash;pardon me,&mdash;that will be the surest way to make him
+ either discontented or hypocritical. A young man of his prospects and
+ temper can hardly be expected to chime in with all our sober,
+ old-fashioned habits. You will impose on him&mdash;if he is to conform to
+ our hours and notions and quiet set&mdash;a thousand irksome restraints;
+ and what will be the consequence? In a year he will be of age, and can
+ throw us off altogether, if he pleases. I know the boy; don&rsquo;t seem to
+ distrust him,&mdash;he may be trusted. You place the true restraint on
+ temptation when you say to him: &lsquo;We confide to you our dearest treasure,&mdash;your
+ honour, your morals, your conscience, yourself!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But at least you will go with him, if it must be so,&rdquo; said Lady Mary,
+ after a few timid arguments, from which, one by one, she was driven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I! What for? To be a jest of the young puppies he must know; to make him
+ ashamed of himself and me,&mdash;himself as a milksop, and me as a dry
+ nurse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But this was not so abroad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Abroad, ma&rsquo;am, I gave him full swing I promise you; and when we went
+ abroad he was two years younger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he is a mere child still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child, Lady Mary! At his age I had gone through two sieges. There are
+ younger faces than his at a mess-room. Come, come! I know what you fear,&mdash;he
+ may commit some follies; very likely. He may be taken in, and lose some
+ money,&mdash;he can afford it, and he will get experience in return. Vices
+ he has none. I have seen him,&mdash;ay, with the vicious. Send him out
+ against the world like a saint of old, with his Bible in his hand, and no
+ spot on his robe. Let him see fairly what is, not stay here to dream of
+ what is not. And when he&rsquo;s of age, ma&rsquo;am, we must get him an object, a
+ pursuit; start him for the county, and make him serve the State. He will
+ understand that business pretty well. Tush! tush! what is there to cry
+ at?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain prevailed. We don&rsquo;t say that his advice would have been
+ equally judicious for all youths of Percival&rsquo;s age; but he knew well the
+ nature to which he confided; he knew well how strong was that young heart
+ in its healthful simplicity and instinctive rectitude; and he appreciated
+ his manliness not too highly when he felt that all evident props and aids
+ would be but irritating tokens of distrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, armed only with letters of introduction, his mother&rsquo;s tearful
+ admonitions, and Greville&rsquo;s experienced warnings, Percival St. John was
+ launched into London life. After the first month or so, Greville came up
+ to visit him, do him sundry kind, invisible offices amongst his old
+ friends, help him to equip his apartments, and mount his stud; and wholly
+ satisfied with the result of his experiment, returned in high spirits,
+ with flattering reports, to the anxious mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, indeed, the tone of Percival&rsquo;s letters would have been sufficient to
+ allay even maternal anxiety. He did not write, as sons are apt to do,
+ short excuses for not writing more at length, unsatisfactory compressions
+ of details (exciting worlds of conjecture) into a hurried sentence. Frank
+ and overflowing, those delightful epistles gave accounts fresh from the
+ first impressions of all he saw and did. There was a racy, wholesome gusto
+ in his enjoyment of novelty and independence. His balls and his dinners
+ and his cricket at Lord&rsquo;s, his partners and his companions, his general
+ gayety, his occasional ennui, furnished ample materials to one who felt he
+ was corresponding with another heart, and had nothing to fear or to
+ conceal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But about two months before this portion of our narrative opens with the
+ coronation, Lady Mary&rsquo;s favourite sister, who had never married, and who,
+ by the death of her parents, was left alone in the worse than widowhood of
+ an old maid, had been ordered to Pisa for a complaint that betrayed
+ pulmonary symptoms; and Lady Mary, with her usual unselfishness, conquered
+ both her aversion to movement and her wish to be in reach of her son, to
+ accompany abroad this beloved and solitary relative. Captain Greville was
+ pressed into service as their joint cavalier. And thus Percival&rsquo;s habitual
+ intercourse with his two principal correspondents received a temporary
+ check.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0014" id="Blink2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. JOHN ARDWORTH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At noon the next day Beck, restored to his grandeur, was at the helm of
+ his state; Percival was vainly trying to be amused by the talk of two or
+ three loungers who did him the honour to smoke a cigar in his rooms; and
+ John Ardworth sat in his dingy cell in Gray&rsquo;s Inn, with a pile of law
+ books on the table, and the daily newspapers carpeting a footstool of
+ Hansard&rsquo;s Debates upon the floor,&mdash;no unusual combination of studies
+ amongst the poorer and more ardent students of the law, who often owe
+ their earliest, nor perhaps their least noble, earnings to employment in
+ the empire of the Press. By the power of a mind habituated to labour, and
+ backed by a frame of remarkable strength and endurance, Ardworth grappled
+ with his arid studies not the less manfully for a night mainly spent in a
+ printer&rsquo;s office, and stinted to less than four hours&rsquo; actual sleep. But
+ that sleep was profound and refreshing as a peasant&rsquo;s. The nights thus
+ devoted to the Press (he was employed in the sub-editing of a daily
+ journal), the mornings to the law, he kept distinct the two separate
+ callings with a stern subdivision of labour which in itself proved the
+ vigour of his energy and the resolution of his will. Early compelled to
+ shift for himself and carve out his own way, he had obtained a small
+ fellowship at the small college in which he had passed his academic
+ career. Previous to his arrival in London, by contributions to political
+ periodicals and a high reputation at that noble debating society in
+ Cambridge which has trained some of the most eminent of living public men
+ [Amongst those whom the &ldquo;Union&rdquo; almost contemporaneously prepared for
+ public life, and whose distinction has kept the promise of their youth, we
+ may mention the eminent barristers, Messrs. Austin and Cockburn; and
+ amongst statesmen, Lord Grey, Mr. C. Buller, Mr. Charles Villiers, and Mr.
+ Macaulay. Nor ought we to forget those brilliant competitors for the
+ prizes of the University, Dr. Kennedy (now head-master of Shrewsbury
+ School) and the late Winthrop M. Praed.], he had established a name which
+ was immediately useful to him in obtaining employment on the Press. Like
+ most young men of practical ability, he was an eager politician. The
+ popular passion of the day kindled his enthusiasm and stirred the depths
+ of his soul with magnificent, though exaggerated, hopes in the destiny of
+ his race. He identified himself with the people; his stout heart beat loud
+ in their stormy cause. His compositions, if they wanted that knowledge of
+ men, that subtle comprehension of the true state of parties, that happy
+ temperance in which the crowning wisdom of statesmen must consist,&mdash;qualities
+ which experience alone can give,&mdash;excited considerable attention by
+ their bold eloquence and hardy logic. They were suited to the time. But
+ John Ardworth had that solidity of understanding which betokens more than
+ talent, and which is the usual substratum of genius. He would not depend
+ alone on the precarious and often unhonoured toils of polemical literature
+ for that distinction on which he had fixed his steadfast heart. Patiently
+ he plodded on through the formal drudgeries of his new profession,
+ lighting up dulness by his own acute comprehension, weaving complexities
+ into simple system by the grasp of an intellect inured to generalize, and
+ learning to love even what was most distasteful, by the sense of
+ difficulty overcome, and the clearer vision which every step through the
+ mists and up the hill gave of the land beyond. Of what the superficial are
+ apt to consider genius, John Ardworth had but little. He had some
+ imagination (for a true thinker is never without that), but he had a very
+ slight share of fancy. He did not flirt with the Muses; on the granite of
+ his mind few flowers could spring. His style, rushing and earnest,
+ admitted at times of a humour not without delicacy,&mdash;though less
+ delicate than forcible and deep,&mdash;but it was little adorned with wit,
+ and still less with poetry. Yet Ardworth had genius, and genius ample and
+ magnificent. There was genius in that industrious energy so patient in the
+ conquest of detail, so triumphant in the perception of results. There was
+ genius in that kindly sympathy with mankind; genius in that stubborn
+ determination to succeed; genius in that vivid comprehension of affairs,
+ and the large interests of the world; genius fed in the labours of the
+ closet, and evinced the instant he was brought into contact with men,&mdash;evinced
+ in readiness of thought, grasp of memory, even in a rough, imperious
+ nature, which showed him born to speak strong truths, and in their name to
+ struggle and command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rough was this man often in his exterior, though really gentle and
+ kind-hearted. John Ardworth had sacrificed to no Graces; he would have
+ thrown Lord Chesterfield into a fever. Not that he was ever vulgar, for
+ vulgarity implies affectation of refinement; but he talked loud and
+ laughed loud if the whim seized him, and rubbed his great hands with a
+ boyish heartiness of glee if he discomfited an adversary in argument. Or,
+ sometimes, he would sit abstracted and moody, and answer briefly and
+ boorishly those who interrupted him. Young men were mostly afraid of him,
+ though he wanted but fame to have a set of admiring disciples. Old men
+ censured his presumption and recoiled from the novelty of his ideas. Women
+ alone liked and appreciated him, as, with their finer insight into
+ character, they generally do what is honest and sterling. Some strange
+ failings, too, had John Ardworth,&mdash;some of the usual vagaries and
+ contradictions of clever men. As a system, he was rigidly abstemious. For
+ days together he would drink nothing but water, eat nothing but bread, or
+ hard biscuit, or a couple of eggs; then, having wound up some allotted
+ portion of work, Ardworth would indulge what he called a self-saturnalia,&mdash;would
+ stride off with old college friends to an inn in one of the suburbs, and
+ spend, as he said triumphantly, &ldquo;a day of blessed debauch!&rdquo; Innocent
+ enough, for the most part, the debauch was, consisting in cracking jests,
+ stringing puns, a fish dinner, perhaps, and an extra bottle or two of
+ fiery port. Sometimes this jollity, which was always loud and uproarious,
+ found its scene in one of the cider-cellars or midnight taverns; but
+ Ardworth&rsquo;s labours on the Press made that latter dissipation extremely
+ rare. These relaxations were always succeeded by a mien more than usually
+ grave, a manner more than usually curt and ungracious, an application more
+ than ever rigorous and intense. John Ardworth was not a good-tempered man,
+ but he was the best-natured man that ever breathed. He was, like all
+ ambitious persons, very much occupied with self; and yet it would have
+ been a ludicrous misapplication of words to call him selfish. Even the
+ desire of fame which absorbed him was but a part of benevolence,&mdash;a
+ desire to promote justice and to serve his kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Ardworth&rsquo;s shaggy brows were bent over his open volumes when his
+ clerk entered noiselessly and placed on his table a letter which the
+ twopenny-postman had just delivered. With an impatient shrug of the
+ shoulders, Ardworth glanced towards the superscription; but his eye became
+ earnest and his interest aroused as he recognized the hand. &ldquo;Again!&rdquo; he
+ muttered. &ldquo;What mystery is this? Who can feel such interest in my fate?&rdquo;
+ He broke the seal and read as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you neglect my advice, or have you begun to act upon it? Are you
+ contented only with the slow process of mechanical application, or will
+ you make a triumphant effort to abridge your apprenticeship and emerge at
+ once into fame and power? I repeat that you fritter away your talents and
+ your opportunities upon this miserable task-work on a journal. I am
+ impatient for you. Come forward yourself, put your force and your
+ knowledge into some work of which the world may know the author. Day after
+ day I am examining into your destiny, and day after day I believe more and
+ more that you are not fated for the tedious drudgery to which you doom
+ your youth. I would have you great, but in the senate, not a wretched
+ casuist at the Bar. Appear in public as an individual authority, not one
+ of that nameless troop of shadows contemned while dreaded as the Press.
+ Write for renown. Go into the world, and make friends. Soften your rugged
+ bearing. Lift yourself above that herd whom you call &ldquo;the people.&rdquo; What if
+ you are born of the noble class! What if your career is as gentleman, not
+ plebeian Want not for money. Use what I send you as the young and the
+ well-born should use it; or let it at least gain you a respite from toils
+ for bread, and support you in your struggle to emancipate yourself from
+ obscurity into fame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ YOUR UNKNOWN FRIEND
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bank-note for 100 pounds dropped from the envelope as Ardworth silently
+ replaced the letter on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thrice before had he received communications in the same handwriting, and
+ much to the same effect. Certainly, to a mind of less strength there would
+ have been something very unsettling in those vague hints of a station
+ higher than he owned, of a future at variance with the toilsome lot he had
+ drawn from the urn; but after a single glance over his lone position in
+ all its bearings and probable expectations, Ardworth&rsquo;s steady sense shook
+ off the slight disturbance such misty vaticinations had effected. His
+ mother&rsquo;s family was indeed unknown to him, he was even ignorant of her
+ maiden name. But that very obscurity seemed unfavourable to much hope from
+ such a quarter. The connections with the rich and well-born are seldom
+ left obscure. From his father&rsquo;s family he had not one expectation. More
+ had he been moved by exhortation now generally repeated, but in a previous
+ letter more precisely detailed; namely, to appeal to the reading public in
+ his acknowledged person, and by some striking and original work. This idea
+ he had often contemplated and revolved; but partly the necessity of
+ keeping pace with the many exigencies of the hour had deterred him, and
+ partly also the conviction of his sober judgment that a man does himself
+ no good at the Bar even by the most brilliant distinction gained in
+ discursive fields. He had the natural yearning of the Restless Genius; and
+ the Patient Genius (higher power of the two) had suppressed the longing.
+ Still, so far, the whispers of his correspondent tempted and aroused. But
+ hitherto he had sought to persuade himself that the communications thus
+ strangely forced on him arose perhaps from idle motives,&mdash;a jest, it
+ might be, of one of his old college friends, or at best the vain
+ enthusiasm of some more credulous admirer. But the enclosure now sent to
+ him forbade either of these suppositions. Who that he knew could afford so
+ costly a jest or so extravagant a tribute? He was perplexed, and with his
+ perplexity was mixed a kind of fear. Plain, earnest, unromantic in the
+ common acceptation of the word, the mystery of this intermeddling with his
+ fate, this arrogation of the license to spy, the right to counsel, and the
+ privilege to bestow, gave him the uneasiness the bravest men may feel at
+ noises in the dark. That day he could apply no more, he could not settle
+ back to his Law Reports. He took two or three unquiet turns up and down
+ his smoke-dried cell, then locked up the letter and enclosure, seized his
+ hat, and strode, with his usual lusty, swinging strides, into the open
+ air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But still the letter haunted him. &ldquo;And if,&rdquo; he said almost audibly,&mdash;&ldquo;if
+ I were the heir to some higher station, why then I might have a heart like
+ idle men; and Helen, beloved Helen&mdash;&rdquo; He paused, sighed, shook his
+ rough head, shaggy with neglected curls, and added: &ldquo;As if even then I
+ could steal myself into a girl&rsquo;s good graces! Man&rsquo;s esteem I may command,
+ though poor; woman&rsquo;s love could I win, though rich? Pooh! pooh! every wood
+ does not make a Mercury; and faith, the wood I am made of will scarcely
+ cut up into a lover.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, though thus soliloquizing, Ardworth mechanically bent his
+ way towards Brompton, and halted, half-ashamed of himself, at the house
+ where Helen lodged with her aunt. It was a building that stood apart from
+ all the cottages and villas of that charming suburb, half-way down a
+ narrow lane, and enclosed by high, melancholy walls, deep set in which a
+ small door, with the paint blistered and weather-stained, gave
+ unfrequented entrance to the demesne. A woman servant of middle age and
+ starched, puritanical appearance answered the loud ring of the bell, and
+ Ardworth seemed a privileged visitor, for she asked him no question as,
+ with a slight nod and a smileless, stupid expression in a face otherwise
+ comely, she led the way across a paved path, much weed-grown, to the
+ house. That house itself had somewhat of a stern and sad exterior. It was
+ not ancient, yet it looked old from shabbiness and neglect. The vine,
+ loosened from the rusty nails, trailed rankly against the wall, and fell
+ in crawling branches over the ground. The house had once been whitewashed;
+ but the colour, worn off in great patches, distained with damp, struggled
+ here and there with the dingy, chipped bricks beneath. There was no
+ peculiar want of what is called &ldquo;tenantable repair;&rdquo; the windows were
+ whole, and doubtless the roof sheltered from the rain. But the woodwork
+ that encased the panes was decayed, and houseleek covered the tiles.
+ Altogether, there was that forlorn and cheerless aspect about the place
+ which chills the visitor, he defines not why. And Ardworth steadied his
+ usual careless step, and crept, as if timidly, up the creaking stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the drawing-room, it seemed at first deserted; but the eye,
+ searching round, perceived something stir in the recess of a huge chair
+ set by the fireless hearth. And from amidst a mass of coverings a pale
+ face emerged, and a thin hand waved its welcome to the visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth approached, pressed the hand, and drew a seat near to the
+ sufferer&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are better, I hope?&rdquo; he said cordially, and yet in a tone of more
+ respect than was often perceptible in his deep, blunt voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am always the same,&rdquo; was the quiet answer; &ldquo;come nearer still. Your
+ visits cheer me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as these last words were said, Madame Dalibard raised herself from her
+ recumbent posture and gazed long upon Ardworth&rsquo;s face of power and front
+ of thought. &ldquo;You overfatigue yourself, my poor kinsman,&rdquo; she said, with a
+ certain tenderness; &ldquo;you look already too old for your young years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s no disadvantage at the Bar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the Bar your means, or your end?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Madame Dalibard, it is my profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, your profession is to rise. John Ardworth,&rdquo; and the low voice swelled
+ in its volume, &ldquo;you are bold, able, and aspiring; for this, I love you,&mdash;love
+ you almost&mdash;almost as a mother. Your fate,&rdquo; she continued hurriedly,
+ &ldquo;interests me; your energies inspire me with admiration. Often I sit here
+ for hours, musing over your destiny to be, so that at times I may almost
+ say that in your life I live.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth looked embarrassed, and with an awkward attempt at compliment he
+ began, hesitatingly: &ldquo;I should think too highly of myself if I could
+ really believe that you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; interrupted Madame Dalibard,&mdash;&ldquo;we have had many
+ conversations upon grave and subtle matters; we have disputed on the
+ secret mysteries of the human mind; we have compared our several
+ experiences of outward life and the mechanism of the social world,&mdash;tell
+ me, then, and frankly, what do you think of me? Do you regard me merely as
+ your sex is apt to regard the woman who aspires to equal men,&mdash;a
+ thing of borrowed phrases and unsound ideas, feeble to guide, and
+ unskilled to teach; or do you recognize in this miserable body a mind of
+ force not unworthy yours, ruled by an experience larger than your own?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think of you,&rdquo; answered Ardworth, frankly, &ldquo;as the most remarkable
+ woman I have ever met. Yet&mdash;do not be angry&mdash;I do not like to
+ yield to the influence which you gain over me when we meet. It disturbs my
+ convictions, it disquiets my reason; I do not settle back to my life so
+ easily after your breath has passed over it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Lucretia, with a solemn sadness in her voice, &ldquo;that
+ influence is but the natural power which cold maturity exercises on ardent
+ youth. It is my mournful ad vantage over you that disquiets your happy
+ calm. It is my experience that unsettles the fallacies which you name
+ &lsquo;convictions.&rsquo; Let this pass. I asked your opinion of me, because I wished
+ to place at your service all that knowledge of life which I possess. In
+ proportion as you esteem me you will accept or reject my counsels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have benefited by them already. It is the tone that you advised me to
+ assume that gave me an importance I had not before with that old formalist
+ whose paper I serve, and whose prejudices I shock; it is to your
+ criticisms that I owe the more practical turn of my writings, and the
+ greater hold they have taken on the public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trifles indeed, these,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard, with a half smile. &ldquo;Let
+ them at least induce you to listen to me if I propose to make your path
+ more pleasant, yet your ascent more rapid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth knit his brows, and his countenance assumed an expression of
+ doubt and curiosity. However, he only replied, with a blunt laugh,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must be wise indeed if you have discovered a royal road to
+ distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &lsquo;Ah, who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame&rsquo;s proud
+ temple shines afar!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more sensible exclamation than poets usually preface with their whining
+ &lsquo;Ahs&rsquo; and &lsquo;Ohs!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What we are is nothing,&rdquo; pursued Madame Dalibard; &ldquo;what we seem is much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth thrust his hands into his pockets and shook his head. The wise
+ woman continued, unheeding his dissent from her premises,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything you are taught to value has a likeness, and it is that
+ likeness which the world values. Take a man out of the streets, poor and
+ ragged, what will the world do with him? Send him to the workhouse, if not
+ to the jail. Ask a great painter to take that man&rsquo;s portrait,&mdash;rags,
+ squalor, and all,&mdash;and kings will bid for the picture. You would
+ thrust the man from your doors, you would place the portrait in your
+ palaces. It is the same with qualities; the portrait is worth more than
+ the truth. What is virtue without character? But a man without virtue may
+ thrive on a character! What is genius without success? But how often you
+ bow to success without genius! John Ardworth, possess yourself of the
+ portraits,&mdash;win the character; seize the success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; exclaimed Ardworth, rudely, &ldquo;this is horrible!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Horrible it may be,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard, gently, and feeling, perhaps,
+ that she had gone too far; &ldquo;but it is the world&rsquo;s judgment. Seem, then, as
+ well as be. You have virtue, as I believe. Well, wrap yourself in it&mdash;in
+ your closet. Go into the world, and earn character. If you have genius,
+ let it comfort you. Rush into the crowd, and get success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; cried Ardworth; &ldquo;I recognize you. How could I be so blind? It is
+ you who have written to me, and in the same strain; you have robbed
+ yourself,&mdash;you, poor sufferer,&mdash;to throw extravagance into these
+ strong hands. And why? What am I to you?&rdquo; An expression of actual fondness
+ softened Lucretia&rsquo;s face as she looked up at him and replied: &ldquo;I will tell
+ you hereafter what you are to me. First, I confess that it is I whose
+ letters have perplexed, perhaps offended you. The sum that I sent I do not
+ miss. I have more,&mdash;will ever have more at your command; never fear.
+ Yes, I wish you to go into the world, not as a dependant, but as an equal
+ to the world&rsquo;s favourites. I wish you to know more of men than mere
+ law-books teach you. I wish you to be in men&rsquo;s mouths, create a circle
+ that shall talk of young Ardworth; that talk would travel to those who can
+ advance your career. The very possession of money in certain stages of
+ life gives assurance to the manner, gives attraction to the address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Ardworth, &ldquo;all this is very well for some favourite of birth
+ and fortune; but for me&mdash;Yet speak, and plainly. You throw out hints
+ that I am what I know not, but something less dependent on his nerves and
+ his brain than is plain John Ardworth. What is it you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard bent her face over her breast, and rocking herself in her
+ chair, seemed to muse for some moments before she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I first came to England, some months ago, I desired naturally to
+ learn all the particulars of my family and kindred, from which my long
+ residence abroad had estranged me. John Walter Ardworth was related to my
+ half-sister; to me he was but a mere connection. However, I knew something
+ of his history, yet I did not know that he had a son. Shortly before I
+ came to England, I learned that one who passed for his son had been
+ brought up by Mr. Fielden, and from Mr. Fielden I have since learned all
+ the grounds for that belief from which you take the name of Ardworth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia paused a moment; and after a glance at the impatient, wondering,
+ and eager countenance that bent intent upon her, she resumed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your reputed father was, you are doubtless aware, of reckless and
+ extravagant habits. He had been put into the army by my uncle, and he
+ entered the profession with the careless buoyancy of his sanguine nature.
+ I remember those days,&mdash;that day! Well, to return&mdash;where was I?&mdash;Walter
+ Ardworth had the folly to entertain strong notions of politics. He dreamed
+ of being a soldier, and yet persuaded himself to be a republican. His
+ notions, so hateful in his profession, got wind; he disguised nothing, he
+ neglected the portraits of things,&mdash;appearances. He excited the
+ rancour of his commanding officer; for politics then, more even than now,
+ were implacable ministrants to hate. Occasion presented itself. During the
+ short Peace of Amiens he had been recalled. He had to head a detachment of
+ soldiers against some mob,&mdash;in Ireland, I believe; he did not fire on
+ the mob, according to orders,&mdash;so, at least, it was said. John Walter
+ Ardworth was tried by a court-martial, and broke! But you know all this,
+ perhaps?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My poor father! Only in part; I knew that he had been dismissed the army,&mdash;I
+ believed unjustly. He was a soldier, and yet he dared to think for himself
+ and be humane!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my uncle had left him a legacy; it brought no blessing,&mdash;none of
+ that old man&rsquo;s gold did. Where are they all now,&mdash;Dalibard, Susan,
+ and her fair-faced husband,&mdash;where? Vernon is in his grave,&mdash;but
+ one son of many left! Gabriel Varney lives, it is true, and I! But that
+ gold,&mdash;yea, in our hands there was a curse on it! Walter Ardworth had
+ his legacy. His nature was gay; if disgraced in his profession, he found
+ men to pity and praise him,&mdash;Fools of Party like himself. He lived
+ joyously, drank or gamed, or lent or borrowed,&mdash;what matters the
+ wherefore? He was in debt; he lived at last a wretched, shifting, fugitive
+ life, snatching bread where he could, with the bailiffs at his heels.
+ Then, for a short time, we met again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s brow grew black as night as her voice dropped at that last
+ sentence, and it was with a start that she continued,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the midst of this hunted existence, Walter Ardworth appeared, late one
+ night, at Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s with an infant. He seemed&mdash;so says Mr.
+ Fielden&mdash;ill, worn, and haggard. He entered into no explanations with
+ respect to the child that accompanied him, and retired at once to rest.
+ What follows, Mr. Fielden, at my request, has noted down. Read, and see
+ what claim you have to the honourable parentage so vaguely ascribed to
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke, Madame Dalibard opened a box on her table, drew forth a
+ paper in Fielden&rsquo;s writing, and placed it in Ardworth&rsquo;s hand. After some
+ preliminary statement of the writer&rsquo;s intimacy with the elder Ardworth,
+ and the appearance of the latter at his house, as related by Madame
+ Dalibard, etc., the document went on thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, when my poor guest was still in bed, my servant Hannah came
+ to advise me that two persons were without, waiting to see me. As is my
+ wont, I bade them be shown in. On their entrance (two rough,
+ farmer-looking men they were, who I thought might be coming to hire my
+ little pasture field), I prayed them to speak low, as a sick gentleman was
+ just overhead. Whereupon, and without saying a word further, the two
+ strangers made a rush from the room, leaving me dumb with amazement; in a
+ few moments I heard voices and a scuffle above. I recovered myself, and
+ thinking robbers had entered my peaceful house, I called out lustily, when
+ Hannah came in, and we both, taking courage, went upstairs, and found that
+ poor Walter was in the hands of these supposed robbers, who in truth were
+ but bailiffs. They would not trust him out of their sight for a moment.
+ However, he took it more pleasantly than I could have supposed possible;
+ prayed me in a whisper to take care of the child, and I should soon hear
+ from him again. In less than an hour he was gone. Two days afterwards I
+ received from him a hurried letter, without address, of which this is a
+ copy:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR FRIEND,&mdash;I slipped from the bailiffs, and here I am in a safe
+ little tavern in sight of the sea! Mother Country is a very bad parent to
+ me! Mother Brownrigg herself could scarcely be worse. I shall work out my
+ passage to some foreign land, and if I can recover my health (sea-air is
+ bracing), I don&rsquo;t despair of getting my bread honestly, somehow. If ever I
+ can pay my debts, I may return. But, meanwhile, my good old tutor, what
+ will you think of me? You to whom my sole return for so much pains, taken
+ in vain, is another mouth to feed! And no money to pay for the board! Yet
+ you&rsquo;ll not grudge the child a place at your table, will you? No, nor kind,
+ saving Mrs. Fielden either,&mdash;God bless her tender, economical soul!
+ You know quite enough of me to be sure that I shall very soon either free
+ you of the boy, or send you something to prevent its being an encumbrance.
+ I would say, love and pity the child for my sake. But I own I feel&mdash;-By
+ Jove, I must be off; I hear the first signal from the vessel that&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours in haste, J. W. A.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Ardworth stopped from the lecture, and sighed heavily. There seemed
+ to him in this letter worse than a mock gayety,&mdash;a certain levity and
+ recklessness which jarred on his own high principles. And the want of
+ affection for the child thus abandoned was evident,&mdash;not one fond
+ word. He resumed the statement with a gloomy and disheartened attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was all I heard from my poor, erring Walter for more than three
+ years; but I knew, in spite of his follies, that his heart was sound at
+ bottom (the son&rsquo;s eyes brightened here, and he kissed the paper), and the
+ child was no burden to us; we loved it, not only for Ardworth&rsquo;s sake, but
+ for its own, and for charity&rsquo;s and Christ&rsquo;s. Ardworth&rsquo;s second letter was
+ as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ En iterum Crispinus! I am still alive, and getting on in the world,&mdash;ay,
+ and honestly too; I am no longer spending heedlessly; I am saving for my
+ debts, and I shall live, I trust, to pay off every farthing. First, for my
+ debt to you I send an order, not signed in my name, but equally valid, on
+ Messrs. Drummond, for 250 pounds. Repay yourself what the boy has cost.
+ Let him be educated to get his own living,&mdash;if clever, as a scholar
+ or a lawyer; if dull, as a tradesman. Whatever I may gain, he will have
+ his own way to make. I ought to tell you the story connected with his
+ birth; but it is one of pain and shame, and, on reflection, I feel that I
+ have no right to injure him by affixing to his early birth an opprobrium
+ of which he himself is guiltless. If ever I return to England, you shall
+ know all, and by your counsels I will abide. Love to all your happy
+ family. Your grateful FRIEND AND PUPIL. From this letter I began to
+ suspect that the poor boy was probably not born in wedlock, and that
+ Ardworth&rsquo;s silence arose from his compunction. I conceived it best never
+ to mention this suspicion to John himself as he grew up. Why should I
+ afflict him by a doubt from which his own father shrank, and which might
+ only exist in my own inexperienced and uncharitable interpretation of some
+ vague words? When John was fourteen, I received from Messrs. Drummond a
+ further sum of 500 pounds, but without any line from Ardworth, and only to
+ the effect that Messrs. Drummond were directed by a correspondent in
+ Calcutta to pay me the said sum on behalf of expenses incurred for the
+ maintenance of the child left to my charge by John Walter Ardworth. My
+ young pupil had been two years at the University when I received the
+ letter of which this is a copy:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How are you? Still well, still happy? Let me hope so! I have not written
+ to you, dear old friend, but I have not been forgetful of you; I have
+ inquired of you through my correspondents, and have learned, from time to
+ time, such accounts as satisfied my grateful affection for you. I find
+ that you have given the boy my name. Well, let him bear it,&mdash;it is
+ nothing to boast of such as it became in my person; but, mind, I do not,
+ therefore, acknowledge him as my son. I wish him to think himself without
+ parents, without other aid in the career of life than his own industry and
+ talent&mdash;if talent he has. Let him go through the healthful probation
+ of toil; let him search for and find independence. Till he is of age, 150
+ pounds per annum will be paid quarterly to your account for him at Messrs.
+ Drummond&rsquo;s. If then, to set him up in any business or profession, a sum of
+ money be necessary, name the amount by a line, signed A. B., Calcutta, to
+ the care of Messrs. Drummond, and it will reach and find me disposed to
+ follow your instructions. But after that time all further supply from me
+ will cease. Do not suppose, because I send this from India, that I am
+ laden with rupees; all I can hope to attain is a competence. That boy is
+ not the only one who has claims to share it. Even, therefore, if I had the
+ wish to rear him to the extravagant habits that ruined myself, I have not
+ the power. Yes, let him lean on his own strength. In the letter you send
+ me, write fully of your family, your sons, and write as to a man who can
+ perhaps help them in the world, and will be too happy thus in some slight
+ degree to repay all he owes you. You would smile approvingly if you saw me
+ now,&mdash;a steady, money-getting man, but still yours as ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P.S.&mdash;Do not let the boy write to me, nor give him this clew to my
+ address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the receipt of this letter, I wrote fully to Ardworth about the
+ excellent promise and conduct of his poor neglected son. I told him truly
+ he was a son any father might be proud of, and rebuked, even to harshness,
+ Walter&rsquo;s unseemly tone respecting him. One&rsquo;s child is one&rsquo;s child, however
+ the father may have wronged the mother. To this letter I never received
+ any answer. When John was of age, and had made himself independent of want
+ by obtaining a college fellowship, I spoke to him about his prospects. I
+ told him that his father, though residing abroad and for some reason
+ keeping himself concealed, had munificently paid hitherto for his
+ maintenance, and would lay down what might be necessary to start him in
+ business, or perhaps place him in the army, but that his father might be
+ better pleased if he could show a love of independence, and henceforth
+ maintain himself. I knew the boy I spoke to! John thought as I did, and I
+ never applied for another donation to the elder Ardworth. The allowance
+ ceased; John since then has maintained himself. I have heard no more from
+ his father, though I have written often to the address he gave me. I begin
+ to fear that he is dead. I once went up to town and saw one of the heads
+ of Messrs. Drummond&rsquo;s firm, a very polite gentleman, but he could give me
+ no information, except that he obeyed instructions from a correspondent at
+ Calcutta,&mdash;one Mr. Macfarren. Whereon I wrote to Mr. Macfarren, and
+ asked him, as I thought very pressingly, to tell me all he knew of poor
+ Ardworth the elder. He answered shortly that he knew of no such person at
+ all, and that A. B. was a French merchant, settled in Calcutta, who had
+ been dead for above two years. I now gave up all hopes of any further
+ intelligence, and was more convinced than ever that I had acted rightly in
+ withholding from poor John my correspondence with his father. The lad had
+ been curious and inquisitive naturally; but when I told him that I thought
+ it my duty to his father to be so reserved, he forebore to press me. I
+ have only to add, first, that by all the inquiries I could make of the
+ surviving members of Walter Ardworth&rsquo;s family, it seemed their full belief
+ that he had never been married, and therefore I fear we must conclude that
+ he had no legitimate children,&mdash;which may account for, though it
+ cannot excuse, his neglect; and secondly, with respect to the sums
+ received on dear John&rsquo;s account, I put them all by, capital and interest,
+ deducting only the expense of his first year at Cambridge (the which I
+ could not defray without injuring my own children), and it all stands in
+ his name at Messrs. Drummond&rsquo;s, vested in the Three per Cents. That I have
+ not told him of this was by my poor dear wife&rsquo;s advice; for she said, very
+ sensibly,&mdash;and she was a shrewd woman on money matters,&mdash;&ldquo;If he
+ knows he has such a large sum all in the lump, who knows but he may grow
+ idle and extravagant, and spend it at once, like his father before him?
+ Whereas, some time or other he will want to marry, or need money for some
+ particular purpose,&mdash;then what a blessing it will be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, my dear madam, as you know the world better than I do, you can
+ now do as you please, both as to communicating to John all the information
+ herein contained as to his parentage, and as to apprising him of the large
+ sum of which he is lawfully possessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MATTHEW FIELDEN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.S.&mdash;In justice to poor John Ardworth, and to show that whatever
+ whim he may have conceived about his own child, he had still a heart kind
+ enough to remember mine, though Heaven knows I said nothing about them in
+ my letters, my eldest boy received an offer of an excellent place in a
+ West India merchant&rsquo;s house, and has got on to be chief clerk; and my
+ second son was presented to a living of 117 pounds a year by a gentleman
+ he never heard of. Though I never traced these good acts to Ardworth, from
+ whom else could they come?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth put down the paper without a word; and Lucretia, who had watched
+ him while he read, was struck with the self-control he evinced when he
+ came to the end of the disclosure. She laid her hand on his and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage! you have lost nothing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; said Ardworth, with a bitter smile. &ldquo;A father&rsquo;s love and a
+ father&rsquo;s name,&mdash;nothing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; exclaimed Lucretia, &ldquo;is this man your father? Does a father&rsquo;s heart
+ beat in one line of those hard sentences? No, no; it seems to me probable,&mdash;it
+ seems to me almost certain, that you are&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped, and
+ continued, with a calmer accent, &ldquo;near to my own blood. I am now in
+ England, in London, to prosecute the inquiry built upon that hope. If so,
+ if so, you shall&mdash;&rdquo; Madame Dalibard again stopped abruptly, and there
+ was something terrible in the very exultation of her countenance. She drew
+ a long breath, and resumed, with an evident effort at self-command, &ldquo;If
+ so, I have a right to the interest I feel for you. Suffer me yet to be
+ silent as to the grounds of my belief, and&mdash;and&mdash;love me a
+ little in the mean while!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her voice trembled, as if with rushing tears, at these last words, and
+ there was almost an agony in the tone in which they were said, and in the
+ gesture of the clasped hands she held out to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much moved (amidst all his mingled emotions at the tale thus made known to
+ him) by the manner and voice of the narrator, Ardworth bent down and
+ kissed the extended hands. Then he rose abruptly, walked to and fro the
+ room, muttering to himself, paused opposite the window, threw it open, as
+ for air, and, indeed, fairly gasped for breath. When he turned round,
+ however, his face was composed, and folding his arms on his large breast
+ with a sudden action, he said aloud, and yet rather to himself than to his
+ listener,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What matter, after all, by what name men call our fathers? We ourselves
+ make our own fate! Bastard or noble, not a jot care I. Give me ancestors,
+ I will not disgrace them; raze from my lot even the very name of father,
+ and my sons shall have an ancestor in me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he thus spoke, there was a rough grandeur in his hard face and the
+ strong ease of his powerful form. And while thus standing and thus
+ looking, the door opened, and Varney walked in abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two men had met occasionally at Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s, but no intimacy
+ had been established between them. Varney was formal and distant to
+ Ardworth, and Ardworth felt a repugnance to Varney. With the instinct of
+ sound, sterling, weighty natures, he detected at once, and disliked
+ heartily, that something of gaudy, false, exaggerated, and hollow which
+ pervaded Gabriel Varney&rsquo;s talk and manner,&mdash;even the trick of his
+ walk and the cut of his dress. And Ardworth wanted that boyish and
+ beautiful luxuriance of character which belonged to Percival St. John,
+ easy to please and to be pleased, and expanding into the warmth of
+ admiration for all talent and all distinction. For art, if not the
+ highest, Ardworth cared not a straw; it was nothing to him that Varney
+ painted and composed, and ran showily through the jargon of literary
+ babble, or toyed with the puzzles of unsatisfying metaphysics. He saw but
+ a charlatan, and he had not yet learned from experience what strength and
+ what danger lie hid in the boa parading its colours in the sun, and
+ shifting, in the sensual sportiveness of its being, from bough to bough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney halted in the middle of the room as his eye rested first on
+ Ardworth, and then glanced towards Madame Dalibard. But Ardworth, jarred
+ from his revery or resolves by the sound of a voice discordant to his ear
+ at all times, especially in the mood which then possessed him, scarcely
+ returned Varney&rsquo;s salutation, buttoned his coat over his chest, seized his
+ hat, and upsetting two chairs, and very considerably disturbing the
+ gravity of a round table, forced his way to Madame Dalibard, pressed her
+ hand, and said in a whisper, &ldquo;I shall see you again soon,&rdquo; and vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney, smoothing his hair with fingers that shone with rings, slid into
+ the seat next Madame Dalibard, which Ardworth had lately occupied, and
+ said: &ldquo;If I were a Clytemnestra, I should dread an Orestes in such a son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard shot towards the speaker one of the sidelong, suspicious
+ glances which of old had characterized Lucretia, and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clytemnestra was happy! The Furies slept to her crime, and haunted but
+ the avenger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door opened, and Ardworth reappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I quite forgot what I half came to know. How is Helen? Did she return
+ home safe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Safe&mdash;yes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear girl, I am glad to hear it! Where is she? Not gone to those Miverses
+ again? I am no aristocrat, but why should one couple together refinement
+ and vulgarity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Ardworth,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard, with haughty coldness, &ldquo;my niece is
+ under my care, and you will permit me to judge for myself how to discharge
+ the trust. Mr. Mivers is her own relation,&mdash;a nearer one than you
+ are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not at all abashed by the rebuke, Ardworth said carelessly: &ldquo;Well, I shall
+ talk to you again on that subject. Meanwhile, pray give my love to her,&mdash;Helen,
+ I mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard half rose in her chair, then sank back again, motioning
+ with her hand to Ardworth to approach. Varney rose and walked to the
+ window, as if sensible that something was about to be said not meant for
+ his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ardworth was close to her chair, Madame Dalibard grasped his hand
+ with a vigour that surprised him, and drawing him nearer still, whispered
+ as he bent down,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give Helen your love, if it is a cousin&rsquo;s, or, if you will, a
+ brother&rsquo;s love. Do you intend&mdash;do you feel&mdash;an other, a warmer
+ love? Speak, sir!&rdquo; and drawing suddenly back, she gazed on his face with a
+ stern and menacing expression, her teeth set, and the lips firmly pressed
+ together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth, though a little startled, and half angry, answered with the low,
+ ironical laugh not uncommon to him, &ldquo;Pish! you ladies are apt to think us
+ men much greater fools than we are. A briefless lawyer is not very
+ inflammable tinder. Yes, a cousin&rsquo;s love,&mdash;quite enough. Poor little
+ Helen! time enough to put other notions into her head; and then&mdash;she
+ will have a sweetheart, gay and handsome like herself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard, with a slight smile, &ldquo;ay, I am satisfied. Come
+ soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth nodded, and hurried down the stairs. As he gained the door, he
+ caught sight of Helen at a distance, bending over a flower-bed in the
+ neglected garden. He paused, irresolute, a moment. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he muttered to
+ himself, &ldquo;no; I am fit company only for myself! A long walk into the
+ fields, and then away with these mists round the Past and Future; the
+ Present at least is mine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0015" id="Blink2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. THE WEAVERS AND THE WOOF.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what,&rdquo; said Varney,&mdash;&ldquo;what, while we are pursuing a fancied
+ clew, and seeking to provide first a name, and then a fortune for this
+ young lawyer,&mdash;what steps have you really taken to meet the danger
+ that menaces me,&mdash;to secure, if our inquiries fail, an independence
+ for yourself? Months have elapsed, and you have still shrunk from
+ advancing the great scheme upon which we built, when the daughter of Susan
+ Mainwaring was admitted to your hearth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why recall me, in these rare moments when I feel myself human still,&mdash;why
+ recall me back to the nethermost abyss of revenge and crime? Oh, let me be
+ sure that I have still a son! Even if John Ardworth, with his gifts and
+ energies, be denied to me, a son, though in rags, I will give him wealth!&mdash;a
+ son, though ignorant as the merest boor, I will pour into his brain my
+ dark wisdom! A son! a son! my heart swells at the word. Ah, you sneer!
+ Yes, my heart swells, but not with the mawkish fondness of a feeble
+ mother. In a son, I shall live again,&mdash;transmigrate from this
+ tortured and horrible life of mine; drink back my youth. In him I shall
+ rise from my fall,&mdash;strong in his power, great in his grandeur. It is
+ because I was born a woman,&mdash;had woman&rsquo;s poor passions and infirm
+ weakness,&mdash;that I am what I am. I would transfer myself into the soul
+ of man,&mdash;man, who has the strength to act, and the privilege to rise.
+ Into the bronze of man&rsquo;s nature I would pour the experience which has
+ broken, with its fierce elements, the puny vessel of clay. Yes, Gabriel,
+ in return for all I have done and sacrificed for you, I ask but
+ co-operation in that one hope of my shattered and storm-beat being. Bear,
+ forbear, await; risk not that hope by some wretched, peddling crime which
+ will bring on us both detection,&mdash;some wanton revelry in guilt, which
+ is not worth the terror that treads upon its heels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget,&rdquo; answered Varney, with a kind of submissive sullenness,&mdash;for
+ whatever had passed between these two persons in their secret and fearful
+ intimacy, there was still a power in Lucretia, surviving her fall amidst
+ the fiends, that impressed Varney with the only respect he felt for man or
+ woman,&mdash;&ldquo;you forget strangely the nature of our elaborate and master
+ project when you speak of &lsquo;peddling crime,&rsquo; or &lsquo;wanton revelry&rsquo; in guilt!
+ You forget, too, how every hour that we waste deepens the peril that
+ surrounds me, and may sweep from your side the sole companion that can aid
+ you in your objects,&mdash;nay, without whom they must wholly fail. Let me
+ speak first of that most urgent danger, for your memory seems short and
+ troubled, since you have learned only to hope the recovery of your son. If
+ this man Stubmore, in whom the trust created by my uncle&rsquo;s will is now
+ vested, once comes to town, once begins to bustle about his accursed
+ projects of transferring the money from the Bank of England, I tell you
+ again and again that my forgery on the bank will be detected, and that
+ transportation will be the smallest penalty inflicted. Part of the
+ forgery, as you know, was committed on your behalf, to find the moneys
+ necessary for the research for your son,&mdash;committed on the clear
+ understanding that our project on Helen should repay me, should enable me,
+ perhaps undetected, to restore the sums illegally abstracted, or, at the
+ worst, to confess to Stubmore&mdash;whose character I well know&mdash;that,
+ oppressed by difficulties, I had yielded to temptation, that I had forged
+ his name (as I had forged his father&rsquo;s) as an authority to sell the
+ capital from the bank, and that now, in replacing the money, I repaid my
+ error and threw myself on his indulgence, on his silence. I say that I
+ know enough of the man to know that I should be thus cheaply saved, or at
+ the worst, I should have but to strengthen his compassion by a bribe to
+ his avarice; but if I cannot replace the money, I am lost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said Lucretia; &ldquo;the money you shall have, let me but find my
+ son, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grant me patience!&rdquo; cried Varney, impetuously. &ldquo;But what can your son do,
+ if found, unless you endow him with the heritage of Laughton? To do that,
+ Helen, who comes next to Percival St. John in the course of the entail,
+ must cease to live! Have I not aided, am I not aiding you hourly, in your
+ grand objects? This evening I shall see a man whom I have long lost sight
+ of, but who has acquired in a lawyer&rsquo;s life the true scent after evidence:
+ if that evidence exist, it shall be found. I have just learned his
+ address. By tomorrow he shall be on the track. I have stinted myself to
+ save from the results of the last forgery the gold to whet his zeal. For
+ the rest, as I have said, your design involves the removal of two lives.
+ Already over the one more difficult to slay the shadow creeps and the pall
+ hangs. I have won, as you wished, and as was necessary, young St. John&rsquo;s
+ familiar acquaintance; when the hour comes, he is in my hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia smiled sternly. &ldquo;So!&rdquo; she said, between her ground teeth, &ldquo;the
+ father forbade me the house that was my heritage! I have but to lift a
+ finger and breathe a word, and, desolate as I am, I thrust from that home
+ the son! The spoiler left me the world,&mdash;I leave his son the grave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Varney, doggedly pursuing his dreadful object, &ldquo;why force me
+ to repeat that his is not the only life between you and your son&rsquo;s
+ inheritance? St. John gone, Helen still remains. And what, if your
+ researches fail, are we to lose the rich harvest which Helen will yield
+ us,&mdash;a harvest you reap with the same sickle which gathers in your
+ revenge? Do you no longer see in Helen&rsquo;s face the features of her mother?
+ Is the perfidy of William Mainwaring forgotten or forgiven?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel Varney,&rdquo; said Lucretia, in a hollow and tremulous voice, &ldquo;when in
+ that hour in which my whole being was revulsed, and I heard the cord snap
+ from the anchor, and saw the demons of the storm gather round my bark;
+ when in that hour I stooped calmly down and kissed my rival&rsquo;s brow,&mdash;I
+ murmured an oath which seemed not inspired by my own soul, but by an
+ influence henceforth given to my fate: I vowed that the perfidy dealt to
+ me should be repaid; I vowed that the ruin of my own existence should fall
+ on the brow which I kissed. I vowed that if shame and disgrace were to
+ supply the inheritance I had forfeited, I would not stand alone amidst the
+ scorn of the pitiless world. In the vision of my agony, I saw, afar, the
+ altar dressed and the bride-chamber prepared; and I breathed my curse,
+ strong as prophecy, on the marriage-hearth and the marriage-bed. Why
+ dream, then, that I would rescue the loathed child of that loathed union
+ from your grasp? But is the time come? Yours may be come: is mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something so awful there was in the look of his accomplice, so intense in
+ the hate of her low voice, that Varney, wretch as he was, and
+ contemplating at that very hour the foulest and most hideous guilt, drew
+ back, appalled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard resumed, and in a somewhat softer tone, but softened only
+ by the anguish of despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, had it been otherwise, what might I have been! Given over from that
+ hour to the very incarnation of plotting crime, none to resist the evil
+ impulse of my own maddening heart, the partner, forced on me by fate,
+ leading me deeper and deeper into the inextricable hell,&mdash;from that
+ hour fraud upon fraud, guilt upon guilt, infamy heaped on infamy, till I
+ stand a marvel to myself that the thunderbolt falls not, that Nature
+ thrusts not from her breast a living outrage on all her laws! Was I not
+ justified in the desire of retribution? Every step that I fell, every
+ glance that I gave to the gulf below, increased but in me the desire for
+ revenge. All my acts had flowed from one fount: should the stream roll
+ pollution, and the fount spring pure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have had your revenge on your rival and her husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had it, and I passed on!&rdquo; said Lucretia, with nostrils dilated as with
+ haughty triumph; &ldquo;they were crushed, and I suffered them to live! Nay,
+ when, by chance, I heard of William Mainwaring&rsquo;s death, I bowed down my
+ head, and I almost think I wept. The old days came back upon me. Yes, I
+ wept! But I had not destroyed their love. No, no; there I had miserably
+ failed. A pledge of that love lived. I had left their hearth barren; Fate
+ sent them a comfort which I had not foreseen. And suddenly my hate
+ returned, my wrongs rose again, my vengeance was not sated. The love that
+ had destroyed more than my life,&mdash;my soul,&mdash;rose again and
+ cursed me in the face of Helen. The oath which I took when I kissed my
+ rival&rsquo;s brow, demanded another prey when I kissed the child of those
+ nuptials.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are prepared at last, then, to act?&rdquo; cried Varney, in a tone of
+ savage joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment, close under the window, rose, sudden and sweet, the voice
+ of one singing,&mdash;the young voice of Helen. The words were so distinct
+ that they came to the ears of the dark-plotting and guilty pair. In the
+ song itself there was little to remark or peculiarly apposite to the
+ consciences of those who heard; yet in the extreme and touching purity of
+ the voice, and in the innocence of the general spirit of the words, trite
+ as might be the image they conveyed, there was something that contrasted
+ so fearfully their own thoughts and minds that they sat silent, looking
+ vacantly into each other&rsquo;s faces, and shrinking perhaps to turn their eyes
+ within themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HELEN&rsquo;S HYMN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ye fade, yet still how sweet, ye Flowers! Your scent outlives the bloom!
+ So, Father, may my mortal hours Grow sweeter towards the tomb!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In withered leaves a healing cure The simple gleaners find; So may our
+ withered hopes endure In virtues left behind!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, not to me be vainly given The lesson ye bestow, Of thoughts that rise
+ in sweets to Heaven, And turn to use below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The song died, but still the listeners remained silent, till at length,
+ shaking off the effect, with his laugh of discordant irony, Varney said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet innocence, fresh from the nursery! Would it not be sin to suffer
+ the world to mar it? You hear the prayer: why not grant it, and let the
+ flower &lsquo;turn to use below&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but could it wither first!&rdquo; muttered Lucretia, with an accent of
+ suppressed rage. &ldquo;Do you think that her&mdash;that his&mdash;daughter is
+ to me but a vulgar life to be sacrificed merely for gold? Imagine away
+ your sex, man! Women only know what I&mdash;such as I, woman still&mdash;feel
+ in the presence of the pure! Do you fancy that I should not have held
+ death a blessing if death could have found me in youth such as Helen is?
+ Ah, could she but live to suffer! Die! Well, since it must be, since my
+ son requires the sacrifice, do as you will with the victim that death
+ mercifully snatches from my grasp. I could have wished to prolong her
+ life, to load it with some fragment of the curse her parents heaped upon
+ me,&mdash;baffled love, and ruin, and despair! I could have hoped, in this
+ division of the spoil, that mine had been the vengeance, if yours the
+ gold. You want the life, I the heart,&mdash;the heart to torture first;
+ and then&mdash;why then more willingly than I do now, could I have thrown
+ the carcass to the jackal!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; began Varney; when the door opened and Helen herself stood
+ unconsciously smiling at the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0016" id="Blink2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE LAWYER AND THE BODY-SNATCHER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That same evening Beck, according to appointment, met Percival and showed
+ him the dreary-looking house which held the fair stranger who had so
+ attracted his youthful fancy. And Percival looked at the high walls with
+ the sailor&rsquo;s bold desire for adventure, while confused visions reflected
+ from plays, operas, and novels, in which scaling walls with rope-ladders
+ and dark-lanterns was represented as the natural vocation of a lover,
+ flitted across his brain; and certainly he gave a deep sigh as his
+ common-sense plucked him back from such romance. However, having now
+ ascertained the house, it would be easy to learn the name of its inmates,
+ and to watch or make his opportunity. As slowly and reluctantly he walked
+ back to the spot where he had left his cabriolet, he entered into some
+ desultory conversation with his strange guide; and the pity he had before
+ conceived for Beck increased upon him as he talked and listened. This
+ benighted mind, only illumined by a kind of miserable astuteness and that
+ &ldquo;cunning of the belly&rdquo; which is born of want to engender avarice; this
+ joyless temperament; this age in youth; this living reproach, rising up
+ from the stones of London against our social indifference to the souls
+ which wither and rot under the hard eyes of science and the deaf ears of
+ wealth,&mdash;had a pathos for his lively sympathies and his fresh heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If ever you want a friend, come to me,&rdquo; said St. John, abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweeper stared, and a gleam of diviner nature, a ray of gratitude and
+ unselfish devotion, darted through the fog and darkness of his mind. He
+ stood, with his hat off, watching the wheels of the cabriolet as it bore
+ away the happy child of fortune, and then, shaking his head, as at some
+ puzzle that perplexed and defied his comprehension, strode back to the
+ town and bent his way homeward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between two and three hours after Percival thus parted from the sweeper, a
+ man whose dress was little in accordance with the scene in which we
+ present him, threaded his way through a foul labyrinth of alleys in the
+ worst part of St. Giles&rsquo;s,&mdash;a neighbourhood, indeed, carefully
+ shunned at dusk by wealthy passengers; for here dwelt not only Penury in
+ its grimmest shape, but the desperate and dangerous guilt which is not to
+ be lightly encountered in its haunts and domiciles. Here children imbibe
+ vice with their mother&rsquo;s milk. Here Prostitution, commencing with
+ childhood, grows fierce and sanguinary in the teens, and leagues with
+ theft and murder. Here slinks the pickpocket, here emerges the burglar,
+ here skulks the felon. Yet all about and all around, here, too, may be
+ found virtue in its rarest and noblest form,&mdash;virtue outshining
+ circumstance and defying temptation; the virtue of utter poverty, which
+ groans, and yet sins not. So interwoven are these webs of penury and fraud
+ that in one court your life is not safe; but turn to the right hand, and
+ in the other, you might sleep safely in that worse than Irish shealing,
+ though your pockets were full of gold. Through these haunts the ragged and
+ penniless may walk unfearing, for they have nothing to dread from the
+ lawless,&mdash;more, perhaps, from the law; but the wealthy, the
+ respectable, the spruce, the dainty, let them beware the spot, unless the
+ policeman is in sight or day is in the skies!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this passenger, whose appearance, as we have implied, was certainly not
+ that of a denizen, turned into one of the alleys, a rough hand seized him
+ by the arm, and suddenly a group of girls and tatterdemalions issued from
+ a house, in which the lower shutters unclosed showed a light burning, and
+ surrounded him with a hoarse whoop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passenger whispered a word in the ear of the grim blackguard who had
+ seized him, and his arm was instantly released.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! a pal,&mdash;he has the catch,&rdquo; said the blackguard, surlily. The
+ group gave way, and by the light of the clear starlit skies, and a single
+ lamp hung at the entrance of the alley, gazed upon the stranger. But they
+ made no effort to detain him; and as he disappeared in the distant
+ shadows, hastened back into the wretched hostlery where they had been
+ merry-making. Meanwhile, the stranger gained a narrow court, and stopped
+ before a house in one of its angles,&mdash;a house taller than the rest,
+ so much taller than the rest that it had the effect of a tower; you would
+ have supposed it (perhaps rightly) to be the last remains of some ancient
+ building of importance, around which, as population thickened and fashion
+ changed, the huts below it had insolently sprung up. Quaint and massive
+ pilasters, black with the mire and soot of centuries, flanked the deep-set
+ door; the windows were heavy with mullions and transoms, and strongly
+ barred in the lower floor; but few of the panes were whole, and only here
+ and there had any attempt been made to keep out the wind and rain by rags,
+ paper, old shoes, old hats, and other ingenious contrivances. Beside the
+ door was conveniently placed a row of some ten or twelve bell-pulls,
+ appertaining no doubt to the various lodgments into which the building was
+ subdivided. The stranger did not seem very familiar with the appurtenances
+ of the place. He stood in some suspense as to the proper bell to select;
+ but at last, guided by a brass plate annexed to one of the pulls, which,
+ though it was too dark to decipher the inscription, denoted a claim to
+ superior gentility to the rest of that nameless class, he hazarded a tug,
+ which brought forth a &lsquo;larum loud enough to startle the whole court from
+ its stillness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a minute or less, the casement in one of the upper stories opened, a
+ head peered forth, and one of those voices peculiar to low debauch&mdash;raw,
+ cracked, and hoarse&mdash;called out: &ldquo;Who waits?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it you, Grabman?&rdquo; asked the stranger, dubiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&mdash;Nicholas Grabman, attorney-at-law, sir, at your service; and
+ your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jason,&rdquo; answered the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho, there! ho, Beck!&rdquo; cried the cracked voice to some one within; &ldquo;go
+ down and open the door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments the heavy portal swung and creaked and yawned sullenly,
+ and a gaunt form, half-undressed, with an inch of a farthing rushlight
+ glimmering through a battered lantern in its hand, presented itself to
+ Jason. The last eyed the ragged porter sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you live here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Beck, with the cringe habitual to him. &ldquo;H-up the ladder,
+ vith the rats, drat &lsquo;em.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, lead on; hold up the lantern. A devil of a dark place this!&rdquo;
+ grumbled Jason, as he nearly stumbled over sundry broken chattels, and
+ gained a flight of rude, black, broken stairs, that creaked under his
+ tread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;St! &lsquo;st!&rdquo; said Beck between his teeth, as the stranger, halting at the
+ second floor, demanded, in no gentle tones, whether Mr. Grabman lived in
+ the chimney-pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;St! &lsquo;st! Don&rsquo;t make such a rumpus, or No. 7 will be at you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do I care for No. 7? And who the devil is No. 7?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A body-snatcher!&rdquo; whispered Beck, with a shudder. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a dillicut
+ sleeper,&mdash;can&rsquo;t abide having his night&rsquo;s rest sp&rsquo;ilt. And he&rsquo;s the
+ houtrageoustest great cretur when he&rsquo;s h-up in his tantrums; it makes your
+ &lsquo;air stand on ind to &lsquo;ear him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like very much to hear him, then,&rdquo; said the stranger, curiously.
+ And while he spoke, the door of No. 7 opened abruptly. A huge head,
+ covered with matted hair, was thrust for a moment through the aperture,
+ and two dull eyes, that seemed covered with a film like that of the birds
+ which feed on the dead, met the stranger&rsquo;s bold, sparkling orbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hell and fury!&rdquo; bawled out the voice of this ogre, like a clap of near
+ thunder, &ldquo;if you two keep tramp, tramp, there close at my door, I&rsquo;ll make
+ you meat for the surgeons, b&mdash;&mdash; you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop a moment, my civil friend,&rdquo; said the stranger, advancing; &ldquo;just
+ stand where you are: I should like to make a sketch of your head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That head protruded farther from the door, and with it an enormous bulk of
+ chest and shoulder. But the adventurous visitor was not to be daunted. He
+ took out, very coolly, a pencil and the back of a letter, and began his
+ sketch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The body-snatcher stared at him an instant in mute astonishment; but that
+ operation and the composure of the artist were so new to him that they
+ actually inspired him with terror. He slunk back, banged to the door; and
+ the stranger, putting up his implements, said, with a disdainful laugh, to
+ Beck, who had slunk away into a corner,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. 7 knows well how to take care of No. 1. Lead on, and be quick, then!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they continued to mount, they heard the body-snatcher growling and
+ blaspheming in his den, and the sound made Beck clamber the quicker, till
+ at the next landing-place he took breath, threw open a door, and Jason,
+ pushing him aside, entered first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior of the room bespoke better circumstances than might have been
+ supposed from the approach; the floor was covered with sundry scraps of
+ carpet, formerly of different hues and patterns, but mellowed by time into
+ one threadbare mass of grease and canvas. There was a good fire on the
+ hearth, though the night was warm; there were sundry volumes piled round
+ the walls, in the binding peculiar to law books; in a corner stood a tall
+ desk, of the fashion used by clerks, perched on tall, slim legs, and
+ companioned by a tall, slim stool. On a table before the fire were
+ scattered the remains of the nightly meal,&mdash;broiled bones, the
+ skeleton of a herring; and the steam rose from a tumbler containing a
+ liquid colourless as water, but poisonous as gin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The room was squalid and dirty, and bespoke mean and slovenly habits; but
+ it did not bespeak penury and want, it had even an air of filthy comfort
+ of its own,&mdash;the comfort of the swine in its warm sty. The occupant
+ of the chamber was in keeping with the localities. Figure to yourself a
+ man of middle height, not thin, but void of all muscular flesh,&mdash;bloated,
+ puffed, unwholesome. He was dressed in a gray-flannel gown and short
+ breeches, the stockings wrinkled and distained, the feet in slippers. The
+ stomach was that of a portly man, the legs were those of a skeleton; the
+ cheeks full and swollen, like a ploughboy&rsquo;s, but livid, bespeckled, of a
+ dull lead-colour, like a patient in the dropsy. The head, covered in
+ patches with thin, yellowish hair, gave some promise of intellect, for the
+ forehead was high, and appeared still more so from partial baldness; the
+ eyes, embedded in fat and wrinkled skin, were small and lustreless, but
+ they still had that acute look which education and ability communicate to
+ the human orb; the mouth most showed the animal,&mdash;full-lipped,
+ coarse, and sensual; while behind one of two great ears stuck a pen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You see before you, then, this slatternly figure,&mdash;slipshod,
+ half-clothed, with a sort of shabby demi-gentility about it, half
+ ragamuffin, half clerk; while in strong contrast appeared the new-comer,
+ scrupulously neat, new, with bright black-satin stock, coat cut jauntily
+ to the waist, varnished boots, kid gloves, and trim mustache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind this sleek and comely personage, on knock-knees, in torn shirt open
+ at the throat, with apathetic, listless, unlighted face, stood the lean
+ and gawky Beck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set a chair for the gentleman,&rdquo; said the inmate of the chamber to Beck,
+ with a dignified wave of the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you do, Mr.&mdash;Mr.&mdash;humph&mdash;Jason? How do you do?
+ Always smart and blooming; the world thrives with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The world is a farm that thrives with all who till it properly, Grabman,&rdquo;
+ answered Jason, dryly; and with his handkerchief he carefully dusted the
+ chair, on which he then daintily deposited his person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who is your Ganymede, your valet, your gentleman-usher?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, a lad about town who lodges above and does odd jobs for me,&mdash;brushes
+ my coat, cleans my shoes, and after his day&rsquo;s work goes an errand now and
+ then. Make yourself scarce, Beck! Anatomy, vanish!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck grinned, nodded, pulled hard at a flake of his hair, and closed the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of your brotherhood, that?&rdquo; asked Jason, carelessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He, oaf? No,&rdquo; said Grabman, with profound contempt in his sickly visage.
+ &ldquo;He works for his bread,&mdash;instinct! Turnspits and truffle-dogs and
+ some silly men have it! What an age since we met! Shall I mix you a
+ tumbler?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know I never drink your vile spirits; though in Champagne and
+ Bordeaux I am any man&rsquo;s match.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how the devil do you keep old black thoughts out of your mind by
+ those washy potations?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old black thoughts&mdash;of what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of black actions, Jason. We have not met since you paid me for
+ recommending the nurse who attended your uncle in his last illness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, poor coward?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grabman knit his thin eyebrows and gnawed his blubber lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no coward, as you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not when a thing is to be done, but after it is done. You brave the
+ substance, and tremble at the shadow. I dare say you see ugly goblins in
+ the dark, Grabman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay; but it is no use talking to you. You call yourself Jason because
+ of your yellow hair, or your love for the golden fleece; but your old
+ comrades call you &lsquo;Rattlesnake,&rsquo; and you have its blood, as its venom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And its charm, man,&rdquo; added Jason, with a strange smile, that, though
+ hypocritical and constrained, had yet a certain softness, and added
+ greatly to the comeliness of features which many might call beautiful, and
+ all would allow to be regular and symmetrical. &ldquo;I shall find at least ten
+ love-letters on my table when I go home. But enough of these fopperies, I
+ am here on business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Law, of course; I am your man. Who&rsquo;s the victim?&rdquo; and a hideous grin on
+ Grabman&rsquo;s face contrasted the sleek smile that yet lingered upon his
+ visitor&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; something less hazardous, but not less lucrative than our old
+ practices. This is a business that may bring you hundreds, thousands; that
+ may take you from this hovel to speculate at the West End; that may change
+ your gin into Lafitte, and your herring into venison; that may lift the
+ broken attorney again upon the wheel,&mdash;again to roll down, it may be;
+ but that is your affair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Fore Gad, open the case,&rdquo; cried Grabman, eagerly, and shoving aside the
+ ignoble relics of his supper, he leaned his elbows on the table and his
+ chin on his damp palms, while eyes that positively brightened into an
+ expression of greedy and relentless intelligence were fixed upon his
+ visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The case runs thus,&rdquo; said Jason. &ldquo;Once upon a time there lived, at an old
+ house in Hampshire called Laughton, a wealthy baronet named St. John. He
+ was a bachelor, his estates at his own disposal. He had two nieces and a
+ more distant kinsman. His eldest niece lived with him,&mdash;she was
+ supposed to be destined for his heiress; circumstances needless to relate
+ brought upon this girl her uncle&rsquo;s displeasure,&mdash;she was dismissed
+ his house. Shortly afterwards he died, leaving to his kinsman&mdash;a Mr.
+ Vernon&mdash;his estates, with remainder to Vernon&rsquo;s issue, and in default
+ thereof, first to the issue of the younger niece, next to that of the
+ elder and disinherited one. The elder married, and was left a widow
+ without children. She married again, and had a son. Her second husband,
+ for some reason or other, conceived ill opinions of his wife. In his last
+ illness (he did not live long) he resolved to punish the wife by robbing
+ the mother. He sent away the son, nor have we been able to discover him
+ since. It is that son whom you are to find.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see, I see; go on,&rdquo; said Grabman. &ldquo;This son is now the remainderman.
+ How lost? When? What year? What trace?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Patience. You will find in this paper the date of the loss and the age of
+ the child, then a mere infant. Now for the trace. This husband&mdash;did I
+ tell you his name? No? Alfred Braddell&mdash;had one friend more intimate
+ than the rest,&mdash;John Walter Ardworth, a cashiered officer, a ruined
+ man, pursued by bill-brokers, Jews, and bailiffs. To this man we have
+ lately had reason to believe that the child was given. Ardworth, however,
+ was shortly afterwards obliged to fly his creditors. We know that he went
+ to India; but if residing there, it must have been under some new name,
+ and we fear he is now dead. All our inquiries, at least after this man,
+ have been fruitless. Before he went abroad, he left with his old tutor a
+ child corresponding in age to that of Mrs. Braddell&rsquo;s. In this child she
+ thinks she recognizes her son. All that you have to do is to trace his
+ identity by good legal evidence. Don&rsquo;t smile in that foolish way,&mdash;I
+ mean sound, bona fide evidence that will stand the fire of
+ cross-examination; you know what that is! You will therefore find out,&mdash;first,
+ whether Braddell did consign his child to Ardworth, and, if so, you must
+ then follow Ardworth, with that child in his keeping, to Matthew Fielden&rsquo;s
+ house, whose address you find noted in the paper I gave you, together with
+ many other memoranda as to Ardworth&rsquo;s creditors and those whom he is
+ likely to have come across.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John Ardworth, I see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John Walter Ardworth,&mdash;commonly called Walter; he, like me,
+ preferred to be known only by his second baptismal name. He, because of a
+ favourite Radical godfather; I, because Honore is an inconvenient
+ Gallicism. And perhaps when Honore Mirabeau (my godfather) went out of
+ fashion with the sans-culottes, my father thought Gabriel a safer
+ designation. Now I have told you all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the mother&rsquo;s maiden name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her maiden name was Clavering; she was married under that of Dalibard,
+ her first husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Grabman, looking over the notes in the paper given to him, &ldquo;it
+ is at Liverpool that the husband died, and whence the child was sent
+ away?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so; to Liverpool you will go first. I tell you fairly, the task is
+ difficult, for hitherto it has foiled me. I knew but one man who, without
+ flattery, could succeed, and therefore I spared no pains to find out
+ Nicholas Grabman. You have the true ferret&rsquo;s faculty; you, too, are a
+ lawyer, and snuff evidence in every breath. Find us a son,&mdash;a legal
+ son,&mdash;a son to be shown in a court of law, and the moment he steps
+ into the lands and the Hall of Laughton, you have five thousand pounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I have a bond to that effect?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My bond, I fear, is worth no more than my word. Trust to the last; if I
+ break it, you know enough of my secrets to hang me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk of hanging; I hate that subject. But stop. If found, does this
+ son succeed? Did this Mr. Vernon leave no heir; this other sister continue
+ single, or prove barren?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, true! He, Mr. Vernon, who by will took the name of St. John, he left
+ issue; but only one son still survives, a minor and unmarried. The sister,
+ too, left a daughter; both are poor, sickly creatures,&mdash;their lives
+ not worth a straw. Never mind them. You find Vincent Braddell, and he will
+ not be long out of his property, nor you out of your 5,000 pounds! You
+ see, under these circumstances a bond might become dangerous evidence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grabman emitted a fearful and tremulous chuckle,&mdash;a laugh like the
+ laugh of a superstitious man when you talk to him of ghosts and
+ churchyards. He chuckled, and his hair bristled. But after a pause, in
+ which he seemed to wrestle with his own conscience, he said: &ldquo;Well, well,
+ you are a strange man, Jason; you love your joke. I have nothing to do
+ except to find out this ultimate remainderman; mind that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perfectly; nothing like subdivision of labour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The search will be expensive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is oil for your wheels,&rdquo; answered Jason, putting a note-book into
+ his confidant&rsquo;s hands. &ldquo;But mind you waste it not. No tricks, no false
+ play, with me; you know Jason, or, if you like the name better, you know
+ the Rattlesnake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will account for every penny,&rdquo; said Grabman, eagerly, and clasping his
+ hands, while his pale face grew livid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not doubt it, my quill-driver. Look sharp, start to-morrow. Get
+ thyself decent clothes, be sober, cleanly, and respectable. Act as a man
+ who sees before him 5,000 pounds. And now, light me downstairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the candle in his hand, Grabman stole down the rugged steps even more
+ timorously than Beck had ascended them, and put his finger to his mouth as
+ they came in the dread vicinity of No. 7. But Jason, or rather Gabriel
+ Varney, with that fearless, reckless bravado of temper which, while
+ causing half his guilt, threw at times a false glitter over its baseness,
+ piqued by the cowardice of his comrade, gave a lusty kick at the closed
+ door, and shouted out: &ldquo;Old grave-stealer, come out, and let me finish
+ your picture. Out, out! I say, out!&rdquo; Grabman left the candle on the steps,
+ and made but three bounds to his own room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the third shout of his disturber the resurrection-man threw open his
+ door violently and appeared at the gap, the upward flare of the candle
+ showing the deep lines ploughed in his hideous face, and the immense
+ strength of his gigantic trunk and limbs. Slight, fair, and delicate as he
+ was, Varney eyed him deliberately, and trembled not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want with me?&rdquo; said the terrible voice, tremulous with rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only to finish your portrait as Pluto. He was the god of Hell, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment the vast hand of the ogre hung like a great cloud over
+ Gabriel Varney. This last, ever on his guard, sprang aside, and the light
+ gleamed on the steel of a pistol. &ldquo;Hands off! Or&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The click of the pistol-cock finished the sentence. The ruffian halted. A
+ glare of disappointed fury gave a momentary lustre to his dull eyes.
+ &ldquo;P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I shall meet you again one o&rsquo; these days, or nights, and I shall
+ know ye in ten thousand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing like a bird in the hand, Master Grave-stealer. Where can we ever
+ meet again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps in the fields, p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps on the road, p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps at the Old Bailey,
+ p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps at the gallows, p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps in the convict-ship. I knows what that is!
+ I was chained night and day once to a chap jist like you. Didn&rsquo;t I break
+ his spurit; didn&rsquo;t I spile his sleep! Ho, ho! you looks a bit less
+ varmently howdacious now, my flash cove!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney hitherto had not known one pang of fear, one quicker beat of the
+ heart before. But the image presented to his irritable fancy (always prone
+ to brood over terrors),&mdash;the image of that companion chained to him
+ night and day,&mdash;suddenly quelled his courage; the image stood before
+ him palpably like the Oulos Oneiros,&mdash;the Evil Dream of the Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He breathed loud. The body-stealer&rsquo;s stupid sense saw that he had produced
+ the usual effect of terror, which gratified his brutal self-esteem; he
+ retreated slowly, inch by inch, to the door, followed by Varney&rsquo;s appalled
+ and staring eye, and closed it with such violence that the candle was
+ extinguished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney, not daring,&mdash;yes, literally not daring,&mdash;to call aloud
+ to Grabman for another light, crept down the dark stairs with hurried,
+ ghostlike steps; and after groping at the door-handle with one hand, while
+ the other grasped his pistol with a strain of horror, he succeeded at last
+ in winning access to the street, and stood a moment to collect himself in
+ the open air,&mdash;the damps upon his forehead, and his limbs trembling
+ like one who has escaped by a hairbreadth the crash of a falling house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0017" id="Blink2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. THE RAPE OF THE MATTRESS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That Mr. Grabman slept calmly that night is probable enough, for his
+ gin-bottle was empty the next morning; and it was with eyes more than
+ usually heavy that he dozily followed the movements of Beck, who,
+ according to custom, opened the shutters of the little den adjoining his
+ sitting-room, brushed his clothes, made his fire, set on the kettle to
+ boil, and laid his breakfast things, preparatory to his own departure to
+ the duties of the day. Stretching himself, however, and shaking off
+ slumber, as the remembrance of the enterprise he had undertaken glanced
+ pleasantly across him, Grabman sat up in his bed and said, in a voice
+ that, if not maudlin, was affectionate, and if not affectionate, was
+ maudlin,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beck, you are a good fellow. You have faults, you are human,&mdash;humanism
+ est errare; which means that you some times scorch my muffins. But, take
+ you all in all, you are a kind creature. Beck, I am going into the country
+ for some days. I shall leave my key in the hole in the wall,&mdash;you
+ know; take care of it when you come in. You were out late last night, my
+ poor fellow. Very wrong! Look well to yourself, or who knows? You may be
+ clutched by that blackguard resurrection-man, No. 7. Well, well, to think
+ of that Jason&rsquo;s foolhardiness! But he&rsquo;s the worse devil of the two. Eh!
+ what was I saying? And always give a look into my room every night before
+ you go to roost. The place swarms with cracksmen, and one can&rsquo;t be too
+ cautious. Lucky dog, you, to have nothing to be robbed of!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck winced at that last remark. Grabman did not seem to notice his
+ confusion, and proceeded, as he put on his stockings: &ldquo;And, Beck, you are
+ a good fellow, and have served me faithfully; when I come back, I will
+ bring you something handsome,&mdash;a backey-box or&mdash;who knows?&mdash;a
+ beautiful silver watch. Meanwhile, I think&mdash;let me see&mdash;yes, I
+ can give you this elegant pair of small-clothes. Put out my best,&mdash;the
+ black ones. And now, Beck, I&rsquo;ll not keep you any longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor sweep, with many pulls at his forelock, acknowledged the
+ munificent donation; and having finished all his preparations, hastened
+ first to his room, to examine at leisure, and with great admiration, the
+ drab small-clothes. &ldquo;Room,&rdquo; indeed, we can scarcely style the wretched
+ enclosure which Beck called his own. It was at the top of the house, under
+ the roof, and hot&mdash;oh, so hot&mdash;in the summer! It had one small
+ begrimed window, through which the light of heaven never came, for the
+ parapet, beneath which ran the choked gutter, prevented that; but the rain
+ and the wind came in. So sometimes, through four glassless frames, came a
+ fugitive tom-cat. As for the rats, they held the place as their own.
+ Accustomed to Beck, they cared nothing for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were the Mayors of that Palace; he only le roi faineant. They ran
+ over his bed at night; he often felt them on his face, and was convinced
+ they would have eaten him, if there had been anything worth eating upon
+ his bones; still, perhaps out of precaution rather than charity, he
+ generally left them a potato or two, or a crust of bread, to take off the
+ edge of their appetites. But Beck was far better off than most who
+ occupied the various settlements in that Alsatia,&mdash;he had his room to
+ himself. That was necessary to his sole luxury,&mdash;the inspection of
+ his treasury, the safety of his mattress; for it he paid, without
+ grumbling, what he thought was a very high rent. To this hole in the roof
+ there was no lock,&mdash;for a very good reason, there was no door to it.
+ You went up a ladder, as you would go into a loft. Now, it had often been
+ matter of much intense cogitation to Beck whether or not he should have a
+ door to his chamber; and the result of the cogitation was invariably the
+ same,&mdash;he dared not! What should he want with a door,&mdash;a door
+ with a lock to it? For one followed as a consequence to the other. Such a
+ novel piece of grandeur would be an ostentatious advertisement that he had
+ something to guard. He could have no pretence for it on the ground that he
+ was intruded on by neighbours; no step but his own was ever caught by him
+ ascending that ladder; it led to no other room. All the offices required
+ for the lodgment he performed himself. His supposed poverty was a better
+ safeguard than doors of iron. Besides this, a door, if dangerous, would be
+ superfluous; the moment it was suspected that Beck had something worth
+ guarding, that moment all the picklocks and skeleton keys in the
+ neighbourhood would be in a jingle. And a cracksman of high repute lodged
+ already on the ground-floor. So Beck&rsquo;s treasure, like the bird&rsquo;s nest, was
+ deposited as much out of sight as his instinct could contrive; and the
+ locks and bolts of civilized men were equally dispensed with by bird and
+ Beck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a rusty nail the sweep suspended the drab small-clothes, stroked them
+ down lovingly, and murmured, &ldquo;They be &lsquo;s too good for I; I should like to
+ pop &lsquo;em! But vould n&rsquo;t that be a shame? Beck, be n&rsquo;t you be a hungrateful
+ beast to go for to think of nothin&rsquo; but the tin, ven your &lsquo;art ought to
+ varm with hemotion? I vill vear &lsquo;em ven I vaits on him. Ven he sees his
+ own smalls bringing in the muffins, he will say, &lsquo;Beck, you becomes &lsquo;em!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fraught with this noble resolution, the sweep caught up his broom, crept
+ down the ladder, and with a furtive glance at the door of the room in
+ which the cracksman lived, let himself out and shambled his way to his
+ crossing. Grabman, in the mean while, dressed himself with more care than
+ usual, shaved his beard from a four days&rsquo; crop, and while seated at his
+ breakfast, read attentively over the notes which Varney had left to him,
+ pausing at times to make his own pencil memoranda. He then packed up such
+ few articles as so moderate a worshipper of the Graces might require,
+ deposited them in an old blue brief-bag, and this done, he opened his
+ door, and creeping to the threshold, listened carefully. Below, a few
+ sounds might be heard,&mdash;here, the wail of a child; there, the shrill
+ scold of a woman in that accent above all others adapted to scold,&mdash;the
+ Irish. Farther down still, the deep bass oath of the choleric
+ resurrection-man; but above, all was silent. Only one floor intervened
+ between Grabman&rsquo;s apartment and the ladder that led to Beck&rsquo;s loft. And
+ the inmates of that room gave no sound of life. Grabman took courage, and
+ shuffling off his shoes, ascended the stairs; he passed the closed door of
+ the room above; he seized the ladder with a shaking hand; he mounted, step
+ after step; he stood in Beck&rsquo;s room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, O Nicholas Grabman! some moralists may be harsh enough to condemn
+ thee for what thou art doing,&mdash;kneeling yonder in the dim light, by
+ that curtainless pallet, with greedy fingers feeling here and there, and a
+ placid, self-hugging smile upon thy pale lips. That poor vagabond whom
+ thou art about to despoil has served thee well and faithfully, has borne
+ with thine ill-humours, thy sarcasms, thy swearings, thy kicks, and
+ buffets; often, when in the bestial sleep of drunkenness he has found thee
+ stretched helpless on thy floor, with a kindly hand he has moved away the
+ sharp fender, too near that knavish head, now bent on his ruin, or closed
+ the open window, lest the keen air, that thy breath tainted, should visit
+ thee with rheum and fever. Small has been his guerdon for uncomplaining
+ sacrifice of the few hours spared to this weary drudge from his daily
+ toil,&mdash;small, but gratefully received. And if Beck had been taught to
+ pray, he would have prayed for thee as for a good man, O miserable sinner!
+ And thou art going now, Nicholas Grabman, upon an enterprise which
+ promises thee large gains, and thy purse is filled; and thou wantest
+ nothing for thy wants or thy swinish luxuries. Why should those shaking
+ fingers itch for the poor beggar-man&rsquo;s hoards?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But hadst thou been bound on an errand that would have given thee a
+ million, thou wouldst not have left unrifled that secret store which thy
+ prying eye had discovered, and thy hungry heart had coveted. No; since one
+ night,&mdash;fatal, alas! to the owner of loft and treasure, when, needing
+ Beck for some service, and fearing to call aloud (for the resurrection-man
+ in the floor below thee, whose oaths even now ascend to thine ear, sleeps
+ ill, and has threatened to make thee mute forever if thou disturbest him
+ in the few nights in which his dismal calling suffers him to sleep at
+ all), thou didst creep up the ladder, and didst see the unconscious miser
+ at his nightly work, and after the sight didst steal down again, smiling,&mdash;no;
+ since that night, no schoolboy ever more rootedly and ruthlessly set his
+ mind upon nest of linnet than thine was set upon the stores in Beck&rsquo;s
+ mattress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet why, O lawyer, should rigid moralists blame thee more than such of
+ thy tribe as live, honoured and respectable, upon the frail and the poor?
+ Who among them ever left loft or mattress while a rap could be wrung from
+ either? Matters it to Astraea whether the spoliation be made thus nakedly
+ and briefly, or by all the acknowledged forms in which, item on item,
+ six-and-eightpence on six-and-eightpence, the inexorable hand closes at
+ length on the last farthing of duped despair? Not&mdash;Heaven forbid!&mdash;that
+ we make thee, foul Nicholas Grabman, a type for all the class called
+ attorneys-at-law! Noble hearts, liberal minds, are there amongst that
+ brotherhood, we know and have experienced; but a type art thou of those
+ whom want and error and need have proved&mdash;alas! too well&mdash;the
+ lawyers of the poor. And even while we write, and even while ye read, many
+ a Grabman steals from helpless toil the savings of a life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ye poor hoards,&mdash;darling delights of your otherwise joyless owner,&mdash;how
+ easily has his very fondness made ye the prey of the spoiler! How
+ gleefully, when the pence swelled into a shilling, have they been
+ exchanged into the new bright piece of silver, the newest and brightest
+ that could be got; then the shillings into crowns, then the crowns into
+ gold,&mdash;got slyly and at a distance, and contemplated with what
+ rapture; so that at last the total lay manageable and light in its radiant
+ compass. And what a total! what a surprise to Grabman! Had it been but a
+ sixpence, he would have taken it; but to grasp sovereigns by the handful,
+ it was too much for him; and as he rose, he positively laughed, from a
+ sense of fun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But amongst his booty there was found one thing that specially moved his
+ mirth: it was a child&rsquo;s coral, with its little bells. Who could have given
+ Beck such a bauble, or how Beck could have refrained from turning it into
+ money, would have been a fit matter for speculation. But it was not that
+ at which Grabman chuckled; he laughed, first because it was an emblem of
+ the utter childishness and folly of the creature he was leaving penniless,
+ and secondly, because it furnished his ready wit with a capital
+ contrivance to shift Beck&rsquo;s indignation from his own shoulders to a party
+ more liable to suspicion. He left the coral on the floor near the bed,
+ stole down the ladder, reached his own room, took up his brief-bag, locked
+ his door, slipped the key in the rat-hole, where the trusty, plundered
+ Beck alone could find it, and went boldly downstairs; passing successively
+ the doors within which still stormed the resurrection-man, still wailed
+ the child, still shrieked the Irish shrew, he paused at the ground-floor
+ occupied by Bill the cracksman and his long-fingered, slender, quick-eyed
+ imps, trained already to pass through broken window-panes, on their
+ precocious progress to the hulks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was open, and gave a pleasant sight of the worthy family within.
+ Bill himself, a stout-looking fellow with a florid, jolly countenance, and
+ a pipe in his mouth, was sitting at his window, with his brawny legs
+ lolling on a table covered with the remains of a very tolerable breakfast.
+ Four small Bills were employed in certain sports which, no doubt,
+ according to the fashionable mode of education, instilled useful lessons
+ under the artful guise of playful amusement. Against the wall, at one
+ corner of the room, was affixed a row of bells, from which were suspended
+ exceedingly tempting apples by slender wires. Two of the boys were engaged
+ in the innocent entertainment of extricating the apples without
+ occasioning any alarm from the bells; a third was amusing himself at a
+ table, covered with mock rings and trinkets, in a way that seemed really
+ surprising; with the end of a finger, dipped probably in some glutinous
+ matter, he just touched one of the gewgaws, and lo, it vanished!&mdash;vanished
+ so magically that the quickest eye could scarcely trace whither; sometimes
+ up a cuff, sometimes into a shoe,&mdash;here, there, anywhere, except back
+ again upon the table. The fourth, an urchin apparently about five years
+ old,&mdash;he might be much younger, judging from his stunted size;
+ somewhat older, judging from the vicious acuteness of his face,&mdash;on
+ the floor under his father&rsquo;s chair, was diving his little hand into the
+ paternal pockets in search for a marble sportively hidden in those
+ capacious recesses. On the rising geniuses around him Bill the cracksman
+ looked, and his father&rsquo;s heart was proud. Pausing at the threshold,
+ Grabman looked in and said cheerfully, &ldquo;Good-day to you; good-day to you
+ all, my little dears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Grabman,&rdquo; said Bill, rising, and making a bow,&mdash;for Bill valued
+ himself much on his politeness,&mdash;&ldquo;come to blow a cloud, eh? Bob,&rdquo;
+ this to the eldest born, &ldquo;manners, sir; wipe your nose, and set a chair
+ for the gent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many thanks to you, Bill, but I can&rsquo;t stay now; I have a long journey to
+ take. But, bless my soul, how stupid I am! I have forgotten my
+ clothes-brush. I knew there was some thing on my mind all the way I was
+ coming downstairs. I was saying, &lsquo;Grabman, there is something forgotten!
+ &lsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what that &lsquo;ere feelin&rsquo; is,&rdquo; said Bill, thoughtfully; &ldquo;I had it
+ myself the night afore last; and sure enough, when I got to the &mdash;&mdash;.
+ But that&rsquo;s neither here nor there. Bob, run upstairs and fetch down Mr.
+ Grabman&rsquo;s clothes-brush. &lsquo;T is the least you can do for a gent who saved
+ your father from the fate of them &lsquo;ere innocent apples. Your fist,
+ Grabman. I have a heart in my buzzom; cut me open, and you will find there
+ `Halibi, and Grabman!&rsquo; Give Bob your key.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The brush is not in my room,&rdquo; answered Grabman; &ldquo;it is at the top of the
+ house, up the ladder, in Beck&rsquo;s loft,&mdash;Beck, the sweeper. The stupid
+ dog always keeps it there, and forgot to give it me. Sorry to occasion my
+ friend Bob so much trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bob has a soul above trouble; his father&rsquo;s heart beats in his buzzom.
+ Bob, track the dancers. Up like a lark, and down like a dump.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bob grinned, made a mow at Mr. Grabman, and scampered up the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You never attends our free-and-easy,&rdquo; said Bill; &ldquo;but we toasts you with
+ three times three, and up standing. &lsquo;T is a hungrateful world! But some
+ men has a heart; and to those who has a heart, Grabman is a trump!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure, whenever I can do you a service, you may reckon on me.
+ Meanwhile, if you could get that cursed bullying fellow who lives under me
+ to be a little more civil, you would oblige me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Under you? No. 7? No. 7, is it? Grabman, h-am I a man? Is this a h-arm,
+ and this a bunch of fives? I dares do all that does become a man; but No.
+ 7 is a body-snatcher! No. 7 has bullied me, and I bore it! No. 7 might
+ whop me, and this h-arm would let him whop! He lives with graves and
+ churchyards and stiff &lsquo;uns, that damnable No. 7! Ask some&rsquo;at else,
+ Grabman. I dares not touch No. 7 any more than the ghostesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grabman sneered as he saw that Bill, stout rogue as he was, turned pale
+ while he spoke; but at that moment Bob reappeared with the clothes-brush,
+ which the ex-attorney thrust into his pocket, and shaking Bill by the
+ hand, and patting Bob on the head, he set out on his journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill reseated himself, muttering, &ldquo;Bully a body-snatcher! Drot that
+ Grabman, does he want to get rid of poor Bill?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Bob exhibited slyly, to his second brother, the sight of Beck&rsquo;s
+ stolen coral. The children took care not to show it to their father. They
+ were already inspired by the laudable ambition to set up in business on
+ their own account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0018" id="Blink2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. PERCIVAL VISITS LUCRETIA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Having once ascertained the house in which Helen lived, it was no
+ difficult matter for St. John to learn the name of the guardian whom Beck
+ had supposed to be her mother. No common delight mingled with Percival&rsquo;s
+ amaze when in that name he recognized one borne by his own kinswoman. Very
+ little indeed of the family history was known to him. Neither his father
+ nor his mother ever willingly conversed of the fallen heiress,&mdash;it
+ was a subject which the children had felt to be proscribed; but in the
+ neighbourhood, Percival had of course heard some mention of Lucretia as
+ the haughty and accomplished Miss Clavering, who had, to the astonishment
+ of all, stooped to a mesalliance with her uncle&rsquo;s French librarian. That
+ her loss of the St. John property, the succession of Percival&rsquo;s father,
+ were unexpected by the villagers and squires around, and perhaps set down
+ to the caprice of Sir Miles, or to an intellect impaired by apoplectic
+ attacks, it was not likely that he should have heard. The rich have the
+ polish of their education, and the poor that instinctive tact, so
+ wonderful amongst the agricultural peasantry, to prevent such unmannerly
+ disclosures or unwelcome hints; and both by rich and poor, the Vernon St.
+ Johns were too popular and respected for wanton allusions to subjects
+ calculated to pain them. All, therefore, that Percival knew of his
+ relation was that she had resided from infancy with Sir Miles; that after
+ their uncle&rsquo;s death she had married an inferior in rank, of the name of
+ Dalibard, and settled abroad; that she was a person of peculiar manners,
+ and, he had heard somewhere, of rare gifts. He had been unable to learn
+ the name of the young lady staying with Madame Dalibard; he had learned
+ only that she went by some other name, and was not the daughter of the
+ lady who rented the house. Certainly it was possible that this last might
+ not be his kinswoman, after all. The name, though strange to English ears,
+ and not common in France, was no sufficient warrant for Percival&rsquo;s high
+ spirits at the thought that he had now won legitimate and regular access
+ to the house; still, it allowed him to call, it furnished a fair excuse
+ for a visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How long he was at his toilet that day, poor boy! How sedulously, with
+ comb and brush, he sought to smooth into straight precision that luxuriant
+ labyrinth of jetty curls, which had never cost him a thought before! Gil
+ Blas says that the toilet is a pleasure to the young, though a labour to
+ the old; Percival St. John&rsquo;s toilet was no pleasure to him that anxious
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he tore himself, dissatisfied and desperate, from the glass,
+ caught his hat and his whip, threw himself on his horse, and rode, at
+ first very fast, and at last very slowly, to the old, decayed, shabby,
+ neglected house that lay hid, like the poverty of fallen pride, amidst the
+ trim villas and smart cottages of fair and flourishing Brompton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same servant who had opened the gate to Ardworth appeared to his
+ summons, and after eying him for some moments with a listless, stupid
+ stare, said: &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be after some mistake!&rdquo; and turned away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, stop!&rdquo; cried Percival, trying to intrude himself through the gate;
+ but the servant blocked up the entrance sturdily. &ldquo;It is no mistake at
+ all, my good lady. I have come to see Madame Dalibard, my&mdash;my
+ relation!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your relation!&rdquo; and again the woman stared at Percival with a look
+ through the dull vacancy of which some distrust was dimly perceptible.
+ &ldquo;Bide a bit there, and give us your name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival gave his card to the servant with his sweetest and most
+ persuasive smile. She took it with one hand, and with the other turned the
+ key in the gate, leaving Percival outside. It was five minutes before she
+ returned; and she then, with the same prim, smileless expression of
+ countenance, opened the gate and motioned him to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kind-hearted boy sighed as he cast a glance at the desolate and
+ poverty-stricken appearance of the house, and thought within himself: &ldquo;Ah,
+ pray Heaven she may be my relation; and then I shall have the right to
+ find her and that sweet girl a very different home!&rdquo; The old woman threw
+ open the drawing-room door, and Percival was in the presence of his
+ deadliest foe! The armchair was turned towards the entrance, and from
+ amidst the coverings that hid the form, the remarkable countenance of
+ Madame Dalibard emerged, sharp and earnest, directly fronting the
+ intruder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; she said slowly, and, as it were, devouring him with her keen,
+ steadfast eyes,&mdash;&ldquo;so you are Percival St. John! Welcome! I did not
+ know that we should ever meet. I have not sought you, you seek me! Strange&mdash;yes,
+ strange&mdash;that the young and the rich should seek the suffering and
+ the poor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surprised and embarrassed by this singular greeting, Percival halted
+ abruptly in the middle of the room; and there was something inexpressibly
+ winning in his shy, yet graceful confusion. It seemed, with silent
+ eloquence, to apologize and to deprecate. And when, in his silvery voice,
+ scarcely yet tuned to the fulness of manhood, he said feelingly, &ldquo;Forgive
+ me, madam, but my mother is not in England,&rdquo; the excuse evinced such
+ delicacy of idea, so exquisite a sense of high breeding, that the calm
+ assurance of worldly ease could not have more attested the chivalry of the
+ native gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have nothing to forgive, Mr. St. John,&rdquo; said Lucretia, with a softened
+ manner. &ldquo;Pardon me rather that my infirmities do not allow me to rise to
+ receive you. This seat,&mdash;here,&mdash;next to me. You have a strong
+ likeness to your father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival received this last remark as a compliment, and bowed. Then, as he
+ lifted his ingenuous brow, he took for the first time a steady view of his
+ new-found relation. The peculiarities of Lucretia&rsquo;s countenance in youth
+ had naturally deepened with middle age. The contour, always too sharp and
+ pronounced, was now strong and bony as a man&rsquo;s; the line between the
+ eyebrows was hollowed into a furrow. The eye retained its old uneasy,
+ sinister, sidelong glance, or at rare moments (as when Percival entered),
+ its searching penetration and assured command; but the eyelids themselves,
+ red and injected, as with grief or vigil, gave something haggard and wild,
+ whether to glance or gaze. Despite the paralysis of the frame, the face,
+ though pale and thin, showed no bodily decay. A vigour surpassing the
+ strength of woman might still be seen in the play of the bold muscles, the
+ firmness of the contracted lips. What physicians call &ldquo;vitality,&rdquo; and
+ trace at once (if experienced) on the physiognomy as the prognostic of
+ long life, undulated restlessly in every aspect of the face, every
+ movement of those thin, nervous hands, which, contrasting the rest of that
+ motionless form, never seemed to be at rest. The teeth were still white
+ and regular, as in youth; and when they shone out in speaking, gave a
+ strange, unnatural freshness to a face otherwise so worn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Percival gazed, and, while gazing, saw those wandering eyes bent down,
+ and yet felt they watched him, a thrill almost of fear shot through his
+ heart. Nevertheless, so much more impressionable was he to charitable and
+ trustful than to suspicious and timid emotions that when Madame Dalibard,
+ suddenly looking up and shaking her head gently, said, &ldquo;You see but a sad
+ wreck, young kinsman,&rdquo; all those instincts, which Nature itself seemed to
+ dictate for self-preservation, vanished into heavenly tenderness and pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said, rising, and pressing one of those deadly hands in both his
+ own, while tears rose to his eyes,&mdash;&ldquo;Ah! since you call me kinsman, I
+ have all a kinsman&rsquo;s privileges. You must have the best advice, the most
+ skilful surgeons. Oh, you will recover; you must not despond.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s lips moved uneasily. This kindness took her by surprise. She
+ turned desperately away from the human gleam that shot across the
+ sevenfold gloom of her soul. &ldquo;Do not think of me,&rdquo; she said, with a forced
+ smile; &ldquo;it is my peculiarity not to like allusion to myself, though this
+ time I provoked it. Speak to me of the old cedar-trees at Laughton,&mdash;do
+ they stand still? You are the master of Laughton now! It is a noble
+ heritage!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then St. John, thinking to please her, talked of the old manor-house,
+ described the improvements made by his father, spoke gayly of those which
+ he himself contemplated; and as he ran on, Lucretia&rsquo;s brow, a moment
+ ruffled, grew smooth and smoother, and the gloom settled back upon her
+ soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All at once she interrupted him. &ldquo;How did you discover me? Was it through
+ Mr. Varney? I bade him not mention me: yet how else could you learn?&rdquo; As
+ she spoke, there was an anxious trouble in her tone, which increased while
+ she observed that St. John looked confused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he began hesitatingly, and brushing his hat with his hand, &ldquo;why&mdash;perhaps
+ you may have heard from the&mdash;that is&mdash;I think there is a young
+ &mdash;&mdash;. Ah, it is you, it is you! I see you once again!&rdquo; And
+ springing up, he was at the side of Helen, who at that instant had entered
+ the room, and now, her eyes downcast, her cheeks blushing, her breast
+ gently heaving, heard, but answered not that passionate burst of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Startled, Madame Dalibard (her hands firmly grasping the sides of her
+ chair) contemplated the two. She had heard nothing, guessed nothing of
+ their former meeting. All that had passed before between them was unknown
+ to her. Yet there was evidence unmistakable, conclusive: the son of her
+ despoiler loved the daughter of her rival; and&mdash;if the virgin heart
+ speaks by the outward sign&mdash;those downcast eyes, those blushing
+ cheeks, that heaving breast, told that he did not love in vain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before her lurid and murderous gaze, as if to defy her, the two inheritors
+ of a revenge unglutted by the grave stood, united mysteriously together.
+ Up, from the vast ocean of her hate, rose that poor isle of love; there,
+ unconscious of the horror around them, the victims found their footing!
+ How beautiful at that hour their youth; their very ignorance of their own
+ emotions; their innocent gladness; their sweet trouble! The fell gazer
+ drew a long breath of fiendlike complacency and glee, and her hands opened
+ wide, and then slowly closed, as if she felt them in her grasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0019" id="Blink2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. THE ROSE BENEATH THE UPAS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And from that day Percival had his privileged entry into Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s
+ house. The little narrative of the circumstances connected with his first
+ meeting with Helen, partly drawn from Percival, partly afterwards from
+ Helen (with blushing and faltered excuses from the latter for not having
+ mentioned before an incident that might, perhaps needlessly, vex or alarm
+ her aunt in so delicate a state of health), was received by Lucretia with
+ rare graciousness. The connection, not only between herself and Percival,
+ but between Percival and Helen, was allowed and even dwelt upon by Madame
+ Dalibard as a natural reason for permitting the artless intimacy which
+ immediately sprang up between these young persons. She permitted Percival
+ to call daily, to remain for hours, to share in their simple meals, to
+ wander alone with Helen in the garden, assist her to bind up the ragged
+ flowers, and sit by her in the old ivy-grown arbour when their work was
+ done. She affected to look upon them both as children, and to leave to
+ them that happy familiarity which childhood only sanctions, and compared
+ to which the affection of maturer years seems at once coarse and cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they grew more familiar, the differences and similarities in their
+ characters came out, and nothing more delightful than the harmony into
+ which even the contrasts blended ever invited the guardian angel to pause
+ and smile. As flowers in some trained parterre relieve each other, now
+ softening, now heightening, each several hue, till all unite in one
+ concord of interwoven beauty, so these two blooming natures, brought
+ together, seemed, where varying still, to melt and fuse their affluences
+ into one wealth of innocence and sweetness. Both had a native buoyancy and
+ cheerfulness of spirit, a noble trustfulness in others, a singular candour
+ and freshness of mind and feeling. But beneath the gayety of Helen there
+ was a soft and holy under-stream of thoughtful melancholy, a high and
+ religious sentiment, that vibrated more exquisitely to the subtle
+ mysteries of creation, the solemn unison between the bright world without
+ and the grave destinies of that world within (which is an imperishable
+ soul), than the lighter and more vivid youthfulness of Percival had yet
+ conceived. In him lay the germs of the active mortal who might win
+ distinction in the bold career we run upon the surface of the earth. In
+ her there was that finer and more spiritual essence which lifts the poet
+ to the golden atmosphere of dreams, and reveals in glimpses to the saint
+ the choral Populace of Heaven. We do not say that Helen would ever have
+ found the utterance of the poet, that her reveries, undefined and
+ unanalyzed, could have taken the sharp, clear form of words; for to the
+ poet practically developed and made manifest to the world, many other
+ gifts besides the mere poetic sense are needed,&mdash;stern study, and
+ logical generalization of scattered truths, and patient observation of the
+ characters of men, and the wisdom that comes from sorrow and passion, and
+ a sage&rsquo;s experience of things actual, embracing the dark secrets of human
+ infirmity and crime. But despite all that has been said in disparagement
+ or disbelief of &ldquo;mute, inglorious Miltons,&rdquo; we maintain that there are
+ natures in which the divinest element of poetry exists, the purer and more
+ delicate for escaping from bodily form and evaporating from the coarser
+ vessels into which the poet, so called, must pour the ethereal fluid.
+ There is a certain virtue within us, comprehending our subtlest and
+ noblest emotions, which is poetry while untold, and grows pale and poor in
+ proportion as we strain it into poems. Nay, it may be said of this airy
+ property of our inmost being that, more or less, it departs from us
+ according as we give it forth into the world, even, as only by the loss of
+ its particles, the rose wastes its perfume on the air. So this more
+ spiritual sensibility dwelt in Helen as the latent mesmerism in water, as
+ the invisible fairy in an enchanted ring. It was an essence or divinity,
+ shrined and shrouded in herself, which gave her more intimate and vital
+ union with all the influences of the universe, a companion to her
+ loneliness, an angel hymning low to her own listening soul. This made her
+ enjoyment of Nature, in its merest trifles, exquisite and profound; this
+ gave to her tenderness of heart all the delicious and sportive variety
+ love borrows from imagination; this lifted her piety above the mere forms
+ of conventional religion, and breathed into her prayers the ecstasy of the
+ saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Helen was not the less filled with the sweet humanities of her age and
+ sex; her very gravity was tinged with rosy light, as a western cloud with
+ the sun. She had sportiveness and caprice, and even whim, as the
+ butterfly, though the emblem of the soul, still flutters wantonly over
+ every wild-flower, and expands its glowing wings on the sides of the
+ beaten road. And with a sense of weakness in the common world (growing out
+ of her very strength in nobler atmospheres), she leaned the more
+ trustfully on the strong arm of her young adorer, not fancying that the
+ difference between them arose from superiority in her; but rather as a
+ bird, once tamed, flies at the sight of the hawk to the breast of its
+ owner, so from each airy flight into the loftier heaven, let but the
+ thought of danger daunt her wing, and, as in a more powerful nature, she
+ took refuge on that fostering heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The love between these children&mdash;for so, if not literally in years,
+ in their newness to all that steals the freshness and the dew from maturer
+ life they may be rightly called&mdash;was such as befitted those whose
+ souls have not forfeited the Eden. It was more like the love of fairies
+ than of human beings. They showed it to each other innocently and frankly;
+ yet of love as we of the grosser creation call it, with its impatient
+ pains and burning hopes, they never spoke nor dreamed. It was an
+ unutterable, ecstatic fondness, a clinging to each other in thought,
+ desire, and heart, a joy more than mortal in each other&rsquo;s presence; yet,
+ in parting, not that idle and empty sorrow which unfits the weak for the
+ homelier demands on time and life, and this because of the wondrous trust
+ in themselves and in the future, which made a main part of their
+ credulous, happy natures. Neither felt fear nor jealousy, or if jealousy
+ came, it was the pretty, childlike jealousies which have no sting,&mdash;of
+ the bird, if Helen listened to its note too long; of the flower, if
+ Percival left Helen&rsquo;s side too quickly to tie up its drooping petals or
+ refresh its dusty leaves. Close by the stir of the great city, with all
+ its fret and chafe and storm of life, in the desolate garden of that
+ sombre house, and under the withering eyes of relentless Crime, revived
+ the Arcady of old,&mdash;the scene vocal to the reeds of idyllist and
+ shepherd; and in the midst of the iron Tragedy, harmlessly and
+ unconsciously arose the strain of the Pastoral Music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a vain effort to describe the state of Lucretia&rsquo;s mind while
+ she watched the progress of the affection she had favoured, and gazed on
+ the spectacle of the fearless happiness she had promoted. The image of a
+ felicity at once so great and so holy wore to her gloomy sight the aspect
+ of a mocking Fury. It rose in contrast to her own ghastly and
+ crime-stained life; it did not upbraid her conscience with guilt so loudly
+ as it scoffed at her intellect for folly. These children, playing on the
+ verge of life, how much more of life&rsquo;s true secret did they already know
+ than she, with all her vast native powers and wasted realms of blackened
+ and charred experience! For what had she studied, and schemed, and
+ calculated, and toiled, and sinned? As a conqueror stricken unto death
+ would render up all the regions vanquished by his sword for one drop of
+ water to his burning lips, how gladly would she have given all the
+ knowledge bought with blood and fire, to feel one moment as those children
+ felt! Then, from out her silent and grim despair, stood forth, fierce and
+ prominent, the great fiend, Revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a monomania not uncommon to those who have made self the centre of
+ being, Lucretia referred to her own sullen history of wrong and passion
+ all that bore analogy to it, however distant. She had never been enabled,
+ without an intolerable pang of hate and envy, to contemplate courtship and
+ love in others. From the rudest shape to the most refined, that
+ master-passion in the existence, at least of woman,&mdash;reminding her of
+ her own brief episode of human tenderness and devotion,&mdash;opened every
+ wound and wrung every fibre of a heart that, while crime had indurated it
+ to most emotions, memory still left morbidly sensitive to one. But if
+ tortured by the sight of love in those who had had no connection with her
+ fate, who stood apart from her lurid orbit and were gazed upon only afar
+ (as a lost soul, from the abyss, sees the gleam of angels&rsquo; wings within
+ some planet it never has explored), how ineffably more fierce and
+ intolerable was the wrath that seized her when, in her haunted
+ imagination, she saw all Susan&rsquo;s rapture at the vows of Mainwaring
+ mantling in Helen&rsquo;s face! All that might have disarmed a heart as hard,
+ but less diseased, less preoccupied by revenge, only irritated more the
+ consuming hate of that inexorable spirit. Helen&rsquo;s seraphic purity, her
+ exquisite, overflowing kindness, ever forgetting self, her airy
+ cheerfulness, even her very moods of melancholy, calm and seemingly
+ causeless as they were, perpetually galled and blistered that writhing,
+ preternatural susceptibility which is formed by the consciousness of
+ infamy, the dreary egotism of one cut off from the charities of the world,
+ with whom all mirth is sardonic convulsion, all sadness rayless and
+ unresigned despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the two, Percival inspired her with feelings the most akin to humanity.
+ For him, despite her bitter memories of his father, she felt something of
+ compassion, and shrank from the touch of his frank hand in remorse. She
+ had often need to whisper to herself that his life was an obstacle to the
+ heritage of the son of whom, as we have seen, she was in search, and whom,
+ indeed, she believed she had already found in John Ardworth; that it was
+ not in wrath and in vengeance that this victim was to be swept into the
+ grave, but as an indispensable sacrifice to a cherished object, a
+ determined policy. As, in the studies of her youth, she had adopted the
+ Machiavelism of ancient State-craft as a rule admissible in private life,
+ so she seemed scarcely to admit as a crime that which was but the removal
+ of a barrier between her aim and her end. Before she had become personally
+ acquainted with Percival she had rejected all occasion to know him. She
+ had suffered Varney to call upon him as the old protege of Sir Miles, and
+ to wind into his intimacy, meaning to leave to her accomplice, when the
+ hour should arrive, the dread task of destruction. This not from
+ cowardice, for Gabriel had once rightly described her when he said that if
+ she lived with shadows she could quell them, but simply because, more
+ intellectually unsparing than constitutionally cruel (save where the old
+ vindictive memories thoroughly unsexed her), this was a victim whose pangs
+ she desired not to witness, over whose fate it was no luxury to gloat and
+ revel. She wished not to see nor to know him living, only to learn that he
+ was no more, and that Helen alone stood between Laughton and her son. Now
+ that he had himself, as if with predestined feet, crossed her threshold,
+ that he, like Helen, had delivered himself into her toils, the hideous
+ guilt, before removed from her hands, became haunting, fronted her face to
+ face, and filled her with a superstitious awe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, her outward manner to both her meditated victims, if moody and
+ fitful at times, was not such as would have provoked suspicion even in
+ less credulous hearts. From the first entry of Helen under her roof she
+ had been formal and measured in her welcome,&mdash;kept her, as it were,
+ aloof, and affected no prodigal superfluity of dissimulation; but she had
+ never been positively harsh or unkind in word or in deed, and had coldly
+ excused herself for the repulsiveness of her manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am irritable,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;from long suffering, I am unsocial from
+ habitual solitude; do not expect from me the fondness and warmth that
+ should belong to our relationship. Do not harass yourself with vain
+ solicitude for one whom all seeming attention but reminds more painfully
+ of infirmity, and who, even thus stricken down, would be independent of
+ all cares not bought and paid for. Be satisfied to live here in all
+ reasonable liberty, to follow your own habits and caprices uncontrolled.
+ Regard me but as a piece of necessary furniture. You can never displease
+ me but when you notice that I live and suffer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Helen wept bitterly at these hard words when first spoken, it was not
+ with anger that her loving heart was so thrown back upon herself. On the
+ contrary, she became inspired with a compassion so great that it took the
+ character of reverence. She regarded this very coldness as a mournful
+ dignity. She felt grateful that one who could thus dispense with, should
+ yet have sought her. She had heard her mother say that she had been under
+ great obligations to Lucretia; and now, when she was forbidden to repay
+ them even by a kiss on those weary eyelids, a daughter&rsquo;s hand to that
+ sleepless pillow; when she saw that the barrier first imposed was
+ irremovable, that no time diminished the distance her aunt set between
+ them, that the least approach to the tenderness of service beyond the most
+ casual offices really seemed but to fret those excitable nerves, and fever
+ the hand that she ventured timorously to clasp,&mdash;she retreated into
+ herself with a sad amaze that increased her pity and heightened her
+ respect. To her, love seemed so necessary a thing in the helplessness of
+ human life, even when blessed with health and youth, that this rejection
+ of all love in one so bowed and crippled, struck her imagination as
+ something sublime in its dreary grandeur and stoic pride of independence.
+ She regarded it as of old a tender and pious nun would have regarded the
+ asceticism of some sanctified recluse,&mdash;as Theresa (had she lived in
+ the same age) might have regarded Saint Simeon Stylites existing aloft
+ from human sympathy on the roofless summit of his column of stone; and
+ with this feeling she sought to inspire Percival. He had the heart to
+ enter into her compassion, but not the imagination to sympathize with her
+ reverence. Even the repugnant awe that he had first conceived for Madame
+ Dalibard, so bold was he by temperament, he had long since cast off; he
+ recognized only the moroseness and petulance of an habitual invalid, and
+ shook playfully his glossy curls when Helen, with her sweet seriousness,
+ insisted on his recognizing more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this house few, indeed, were the visitors admitted. The Miverses, whom
+ the benevolent officiousness of Mr. Fielden had originally sent thither to
+ see their young kinswoman, now and then came to press Helen to join some
+ party to the theatre or Vauxhall, or a picnic in Richmond Park; but when
+ they found their overtures, which had at first been politely accepted by
+ Madame Dalibard, were rejected, they gradually ceased their visits,
+ wounded and indignant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain it was that Lucretia had at one time eagerly caught at their
+ well-meant civilities to Helen,&mdash;now she as abruptly declined them.
+ Why? It would be hard to plumb into all the black secrets of that heart.
+ It would have been but natural to her, who shrank from dooming Helen to no
+ worse calamity than a virgin&rsquo;s grave, to have designed to throw her into
+ such uncongenial guidance, amidst all the manifold temptations of the
+ corrupt city,&mdash;to have suffered her to be seen and to be ensnared by
+ those gallants ever on the watch for defenceless beauty; and to contrast
+ with their elegance of mien and fatal flatteries the grossness of the
+ companions selected for her, and the unloving discomfort of the home into
+ which she had been thrown. But now that St. John had appeared, that
+ Helen&rsquo;s heart and fancy were steeled alike against more dangerous
+ temptation, the object to be obtained from the pressing courtesy of Mrs.
+ Mivers existed no more. The vengeance flowed into other channels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only other visitors at the house were John Ardworth and Gabriel
+ Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard watched vigilantly the countenance and manner of Ardworth
+ when, after presenting him to Percival, she whispered: &ldquo;I am glad you
+ assured me as to your sentiments for Helen. She had found there the lover
+ you wished for her,&mdash;&lsquo;gay and handsome as herself.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the sudden paleness that overspread Ardworth&rsquo;s face, in his
+ compressed lips and convulsive start, she read with unspeakable rage the
+ untold secret of his heart, till the rage gave way to complacency at the
+ thought that the last insult to her wrongs was spared her,&mdash;that her
+ son (as son she believed he was) could not now, at least, be the
+ successful suitor of her loathed sister&rsquo;s loathed child. Her discovery,
+ perhaps, confirmed her in her countenance to Percival&rsquo;s progressive
+ wooing, and half reconciled her to the pangs it inflicted on herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first introduction Ardworth had scarcely glanced at Percival. He
+ regarded him but as the sleek flutterer in the sunshine of fortune. And
+ for the idle, the gay, the fair, the well-dressed and wealthy, the sturdy
+ workman of his own rough way felt something of the uncharitable disdain
+ which the laborious have-nots too usually entertain for the prosperous
+ haves. But the moment the unwelcome intelligence of Madame Dalibard was
+ conveyed to him, the smooth-faced boy swelled into dignity and importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it was not merely as a rival that that strong, manly heart, after the
+ first natural agony, regarded Percival. No, he looked upon him less with
+ anger than with interest,&mdash;as the one in whom Helen&rsquo;s happiness was
+ henceforth to be invested. And to Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s astonishment,&mdash;for
+ this nature was wholly new to her experience,&mdash;she saw him, even in
+ that first interview, composing his rough face to smiles, smoothing his
+ bluff, imperious accents into courtesy, listening patiently, watching
+ benignly, and at last thrusting his large hand frankly forth, griping
+ Percival&rsquo;s slender fingers in his own; and then, with an indistinct
+ chuckle that seemed half laugh and half groan, as if he did not dare to
+ trust himself further, he made his wonted unceremonious nod, and strode
+ hurriedly from the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he came again and again, almost daily, for about a fortnight.
+ Sometimes, without entering the house, he would join the young people in
+ the garden, assist them with awkward hands in their playful work on the
+ garden, or sit with them in the ivied bower; and warming more and more
+ each time he came, talk at last with the cordial frankness of an elder
+ brother. There was no disguise in this; he began to love Percival,&mdash;what
+ would seem more strange to the superficial, to admire him. Genius has a
+ quick perception of the moral qualities; genius, which, differing thus
+ from mere talent, is more allied to the heart than to the head,
+ sympathizes genially with goodness. Ardworth respected that young,
+ ingenuous, unpolluted mind; he himself felt better and purer in its
+ atmosphere. Much of the affection he cherished for Helen passed thus
+ beautifully and nobly into his sentiments for the one whom Helen not
+ unworthily preferred. And they grew so fond of him,&mdash;as the young and
+ gentle ever will grow fond of genius, however rough, once admitted to its
+ companionship!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival by this time had recalled to his mind where he had first seen
+ that strong-featured, dark-browed countenance, and he gayly reminded
+ Ardworth of his discourtesy, on the brow of the hill which commanded the
+ view of London. That reminiscence made his new friend writhe; for then,
+ amidst all his ambitious visions of the future, he had seen Helen in the
+ distance,&mdash;the reward of every labour, the fairest star in his
+ horizon. But he strove stoutly against the regret of the illusion lost;
+ the vivendi causae were left him still, and for the nymph that had glided
+ from his clasp, he clung at least to the laurel that was left in her
+ place. In the folds of his robust fortitude Ardworth thus wrapped his
+ secret. Neither of his young playmates suspected it. He would have
+ disdained himself if he had so poisoned their pleasure. That he suffered
+ when alone, much and bitterly, is not to be denied; but in that masculine
+ and complete being, Love took but its legitimate rank amidst the passions
+ and cares of man. It soured no existence, it broke no heart; the wind
+ swept some blossoms from the bough, and tossed wildly the agitated
+ branches from root to summit, but the trunk stood firm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some of these visits to Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s, Ardworth renewed with her
+ the more private conversation which had so unsettled his past convictions
+ as to his birth, and so disturbed the calm, strong currents of his mind.
+ He was chiefly anxious to learn what conjectures Madame Dalibard had
+ formed as to his parentage, and what ground there was for belief that he
+ was near in blood to herself, or that he was born to a station less
+ dependent on continuous exertion; but on these points the dark sibyl
+ preserved an obstinate silence. She was satisfied with the hints she had
+ already thrown out, and absolutely refused to say more till better
+ authorized by the inquiries she had set on foot. Artfully she turned from
+ these topics of closer and more household interest to those on which she
+ had previously insisted, connected with the general knowledge of mankind,
+ and the complicated science of practical life. To fire his genius, wing
+ his energies, inflame his ambition above that slow, laborious drudgery to
+ which he had linked the chances of his career, and which her fiery and
+ rapid intellect was wholly unable to comprehend&mdash;save as a waste of
+ life for uncertain and distant objects&mdash;became her task. And she saw
+ with delight that Ardworth listened to her more assentingly than he had
+ done at first. In truth, the pain shut within his heart, the conflict
+ waged keenly between his reason and his passion, unfitted him for the time
+ for mere mechanical employment, in which his genius could afford him no
+ consolation. Now, genius is given to man, not only to enlighten others,
+ but to comfort as well as to elevate himself. Thus, in all the sorrows of
+ actual existence, the man is doubly inclined to turn to his genius for
+ distraction. Harassed in this world of action, he knocks at the gate of
+ that world of idea or fancy which he is privileged to enter; he escapes
+ from the clay to the spirit. And rarely, till some great grief comes, does
+ the man in whom the celestial fire is lodged know all the gift of which he
+ is possessed. At last Ardworth&rsquo;s visits ceased abruptly. He shut himself
+ up once more in his chambers; but the law books were laid aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney, who generally contrived to call when Ardworth was not there,
+ seldom interrupted the lovers in their little paradise of the garden; but
+ he took occasion to ripen and cement his intimacy with Percival. Sometimes
+ he walked or (if St. John had his cabriolet) drove home and dined with
+ him, tete-a-tete, in Curzon Street; and as he made Helen his chief subject
+ of conversation, Percival could not but esteem him amongst the most
+ agreeable of men. With Helen, when Percival was not there, Varney held
+ some secret conferences,&mdash;secret even from Percival. Two or three
+ times, before the hour in which Percival was accustomed to come, they had
+ been out together; and Helen&rsquo;s face looked more cheerful than usual on
+ their return. It was not surprising that Gabriel Varney, so displeasing to
+ a man like Ardworth, should have won little less favour with Helen than
+ with Percival; for, to say nothing of an ease and suavity of manner which
+ stole into the confidence of those in whom to confide was a natural
+ propensity, his various acquisitions and talents, imposing from the
+ surface over which they spread, and the glitter which they made, had an
+ inevitable effect upon a mind so susceptible as Helen&rsquo;s to admiration for
+ art and respect for knowledge. But what chiefly conciliated her to Varney,
+ whom she regarded, moreover, as her aunt&rsquo;s most intimate friend, was that
+ she was persuaded he was unhappy, and wronged by the world of fortune.
+ Varney had a habit of so representing himself,&mdash;of dwelling with a
+ bitter eloquence, which his natural malignity made forcible, on the
+ injustice of the world to superior intellect. He was a great accuser of
+ Fate. It is the illogical weakness of some evil natures to lay all their
+ crimes, and the consequences of crime, upon Destiny. There was a heat, a
+ vigour, a rush of words, and a readiness of strong, if trite, imagery in
+ what Varney said that deceived the young into the monstrous error that he
+ was an enthusiast,&mdash;misanthropical, perhaps, but only so from
+ enthusiasm. How could Helen, whose slightest thought, when a star broke
+ forth from the cloud, or a bird sung suddenly from the copse, had more of
+ wisdom and of poetry than all Varney&rsquo;s gaudy and painted seemings ever
+ could even mimic,&mdash;how could she be so deceived? Yet so it was. Here
+ stood a man whose youth she supposed had been devoted to refined and
+ elevating pursuits, gifted, neglected, disappointed, solitary, and
+ unhappy. She saw little beyond. You had but to touch her pity to win her
+ interest and to excite her trust. Of anything further, even had Percival
+ never existed, she could not have dreamed. It was because a secret and
+ undefinable repugnance, in the midst of pity, trust, and friendship, put
+ Varney altogether out of the light of a possible lover, that all those
+ sentiments were so easily kindled. This repugnance arose not from the
+ disparity between their years; it was rather that nameless uncongeniality
+ which does not forbid friendship, but is irreconcilable with love. To do
+ Varney justice, he never offered to reconcile the two. Not for love did he
+ secretly confer with Helen; not for love did his heart beat against the
+ hand which reposed so carelessly on his murderous arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0020" id="Blink2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. THE RATTLE OF THE SNAKE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The progress of affection between natures like those of Percival and
+ Helen, favoured by free and constant intercourse, was naturally rapid. It
+ was scarcely five weeks from the day he had first seen Helen, and he
+ already regarded her as his plighted bride. During the earlier days of his
+ courtship, Percival, enamoured and absorbed for the first time in his
+ life, did not hasten to make his mother the confidante of his happiness.
+ He had written but twice; and though he said briefly, in the second
+ letter, that he had discovered two relations, both interesting and one
+ charming, he had deferred naming them or entering into detail. This not
+ alone from that indescribable coyness which all have experienced in
+ addressing even those with whom they are most intimate, in the early,
+ half-unrevealed, and mystic emotions of first love, but because Lady
+ Diary&rsquo;s letters had been so full of her sister&rsquo;s declining health, of her
+ own anxieties and fears, that he had shrunk from giving her a new subject
+ of anxiety; and a confidence full of hope and joy seemed to him unfeeling
+ and unseasonable. He knew how necessarily uneasy and restless an avowal
+ that his heart was seriously engaged to one she had never seen, would make
+ that tender mother, and that his confession would rather add to her cares
+ than produce sympathy with his transports. But now, feeling impatient for
+ his mother&rsquo;s assent to the formal proposals which had become due to Madame
+ Dalibard and Helen, and taking advantage of the letter last received from
+ her, which gave more cheering accounts of her sister, and expressed
+ curiosity for further explanation as to his half disclosure, he wrote at
+ length, and cleared his breast of all its secrets. It was the same day in
+ which he wrote this confession and pleaded his cause that we accompany him
+ to the house of his sweet mistress, and leave him by her side, in the
+ accustomed garden. Within, Madame Dalibard, whose chair was set by the
+ window, bent over certain letters, which she took, one by one, from her
+ desk and read slowly, lifting her eyes from time to time and glancing
+ towards the young people as they walked, hand in hand, round the small
+ demesnes, now hid by the fading foliage, now emerging into view. Those
+ letters were the early love-epistles of William Mainwaring. She had not
+ recurred to them for years. Perhaps she now felt that food necessary to
+ the sustainment of her fiendish designs. It was a strange spectacle to see
+ this being, so full of vital energy, mobile and restless as a serpent,
+ condemned to that helpless decrepitude, chained to the uneasy seat, not as
+ in the resigned and passive imbecility of extreme age, but rather as one
+ whom in the prime of life the rack has broken, leaving the limbs inert,
+ the mind active, the form as one dead, the heart with superabundant
+ vigour,&mdash;a cripple&rsquo;s impotence and a Titan&rsquo;s will! What, in that
+ dreary imprisonment and amidst the silence she habitually preserved,
+ passed through the caverns of that breast, one can no more conjecture than
+ one can count the blasts that sweep and rage through the hollows of
+ impenetrable rock, or the elements that conflict in the bosom of the
+ volcano, everlastingly at work. She had read and replaced the letters, and
+ leaning her cheek on her hand, was gazing vacantly on the wall, when
+ Varney intruded on that dismal solitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He closed the door after him with more than usual care; and drawing a seat
+ close to Lucretia, said, &ldquo;Belle-mere, the time has arrived for you to act;
+ my part is wellnigh closed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Lucretia, wearily, &ldquo;what is the news you bring?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First,&rdquo; replied Varney, and as he spoke, he shut the window, as if his
+ whisper could possibly be heard without,&mdash;&ldquo;first, all this business
+ connected with Helen is at length arranged. You know when, agreeably to
+ your permission, I first suggested to her, as it were casually, that you
+ were so reduced in fortune that I trembled to regard your future; that you
+ had years ago sacrificed nearly half your pecuniary resources to maintain
+ her parents,&mdash;she of herself reminded me that she was entitled, when
+ of age, to a sum far exceeding all her wants, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I might be a pensioner on the child of William Mainwaring and Susan
+ Mivers,&rdquo; interrupted Lucretia. &ldquo;I know that, and thank her not. Pass on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you know, too, that in the course of my conversation with the girl I
+ let out also incidentally that, even so, you were dependent on the chances
+ of her life; that if she died (and youth itself is mortal) before she was
+ of age, the sum left her by her grandfather would revert to her father&rsquo;s
+ family; and so, by hints, I drew her on to ask if there was no mode by
+ which, in case of her death, she might insure subsistence to you. So that
+ you see the whole scheme was made at her own prompting. I did but, as a
+ man of business, suggest the means,&mdash;an insurance on her life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Varney, these details are hateful. I do not doubt that you have done all
+ to forestall inquiry and elude risk. The girl has insured her life to the
+ amount of her fortune?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To that amount only? Pooh! Her death will buy more than that. As no one
+ single office will insure for more than 5,000 pounds, and as it was easy
+ to persuade her that such offices were liable to failure, and that it was
+ usual to insure in several, and for a larger amount than the sum desired,
+ I got her to enter herself at three of the principal offices. The amount
+ paid to us on her death will be 15,000 pounds. It will be paid (and here I
+ have followed the best legal advice) in trust to me for your benefit.
+ Hence, therefore, even if our researches fail us, if no son of yours can
+ be found, with sufficient evidence to prove, against the keen interests
+ and bought advocates of heirs-at-law, the right to Laughton, this girl
+ will repay us well, will replace what I have taken, at the risk of my
+ neck, perhaps,&mdash;certainly at the risk of the hulks,&mdash;from the
+ capital of my uncle&rsquo;s legacy, will refund what we have spent on the
+ inquiry; and the residue will secure to you an independence sufficing for
+ your wants almost for life, and to me what will purchase with economy,&rdquo;
+ and Varney smiled, &ldquo;a year or so of a gentleman&rsquo;s idle pleasures. Are you
+ satisfied thus far?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will die happy and innocent,&rdquo; muttered Lucretia, with the growl of
+ demoniac disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you wait, then, till my forgery is detected, and I have no power to
+ buy the silence of the trustees,&mdash;wait till I am in prison, and on a
+ trial for life and death? Reflect, every day, every hour, of delay is
+ fraught with peril. But if my safety is nothing compared to the refinement
+ of your revenge, will you wait till Helen marries Percival St. John? You
+ start! But can you suppose that this innocent love-play will not pass
+ rapidly to its denouement? It is but yesterday that Percival confided to
+ me that he should write this very day to his mother, and communicate all
+ his feelings and his hopes; that he waited but her assent to propose
+ formally for Helen. Now one of two things must happen. Either this mother,
+ haughty and vain as lady-mothers mostly are, may refuse consent to her
+ son&rsquo;s marriage with the daughter of a disgraced banker and the niece of
+ that Lucretia Dalibard whom her husband would not admit beneath his roof&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, sir!&rdquo; exclaimed Lucretia, haughtily; and amidst all the passions
+ that darkened her countenance and degraded her soul, some flash of her
+ ancestral spirit shot across her brow. But it passed quickly, and she
+ added, with fierce composure, &ldquo;You are right; go on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Either-and pardon me for an insult that comes not from me&mdash;either
+ this will be the case: Lady Mary St. John will hasten back in alarm to
+ London; she exercises extraordinary control over her son; she may withdraw
+ him from us altogether, from me as well as you, and the occasion now
+ presented to us may be lost (who knows?) forever,&mdash;or she may be a
+ weak and fond woman; may be detained in Italy by her sister&rsquo;s illness; may
+ be anxious that the last lineal descendant of the St. Johns should marry
+ betimes, and, moved by her darling&rsquo;s prayers, may consent at once to the
+ union. Or a third course, which Percival thinks the most probable, and
+ which, though most unwelcome to us of all, I had wellnigh forgotten, may
+ be adopted. She may come to England, and in order to judge her son&rsquo;s
+ choice with her own eyes, may withdraw Helen from your roof to hers. At
+ all events, delays are dangerous,&mdash;dangerous, putting aside my
+ personal interest, and regarding only your own object,&mdash;may bring to
+ our acts new and searching eyes; may cut us off from the habitual presence
+ either of Percival or Helen, or both; or surround them, at the first
+ breath of illness, with prying friends and formidable precautions. The
+ birds now are in our hands. Why then open the cage and bid them fly, in
+ order to spread the net? This morning all the final documents with the
+ Insurance Companies are completed. It remains for me but to pay the first
+ quarterly premiums. For that I think I am prepared, without drawing
+ further on your hoards or my own scanty resources, which Grabman will take
+ care to drain fast enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Percival St. John?&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard. &ldquo;We want no idle
+ sacrifices. If my son be not found, we need not that boy&rsquo;s ghost amongst
+ those who haunt us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely not,&rdquo; said Varney; &ldquo;and for my part, he may be more useful to me
+ alive than dead. There is no insurance on his life, and a rich friend
+ (credulous greenhorn that he is!) is scarcely of that flock of geese which
+ it were wise to slay from the mere hope of a golden egg. Percival St. John
+ is your victim, not mine; not till you give the order would I lift a
+ finger to harm him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, let him live, unless my son be found to me,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard,
+ almost exultingly,&mdash;&ldquo;let him live to forget yon fair-faced fool,
+ leaning now, see you, so delightedly on his arm, and fancying eternity in
+ the hollow vows of love; let him live to wrong and abandon her by
+ forgetfulness, though even in the grave; to laugh at his boyish dreams,&mdash;to
+ sully her memory in the arms of harlots! Oh, if the dead can suffer, let
+ him live, that she may feel beyond the grave his inconstancy and his fall.
+ Methinks that that thought will comfort me if Vincent be no more, and I
+ stand childless in the world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so settled, then,&rdquo; said Varney, ever ready to clinch the business
+ that promised gold, and relieve his apprehensions of the detection of his
+ fraud. &ldquo;And now to your noiseless hands, as soon as may be, I consign the
+ girl; she has lived long enough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0021" id="Blink2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. LOVE AND INNOCENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During this conference between these execrable and ravening birds of night
+ and prey, Helen and her boy-lover were thus conversing in the garden;
+ while the autumn sun&mdash;for it was in the second week of October&mdash;broke
+ pleasantly through the yellowing leaves of the tranquil shrubs, and the
+ flowers, which should have died with the gone summer, still fresh by
+ tender care, despite the lateness of the season, smiled gratefully as
+ their light footsteps passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Helen,&rdquo; said Percival,&mdash;&ldquo;yes, you will love my mother, for she
+ is one of those people who seem to attract love, as if it were a property
+ belonging to them. Even my dog Beau (you know how fond Beau is of me!)
+ always nestles at her feet when we are at home. I own she has pride, but
+ it is a pride that never offended any one. You know there are some flowers
+ that we call proud. The pride of the flower is not more harmless than my
+ mother&rsquo;s. But perhaps pride is not the right word,&mdash;it is rather the
+ aversion to anything low or mean, the admiration for everything pure and
+ high. Ah, how that very pride&mdash;if pride it be&mdash;will make her
+ love you, my Helen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not tell me,&rdquo; said Helen, smiling seriously, &ldquo;that I shall love
+ your mother,&mdash;I love her already; nay, from the first moment you said
+ you had a mother, my heart leaped to her. Your mother,&mdash;if ever you
+ are really jealous, it must be of her! But that she should love me,&mdash;that
+ is what I doubt and fear. For if you were my brother, Percival, I should
+ be so ambitious for you. A nymph must rise from the stream, a sylphid from
+ the rose, before I could allow another to steal you from my side. And if I
+ think I should feel this only as your sister, what can be precious enough
+ to satisfy a mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, and you only,&rdquo; answered Percival, with his blithesome laugh,&mdash;&ldquo;you,
+ my sweet Helen, much better than nymph or sylphid, about whom, between
+ ourselves, I never cared three straws, even in a poem. How pleased you
+ will be with Laughton! Do you know, I was lying awake all last night to
+ consider what room you would like best for your own? And at last I have
+ decided. Come, listen,&mdash;it opens from the music-gallery that
+ overhangs the hall. From the window you overlook the southern side of the
+ park, and catch a view of the lake beyond. There are two niches in the
+ wall,&mdash;one for your piano, one for your favourite books. It is just
+ large enough to hold four persons with ease,&mdash;our mother and myself,
+ your aunt, whom by that time we shall have petted into good humour; and if
+ we can coax Ardworth there,&mdash;the best good fellow that ever lived,&mdash;I
+ think our party will be complete. By the way, I am uneasy about Ardworth,
+ it is so long since we have seen him; I have called three times,&mdash;nay,
+ five,&mdash;but his odd-looking clerk always swears he is not at home.
+ Tell me, Helen, now you know him so well,&mdash;tell me how I can serve
+ him? You know, I am so terribly rich (at least, I shall be in a month or
+ two), I can never get through my money, unless my friends will help me.
+ And is it not shocking that that noble fellow should be so poor, and yet
+ suffer me to call him &lsquo;friend,&rsquo; as if in friendship one man should want
+ everything, and the other nothing? Still, I don&rsquo;t know how to venture to
+ propose. Come, you understand me, Helen; let us lay our wise heads
+ together and make him well off, in spite of himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this loose boyish talk of Percival that he had found the way,
+ not only to Helen&rsquo;s heart, but to her soul. For in this she (grand,
+ undeveloped poetess!) recognized a nobler poetry than we chain to rhythm,&mdash;the
+ poetry of generous deeds. She yearned to kiss the warm hand she held, and
+ drew nearer to his side as she answered: &ldquo;And sometimes, dear, dear
+ Percival, you wonder why I would rather listen to you than to all Mr.
+ Varney&rsquo;s bitter eloquence, or even to my dear cousin&rsquo;s aspiring ambition.
+ They talk well, but it is of themselves; while you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival blushed, and checked her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said,&mdash;&ldquo;well, to your question. Alas! you know little of
+ my cousin if you think all our arts could decoy him out of his rugged
+ independence; and much as I love him, I could not wish it. But do not fear
+ for him; he is one of those who are born to succeed, and without help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you know that, pretty prophetess?&rdquo; said Percival, with the
+ superior air of manhood. &ldquo;I have seen more of the world than you have, and
+ I cannot see why Ardworth should succeed, as you call it; or, if so, why
+ he should succeed less if he swung his hammock in a better berth than that
+ hole in Gray&rsquo;s Inn, and would just let me keep him a cab and groom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Percival talked of keeping John Ardworth an elephant and a palaquin,
+ Helen could not have been more amused. She clapped her little hands in a
+ delight that provoked Percival, and laughed out loud. Then, seeing her
+ boy-lover&rsquo;s lip pouted petulantly, and his brow was overcast, she said,
+ more seriously,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you not know what it is to feel convinced of something which you
+ cannot explain? Well, I feel this as to my cousin&rsquo;s fame and fortunes.
+ Surely, too, you must feel it, you scarce know why, when he speaks of that
+ future which seems so dim and so far to me, as of something that belonged
+ to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true, Helen,&rdquo; said Percival; &ldquo;he lays it out like the map of his
+ estate. One can&rsquo;t laugh when he says so carelessly: &lsquo;At such an age I
+ shall lead my circuit; at such an age I shall be rich; at such an age I
+ shall enter parliament; and beyond that I shall look as yet&mdash;no
+ farther.&rsquo; And, poor fellow, then he will be forty-three! And in the mean
+ while to suffer such privations!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are no privations to one who lives in the future,&rdquo; said Helen, with
+ that noble intuition into lofty natures which at times flashed from her
+ childish simplicity, foreshadowing what, if Heaven spare her life, her
+ maturer intellect may develop; &ldquo;for Ardworth there is no such thing as
+ poverty. He is as rich in his hopes as we are in&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped
+ short, blushed, and continued, with downcast looks: &ldquo;As well might you
+ pity me in these walks, so dreary without you. I do not live in them, I
+ live in my thoughts of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her voice trembled with emotion in those last words. She slid from
+ Percival&rsquo;s arm, and timidly sat down (and he beside her) on a little mound
+ under the single chestnut-tree, that threw its shade over the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both were silent for some moments,&mdash;Percival, with grateful ecstasy;
+ Helen, with one of those sudden fits of mysterious melancholy to which her
+ nature was so subjected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was the first to speak. &ldquo;Helen,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;since I have known
+ you, I feel as if life were a more solemn thing than I ever regarded it
+ before. It seems to me as if a new and more arduous duty were added to
+ those for which I was prepared,&mdash;a duty, Helen, to become worthy of
+ you! Will you smile? No, you will not smile if I say I have had my brief
+ moments of ambition. Sometimes as a boy, with Plutarch in my hand,
+ stretched idly under the old cedar-trees at Laughton; sometimes as a
+ sailor, when, becalmed on the Atlantic, and my ears freshly filled with
+ tales of Collingwood and Nelson, I stole from my comrades and leaned
+ musingly over the boundless sea. But when this ample heritage passed to
+ me, when I had no more my own fortunes to make, my own rank to build up,
+ such dreams became less and less frequent. Is it not true that wealth
+ makes us contented to be obscure? Yes; I understand, while I speak, why
+ poverty itself befriends, not cripples, Ardworth&rsquo;s energies. But since I
+ have known you, dearest Helen, those dreams return more vividly than ever.
+ He who claims you should be&mdash;must be&mdash;something nobler than the
+ crowd. Helen,&rdquo;&mdash;and he rose by an irresistible and restless impulse,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ shall not be contented till you are as proud of your choice as I of mine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed, as Percival spoke and looked, as if boyhood were cast from him
+ forever. The unusual weight and gravity of his words, to which his tone
+ gave even eloquence; the steady flash of his dark eyes; his erect, elastic
+ form,&mdash;all had the dignity of man. Helen gazed on him silently, and
+ with a heart so full that words would not come, and tears overflowed
+ instead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That sight sobered him at once; he knelt down beside her, threw his arms
+ around her,&mdash;it was his first embrace,&mdash;and kissed the tears
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How have I distressed you? Why do you weep?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me weep on, Percival, dear Percival! These tears are like prayers,&mdash;they
+ speak to Heaven&mdash;and of you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A step came noiselessly over the grass, and between the lovers and the
+ sunlight stood Gabriel Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0022" id="Blink2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. SUDDEN CELEBRITY AND PATIENT HOPE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Percival was unusually gloomy and abstracted in his way to town that day,
+ though Varney was his companion, and in the full play of those animal
+ spirits which he owed to his unrivalled physical organization and the
+ obtuseness of his conscience. Seeing, at length, that his gayety did not
+ communicate itself to Percival, he paused, and looked at him suspiciously.
+ A falling leaf startles the steed, and a shadow the guilty man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are sad, Percival,&rdquo; he said inquiringly. &ldquo;What has disturbed you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is nothing,&mdash;or, at least, would seem nothing to you,&rdquo; answered
+ Percival, with an effort to smile, &ldquo;for I have heard you laugh at the
+ doctrine of presentiments. We sailors are more superstitious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What presentiment can you possibly entertain?&rdquo; asked Varney, more
+ anxiously than Percival could have anticipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Presentiments are not so easily defined, Varney. But, in truth, poor
+ Helen has infected me. Have you not remarked that, gay as she habitually
+ is, some shadow comes over her so suddenly that one cannot trace the
+ cause?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Percival,&rdquo; said Varney, after a short pause, &ldquo;what you say does
+ not surprise me. It would be false kindness to conceal from you that I
+ have heard Madame Dalibard say that her mother was, when about her age,
+ threatened with consumptive symptoms; but she lived many years afterwards.
+ Nay, nay, rally yourself; Helen&rsquo;s appearance, despite the extreme purity
+ of her complexion, is not that of one threatened by the terrible malady of
+ our climate. The young are often haunted with the idea of early death. As
+ we grow older, that thought is less cherished; in youth it is a sort of
+ luxury. To this mournful idea (which you see you have remarked as well as
+ I) we must attribute not only Helen&rsquo;s occasional melancholy, but a
+ generosity of forethought which I cannot deny myself the pleasure of
+ communicating to you, though her delicacy would be shocked at my
+ indiscretion. You know how helpless her aunt is. Well, Helen, who is
+ entitled, when of age, to a moderate competence, has persuaded me to
+ insure her life and accept a trust to hold the moneys (if ever unhappily
+ due) for the benefit of my mother-in-law, so that Madame Dalibard may not
+ be left destitute if her niece die before she is twenty-one. How like
+ Helen, is it not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival was too overcome to answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney resumed: &ldquo;I entreat you not to mention this to Helen; it would
+ offend her modesty to have the secret of her good deeds thus betrayed by
+ one to whom alone she confided them. I could not resist her entreaties,
+ though, entre nous, it cripples me not a little to advance for her the
+ necessary sums for the premiums. Apropos, this brings me to a point on
+ which I feel, as the vulgar idiom goes, &lsquo;very awkward,&rsquo;&mdash;as I always
+ do in these confounded money-matters. But you were good enough to ask me
+ to paint you a couple of pictures for Laughton. Now, if you could let me
+ have some portion of the sum, whatever it be (for I don&rsquo;t price my
+ paintings to you), it would very much oblige me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival turned away his face as he wrung Varney&rsquo;s hand, and muttered,
+ with a choked voice: &ldquo;Let me have my share in Helen&rsquo;s divine forethought.
+ Good Heavens! she, so young, to look thus beyond the grave, always for
+ others&mdash;for others!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Callous as the wretch was, Percival&rsquo;s emotion and his proposal struck
+ Varney with a sentiment like compunction. He had designed to appropriate
+ the lover&rsquo;s gold as it was now offered; but that Percival himself should
+ propose it, blind to the grave to which that gold paved the way, was a
+ horror not counted in those to which his fell cupidity and his goading
+ apprehensions had familiarized his conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, with one of those wayward scruples to which the blackest
+ criminals are sometimes susceptible,&mdash;&ldquo;no. I have promised Helen to
+ regard this as a loan to her, which she is to repay me when of age. What
+ you may advance me is for the pictures. I have a right to do as I please
+ with what is bought by my own labour. And the subjects of the pictures,
+ what shall they be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For one picture try and recall Helen&rsquo;s aspect and attitude when you came
+ to us in the garden, and entitle your subject: &lsquo;The Foreboding.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Varney, hesitatingly. &ldquo;And the other subject?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait for that till the joy-bells at Laughton have welcomed a bride, and
+ then&mdash;and then, Varney,&rdquo; added Percival, with something of his
+ natural joyous smile, &ldquo;you must take the expression as you find it. Once
+ under my care, and, please Heaven, the one picture shall laughingly
+ upbraid the other!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this was said, the cabriolet stopped at Percival&rsquo;s door. Varney dined
+ with him that day; and if the conversation flagged, it did not revert to
+ the subject which had so darkened the bright spirits of the host, and so
+ tried the hypocrisy of the guest. When Varney left, which he did as soon
+ as the dinner was concluded, Percival silently put a check into his hands,
+ to a greater amount than Varney had anticipated even from his generosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is for four pictures, not two,&rdquo; he said, shaking his head; and then,
+ with his characteristic conceit, he added: &ldquo;Well, some years hence the
+ world shall not call them overpaid. Adieu, my Medici; a dozen such men,
+ and Art would revive in England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was left alone, Percival sat down, and leaning his face on both
+ hands, gave way to the gloom which his native manliness and the delicacy
+ that belongs to true affection had made him struggle not to indulge in the
+ presence of another. Never had he so loved Helen as in that hour; never
+ had he so intimately and intensely felt her matchless worth. The image of
+ her unselfish, quiet, melancholy consideration for that austere,
+ uncaressing, unsympathizing relation, under whose shade her young heart
+ must have withered, seemed to him filled with a celestial pathos. And he
+ almost hated Varney that the cynic painter could have talked of it with
+ that business-like phlegm. The evening deepened; the tranquil street grew
+ still; the air seemed close; the solitude oppressed him; he rose abruptly,
+ seized his hat, and went forth slowly, and still with a heavy heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he entered Piccadilly, on the broad step of that house successively
+ inhabited by the Duke of Queensberry and Lord Hertford,&mdash;on the step
+ of that mansion up which so many footsteps light with wanton pleasure have
+ gayly trod, Percival&rsquo;s eye fell upon a wretched, squalid, ragged object,
+ doubled up, as it were, in that last despondency which has ceased to beg,
+ that has no care to steal, that has no wish to live. Percival halted, and
+ touched the outcast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter, my poor fellow? Take care; the policeman will not
+ suffer you to rest here. Come, cheer up, I say! There is something to find
+ you a better lodging!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The silver fell unheeded on the stones. The thing of rags did not even
+ raise its head, but a low, broken voice muttered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It be too late now; let &lsquo;em take me to prison, let &lsquo;em send me &lsquo;cross the
+ sea to Buttany, let &lsquo;em hang me, if they please. I be &lsquo;s good for nothin&rsquo;
+ now,&mdash;nothin&rsquo;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altered as the voice was, it struck Percival as familiar. He looked down
+ and caught a view of the drooping face. &ldquo;Up, man, up!&rdquo; he said cheerily.
+ &ldquo;See, Providence sends you an old friend in need, to teach you never to
+ despair again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hearty accent, more than the words, touched and aroused the poor
+ creature. He rose mechanically, and a sickly, grateful smile passed over
+ his wasted features as he recognized St. John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come! how is this? I have always understood that to keep a crossing was a
+ flourishing trade nowadays.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I &lsquo;as no crossin&rsquo;. I &lsquo;as sold her!&rdquo; groaned Beck. &ldquo;I be&rsquo;s good for
+ nothin&rsquo; now but to cadge about the streets, and steal, and filch, and hang
+ like the rest on us! Thank you kindly, sir,&rdquo; and Beck pulled his forelock,
+ &ldquo;but, please your honour, I vould rather make an ind on it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, pooh! didn&rsquo;t I tell you when you wanted a friend to come to me? Why
+ did you doubt me, foolish fellow? Pick up those shillings; get a bed and a
+ supper. Come and see me to-morrow at nine o&rsquo;clock; you know where,&mdash;the
+ same house in Curzon Street; you shall tell me then your whole story, and
+ it shall go hard but I&rsquo;ll buy you another crossing, or get you something
+ just as good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Beck swayed a moment or two on his slender legs like a drunken man,
+ and then, suddenly falling on his knees, he kissed the hem of his
+ benefactor&rsquo;s garment, and fairly wept. Those tears relieved him; they
+ seemed to wash the drought of despair from his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush! or we shall have a crowd round us. You&rsquo;ll not forget, my poor
+ friend, No.&mdash;&mdash; Curzon Street,&mdash;nine to-morrow. Make haste
+ now, and get food and rest; you look, indeed, as if you wanted them. Ah,
+ would to Heaven all the poverty in this huge city stood here in thy
+ person, and we could aid it as easily as I can thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival had moved on as he said those last words, and looking back, he
+ had the satisfaction to see that Beck was slowly crawling after him, and
+ had escaped the grim question of a very portly policeman, who had no doubt
+ expressed a natural indignation at the audacity of so ragged a skeleton
+ not keeping itself respectably at home in its churchyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Entering one of the clubs in St. James&rsquo;s Street, Percival found a small
+ knot of politicians in eager conversation respecting a new book which had
+ been published but a day or two before, but which had already seized the
+ public attention with that strong grasp which constitutes always an era in
+ an author&rsquo;s life, sometimes an epoch in a nation&rsquo;s literature. The
+ newspapers were full of extracts from the work,&mdash;the gossips, of
+ conjecture as to the authorship. We need scarcely say that a book which
+ makes this kind of sensation must hit some popular feeling of the hour,
+ supply some popular want. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, therefore,
+ its character is political; it was so in the present instance. It may be
+ remembered that that year parliament sat during great part of the month of
+ October, that it was the year in which the Reform Bill was rejected by the
+ House of Lords, and that public feeling in our time had never been so
+ keenly excited. This work appeared during the short interval between the
+ rejection of the Bill and the prorogation of parliament [Parliament was
+ prorogued October 20th; the bill rejected by the Lords, October 8th]. And
+ what made it more remarkable was, that while stamped with the passion of
+ the time, there was a weight of calm and stern reasoning embodied in its
+ vigorous periods, which gave to the arguments of the advocate something of
+ the impartiality of the judge. Unusually abstracted and unsocial,&mdash;for,
+ despite his youth and that peculiar bashfulness before noticed, he was
+ generally alive enough to all that passed around him,&mdash;Percival paid
+ little attention to the comments that circulated round the easy-chairs in
+ his vicinity, till a subordinate in the administration, with whom he was
+ slightly acquainted, pushed a small volume towards him and said,&mdash;&ldquo;You
+ have seen this, of course, St. John? Ten to one you do not guess the
+ author. It is certainly not B&mdash;&mdash;m, though the Lord Chancellor
+ has energy enough for anything. R&mdash;&mdash; says it has a touch of S&mdash;&mdash;r.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could M&mdash;&mdash;y have written it?&rdquo; asked a young member of
+ parliament, timidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M&mdash;&mdash;y! Very like his matchless style, to be sure! You can have
+ read very little of M&mdash;&mdash;y, I should think,&rdquo; said the
+ subordinate, with the true sneer of an official and a critic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young member could have slunk into a nutshell. Percival, with very
+ languid interest, glanced over the volume. But despite his mood, and his
+ moderate affection for political writings, the passage he opened upon
+ struck and seized him unawares. Though the sneer of the official was just,
+ and the style was not comparable to M&mdash;&mdash;y&rsquo;s (whose is?), still,
+ the steady rush of strong words, strong with strong thoughts, heaped
+ massively together, showed the ease of genius and the gravity of thought.
+ The absence of all effeminate glitter, the iron grapple with the pith and
+ substance of the argument opposed, seemed familiar to Percival. He thought
+ he heard the deep bass of John Ardworth&rsquo;s earnest voice when some truth
+ roused his advocacy, or some falsehood provoked his wrath. He put down the
+ book, bewildered. Could it be the obscure, briefless lawyer in Gray&rsquo;s Inn
+ (that very morning the object of his young pity) who was thus lifted into
+ fame? He smiled at his own credulity. But he listened with more attention
+ to the enthusiastic praises that circled round, and the various guesses
+ which accompanied them. Soon, however, his former gloom returned,&mdash;the
+ Babel began to chafe and weary him. He rose, and went forth again into the
+ air. He strolled on without purpose, but mechanically, into the street
+ where he had first seen Helen. He paused a few moments under the colonnade
+ which faced Beck&rsquo;s old deserted crossing. His pause attracted the notice
+ of one of the unhappy beings whom we suffer to pollute our streets and rot
+ in our hospitals. She approached and spoke to him,&mdash;to him whose
+ heart was so full of Helen! He shuddered, and strode on. At length he
+ paused before the twin towers of Westminster Abbey, on which the moon
+ rested in solemn splendour; and in that space one man only shared his
+ solitude. A figure with folded arms leaned against the iron rails near the
+ statue of Canning, and his gaze comprehended in one view the walls of the
+ Parliament, in which all passions wage their war, and the glorious abbey,
+ which gives a Walhalla to the great. The utter stillness of the figure, so
+ in unison with the stillness of the scene, had upon Percival more effect
+ than would have been produced by the most clamorous crowd. He looked round
+ curiously as he passed, and uttered an exclamation as he recognized John
+ Ardworth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, Percival!&rdquo; said Ardworth. &ldquo;A strange meeting-place at this hour!
+ What can bring you hither?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only whim, I fear; and you?&rdquo; as Percival linked his arm into Ardworth&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Twenty years hence I will tell you what brought me hither!&rdquo; answered
+ Ardworth, moving slowly back towards Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If we are alive then!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We live till our destinies below are fulfilled; till our uses have passed
+ from us in this sphere, and rise to benefit another. For the soul is as a
+ sun, but with this noble distinction,&mdash;the sun is confined in its
+ career; day after day it visits the same lands, gilds the same planets or
+ rather, as the astronomers hold, stands, the motionless centre of moving
+ worlds. But the soul, when it sinks into seeming darkness and the deep,
+ rises to new destinies, fresh regions unvisited before. What we call
+ Eternity, may be but an endless series of those transitions which men call
+ &lsquo;deaths,&rsquo; abandonments of home after home, ever to fairer scenes and
+ loftier heights. Age after age, the spirit, that glorious Nomad, may shift
+ its tent, fated not to rest in the dull Elysium of the Heathen, but
+ carrying with it evermore its elements,&mdash;Activity and Desire. Why
+ should the soul ever repose? God, its Principle, reposes never. While we
+ speak, new worlds are sparkling forth, suns are throwing off their
+ nebulae, nebulae are hardening into worlds. The Almighty proves his
+ existence by creating. Think you that Plato is at rest, and Shakspeare
+ only basking on a sun-cloud? Labour is the very essence of spirit, as of
+ divinity; labour is the purgatory of the erring; it may become the hell of
+ the wicked, but labour is not less the heaven of the good!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth spoke with unusual earnestness and passion, and his idea of the
+ future was emblematic of his own active nature; for each of us is wisely
+ left to shape out, amidst the impenetrable mists, his own ideal of the
+ Hereafter. The warrior child of the biting North placed his Hela amid
+ snows, and his Himmel in the banquets of victorious war; the son of the
+ East, parched by relentless summer,&mdash;his hell amidst fire, and his
+ elysium by cooling streams; the weary peasant sighs through life for rest,
+ and rest awaits his vision beyond the grave; the workman of genius,&mdash;ever
+ ardent, ever young,&mdash;honours toil as the glorious development of
+ being, and springs refreshed over the abyss of the grave, to follow, from
+ star to star, the progress that seems to him at once the supreme felicity
+ and the necessary law. So be it with the fantasy of each! Wisdom that is
+ infallible, and love that never sleeps, watch over the darkness, and bid
+ darkness be, that we may dream!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said the young listener, &ldquo;what reproof do you not convey to those,
+ like me, who, devoid of the power which gives results to every toil, have
+ little left to them in life, but to idle life away. All have not the gift
+ to write, or harangue, or speculate, or&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friend,&rdquo; interrupted Ardworth, bluntly, &ldquo;do not belie yourself. There
+ lives not a man on earth&mdash;out of a lunatic asylum&mdash;who has not
+ in him the power to do good. What can writers, haranguers, or speculators
+ do more than that? Have you ever entered a cottage, ever travelled in a
+ coach, ever talked with a peasant in the field, or loitered with a
+ mechanic at the loom, and not found that each of those men had a talent
+ you had not, knew some things you knew not? The most useless creature that
+ ever yawned at a club, or counted the vermin on his rags under the suns of
+ Calabria, has no excuse for want of intellect. What men want is not
+ talent, it is purpose,&mdash;in other words, not the power to achieve, but
+ the will to labour. You, Percival St. John,&mdash;you affect to despond,
+ lest you should not have your uses; you, with that fresh, warm heart; you,
+ with that pure enthusiasm for what is fresh and good; you, who can even
+ admire a thing like Varney, because, through the tawdry man, you recognize
+ art and skill, even though wasted in spoiling canvas; you, who have only
+ to live as you feel, in order to diffuse blessings all around you,&mdash;fie,
+ foolish boy! you will own your error when I tell you why I come from my
+ rooms at Gray&rsquo;s Inn to see the walls in which Hampden, a plain country
+ squire like you, shook with plain words the tyranny of eight hundred
+ years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ardworth, I will not wait your time to tell me what took you yonder. I
+ have penetrated a secret that you, not kindly, kept from me. This morning
+ you rose and found yourself famous; this evening you have come to gaze
+ upon the scene of the career to which that fame will more rapidly conduct
+ you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And upon the tomb which the proudest ambition I can form on earth must
+ content itself to win! A poor conclusion, if all ended here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am right, however,&rdquo; said Percival, with boyish pleasure. &ldquo;It is you
+ whose praises have just filled my ears. You, dear, dear Ardworth! How
+ rejoiced I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth pressed heartily the hand extended to him: &ldquo;I should have trusted
+ you with my secret to-morrow, Percival; as it is, keep it for the present.
+ A craving of my nature has been satisfied, a grief has found distraction.
+ As for the rest, any child that throws a stone into the water with all his
+ force can make a splash; but he would be a fool indeed if he supposed that
+ the splash was a sign that he had turned a stream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Ardworth ceased abruptly; and Percival, engrossed by a bright idea,
+ which had suddenly occurred to him, exclaimed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ardworth, your desire, your ambition, is to enter parliament; there must
+ be a dissolution shortly,&mdash;the success of your book will render you
+ acceptable to many a popular constituency. All you can want is a sum for
+ the necessary expenses. Borrow that sum from me; repay me when you are in
+ the Cabinet, or attorney-general. It shall be so!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A look so bright that even by that dull lamplight the glow of the cheek,
+ the brilliancy of the eye were visible, flashed over Ardworth&rsquo;s face. He
+ felt at that moment what ambitious man must feel when the object he has
+ seen dimly and afar is placed within his grasp; but his reason was proof
+ even against that strong temptation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed his arm round the boy&rsquo;s slender waist, and drew him to his heart
+ with grateful affection as he replied,&mdash;&ldquo;And what, if now in
+ parliament, giving up my career,&mdash;with no regular means of
+ subsistence,&mdash;what could I be but a venal adventurer? Place would
+ become so vitally necessary to me that I should feed but a dangerous war
+ between my conscience and my wants. In chasing Fame, the shadow, I should
+ lose the substance, Independence. Why, that very thought would paralyze my
+ tongue. No, no, my generous friend. As labour is the arch elevator of man,
+ so patience is the essence of labour. First let me build the foundation; I
+ may then calculate the height of my tower. First let me be independent of
+ the great; I will then be the champion of the lowly. Hold! Tempt me no
+ more; do not lure me to the loss of self-esteem. And now, Percival,&rdquo;
+ resumed Ardworth, in the tone of one who wishes to plunge into some
+ utterly new current of thought, &ldquo;let us forget for awhile these solemn
+ aspirations, and be frolicsome and human. &lsquo;Nemo mortalium omnibus horis
+ sapit.&rsquo; &lsquo;Neque semper arcum tendit Apollo.&rsquo; What say you to a cigar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival stared. He was not yet familiarized to the eccentric whims of his
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hot negus and a cigar!&rdquo; repeated Ardworth, while a smile, full of
+ drollery, played round the corners of his lips and twinkled in his
+ deep-set eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you serious?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not serious; I have been serious enough,&rdquo; and Ardworth sighed, &ldquo;for the
+ last three weeks. Who goes &lsquo;to Corinth to be sage,&rsquo; or to the Cider Cellar
+ to be serious?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I subscribe, then, to the negus and cigar,&rdquo; said Percival, smiling; and
+ he had no cause to repent his compliance as he accompanied Ardworth to one
+ of the resorts favoured by that strange person in his rare hours of
+ relaxation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, seated at his favourite table, which happened, luckily, to be vacant,
+ with his head thrown carelessly back, and his negus steaming before him,
+ John Ardworth continued to pour forth, till the clock struck three, jest
+ upon jest, pun upon pun, broad drollery upon broad drollery, without
+ flagging, without intermission, so varied, so copious, so ready, so
+ irresistible that Percival was transported out of all his melancholy in
+ enjoying, for the first time in his life, the exuberant gayety of a grave
+ mind once set free,&mdash;all its intellect sparkling into wit, all its
+ passion rushing into humour. And this was the man he had pitied, supposed
+ to have no sunny side to his life! How much greater had been his
+ compassion and his wonder if he could have known all that had passed,
+ within the last few weeks, through that gloomy, yet silent breast, which,
+ by the very breadth of its mirth, showed what must be the depth of its
+ sadness!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0023" id="Blink2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE LOSS OF THE CROSSING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Despite the lateness of the hour before he got to rest, Percival had
+ already breakfasted, when his valet informed him, with raised,
+ supercilious eyebrows, that an uncommon ragged sort of a person insisted
+ that he had been told to call. Though Beck had been at the house before,
+ and the valet had admitted him, so much thinner, so much more ragged was
+ he now, that the trim servant&mdash;no close observer of such folk&mdash;did
+ not recognize him. However, at Percival&rsquo;s order, too well-bred to show
+ surprise, he ushered Beck up with much civility; and St. John was
+ painfully struck with the ravages a few weeks had made upon the sweeper&rsquo;s
+ countenance. The lines were so deeply ploughed, the dry hair looked so
+ thin, and was so sown with gray that Beck might have beat all Farren&rsquo;s
+ skill in the part of an old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor sweeper&rsquo;s tale, extricated from its peculiar phraseology, was
+ simple enough, and soon told. He had returned home at night to find his
+ hoards stolen, and the labour of his life overthrown. How he passed that
+ night he did not very well remember. We may well suppose that the little
+ reason he possessed was wellnigh bereft from him. No suspicion of the
+ exact thief crossed his perturbed mind. Bad as Grabman&rsquo;s character might
+ be, he held a respectable position compared with the other lodgers in the
+ house. Bill the cracksman, naturally and by vocation, suggested the hand
+ that had despoiled him: how hope for redress or extort surrender from such
+ a quarter? Mechanically, however, when the hour arrived to return to his
+ day&rsquo;s task, he stole down the stairs, and lo, at the very door of the
+ house Bill&rsquo;s children were at play, and in the hand of the eldest he
+ recognized what he called his &ldquo;curril.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your curril!&rdquo; interrupted St. John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, curril,&mdash;vot the little &lsquo;uns bite afore they gets their
+ teethin&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. John smiled, and supposing that Beck had some time or other been
+ puerile enough to purchase such a bauble, nodded to him to continue. To
+ seize upon the urchin, and, in spite of kicks, bites, shrieks, or
+ scratches, repossess himself of his treasure, was the feat of a moment.
+ The brat&rsquo;s clamour drew out the father; and to him Beck (pocketing the
+ coral, that its golden bells might not attract the more experienced eye
+ and influence the more formidable greediness of the paternal thief)
+ loudly, and at first fearlessly, appealed. Him he charged and accused and
+ threatened with all vengeance, human and divine. Then, changing his tone,
+ he implored, he wept, he knelt. As soon as the startled cracksman
+ recovered his astonishment at such audacity, and comprehended the nature
+ of the charge against himself and his family, he felt the more indignant
+ from a strange and unfamiliar consciousness of innocence. Seizing Beck by
+ the nape of the neck, with a dexterous application of hand and foot he
+ sent him spinning into the kennel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to Jericho, mud-scraper!&rdquo; cried Bill, in a voice of thunder; &ldquo;and if
+ ever thou sayst such a vopper agin,&mdash;&lsquo;sparaging the characters of
+ them &lsquo;ere motherless babes,&mdash;I&rsquo;ll seal thee up in a &lsquo;tato-sack, and
+ sell thee for fiv&rsquo;pence to No. 7, the great body-snatcher. Take care how I
+ ever sets eyes agin on thy h-ugly mug!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that Bill clapped to the door, and Beck, frightened out of his wits,
+ crawled from the kennel and, bruised and smarting, crept to his crossing.
+ But he was unable to discharge his duties that day; his ill-fed, miserable
+ frame was too weak for the stroke he had received. Long before dusk he
+ sneaked away, and dreading to return to his lodging, lest, since nothing
+ now was left worth robbing but his carcass, Bill might keep his word and
+ sell that to the body-snatcher, he took refuge under the only roof where
+ he felt he could sleep in safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here we must pause to explain. In our first introduction of Beck we
+ contented ourselves with implying to the ingenious and practised reader
+ that his heart might still be large enough to hold something besides his
+ crossing. Now, in one of the small alleys that have their vent in the
+ great stream of Fleet Street there dwelt an old widow-woman who eked out
+ her existence by charing,&mdash;an industrious, drudging creature, whose
+ sole occupation, since her husband, the journeyman bricklayer, fell from a
+ scaffold, and, breaking his neck, left her happily childless as well as
+ penniless, had been scrubbing stone floors and cleaning out dingy houses
+ when about to be let,&mdash;charing, in a word. And in this vocation had
+ she kept body and soul together till a bad rheumatism and old age had put
+ an end to her utilities and entitled her to the receipt of two shillings
+ weekly from parochial munificence. Between this old woman and Beck there
+ was a mysterious tie, so mysterious that he did not well comprehend it
+ himself. Sometimes he called her &ldquo;mammy,&rdquo; sometimes &ldquo;the h-old crittur.&rdquo;
+ But certain it is that to her he was indebted for that name which he bore,
+ to the puzzlement of St. Giles&rsquo;s. Becky Carruthers was the name of the old
+ woman; but Becky was one of those good creatures who are always called by
+ their Christian names, and never rise into the importance of the surname
+ and the dignity of &ldquo;Mistress;&rdquo; lopping off the last syllable of the
+ familiar appellation, the outcast christened himself &ldquo;Beck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said St. John, who in the course of question and answer had got
+ thus far into the marrow of the sweeper&rsquo;s narrative, &ldquo;is not this good
+ woman really your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother!&rdquo; echoed Beck, with disdain; &ldquo;no, I &lsquo;as a gritter mother nor she.
+ Sint Poll&rsquo;s is my mother. But the h-old crittur tuk care on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I really don&rsquo;t understand you. St. Paul&rsquo;s is your mother? How?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck shook his head mysteriously, and without answering the question,
+ resumed the tale, which we must thus paraphrastically continue to deliver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was a little more than six years old, Beck began to earn his own
+ livelihood, by running errands, holding horses, scraping together pence
+ and halfpence. Betimes, his passion for saving began; at first with a good
+ and unselfish motive,&mdash;that of surprising &ldquo;mammy&rdquo; at the week&rsquo;s end.
+ But when &ldquo;mammy,&rdquo; who then gained enough for herself, patted his head and
+ called him &ldquo;good boy,&rdquo; and bade him save for his own uses, and told him
+ what a great thing it would be if he could lay by a pretty penny against
+ he was a man, he turned miser on his own account; and the miserable luxury
+ grew upon him. At last, by the permission of the police inspector,
+ strengthened by that of the owner of the contiguous house, he made his
+ great step in life, and succeeded a deceased negro in the dignity and
+ emoluments of the memorable crossing. From that hour he felt himself
+ fulfilling his proper destiny. But poor Becky, alas! had already fallen
+ into the sere and yellow leaf; with her decline, her good qualities were
+ impaired. She took to drinking,&mdash;not to positive intoxication, but to
+ making herself &ldquo;comfortable;&rdquo; and, to satisfy her craving, Beck, waking
+ betimes one morning, saw her emptying his pockets. Then he resolved,
+ quietly and without upbraiding her, to remove to a safer lodging. To save
+ had become the imperative necessity of his existence. But to do him
+ justice, Beck had a glimmering sense of what was due to the &ldquo;h-old
+ crittur.&rdquo; Every Saturday evening he called at her house and deposited with
+ her a certain sum, not large even in proportion to his earnings, but which
+ seemed to the poor ignorant miser, who grudged every farthing to himself,
+ an enormous deduction from his total, and a sum sufficient for every
+ possible want of humankind, even to satiety. And now, in returning,
+ despoiled of all save the few pence he had collected that day, it is but
+ fair to him to add that not his least bitter pang was in the remembrance
+ that this was the only Saturday on which, for the first time, the weekly
+ stipend would fail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But so ill and so wretched did he look when he reached her little room
+ that &ldquo;mammy&rdquo; forgot all thought of herself; and when he had told his tale,
+ so kind was her comforting, so unselfish her sympathy, that his heart
+ smote him for his old parsimony, for his hard resentment at her single act
+ of peculation. Had not she the right to all he made? But remorse and grief
+ alike soon vanished in the fever that now seized him; for several days he
+ was insensible; and when he recovered sufficiently to be made aware of
+ what was around him, he saw the widow seated beside him, within four bare
+ walls. Everything, except the bed he slept on, had been sold to support
+ him in his illness. As soon as he could totter forth, Beck hastened to his
+ crossing. Alas! it was preoccupied. His absence had led to ambitious
+ usurpation. A one-legged, sturdy sailor had mounted his throne, and
+ wielded his sceptre. The decorum of the street forbade altercation to the
+ contending parties; but the sailor referred discussion to a meeting at a
+ flash house in the Rookery that evening. There a jury was appointed, and
+ the case opened. By the conventional laws that regulate this useful
+ community, Beck was still in his rights; his reappearance sufficed to
+ restore his claims, and an appeal to the policeman would no doubt
+ re-establish his authority. But Beck was still so ill and so feeble that
+ he had a melancholy persuasion that he could not suitably perform the
+ duties of his office; and when the sailor, not a bad fellow on the whole,
+ offered to pay down on the nail what really seemed a very liberal sum for
+ Beck&rsquo;s peaceful surrender of his rights, the poor wretch thought of the
+ bare walls at his &ldquo;mammy&rsquo;s,&rdquo; of the long, dreary interval that must
+ elapse, even if able to work, before the furniture pawned could be
+ redeemed by the daily profits of his post, and with a groan he held out
+ his hand and concluded the bargain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Creeping home to his &ldquo;h-old crittur,&rdquo; he threw the purchase money into her
+ lap; then, broken-hearted and in despair, he slunk forth again in a sort
+ of vague, dreamy hope that the law, which abhors vagabonds, would seize
+ and finish him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When this tale was done, Percival did not neglect the gentle task of
+ admonition, which the poor sweeper&rsquo;s softened heart and dull remorse made
+ easier. He pointed out, in soft tones, how the avarice he had indulged had
+ been perhaps mercifully chastised, and drew no ineloquent picture of the
+ vicious miseries of the confirmed miser. Beck listened humbly and
+ respectfully; though so little did he understand of mercy and Providence
+ and vice that the diviner part of the homily was quite lost on him.
+ However, he confessed penitently that &ldquo;the mattress had made him vorse nor
+ a beast to the h-old crittur;&rdquo; and that &ldquo;he was cured of saving to the end
+ of his days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Percival, &ldquo;as you really seem not strong enough to bear
+ this out-of-door work (the winter coming on, too), what say you to
+ entering into my service? I want some help in my stables. The work is easy
+ enough, and you are used to horses, you know, in a sort of a way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck hesitated, and looked a moment undecided. At last he said, &ldquo;Please
+ your honour, if I bean&rsquo;t strong enough for the crossin&rsquo;, I &lsquo;se afeared I&rsquo;m
+ too h-ailing to sarve you. And voud n&rsquo;t I be vorse nor a wiper to take
+ your vages and not vork for &lsquo;em h-as I h-ought?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! we&rsquo;ll soon make you strong, my man. Take my advice; don&rsquo;t let your
+ head run on the crossing. That kind of industry exposes you to bad company
+ and bad thoughts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s vot it is, sir,&rdquo; said Beck, assentingly, laying his dexter
+ forefinger on his sinister palm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well! you are in my service, then. Go downstairs now and get your
+ breakfast; by and by you shall show me your &lsquo;mammy&rsquo;s&rsquo; house, and we&rsquo;ll see
+ what can be done for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck pressed his hands to his eyes, trying hard not to cry; but it was too
+ much for him; and as the valet, who appeared to Percival&rsquo;s summons, led
+ him down the stairs, his sobs were heard from attic to basement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0024" id="Blink2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. NEWS FROM GRABMAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That day, opening thus auspiciously to Beck, was memorable also to other
+ and more prominent persons in this history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the forenoon a parcel was brought to Madame Dalibard which
+ contained Ardworth&rsquo;s already famous book, a goodly assortment of extracts
+ from the newspapers thereon, and the following letter from the young
+ author:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will see, by the accompanying packet, that your counsels have had
+ weight with me. I have turned aside in my slow, legitimate career. I have,
+ as you desired, made &ldquo;men talk of me.&rdquo; What solid benefit I may reap from
+ this I know not. I shall not openly avow the book. Such notoriety cannot
+ help meat the Bar. But liberavi animam meam,&mdash;excuse my pedantry,&mdash;I
+ have let my soul free for a moment; I am now catching it back to put bit
+ and saddle on again. I will not tell you how you have disturbed me, how
+ you have stung me into this premature rush amidst the crowd, how, after
+ robbing me of name and father, you have driven me to this experiment with
+ my own mind, to see if I was deceived when I groaned to myself, &ldquo;The
+ Public shall give you a name, and Fame shall be your mother.&rdquo; I am
+ satisfied with the experiment. I know better now what is in me, and I have
+ regained my peace of mind. If in the success of this hasty work there be
+ that which will gratify the interest you so kindly take in me, deem that
+ success your own; I owe it to you,&mdash;to your revelations, to your
+ admonitions. I wait patiently your own time for further disclosures; till
+ then, the wheel must work on, and the grist be ground. Kind and generous
+ friend, till now I would not wound you by returning the sum you sent me,&mdash;nay,
+ more, I knew I should please you by devoting part of it to the risk of
+ giving this essay to the world, and so making its good fortune doubly your
+ own work. Now, when the publisher smiles, and the shopmen bow, and I am
+ acknowledged to have a bank in my brains,&mdash;now, you cannot be
+ offended to receive it back. Adieu. When my mind is in train again, and I
+ feel my step firm on the old dull road, I will come to see you. Till then,
+ yours&mdash;by what name? Open the Biographical Dictionary at hazard, and
+ send me one. GRAY&rsquo;S INN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not at the noble thoughts and the deep sympathy with mankind that glowed
+ through that work, over which Lucretia now tremulously hurried, did she
+ feel delight. All that she recognized, or desired to recognize, were those
+ evidences of that kind of intellect which wins its way through the world,
+ and which, strong and unmistakable, rose up in every page of that vigorous
+ logic and commanding style. The book was soon dropped, thus read; the
+ newspaper extracts pleased even more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; she said audibly, in the freedom of her solitude, &ldquo;this is the son
+ I asked for,&mdash;a son in whom I can rise; in whom I can exchange the
+ sense of crushing infamy for the old delicious ecstasy of pride! For this
+ son can I do too much? No; in what I may do for him methinks there will be
+ no remorse. And he calls his success mine,&mdash;mine!&rdquo; Her nostrils
+ dilated, and her front rose erect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of this exultation Varney found her; and before he could
+ communicate the business which had brought him, he had to listen, which he
+ did with the secret, gnawing envy that every other man&rsquo;s success
+ occasioned him, to her haughty self-felicitations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could not resist saying, with a sneer, when she paused, as if to ask
+ his sympathy,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this is very fine, belle-mere; and yet I should hardly have thought
+ that coarse-featured, uncouth limb of the law, who seldom moves without
+ upsetting a chair, never laughs but the panes rattle in the window,&mdash;I
+ should hardly have thought him the precise person to gratify your pride,
+ or answer the family ideal of a gentleman and a St. John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; said Lucretia, sternly, &ldquo;you have a biting tongue, and it is
+ folly in me to resent those privileges which our fearful connection gives
+ you. But this raillery&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, I was wrong; forgive it!&rdquo; interrupted Varney, who, dreading
+ nothing else, dreaded much the rebuke of his grim stepmother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is forgiven,&rdquo; said Lucretia, coldly, and with a slight wave of her
+ hand; then she added, with composure,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long since&mdash;even while heiress of Laughton&mdash;I parted with mere
+ pride in the hollow seemings of distinction. Had I not, should I have
+ stooped to William Mainwaring? What I then respected, amidst all the
+ degradations I have known, I respect still,&mdash;talent, ambition,
+ intellect, and will. Do you think I would exchange these in a son of mine
+ for the mere graces which a dancing-master can sell him? Fear not. Let us
+ give but wealth to that intellect, and the world will see no clumsiness in
+ the movements that march to its high places, and hear no discord in the
+ laugh that triumphs over fools. But you have some news to communicate, or
+ some proposal to suggest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have both,&rdquo; said Varney. &ldquo;In the first place, I have a letter from
+ Grabman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s eyes sparkled, and she snatched eagerly at the letter her
+ son-in-law drew forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LIVERPOOL, October, 1831.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JASON,&mdash;I think I am on the road to success. Having first possessed
+ myself of the fact, commemorated in the parish register, of the birth and
+ baptism of Alfred Braddell&rsquo;s son,&mdash;for we must proceed regularly in
+ these matters,&mdash;I next set my wits to work to trace that son&rsquo;s exodus
+ from the paternal mansion. I have hunted up an old woman-servant, Jane
+ Prior, who lived with the Braddells. She now thrives as a laundress; she
+ is a rank Puritan, and starches for the godly. She was at first very wary
+ and reserved in her communications; but by siding with her prejudices and
+ humours, and by the intercession of the Rev. Mr. Graves (of her own
+ persuasion), I have got her to open her lips. It seems that these
+ Braddells lived very unhappily; the husband, a pious dissenter, had
+ married a lady who turned out of a very different practice and belief.
+ Jane Prior pitied her master, and detested her mistress. Some
+ circumstances in the conduct of Mrs. Braddell made the husband, who was
+ then in his last illness, resolve, from a point of conscience, to save his
+ child from what he deemed the contamination of her precepts and example.
+ Mrs. Braddell was absent from Liverpool on a visit, which was thought very
+ unfeeling by the husband&rsquo;s friends; during this time Braddell was visited
+ constantly by a gentleman (Mr. Ardworth), who differed from him greatly in
+ some things, and seemed one of the carnal, but with whom agreement in
+ politics (for they were both great politicians and republicans) seems to
+ have established a link. One evening, when Mr. Ardworth was in the house,
+ Jane Prior, who was the only maidservant (for they kept but two, and one
+ had been just discharged), had been sent out to the apothecary&rsquo;s. On her
+ return, Jane Prior, going into the nursery, missed the infant: she thought
+ it was with her master; but coming into his room, Mr. Braddell told her to
+ shut the door, informed her that he had intrusted the boy to Mr. Ardworth,
+ to be brought up in a righteous and pious manner, and implored and
+ commanded her to keep this a secret from his wife, whom he was resolved,
+ indeed, if he lived, not to receive back into his house. Braddell,
+ however, did not survive more than two days this event. On his death, Mrs.
+ Braddell returned; but circumstances connected with the symptoms of his
+ malady, and a strong impression which haunted himself, and with which he
+ had infected Jane Prior, that he had been poisoned, led to a posthumous
+ examination of his remains. No trace of poison was, however, discovered,
+ and suspicions that had been directed against his wife could not be
+ substantiated by law; still, she was regarded in so unfavourable a light
+ by all who had known them both, she met with such little kindness or
+ sympathy in her widowhood, and had been so openly denounced by Jane Prior,
+ that it is not to be wondered at that she left the place as soon as
+ possible. The house, indeed, was taken from her; for Braddell&rsquo;s affairs
+ were found in such confusion, and his embarrassments so great, that
+ everything was seized and sold off,&mdash;nothing left for the widow nor
+ for the child (if the last were ever discovered.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As may be supposed, Mrs. Braddell was at first very clamorous for the lost
+ child; but Jane Prior kept her promise and withheld all clew to it, and
+ Mrs. Braddell was forced to quit the place, in ignorance of what had
+ become of it. Since then no one had heard of her; but Jane Prior says that
+ she is sure she has come to no good. Now, though much of this may be, no
+ doubt, familiar to you, dear Jason, it is right, when I put the evidence
+ before you, that you should know and guard against what to expect; and in
+ any trial at law to prove the identity of Vincent Braddell, Jane Prior
+ must be a principal witness, and will certainly not spare poor Mrs.
+ Braddell. For the main point, however,&mdash;namely, the suspicion of
+ poisoning her husband,&mdash;the inquest and verdict may set aside all
+ alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My next researches have been directed on the track of Walter Ardworth,
+ after leaving Liverpool, which (I find by the books at the inn where he
+ lodged and was known) he did in debt to the innkeeper, the very night he
+ received the charge of the child. Here, as yet, I am in fault; but I have
+ ascertained that a woman, one of the sect, of the name of Joplin, living
+ in a village fifteen miles from the town, had the care of some infant, to
+ replace her own, which she had lost. I am going to this village to-morrow.
+ But I cannot expect much in that quarter, since it would seem at variance
+ with your more probable belief that Walter Ardworth took the child at once
+ to Mr. Fielden&rsquo;s. However, you see I have already gone very far in the
+ evidence,&mdash;the birth of the child, the delivery of the child to
+ Ardworth. I see a very pretty case already before us, and I do not now
+ doubt for a moment of ultimate success. Yours, N. GRABMAN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia read steadily, and with no change of countenance, to the last
+ line of the letter. Then, as she put it down on the table before her, she
+ repeated, with a tone of deep exultation: &ldquo;No doubt of ultimate success!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not fear to brave all which the spite of this woman, Jane Prior,
+ may prompt her to say against you?&rdquo; asked Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s brow fell. &ldquo;It is another torture,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;even to own my
+ marriage with a low-born hypocrite. But I can endure it for the cause,&rdquo;
+ she added, more haughtily. &ldquo;Nothing can really hurt me in these obsolete
+ aspersions and this vague scandal. The inquest acquitted me, and the world
+ will be charitable to the mother of him who has wealth and rank and that
+ vigorous genius which, if proved in obscurity, shall command opinion in
+ renown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are now, then, disposed at once to proceed to action. For Helen all
+ is prepared,&mdash;the insurances are settled, the trust for which I hold
+ them on your behalf is signed and completed. But for Percival St. John I
+ await your directions. Will it be best first to prove your son&rsquo;s identity,
+ or when morally satisfied that that proof is forthcoming, to remove
+ betimes both the barriers to his inheritance? If we tarry for the last,
+ the removal of St. John becomes more suspicious than it does at a time
+ when you have no visible interest in his death. Besides, now we have the
+ occasion, or can make it, can we tell how long it will last? Again, it
+ will seem more natural that the lover should break his heart in the first
+ shock of&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; interrupted Lucretia, &ldquo;I would have all thought and contemplation of
+ crime at an end when, clasping my boy to my heart, I can say, &lsquo;Your
+ mother&rsquo;s inheritance is yours.&rsquo; I would not have a murder before my eyes
+ when they should look only on the fair prospects beyond. I would cast back
+ all the hideous images of horror into the rear of memory, so that hope may
+ for once visit me again undisturbed. No, Gabriel, were I to speak forever,
+ you would comprehend not what I grasp at in a son. It is at a future!
+ Rolling a stone over the sepulchre of the past, it is a resurrection into
+ a fresh world; it is to know again one emotion not impure, one scheme not
+ criminal,&mdash;it is, in a word, to cease to be as myself, to think in
+ another soul, to hear my heart beat in another form. All this I covet in a
+ son. And when all this should smile before me in his image, shall I be
+ plucked back again into my hell by the consciousness that a new crime is
+ to be done? No; wade quickly through the passage of blood, that we may dry
+ our garments and breathe the air upon the bank where sun shines and
+ flowers bloom!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; said Varney. &ldquo;Before the week is out, I must be under
+ the same roof as St. John. Before the week is out, why not all meet in the
+ old halls of Laughton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, in the halls of Laughton. On the hearth of our ancestors the deeds
+ done for our descendants look less dark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And first, to prepare the way, Helen should sicken in these fogs of
+ London, and want change of air.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Place before me that desk. I will read William Mainwaring&rsquo;s letters again
+ and again, till from every shadow in the past a voice comes forth, &lsquo;The
+ child of your rival, your betrayer, your undoer, stands between the
+ daylight and your son!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0025" id="Blink2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. VARIETIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Leaving the guilty pair to concert their schemes and indulge their
+ atrocious hopes, we accompany Percival to the hovel occupied by Becky
+ Carruthers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On following Beck into the room she rented, Percival was greatly surprised
+ to find, seated comfortably on the only chair to be seen, no less a person
+ than the worthy Mrs. Mivers. This good lady in her spinster days had
+ earned her own bread by hard work. She had captivated Mr. Mivers when but
+ a simple housemaid in the service of one of his relations. And while this
+ humble condition in her earlier life may account for much in her language
+ and manners which is nowadays inconsonant with the breeding and education
+ that characterize the wives of opulent tradesmen, so perhaps the
+ remembrance of it made her unusually susceptible to the duties of charity.
+ For there is no class of society more prone to pity and relieve the poor
+ than females in domestic service; and this virtue Mrs. Mivers had not laid
+ aside, as many do, as soon as she was in a condition to practise it with
+ effect. Mrs. Mivers blushed scarlet on being detected in her visit of
+ kindness, and hastened to excuse herself by the information that she
+ belonged to a society of ladies for &ldquo;The Bettering the Condition of the
+ Poor,&rdquo; and that having just been informed of Mrs. Becky&rsquo;s destitute state,
+ she had looked in to recommend her&mdash;a ventilator!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is quite shocking to see how little the poor attends to the proper
+ wentilating their houses. No wonder there&rsquo;s so much typus about!&rdquo; said
+ Mrs. Mivers. &ldquo;And for one-and-sixpence we can introduce a stream of h-air
+ that goes up the chimbly, and carries away all that it finds!&rdquo;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I &lsquo;umbly thank you, marm,&rdquo; said the poor bundle of rags that went by the
+ name of &ldquo;Becky,&rdquo; as with some difficulty she contrived to stand in the
+ presence of the benevolent visitor; &ldquo;but I am much afeard that the h-air
+ will make the rheumatiz very rumpatious!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary, on the contrary,&rdquo; said Mrs. Mivers, triumphantly; and
+ she proceeded philosophically to explain that all the fevers, aches,
+ pains, and physical ills that harass the poor arise from the want of an
+ air-trap in the chimney and a perforated network in the window-pane. Becky
+ listened patiently; for Mrs. Mivers was only a philosopher in her talk,
+ and she had proved herself anything but a philosopher in her actions, by
+ the spontaneous present of five shillings, and the promise of a basket of
+ victuals and some good wine to keep the cold wind she invited to the
+ apartment out of the stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival imitated the silence of Becky, whose spirit was so bowed down by
+ an existence of drudgery that not even the sight of her foster-son could
+ draw her attention from the respect due to a superior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And is this poor cranky-looking cretur your son, Mrs. Becky?&rdquo; said the
+ visitor, struck at last by the appearance of the ex-sweeper as he stood at
+ the threshold, hat in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed, marm,&rdquo; answered Becky; &ldquo;I often says, says I: &lsquo;Child, you be
+ the son of Sint Poll&rsquo;s.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck smiled proudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was agin the grit church, marm &mdash;&mdash; But it&rsquo;s a long story.
+ My poor good man had not a long been dead,&mdash;as good a man as hever
+ lived, marm,&rdquo; and Becky dropped a courtesy; &ldquo;he fell off a scaffold, and
+ pitched right on his &lsquo;ead, or I should not have come on the parish, marm,&mdash;and
+ that&rsquo;s the truth on it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, I shall call and hear all about it; a sad case, I dare say.
+ You see, your husband should have subscribed to our Loan Society, and then
+ they&rsquo;d have found him a &lsquo;andsome coffin, and given three pounds to his
+ widder. But the poor are so benighted in these parts. I&rsquo;m sure, sir, I
+ can&rsquo;t guess what brought you here; but that&rsquo;s no business of mine. And how
+ are all at Old Brompton?&rdquo; Here Mrs. Mivers bridled indignantly. &ldquo;There was
+ a time when Miss Mainwaring was very glad to come and chat with Mr. M. and
+ myself; but now &lsquo;rum has riz,&rsquo; as the saying is,&mdash;not but what I dare
+ say it&rsquo;s not her fault, poor thing! That stiff aunt of hers,&mdash;she
+ need not look so high; pride and poverty, forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While delivering these conciliatory sentences, Mrs. Mivers had gathered up
+ her gown, and was evidently in the bustle of departure. As she now nodded
+ to Becky, Percival stepped up, and, with his irresistible smile, offered
+ her his arm. Much surprised and much flattered, Mrs. Mivers accepted it.
+ As she did so, he gently detained her while he said to Becky,&mdash;&ldquo;My
+ good friend, I have brought you the poor lad to whom you have been a
+ mother, to tell you that good deeds find their reward sooner or later. As
+ for him, make yourself easy; he will inform you of the new step he has
+ taken, and for you, good, kind-hearted creature, thank the boy you brought
+ up if your old age shall be made easy and cheerful. Now, Beck, silly lad,
+ go and tell all to your nurse! Take care of this step, Mrs. Mivers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he was in the street, Percival, who, if amused at the
+ ventilator, had seen the five shillings gleam on Becky&rsquo;s palm, and felt
+ that he had found under the puce-coloured gown a good woman&rsquo;s heart to
+ understand him, gave Mrs. Mivers a short sketch of poor Becky&rsquo;s history
+ and misfortunes, and so contrived to interest her in behalf of the nurse
+ that she willingly promised to become Percival&rsquo;s almoner, to execute his
+ commission, to improve the interior of Becky&rsquo;s abode, and distribute
+ weekly the liberal stipend he proposed to settle on the old widow. They
+ had grown, indeed, quite friendly and intimate by the time he reached the
+ smart plate-glazed mahogany-coloured facade within which the flourishing
+ business of Mr. Mivers was carried on; and when, knocking at the private
+ door, promptly opened by a lemon-coloured page, she invited him upstairs,
+ it so chanced that the conversation had slid off to Helen, and Percival
+ was sufficiently interested to bow assent and to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though all the way up the stairs Mrs. Mivers, turning back at every other
+ step, did her best to impress upon her young visitor&rsquo;s mind the important
+ fact that they kept their household establishment at their &ldquo;willer,&rdquo; and
+ that their apartments in Fleet Street were only a &ldquo;conwenience,&rdquo; the store
+ set by the worthy housewife upon her goods and chattels was sufficiently
+ visible in the drugget that threaded its narrow way up the gay Brussels
+ stair-carpet, and in certain layers of paper which protected from the
+ profanation of immediate touch the mahogany hand-rail. And nothing could
+ exceed the fostering care exhibited in the drawing-room, when the door
+ thrown open admitted a view of its damask moreen curtains, pinned back
+ from such impertinent sunbeams as could force their way through the foggy
+ air of the east into the windows, and the ells of yellow muslin that
+ guarded the frames, at least, of a collection of coloured prints and two
+ kit-kat portraitures of Mr. Mivers and his lady from the perambulations of
+ the flies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Percival&rsquo;s view of this interior was somewhat impeded by his portly
+ guide, who, uttering a little exclamation of surprise, stood motionless on
+ the threshold as she perceived Mr. Mivers seated by the hearth in close
+ conference with a gentleman whom she had never seen before. At that hour
+ it was so rare an event in the life of Mr. Mivers to be found in the
+ drawing-room, and that he should have an acquaintance unknown to his
+ helpmate was a circumstance so much rarer still, that Mrs. Mivers may well
+ be forgiven for keeping St. John standing at the door till she had
+ recovered her amaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Mr. Mivers rose in some confusion, and was apparently about to
+ introduce his guest, when that gentleman coughed, and pinched the host&rsquo;s
+ arm significantly. Mr. Mivers coughed also, and stammered out: &ldquo;A
+ gentleman, Mrs. M.,&mdash;a friend; stay with us a day or two. Much
+ honoured, hum!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Mivers stared and courtesied, and stared again. But there was an
+ open, good-humoured smile in the face of the visitor, as he advanced and
+ took her hand, that attracted a heart very easily conciliated. Seeing that
+ that was no moment for further explanation, she plumped herself into a
+ seat and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But bless us and save us, I am keeping you standing, Mr. St. John!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;St. John!&rdquo; repeated the visitor, with a vehemence that startled Mrs.
+ Mivers. &ldquo;Your name is St. John, sir,&mdash;related to the St. Johns of
+ Laughton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, indeed,&rdquo; answered Percival, with his shy, arch smile. &ldquo;Laughton at
+ present has no worthier owner than myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman made two strides to Percival and shook him heartily by the
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is pleasant indeed!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;You must excuse my freedom; but
+ I knew well poor old Sir Miles, and my heart warms at the sight of his
+ representative.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival glanced at his new acquaintance, and on the whole was
+ prepossessed in his favour. He seemed somewhere on the sunnier side of
+ fifty, with that superb yellow bronze of complexion which betokens long
+ residence under Eastern skies. Deep wrinkles near the eyes, and a dark
+ circle round them, spoke of cares and fatigue, and perhaps dissipation.
+ But he had evidently a vigour of constitution that had borne him passably
+ through all; his frame was wiry and nervous; his eye bright and full of
+ life; and there was that abrupt, unsteady, mercurial restlessness in his
+ movements and manner which usually accompanies the man whose sanguine
+ temperament prompts him to concede to the impulse, and who is blessed or
+ cursed with a superabundance of energy, according as circumstance may
+ favour or judgment correct that equivocal gift of constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival said something appropriate in reply to so much cordiality paid to
+ the account of the Sir Miles whom he had never seen, and seated himself,
+ colouring slightly under the influence of the fixed, pleased, and earnest
+ look still bent upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Searching for something else to say, Percival asked Mrs. Mivers if she had
+ lately seen John Ardworth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guest, who had just reseated himself, turned his chair round at that
+ question with such vivacity that Mrs. Mivers heard it crack. Her chairs
+ were not meant for such usage. A shade fell over her rosy countenance as
+ she replied,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed (please, sir, them chairs is brittle)! No, he is like Madame
+ at Brompton, and seldom condescends to favour us now. It was but last
+ Sunday we asked him to dinner. I am sure he need not turn up his nose at
+ our roast beef and pudding!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mr. Mivers was taken with a violent fit of coughing, which drew off
+ his wife&rsquo;s attention. She was afraid he had taken cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger took out a large snuff-box, inhaled a long pinch of snuff,
+ and said to St. John,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This Mr. John Ardworth, a pert enough jackanapes, I suppose,&mdash;a limb
+ of the law, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Percival, gravely, &ldquo;John Ardworth is my particular friend. It
+ is clear that you know very little of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; said the stranger,&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;pon my life, that&rsquo;s very true.
+ But I suppose he&rsquo;s like all lawyers,&mdash;cunning and tricky, conceited
+ and supercilious, full of prejudice and cant, and a red-hot Tory into the
+ bargain. I know them, sir; I know them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; answered St. John, half gayly, half angrily, &ldquo;your general
+ experience serves you very little here; for Ardworth is exactly the
+ opposite of all you have described.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even in politics?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I fear he is half a Radical,&mdash;certainly more than a Whig,&rdquo;
+ answered St. John, rather mournfully; for his own theories were all the
+ other way, notwithstanding his unpatriotic forgetfulness of them in his
+ offer to assist Ardworth&rsquo;s entrance into parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am very glad to hear it,&rdquo; cried the stranger, again taking snuff. &ldquo;And
+ this Madame at Brompton&mdash;perhaps I know her a little better than I do
+ young Mr. Ardworth&mdash;Mrs. Brad&mdash;I mean Madame Dalibard!&rdquo; and the
+ stranger glanced at Mr. Mivers, who was slowly recovering from some
+ vigorous slaps on the back administered to him by his wife as a
+ counter-irritant to the cough. &ldquo;Is it true that she has lost the use of
+ her limbs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And takes care of poor Helen Mainwaring the orphan? Well, well, that
+ looks amiable enough. I must see; I must see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who shall I say inquired after her, when I see Madame Dalibard?&rdquo; asked
+ Percival, with some curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who? Oh, Mr. Tomkins. She will not recollect him, though,&rdquo;&mdash;and the
+ stranger laughed, and Mr. Mivers laughed too; and Mrs. Mivers, who,
+ indeed, always laughed when other people laughed, laughed also. So
+ Percival thought he ought to laugh for the sake of good company, and all
+ laughed together as he arose and took leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not, however, got far from the house, on his way to his cabriolet,
+ which he had left by Temple Bar, when, somewhat to his surprise, he found
+ Mr. Tomkins at his elbow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, Mr. St. John, but I have only just returned to
+ England, and on such occasions a man is apt to seem curious. This young
+ lawyer &mdash;&mdash; You see the elder Ardworth, a good-for-nothing
+ scamp, was a sort of friend of mine,&mdash;not exactly friend, indeed,
+ for, by Jove, I think he was a worse friend to me than he was to anybody
+ else; still I had a foolish interest for him, and should be glad to hear
+ something more about any one bearing his name than I can coax out of that
+ droll little linen draper. You are really intimate with young Ardworth,
+ eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Intimate! poor fellow, he will not let any one be that; he works too hard
+ to be social. But I love him sincerely, and I admire him beyond measure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dog has industry, then;&mdash;that&rsquo;s good. And does he make debts,
+ like that rascal, Ardworth senior?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, sir, I must say this tone with respect to Mr. Ardworth&rsquo;s father&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the devil, sir! Do you take the father&rsquo;s part as well as the son&rsquo;s?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know anything about Mr. Ardworth senior,&rdquo; said Percival, pouting;
+ &ldquo;but I do know that my friend would not allow any one to speak ill of his
+ father in his presence; and I beg you, sir, to consider that whatever
+ would offend him must offend me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gad&rsquo;s my life! He&rsquo;s the luckiest young rogue to have such a friend. Sir,
+ I wish you a very good-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Tomkins took off his hat, bowed, and passing St. John with a rapid
+ step, was soon lost to his eye amongst the crowd hurrying westward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our business being now rather with him than Percival, we leave the
+ latter to mount his cabriolet, and we proceed with Mr. Mivers&rsquo;s mercurial
+ guest on his eccentric way through the throng. There was an odd mixture of
+ thoughtful abstraction and quick observation in the soliloquy in which
+ this gentleman indulged, as he walked briskly on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pretty young spark that St. John! A look of his father, but handsomer,
+ and less affected. I like him. Fine shop that, very! London wonderfully
+ improved. A hookah in that window,&mdash;God bless me!&mdash;a real
+ hookah! This is all very good news about that poor boy, very. After all,
+ he is not to blame if his mother was such a damnable&mdash;I must contrive
+ to see and judge of him myself as soon as possible. Can&rsquo;t trust to others;
+ too sharp for that. What an ugly dog that is, looking after me! It is
+ certainly a bailiff. Hang it, what do I care for bailiffs? Hem, hem!&rdquo; And
+ the gentleman thrust his hands into his pockets, and laughed, as the
+ jingle of coin reached his ear through the din without. &ldquo;Well, I must make
+ haste to decide; for really there is a very troublesome piece of business
+ before me. Plague take her, what can have become of the woman? I shall
+ have to hunt out a sharp lawyer. But John&rsquo;s a lawyer himself. No,
+ attorneys, I suppose, are the men. Gad! they were sharp enough when they
+ had to hunt me. What&rsquo;s that great bill on the wall about? &lsquo;Down with the
+ Lords!&rsquo; Pooh, pooh! Master John Bull, you love lords a great deal too much
+ for that. A prettyish girl! English women are very good-looking,
+ certainly. That Lucretia, what shall I do, if &mdash;&mdash; Ah, time
+ enough to think of her when I have got over that mighty stiff if!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such cogitations and mental remarks our traveller whiled away the time
+ till he found himself in Piccadilly. There, a publisher&rsquo;s shop (and he had
+ that keen eye for shops which betrays the stranger in London), with its
+ new publications exposed at the window, attracted his notice. Conspicuous
+ amongst the rest was the open title-page of a book, at the foot of which
+ was placed a placard with the enticing words, &ldquo;FOURTH EDITION; JUST OUT,&rdquo;
+ in red capitals. The title of the work struck his irritable, curious
+ fancy; he walked into the shop, asked for the volume, and while looking
+ over the contents with muttered ejaculations, &ldquo;Good! capital! Why, this
+ reminds one of Horne Tooke! What&rsquo;s the price? Very dear; must have it
+ though,&mdash;must. Ha, ha! home-thrust there!&rdquo;&mdash;while thus turning
+ over the leaves, and rending them asunder with his forefinger, regardless
+ of the paper cutter extended to him by the shopman, a gentleman, pushing
+ by him, asked if the publisher was at home; and as the shopman, bowing
+ very low, answered &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the new-comer darted into a little recess behind
+ the shop. Mr. Tomkins, who had looked up very angrily on being jostled so
+ unceremoniously, started and changed colour when he saw the face of the
+ offender. &ldquo;Saints in heaven!&rdquo; he murmured almost audibly, &ldquo;what a look of
+ that woman; and yet&mdash;no&mdash;it is gone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is that gentleman?&rdquo; he asked abruptly, as he paid for his book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shopman smiled, but answered, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a lie! You would never bow so low to a man you did not know!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shopman smiled again. &ldquo;Why, sir, there are many who come to this house
+ who don&rsquo;t wish us to know them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, I understand; you are political publishers,&mdash;afraid of libels, I
+ dare say. Always the same thing in this cursed country; and then they tell
+ us we are &lsquo;free!&rsquo; So I suppose that gentleman has written something
+ William Pitt does not like. But William Pitt&mdash;ha&mdash;he&rsquo;s dead!
+ Very true, so he is! Sir, this little book seems most excellent; but in my
+ time, a man would have been sent to Newgate for printing it.&rdquo; While thus
+ running on, Mr. Tomkins had edged himself pretty close to the recess
+ within which the last-comer had disappeared; and there, seated on a high
+ stool, he contrived to read and to talk at the same time, but his eye and
+ his ear were both turned every instant towards the recess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shopman, little suspecting that in so very eccentric, garrulous a
+ person he was permitting a spy to encroach upon the secrets of the house,
+ continued to make up sundry parcels of the new publication which had so
+ enchanted his customer, while he expatiated on the prodigious sensation
+ the book had created, and while the customer himself had already caught
+ enough of the low conversation within the recess to be aware that the
+ author of the book was the very person who had so roused his curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not till that gentleman, followed to the door by the polite publisher, had
+ quitted the shop, did Mr. Tomkins put this volume in his pocket, and, with
+ a familiar nod at the shopman, take himself off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was scarcely in the street when he saw Percival St. John leaning out of
+ his cabriolet and conversing with the author he had discovered. He halted
+ a moment irresolute; but the young man, in whom our reader recognizes John
+ Ardworth, declining St. John&rsquo;s invitation to accompany him to Brompton,
+ resumed his way through the throng; the cabriolet drove on; and Mr.
+ Tomkins, though with a graver mien and a steadier step, continued his
+ desultory rambles. Meanwhile, John Ardworth strode gloomily back to his
+ lonely chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, throwing himself on the well-worn chair before the crowded desk, he
+ buried his face in his hands, and for some minutes he felt all that
+ profound despondency peculiar to those who have won fame, to add to the
+ dark volume of experience the conviction of fame&rsquo;s nothingness. For some
+ minutes he felt an illiberal and ungrateful envy of St. John, so fair, so
+ light-hearted, so favoured by fortune, so rich in friends,&mdash;in a
+ mother&rsquo;s love, and in Helen&rsquo;s half-plighted troth. And he, from his very
+ birth, cut off from the social ties of blood; no mother&rsquo;s kiss to reward
+ the toils or gladden the sports of childhood; no father&rsquo;s cheering word up
+ the steep hill of man! And Helen, for whose sake he had so often, when his
+ heart grew weary, nerved himself again to labour, saying, &ldquo;Let me be rich,
+ let me be great, and then I will dare to tell Helen that I love her!&rdquo;&mdash;Helen
+ smiling upon another, unconscious of his pangs! What could fame bestow in
+ compensation? What matter that strangers praised, and the babble of the
+ world&rsquo;s running stream lingered its brief moment round the pebble in its
+ way. In the bitterness of his mood, he was unjust to his rival. All that
+ exquisite but half-concealed treasure of imagination and thought which lay
+ beneath the surface of Helen&rsquo;s childlike smile he believed that he alone&mdash;he,
+ soul of power and son of genius&mdash;was worthy to discover and to prize.
+ In the pride not unfrequent with that kingliest of all aristocracies, the
+ Chiefs of Intellect, he forgot the grandeur which invests the attributes
+ of the heart; forgot that, in the lists of love, the heart is at least the
+ equal of the mind. In the reaction that follows great excitement, Ardworth
+ had morbidly felt, that day, his utter solitude,&mdash;felt it in the
+ streets through which he had passed; in the home to which he had returned;
+ the burning tears, shed for the first time since childhood, forced
+ themselves through his clasped fingers. At length he rose, with a strong
+ effort at self-mastery, some contempt of his weakness, and much remorse at
+ his ungrateful envy. He gathered together the soiled manuscript and dingy
+ proofs of his book, and thrust them through the grimy bars of his grate;
+ then, opening his desk, he drew out a small packet, with tremulous fingers
+ unfolding paper after paper, and gazed, with eyes still moistened, on the
+ relics kept till then in the devotion of the only sentiment inspired by
+ Eros that had ever, perhaps, softened his iron nature. These were two
+ notes from Helen, some violets she had once given him, and a little purse
+ she had knitted for him (with a playful prophecy of future fortunes) when
+ he had last left the vicarage. Nor blame him, ye who, with more habitual
+ romance of temper, and richer fertility of imagination, can reconcile the
+ tenderest memories with the sternest duties, if he, with all his strength,
+ felt that the associations connected with those tokens would but enervate
+ his resolves and embitter his resignation. You can guess not the extent of
+ the sacrifice, the bitterness of the pang, when, averting his head, he
+ dropped those relics on the hearth. The evidence of the desultory
+ ambition, the tokens of the visionary love,&mdash;the same flame leaped up
+ to devour both! It was as the funeral pyre of his youth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;let all that can divert me from the true ends
+ of my life consume! Labour, take back your son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour afterwards, and his clerk, returning home, found Ardworth employed
+ as calmly as usual on his Law Reports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0026" id="Blink2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. THE INVITATION TO LAUGHTON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That day, when he called at Brompton, Percival reported to Madame Dalibard
+ his interview with the eccentric Mr. Tomkins. Lucretia seemed chafed and
+ disconcerted by the inquiries with which that gentleman had honoured her,
+ and as soon as Percival had gone, she sent for Varney. He did not come
+ till late; she repeated to him what St. John had said of the stranger.
+ Varney participated in her uneasy alarm. The name, indeed, was unknown to
+ them, nor could they conjecture the bearer of so ordinary a patronymic;
+ but there had been secrets enough in Lucretia&rsquo;s life to render her
+ apprehensive of encountering those who had known her in earlier years; and
+ Varney feared lest any rumour reported to St. John might create his
+ mistrust, or lessen the hold obtained upon a victim heretofore so
+ unsuspicious. They both agreed in the expediency of withdrawing themselves
+ and St. John as soon as possible from London, and frustrating Percival&rsquo;s
+ chance of closer intercourse with the stranger, who had evidently aroused
+ his curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Helen was much indisposed; and the symptoms grew so grave
+ towards the evening that Madame Dalibard expressed alarm, and willingly
+ suffered Percival (who had only been permitted to see Helen for a few
+ minutes, when her lassitude was so extreme that she was obliged to retire
+ to her room) to go in search of a physician. He returned with one of the
+ most eminent of the faculty. On the way to Brompton, in reply to the
+ questions of Dr. &mdash;&mdash;, Percival spoke of the dejection to which
+ Helen was occasionally subject, and this circumstance confirmed Dr.
+ &mdash;&mdash;, after he had seen his patient, in his view of the case. In
+ addition to some feverish and inflammatory symptoms which he trusted his
+ prescriptions would speedily remove, he found great nervous debility, and
+ willingly fell in with the casual suggestion of Varney, who was present,
+ that a change of air would greatly improve Miss Mainwaring&rsquo;s general
+ health, as soon as the temporary acute attack had subsided. He did not
+ regard the present complaint very seriously, and reassured poor Percival
+ by his cheerful mien and sanguine predictions. Percival remained at the
+ house the whole day, and had the satisfaction, before he left, of hearing
+ that the remedies had already abated the fever, and that Helen had fallen
+ into a profound sleep. Walking back to town with Varney, the last said
+ hesitatingly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were saying to me the other day that you feared you should have to go
+ for a few days both to Vernon Grange and to Laughton, as your steward
+ wished to point out to you some extensive alterations in the management of
+ your woods to commence this autumn. As you were so soon coming of age,
+ Lady Mary desired that her directions should yield to your own. Now, since
+ Helen is recommended change of air, why not invite Madame Dalibard to
+ visit you at one of these places? I would suggest Laughton. My poor
+ mother-in-law I know longs to revisit the scenes of her youth, and you
+ could not compliment or conciliate her more than by such an invitation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Percival, joyfully, &ldquo;it would realize the fondest dream of my
+ heart to see Helen under the old roof-tree of Laughton; but as my mother
+ is abroad, and there is therefore no lady to receive them, perhaps&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; interrupted Varney, &ldquo;Madame Dalibard herself is almost the very
+ person whom les bienseances might induce you to select to do the honours
+ of your house in Lady Mary&rsquo;s absence, not only as kinswoman to yourself,
+ but as the nearest surviving relative of Sir Miles,&mdash;the most
+ immediate descendant of the St. Johns; her mature years and decorum of
+ life, her joint kindred to Helen and yourself, surely remove every
+ appearance of impropriety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If she thinks so, certainly; I am no accurate judge of such formalities.
+ You could not oblige me more, Varney, than in pre-obtaining her consent to
+ the proposal. Helen at Laughton! Oh, blissful thought!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And in what air would she be so likely to revive?&rdquo; said Varney; but his
+ voice was thick and husky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ideas thus presented to him almost banished anxiety from Percival&rsquo;s
+ breast. In a thousand delightful shapes they haunted him during the
+ sleepless night; and when, the next morning, he found that Helen was
+ surprisingly better, he pressed his invitation upon Madame Dalibard with a
+ warmth that made her cheek yet more pale, and the hand, which the boy
+ grasped as he pleaded, as cold as the dead. But she briefly consented, and
+ Percival, allowed a brief interview with Helen, had the rapture to see her
+ smile in a delight as childlike as his own at the news he communicated,
+ and listen with swimming eye when he dwelt on the walks they should take
+ together amidst haunts to become henceforth dear to her as to himself.
+ Fairyland dawned before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visit of the physician justified Percival&rsquo;s heightened spirits. All
+ the acuter symptoms had vanished already. He sanctioned his patient&rsquo;s
+ departure from town as soon as Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s convenience would permit,
+ and recommended only a course of restorative medicines to strengthen the
+ nervous system, which was to commence with the following morning, and be
+ persisted in for some weeks. He dwelt much on the effect to be derived
+ from taking these medicines the first thing in the day, as soon as Helen
+ woke. Varney and Madame Dalibard exchanged a rapid glance. Charmed with
+ the success that in this instance had attended the skill of the great
+ physician, Percival, in his usual zealous benevolence, now eagerly pressed
+ upon Madame Dalibard the wisdom of consulting Dr. &mdash;&mdash; for her
+ own malady; and the doctor, putting on his spectacles and drawing his
+ chair nearer to the frowning cripple, began to question her of her state.
+ But Madame Dalibard abruptly and discourteously put a stop to all
+ interrogatories: she had already exhausted all remedies art could suggest;
+ she had become reconciled to her deplorable infirmity, and lost all faith
+ in physicians. Some day or other she might try the baths at Egra, but till
+ then she must be permitted to suffer undisturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor, by no means wishing to undertake a case of chronic paralysis,
+ rose smilingly, and with a liberal confession that the German baths were
+ sometimes extremely efficacious in such complaints, pressed Percival&rsquo;s
+ outstretched hand, then slipped his own into his pocket, and bowed his way
+ out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Relieved from all apprehension, Percival very good-humouredly received the
+ hint of Madame Dalibard that the excitement through which she had gone for
+ the last twenty-four hours rendered her unfit for his society, and went
+ home to write to Laughton and prepare all things for the reception of his
+ guests. Varney accompanied him. Percival found Beck in the hall, already
+ much altered, and embellished, by a new suit of livery. The ex-sweeper
+ stared hard at Varney, who, without recognizing, in so smart a shape, the
+ squalid tatterdemalion who had lighted him up the stairs to Mr. Grabman&rsquo;s
+ apartments, passed him by into Percival&rsquo;s little study, on the
+ ground-floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Beck,&rdquo; said Percival, ever mindful of others, and attributing his
+ groom&rsquo;s astonished gaze at Varney to his admiration of that gentleman&rsquo;s
+ showy exterior, &ldquo;I shall send you down to the country to-morrow with two
+ of the horses; so you may have to-day to yourself to take leave of your
+ nurse. I flatter myself you will find her rooms a little more comfortable
+ than they were yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck heard with a bursting heart; and his master, giving him a cheering
+ tap on the shoulder, left him to find his way into the streets and to
+ Becky&rsquo;s abode.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found, indeed, that the last had already undergone the magic
+ transformation which is ever at the command of godlike wealth. Mrs.
+ Mivers, who was naturally prompt and active, had had pleasure in executing
+ Percival&rsquo;s commission. Early in the morning, floors had been scrubbed, the
+ windows cleaned, the ventilator fixed; then followed porters with chairs
+ and tables, and a wonderful Dutch clock, and new bedding, and a bright
+ piece of carpet; and then came two servants belonging to Mrs. Mivers to
+ arrange the chattels; and finally, when all was nearly completed, the
+ Avatar of Mrs. Mivers herself, to give the last finish with her own
+ mittened hands and in her own housewifely apron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good lady was still employed in ranging a set of teacups on the
+ shelves of the dresser when Beck entered; and his old nurse, in the
+ overflow of her gratitude, hobbled up to her foundling and threw her arms
+ round his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s right!&rdquo; said Mrs. Mivers, good-humouredly, turning round, and
+ wiping the tear from her eye. &ldquo;You ought to make much of him, poor lad,&mdash;he
+ has turned out a godsend indeed; and, upon my word, he looks very
+ respectable in his new clothes. But what is this,&mdash;a child&rsquo;s coral?&rdquo;
+ as, opening a drawer in the dresser, she discovered Beck&rsquo;s treasure. &ldquo;Dear
+ me, it is a very handsome one; why, these bells look like gold!&rdquo; and
+ suspicion of her protege&rsquo;s honesty for a moment contracted her thoughtful
+ brow. &ldquo;However on earth did you come by this, Mrs. Becky?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure and sartin,&rdquo; answered Becky, dropping her mutilated courtesy, &ldquo;I
+ be&rsquo;s glad it be found now, instead of sum days afore, or I might have been
+ vicked enough to let it go with the rest to the pop-shop; and I&rsquo;m sure the
+ times out of mind ven that &lsquo;ere boy was a h-urchin that I&rsquo;ve risted the
+ timtashung and said, &lsquo;No, Becky Carruthers, that maun&rsquo;t go to my
+ h-uncle&rsquo;s!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why not, my good woman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lor&rsquo; love you, marm, if that curril could speak, who knows vot it might
+ say,&mdash;eh, lad, who knows? You sees, marm, my good man had not a long
+ been dead; I could not a get no vork no vays. &lsquo;Becky Carruthers,&rsquo; says I,
+ &lsquo;you must go out in the streets a begging!&rsquo; I niver thought I should a
+ come to that. But my poor husband, you sees, marm, fell from a scaffol&rsquo;,&mdash;as
+ good a man as hever&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, you told me all that before,&rdquo; said Mrs. Mivers, growing
+ impatient, and already diverted from her interest in the coral by a new
+ cargo, all bright from the tinman, which, indeed, no less instantaneously,
+ absorbed the admiration both of Beck and his nurse. And what with the
+ inspection of these articles, and the comments each provoked, the coral
+ rested in peace on the dresser till Mrs. Mivers, when just about to renew
+ her inquiries, was startled by the sound of the Dutch clock striking four,&mdash;a
+ voice which reminded her of the lapse of time and her own dinner-hour. So,
+ with many promises to call again and have a good chat with her humble
+ friend, she took her departure, amidst the blessings of Becky, and the
+ less noisy, but not less grateful, salutations of Beck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very happy was the evening these poor creatures passed together over their
+ first cup of tea from the new bright copper kettle and the almost
+ forgotten luxury of crumpets, in which their altered circumstances
+ permitted them without extravagance to indulge. In the course of
+ conversation Beck communicated how much he had been astonished by
+ recognizing the visitor of Grabman, the provoker of the irritable
+ grave-stealer, in the familiar companion of his master; and when Becky
+ told him how often, in the domestic experience her vocation of charing had
+ accumulated, she had heard of the ruin brought on rich young men by
+ gamblers and sharpers, Beck promised to himself to keep a sharp eye on
+ Grabman&rsquo;s showy acquaintance. &ldquo;For master is but a babe, like,&rdquo; said he,
+ majestically; &ldquo;and I&rsquo;d be cut into mincemeat afore I&rsquo;d let an &lsquo;air on his
+ &lsquo;ead come to &lsquo;arm, if so be&rsquo;s h-as &lsquo;ow I could perwent it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We need not say that his nurse confirmed him in these good resolutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Beck, when the time came for parting, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll keep from
+ the gin-shop, old &lsquo;oman, and not shame the young master?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sartin sure,&rdquo; answered Becky; &ldquo;it is only ven vun is down in the vorld
+ that vun goes to the Ticker-shop. Now, h-indeed,&rdquo;&mdash;and she looked
+ round very proudly,&mdash;&ldquo;I &lsquo;as a &lsquo;spectable stashion, and I vould n&rsquo;t go
+ for to lower it, and let &lsquo;em say that Becky Carruthers does not know how
+ to conduct herself. The curril will be safe enuff now; but p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps you had
+ best take it yourself, lad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vot should I do vith it? I&rsquo;ve had enuff of the &lsquo;sponsibility. Put it up
+ in a &lsquo;ankerchiff, and p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps ven master gets married, and &lsquo;as a babby
+ vots teethin&rsquo;, he vil say, &lsquo;Thank ye, Beck, for your curril.&rsquo; Vould not
+ that make us proud, mammy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chuckling heartily at that vision, Beck kissed his nurse, and trying hard
+ to keep himself upright, and do credit to the dignity of his cloth,
+ returned to his new room over the stables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0027" id="Blink2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE WAKING OF THE SERPENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And how, O Poet of the sad belief, and eloquence &ldquo;like ebony, at once dark
+ and splendid [It was said of Tertullian that &lsquo;his style was like ebony,
+ dark and splendid&rsquo;],&rdquo; how couldst thou, august Lucretius, deem it but
+ sweet to behold from the steep the strife of the great sea, or, safe from
+ the peril, gaze on the wrath of the battle, or, serene in the temples of
+ the wise, look afar on the wanderings of human error? Is it so sweet to
+ survey the ills from which thou art delivered? Shall not the strong law of
+ SYMPATHY find thee out, and thy heart rebuke thy philosophy? Not sweet,
+ indeed, can be man&rsquo;s shelter in self when he says to the storm, &ldquo;I have no
+ bark on the sea;&rdquo; or to the gods of the battle, &ldquo;I have no son in the
+ slaughter;&rdquo; when he smiles unmoved upon Woe, and murmurs, &ldquo;Weep on, for
+ these eyes know no tears;&rdquo; when, unappalled, he beholdeth the black deeds
+ of crime, and cries to his conscience, &ldquo;Thou art calm.&rdquo; Yet solemn is the
+ sight to him who lives in all life,&mdash;seeks for Nature in the storm,
+ and Providence in the battle; loses self in the woe; probes his heart in
+ the crime; and owns no philosophy that sets him free from the fetters of
+ man. Not in vain do we scan all the contrasts in the large framework of
+ civilized earth if we note &ldquo;when the dust groweth into hardness, and the
+ clods cleave fast together.&rdquo; Range, O Art, through all space, clasp
+ together in extremes, shake idle wealth from its lethargy, and bid States
+ look in hovels where the teacher is dumb, and Reason unweeded runs to rot!
+ Bid haughty Intellect pause in its triumph, and doubt if intellect alone
+ can deliver the soul from its tempters! Only that lives uncorrupt which
+ preserves in all seasons the human affections in which the breath of God
+ breathes and is. Go forth to the world, O Art, go forth to the innocent,
+ the guilty, the wise, and the dull; go forth as the still voice of Fate!
+ Speak of the insecurity even of goodness below; carry on the rapt vision
+ of suffering Virtue through &ldquo;the doors of the shadows of death;&rdquo; show the
+ dim revelation symbolled forth in the Tragedy of old,&mdash;how incomplete
+ is man&rsquo;s destiny, how undeveloped is the justice divine, if Antigone sleep
+ eternally in the ribs of the rock, and Oedipus vanish forever in the Grove
+ of the Furies. Here below, &ldquo;the waters are hid with a stone, and the face
+ of the deep is frozen;&rdquo; but above liveth He &ldquo;who can bind the sweet
+ influence of the Pleiades, and loose the bands of Orion.&rdquo; Go with Fate
+ over the bridge, and she vanishes in the land beyond the gulf! Behold
+ where the Eternal demands Eternity for the progress of His creatures and
+ the vindication of His justice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was past midnight, and Lucretia sat alone in her dreary room; her head
+ buried on her bosom, her eyes fixed on the ground, her hands resting on
+ her knees,&mdash;it was an image of inanimate prostration and decrepitude
+ that might have moved compassion to its depth. The door opened, and Martha
+ entered, to assist Madame Dalibard, as usual, to retire to rest. Her
+ mistress slowly raised her eyes at the noise of the opening door, and
+ those eyes took their searching, penetrating acuteness as they fixed upon
+ the florid nor uncomely countenance of the waiting-woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her starched cap, her sober-coloured stuff gown, in her prim, quiet
+ manner and a certain sanctified demureness of aspect, there was something
+ in the first appearance of this woman that impressed you with the notion
+ of respectability, and inspired confidence in those steady good qualities
+ which we seek in a trusty servant. But more closely examined, an habitual
+ observer might have found much to qualify, perhaps to disturb, his first
+ prepossessions. The exceeding lowness of the forehead, over which that
+ stiff, harsh hair was so puritanically parted; the severe hardness of
+ those thin, small lips, so pursed up and constrained; even a certain dull
+ cruelty in those light, cold blue eyes,&mdash;might have caused an uneasy
+ sentiment, almost approaching to fear. The fat grocer&rsquo;s spoilt child
+ instinctively recoiled from her when she entered the shop to make her
+ household purchases; the old, gray-whiskered terrier dog at the
+ public-house slunk into the tap when she crossed the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard silently suffered herself to be wheeled into the adjoining
+ bedroom, and the process of disrobing was nearly completed before she said
+ abruptly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you attended Mr. Varney&rsquo;s uncle in his last illness. Did he suffer
+ much?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was a poor creature at best,&rdquo; answered Martha; &ldquo;but he gave me a deal
+ of trouble afore he went. He was a scranny corpse when I strecked him
+ out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard shrank from the hands at that moment employed upon
+ herself, and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not, then, the first corpse you have laid out for the grave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not by many.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did any of those you so prepared die of the same complaint?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; returned Martha. &ldquo;I never inquires how folks die;
+ my bizness was to nurse &lsquo;em till all was over, and then to sit up. As they
+ say in my country, &lsquo;Riving Pike wears a hood when the weather bodes ill.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ [If Riving Pike do wear a hood, The day, be sure, will ne&rsquo;er be good. A
+ Lancashire Distich.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And when you sat up with Mr. Varney&rsquo;s uncle, did you feel no fear in the
+ dead of the night,&mdash;that corpse before you, no fear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young Mr. Varney said I should come to no harm. Oh, he&rsquo;s a clever man!
+ What should I fear, ma&rsquo;am?&rdquo; answered Martha, with a horrid simplicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have belonged to a very religious sect, I think I have heard you say,&mdash;a
+ sect not unfamiliar to me; a sect to which great crime is very rarely
+ known?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma&rsquo;am, some of &lsquo;em be tame enough, but others be weel [whirlpool]
+ deep!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not believe what they taught you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did when I was young and silly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what disturbed your belief?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;am, the man what taught me, and my mother afore me, was the first I
+ ever kep&rsquo; company with,&rdquo; answered Martha, without a change in her florid
+ hue, which seemed fixed in her cheek, as the red in an autumn leaf. &ldquo;After
+ he had ruined me, as the girls say, he told me as how it was all sham!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You loved him, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man was well enough, ma&rsquo;am, and he behaved handsome and got me a
+ husband. I&rsquo;ve known better days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sleep well at night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma&rsquo;am, thank you; I loves my bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have done with you,&rdquo; said Madame Dalibard, stifling a groan, as now,
+ placed in her bed, she turned to the wall. Martha extinguished the candle,
+ leaving it on the table by the bed, with a book and a box of matches, for
+ Madame Dalibard was a bad sleeper, and often read in the night. She then
+ drew the curtains and went her way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might be an hour after Martha had retired to rest that a hand was
+ stretched from the bed, that the candle was lighted, and Lucretia Dalibard
+ rose; with a sudden movement she threw aside the coverings, and stood in
+ her long night-gear on the floor. Yes, the helpless, paralyzed cripple
+ rose, was on her feet,&mdash;tall, elastic, erect! It was as a
+ resuscitation from the grave. Never was change more startling than that
+ simple action effected,&mdash;not in the form alone, but the whole
+ character of the face. The solitary light streamed upward on a countenance
+ on every line of which spoke sinister power and strong resolve. If you had
+ ever seen her before in her false, crippled state, prostrate and helpless,
+ and could have seen her then,&mdash;those eyes, if haggard still, now full
+ of life and vigour; that frame, if spare, towering aloft in commanding
+ stature, perfect in its proportions as a Grecian image of Nemesis,&mdash;your
+ amaze would have merged into terror, so preternatural did the
+ transformation appear, so did aspect and bearing contradict the very
+ character of her sex, uniting the two elements most formidable in man or
+ in fiend,&mdash;wickedness and power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stood a moment motionless, breathing loud, as if it were a joy to
+ breathe free from restraint; and then, lifting the light, and gliding to
+ the adjoining room, she unlocked a bureau in the corner, and bent over a
+ small casket, which she opened with a secret spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reader, cast back your eye to that passage in this history when Lucretia
+ Clavering took down the volume from the niche in the tapestried chamber at
+ Laughton, and numbered, in thought, the hours left to her uncle&rsquo;s life.
+ Look back on the ungrateful thought; behold how it has swelled and ripened
+ into the guilty deed! There, in that box, Death guards his treasure crypt.
+ There, all the science of Hades numbers its murderous inventions. As she
+ searched for the ingredients her design had pre-selected, something
+ heavier than those small packets she deranged fell to the bottom of the
+ box with a low and hollow sound. She started at the noise, and then
+ smiled, in scorn of her momentary fear, as she took up the ring that had
+ occasioned the sound,&mdash;a ring plain and solid, like those used as
+ signets in the Middle Ages, with a large dull opal in the centre. What
+ secret could that bauble have in common with its ghastly companions in
+ Death&rsquo;s crypt? This had been found amongst Olivier&rsquo;s papers; a note in
+ that precious manuscript, which had given to the hands of his successors
+ the keys of the grave, had discovered the mystery of its uses. By the
+ pressure of the hand, at the touch of a concealed spring, a barbed point
+ flew forth steeped in venom more deadly than the Indian extracts from the
+ bag of the cobar de capello,&mdash;a venom to which no antidote is known,
+ which no test can detect. It corrupts the whole mass of the blood; it
+ mounts in frenzy and fire to the brain; it rends the soul from the body in
+ spasm and convulsion. But examine the dead, and how divine the effect of
+ the cause! How go back to the records of the Borgias, and amidst all the
+ scepticisms of times in which, happily, such arts are unknown,
+ unsuspected, learn from the hero of Machiavel how a clasp of the hand can
+ get rid of a foe! Easier and more natural to point to the living puncture
+ in the skin, and the swollen flesh round it, and dilate on the danger a
+ rusty nail&mdash;nay, a pin&mdash;can engender when the humours are
+ peccant and the blood is impure! The fabrication of that bauble, the
+ discovery of Borgia&rsquo;s device, was the masterpiece in the science of
+ Dalibard,&mdash;a curious and philosophical triumph of research, hitherto
+ unused by its inventor and his heirs; for that casket is rich in the
+ choice of more gentle materials: but the use yet may come. As she gazed on
+ the ring, there was a complacent and proud expression on Lucretia&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dumb token of Caesar Borgia,&rdquo; she murmured,&mdash;&ldquo;him of the wisest head
+ and the boldest hand that ever grasped at empire, whom Machiavel, the
+ virtuous, rightly praised as the model of accomplished ambition! Why
+ should I falter in the paths which he trod with his royal step, only
+ because my goal is not a throne? Every circle is as complete in itself,
+ whether rounding a globule or a star. Why groan in the belief that the
+ mind defiles itself by the darkness through which it glides on its object,
+ or the mire through which it ascends to the hill? Murderer as he was,
+ poisoner, and fratricide, did blood clog his intellect, or crime
+ impoverish the luxury of his genius? Was his verse less melodious [It is
+ well known that Caesar Borgia was both a munificent patron and an
+ exquisite appreciator of art; well known also are his powers of persuasion
+ but the general reader may not, perhaps, be acquainted with the fact that
+ this terrible criminal was also a poet], or his love of art less intense,
+ or his eloquence less persuasive, because he sought to remove every
+ barrier, revenge every wrong, crush every foe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the wondrous corruption to which her mind had descended, thus murmured
+ Lucretia. Intellect had been so long made her sole god that the very
+ monster of history was lifted to her reverence by his ruthless intellect
+ alone,&mdash;lifted in that mood of feverish excitement when conscience,
+ often less silenced, lay crushed, under the load of the deed to come, into
+ an example and a guide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though at times, when looking back, oppressed by the blackest despair, no
+ remorse of the past ever weakened those nerves when the Hour called up its
+ demon, and the Will ruled the rest of the human being as a machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She replaced the ring, she reclosed the casket, relocked its depository;
+ then passed again into the adjoining chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes afterwards, and the dim light that stole from the heavens
+ (in which the moon was partially overcast) through the casement on the
+ staircase rested on a shapeless figure robed in black from head to foot,&mdash;a
+ figure so obscure and undefinable in outline, so suited to the gloom in
+ its hue, so stealthy and rapid in its movements, that had you started from
+ sleep and seen it on your floor, you would perforce have deemed that your
+ fancy had befooled you!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus darkly, through the darkness, went the Poisoner to her prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0028" id="Blink2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. RETROSPECT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have now arrived at that stage in this history when it is necessary to
+ look back on the interval in Lucretia&rsquo;s life,&mdash;between the death of
+ Dalibard, and her reintroduction in the second portion of our tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, without previous notice or warning, Lucretia arrived at William
+ Mainwaring&rsquo;s house; she was in the deep weeds of widowhood, and that garb
+ of mourning sufficed to add Susan&rsquo;s tenderest commiseration to the warmth
+ of her affectionate welcome. Lucretia appeared to have forgiven the past,
+ and to have conquered its more painful recollections; she was gentle to
+ Susan, though she rather suffered than returned her caresses; she was open
+ and frank to William. Both felt inexpressibly grateful for her visit, the
+ forgiveness it betokened, and the confidence it implied. At this time no
+ condition could be more promising and prosperous than that of the young
+ banker. From the first the most active partner in the bank, he had now
+ virtually almost monopolized the business. The senior partner was old and
+ infirm; the second had a bucolic turn, and was much taken up by the care
+ of a large farm he had recently purchased; so that Mainwaring, more and
+ more trusted and honoured, became the sole managing administrator of the
+ firm. Business throve in his able hands; and with patient and steady
+ perseverance there was little doubt but that, before middle age was
+ attained, his competence would have swelled into a fortune sufficient to
+ justify him in realizing the secret dream of his heart,&mdash;the
+ parliamentary representation of the town, in which he had already secured
+ the affection and esteem of the inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long before Lucretia detected the ambition William&rsquo;s industry
+ but partially concealed; it was not long before, with the ascendency
+ natural to her will and her talents, she began to exercise considerable,
+ though unconscious, influence over a man in whom a thousand good qualities
+ and some great talents were unhappily accompanied by infirm purpose and
+ weak resolutions. The ordinary conversation of Lucretia unsettled his mind
+ and inflamed his vanity,&mdash;a conversation able, aspiring, full both of
+ knowledge drawn from books and of that experience of public men which her
+ residence in Paris (whereon, with its new and greater Charlemagne, the
+ eyes of the world were turned) had added to her acquisitions in the lore
+ of human life. Nothing more disturbs a mind like William Mainwaring&rsquo;s than
+ that species of eloquence which rebukes its patience in the present by
+ inflaming all its hopes in the future. Lucretia had none of the charming
+ babble of women, none of that tender interest in household details, in the
+ minutiae of domestic life, which relaxes the intellect while softening the
+ heart. Hard and vigorous, her sentences came forth in eternal appeal to
+ the reason, or address to the sterner passions in which love has no share.
+ Beside this strong thinker, poor Susan&rsquo;s sweet talk seemed frivolous and
+ inane. Her soft hold upon Mainwaring loosened. He ceased to consult her
+ upon business; he began to repine that the partner of his lot could have
+ little sympathy with his dreams. More often and more bitterly now did his
+ discontented glance, in his way homeward, rove to the rooftops of the
+ rural member for the town; more eagerly did he read the parliamentary
+ debates; more heavily did he sigh at the thought of eloquence denied a
+ vent, and ambition delayed in its career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When arrived at this state of mind, Lucretia&rsquo;s conversation took a more
+ worldly, a more practical turn. Her knowledge of the speculators of Paris
+ instructed her pictures of bold ingenuity creating sudden wealth; she
+ spoke of fortunes made in a day,&mdash;of parvenus bursting into
+ millionnaires; of wealth as the necessary instrument of ambition, as the
+ arch ruler of the civilized world. Never once, be it observed, in these
+ temptations, did Lucretia address herself to the heart; the ordinary
+ channels of vulgar seduction were disdained by her. She would not have
+ stooped so low as Mainwaring&rsquo;s love, could she have commanded or allured
+ it; she was willing to leave to Susan the husband reft from her own
+ passionate youth, but leave him with the brand on his brow and the worm at
+ his heart,&mdash;a scoff and a wreck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time there was in that market-town one of those adventurous,
+ speculative men, who are the more dangerous impostors because imposed upon
+ by their own sanguine chimeras, who have a plausibility in their
+ calculations, an earnestness in their arguments, which account for the
+ dupes they daily make in our most sober and wary of civilized communities.
+ Unscrupulous in their means, yet really honest in the belief that their
+ objects can be attained, they are at once the rogues and fanatics of
+ Mammon. This person was held to have been fortunate in some adroit
+ speculations in the corn trade, and he was brought too frequently into
+ business with Mainwaring not to be a frequent visitor at the house. In him
+ Lucretia saw the very instrument of her design. She led him on to talk of
+ business as a game, of money as a realizer of cent per cent; she drew him
+ into details, she praised him, she admired. In his presence she seemed
+ only to hear him; in his absence, musingly, she started from silence to
+ exclaim on the acuteness of his genius and the accuracy of his figures.
+ Soon the tempter at Mainwaring&rsquo;s heart gave signification to these
+ praises, soon this adventurer became his most intimate friend. Scarcely
+ knowing why, never ascribing the change to her sister, poor Susan wept,
+ amazed at Mainwaring&rsquo;s transformation. No care now for the new books from
+ London, or the roses in the garden; the music on the instrument was
+ unheeded. Books, roses, music,&mdash;what are those trifles to a man
+ thinking upon cent per cent? Mainwaring&rsquo;s very countenance altered; it
+ lost its frank, affectionate beauty: sullen, abstracted, morose, it showed
+ that some great care was at the core. Then Lucretia herself began
+ grievingly to notice the change to Susan; gradually she altered her tone
+ with regard to the speculator, and hinted vague fears, and urged Susan&rsquo;s
+ remonstrance and warning. As she had anticipated, warning and remonstrance
+ came in vain to the man who, comparing Lucretia&rsquo;s mental power to Susan&rsquo;s,
+ had learned to despise the unlearned, timid sense of the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is unnecessary to trace this change in Mainwaring step by step, or to
+ measure the time which sufficed to dazzle his reason and blind his honour.
+ In the midst of schemes and hopes which the lust of gold now pervaded came
+ a thunderbolt. An anonymous letter to the head partner of the bank
+ provoked suspicions that led to minute examination of the accounts. It
+ seemed that sums had been irregularly advanced (upon bills drawn by men of
+ straw) to the speculator by Mainwaring; and the destination of these sums
+ could be traced to gambling operations in trade in which Mainwaring had a
+ private interest and partnership. So great, as we have said, had been the
+ confidence placed in William&rsquo;s abilities and honour that the facilities
+ afforded him in the disposal of the joint stock far exceeded those usually
+ granted to the partner of a firm, and the breach of trust appeared the
+ more flagrant from the extent of the confidence misplaced. Meanwhile,
+ William Mainwaring, though as yet unconscious of the proceedings of his
+ partners, was gnawed by anxiety and remorse, not unmixed with hope. He
+ depended upon the result of a bold speculation in the purchase of shares
+ in a Canal Company, a bill for which was then before parliament, with (as
+ he was led to believe) a certainty of success. The sums he had, on his own
+ responsibility, abstracted from the joint account were devoted to this
+ adventure. But, to do him justice, he never dreamed of appropriating the
+ profits anticipated to himself. Though knowing that the bills on which the
+ moneys had been advanced were merely nominal deposits, he had confidently
+ calculated on the certainty of success for the speculations to which the
+ proceeds so obtained were devoted, and he looked forward to the moment
+ when he might avow what he had done, and justify it by doubling the
+ capital withdrawn. But to his inconceivable horror, the bill of the Canal
+ Company was rejected in the Lords; the shares bought at a premium went
+ down to zero; and to add to his perplexity, the speculator abruptly
+ disappeared from the town. In this crisis he was summoned to meet his
+ indignant associates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence against him was morally damning, if not legally conclusive.
+ The unhappy man heard all in the silence of despair. Crushed and
+ bewildered, he attempted no defence. He asked but an hour to sum up the
+ losses of the bank and his own; they amounted within a few hundreds to the
+ 10,000 pounds he had brought to the firm, and which, in the absence of
+ marriage-settlements, was entirely at his own disposal. This sum he at
+ once resigned to his associates, on condition that they should defray from
+ it his personal liabilities. The money thus repaid, his partners naturally
+ relinquished all further inquiry. They were moved by pity for one so
+ gifted and so fallen,&mdash;they even offered him a subordinate but
+ lucrative situation in the firm in which he had been partner; but
+ Mainwaring wanted the patience and resolution to work back the redemption
+ of his name,&mdash;perhaps, ultimately, of his fortunes. In the fatal
+ anguish of his shame and despair, he fled from the town; his flight
+ confirmed forever the rumours against him,&mdash;rumours worse than the
+ reality. It was long before he even admitted Susan to the knowledge of the
+ obscure refuge he had sought; there, at length, she joined him. Meanwhile,
+ what did Lucretia? She sold nearly half of her own fortune, constituted
+ principally of the moiety of her portion which, at Dalibard&rsquo;s death, had
+ passed to herself as survivor, and partly of the share in her deceased
+ husband&rsquo;s effects which the French law awarded to her, and with the
+ proceeds of this sum she purchased an annuity for her victims. Was this
+ strange generosity the act of mercy, the result of repentance? No; it was
+ one of the not least subtle and delicious refinements of her revenge. To
+ know him who had rejected her, the rival who had supplanted, the miserable
+ pensioners of her bounty, was dear to her haughty and disdainful hate. The
+ lust of power, ever stronger in her than avarice, more than reconciled her
+ to the sacrifice of gold. Yes, here she, the despised, the degraded, had
+ power still; her wrath had ruined the fortunes of her victim, blasted the
+ repute, embittered and desolated evermore the future,&mdash;now her
+ contemptuous charity fed the wretched lives that she spared in scorn. She
+ had no small difficulty, it is true, in persuading Susan to accept this
+ sacrifice, and she did so only by sustaining her sister&rsquo;s belief that the
+ past could yet be retrieved, that Mainwaring&rsquo;s energies could yet rebuild
+ their fortunes, and that as the annuity was at any time redeemable, the
+ aid therefore was only temporary. With this understanding, Susan,
+ overwhelmed with gratitude, weeping and broken-hearted, departed to join
+ the choice of her youth. As the men deputed by the auctioneer to arrange
+ and ticket the furniture for sale entered the desolate house, Lucretia
+ then, with the step of a conqueror, passed from the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she murmured, as she paused, and gazed on the walls, &ldquo;ah, they were
+ happy when I first entered those doors,&mdash;happy in each other&rsquo;s
+ tranquil love; happier still when they deemed I had forgiven the wrong and
+ abjured the past! How honoured was then their home! How knew I then, for
+ the first time, what the home of love can be! And who had destroyed for
+ me, upon all the earth, a home like theirs? They on whom that home smiled
+ with its serene and taunting peace! I&mdash;I, the guest! I&mdash;I, the
+ abandoned, the betrayed,&mdash;what dark memories were on my soul, what a
+ hell boiled within my bosom! Well might those memories take each a voice
+ to accuse them; well, from that hell, might rise the Alecto! Their lives
+ were in my power, my fatal dowry at my command,&mdash;rapid death, or
+ slow, consuming torture; but to have seen each cheer the other to the
+ grave, lighting every downward step with the eyes of love,&mdash;vengeance
+ so urged would have fallen only on myself! Ha! deceiver, didst thou plume
+ thyself, forsooth, on spotless reputation? Didst thou stand, me by thy
+ side, amongst thy perjured household gods and talk of honour? Thy home, it
+ is reft from thee; thy reputation, it is a scoff; thine honour, it is a
+ ghost that shall haunt thee! Thy love, can it linger yet? Shall the soft
+ eyes of thy wife not burn into thy heart, and shame turn love into
+ loathing? Wrecks of my vengeance, minions of my bounty, I did well to let
+ ye live; I shake the dust from my feet on your threshold. Live on,
+ homeless, hopeless, and childless! The curse is fulfilled!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that hour Lucretia never paused from her career to inquire further of
+ her victims; she never entered into communication with either. They knew
+ not her address nor her fate, nor she theirs. As she had reckoned,
+ Mainwaring made no effort to recover himself from his fall. All the high
+ objects that had lured his ambition were gone from him evermore. No place
+ in the State, no authority in the senate, awaits in England the man with a
+ blighted name. For the lesser objects of life he had no heart and no care.
+ They lived in obscurity in a small village in Cornwall till the Peace
+ allowed them to remove to France; the rest of their fate is known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Lucretia removed to one of those smaller Londons, resorts of
+ pleasure and idleness, with which rich England abounds, and in which
+ widows of limited income can make poverty seem less plebeian. And now, to
+ all those passions that had hitherto raged within her, a dismal apathy
+ succeeded. It was the great calm in her sea of life. The winds fell, and
+ the sails drooped. Her vengeance satisfied, that which she had made so
+ preternaturally the main object of existence, once fulfilled, left her in
+ youth objectless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She strove at first to take pleasure in the society of the place; but its
+ frivolities and pettiness of purpose soon wearied that masculine and
+ grasping mind, already made insensible to the often healthful, often
+ innocent, excitement of trifles, by the terrible ordeal it had passed. Can
+ the touch of the hand, scorched by the burning iron, feel pleasure in the
+ softness of silk, or the light down of the cygnet&rsquo;s plume? She next sought
+ such relief as study could afford; and her natural bent of thought, and
+ her desire to vindicate her deeds to herself, plunged her into the
+ fathomless abyss of metaphysical inquiry with the hope to confirm into
+ positive assurance her earlier scepticism,&mdash;with the atheist&rsquo;s hope
+ to annihilate the soul, and banish the presiding God. But no voice that
+ could satisfy her reason came from those dreary deeps; contradiction on
+ contradiction met her in the maze. Only when, wearied with book-lore, she
+ turned her eyes to the visible Nature, and beheld everywhere harmony,
+ order, system, contrivance, art, did she start with the amaze and awe of
+ instinctive conviction, and the natural religion revolted from her
+ cheerless ethics. Then came one of those sudden reactions common with
+ strong passions and exploring minds, but more common with women, however
+ manlike, than with men. Had she lived in Italy then, she had become a nun;
+ for in this woman, unlike Varney and Dalibard, the conscience could never
+ be utterly silenced. In her choice of evil, she found only torture to her
+ spirit in all the respites afforded to the occupations it indulged. When
+ employed upon ill, remorse gave way to the zest of scheming; when the ill
+ was done, remorse came with the repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this peculiar period of her life that Lucretia, turning
+ everywhere, and desperately, for escape from the past, became acquainted
+ with some members of one of the most rigid of the sects of Dissent. At
+ first she permitted herself to know and commune with these persons from a
+ kind of contemptuous curiosity; she desired to encourage, in contemplating
+ them, her experience of the follies of human nature: but in that crisis of
+ her mind, in those struggles of her reason, whatever showed that which she
+ most yearned to discover,&mdash;namely, earnest faith, rooted and genuine
+ conviction, whether of annihilation or of immortality, a philosophy that
+ might reconcile her to crime by destroying the providence of good, or a
+ creed that could hold out the hope of redeeming the past and exorcising
+ sin by the mystery of a Divine sacrifice,&mdash;had over her a power which
+ she had not imagined or divined. Gradually the intense convictions of her
+ new associates disturbed and infected her. Their affirmations that as we
+ are born in wrath, so sin is our second nature, our mysterious heritage,
+ seemed, to her understanding, willing to be blinded, to imply excuses for
+ her past misdeeds. Their assurances that the worst sinner may become the
+ most earnest saint; that through but one act of the will, resolute faith,
+ all redemption is to be found,&mdash;these affirmations and these
+ assurances, which have so often restored the guilty and remodelled the
+ human heart, made a salutary, if brief, impression upon her. Nor were the
+ lives of these Dissenters (for the most part austerely moral), nor the
+ peace and self-complacency which they evidently found in the satisfaction
+ of conscience and fulfilment of duty, without an influence over her that
+ for a while both chastened and soothed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hopeful of such a convert, the good teachers strove hard to confirm the
+ seeds springing up from the granite and amidst the weeds; and amongst them
+ came one man more eloquent, more seductive, than the rest,&mdash;Alfred
+ Braddell. This person, a trader at Liverpool, was one of those strange
+ living paradoxes that can rarely be found out of a commercial community.
+ He himself had been a convert to the sect, and like most converts, he
+ pushed his enthusiasm into the bigotry of the zealot; he saw no salvation
+ out of the pale into which he had entered. But though his belief was
+ sincere, it did not genially operate on his practical life; with the most
+ scrupulous attention to forms, he had the worldliness and cunning of the
+ carnal. He had abjured the vices of the softer senses, but not that which
+ so seldom wars on the decorums of outer life. He was essentially a
+ money-maker,&mdash;close, acute, keen, overreaching. Good works with him
+ were indeed as nothing,&mdash;faith the all in all. He was one of the
+ elect, and could not fall. Still, in this man there was all the intensity
+ which often characterizes a mind in proportion to the narrowness of its
+ compass; that intensity gave fire to his gloomy eloquence, and strength to
+ his obstinate will. He saw Lucretia, and his zeal for her conversion soon
+ expanded into love for her person; yet that love was secondary to his
+ covetousness. Though ostensibly in a flourishing business, he was greatly
+ distressed for money to carry on operations which swelled beyond the reach
+ of his capital; his fingers itched for the sum which Lucretia had still at
+ her disposal. But the seeming sincerity of the man, the persuasion of his
+ goodness, his reputation for sanctity, deceived her; she believed herself
+ honestly and ardently beloved, and by one who could guide her back, if not
+ to happiness, at least to repose. She herself loved him not,&mdash;she
+ could love no more. But it seemed to her a luxury to find some one she
+ could trust, she could honour. If you had probed into the recesses of her
+ mind at that time, you would have found that no religious belief was there
+ settled,&mdash;only the desperate wish to believe; only the disturbance of
+ all previous infidelity; only a restless, gnawing desire to escape from
+ memory, to emerge from the gulf. In this troubled, impatient disorder of
+ mind and feeling, she hurried into a second marriage as fatal as the
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while she bore patiently all the privations of that ascetic
+ household, assisted in all those external formalities, centred all her
+ intellect within that iron range of existence. But no grace descended on
+ her soul,&mdash;no warm ray unlocked the ice of the well. Then, gradually
+ becoming aware of the niggardly meanness, of the harsh, uncharitable
+ judgments, of the decorous frauds that, with unconscious hypocrisy, her
+ husband concealed beneath the robes of sanctity, a weary disgust stole
+ over her,&mdash;it stole, it deepened, it increased; it became intolerable
+ when she discovered that Braddell had knowingly deceived her as to his
+ worldly substance. In that mood in which she had rushed into these ominous
+ nuptials, she had had no thought for vulgar advantages; had Braddell been
+ a beggar, she had married him as rashly. But he, with the inability to
+ comprehend a nature like hers,&mdash;dim not more to her terrible vices
+ than to the sinister grandeur which made their ordinary atmosphere,&mdash;had
+ descended cunningly to address the avarice he thought as potent in others
+ as himself, to enlarge on the worldly prosperity with which Providence had
+ blessed him; and now she saw that her dowry alone had saved the crippled
+ trader from the bankrupt list. With this revolting discovery, with the
+ scorn it produced, vanished all Lucretia&rsquo;s unstable visions of reform. She
+ saw this man a saint amongst his tribe, and would not believe in the
+ virtues of his brethren, great and unquestionable as they might have been
+ proved to a more dispassionate and humbler inquirer. The imposture she
+ detected she deemed universal in the circle in which she dwelt; and Satan
+ once more smiled upon the subject he regained. Lucretia became a mother;
+ but their child formed no endearing tie between the ill-assorted pair,&mdash;it
+ rather embittered their discord. Dimly even then, as she bent over the
+ cradle, that vision, which now, in the old house at Brompton, haunted her
+ dreams and beckoned her over seas of blood into the fancied future, was
+ foreshadowed in the face of her infant son. To be born again in that
+ birth, to live only in that life, to aspire as man may aspire, in that
+ future man whom she would train to knowledge and lead to power,&mdash;these
+ were the feelings with which that sombre mother gazed upon her babe. The
+ idea that the low-born, grovelling father had the sole right over that
+ son&rsquo;s destiny, had the authority to cabin his mind in the walls of form,
+ bind him down to the sordid apprenticeship, debased, not dignified, by the
+ solemn mien, roused her indignant wrath; she sickened when Braddell
+ touched her child. All her pride of intellect, that had never slept, all
+ her pride of birth, long dormant, woke up to protect the heir of her
+ ambition, the descendant of her race, from the defilement of the father&rsquo;s
+ nurture. Not long after her confinement, she formed a plan for escape; she
+ disappeared from the house with her child. Taking refuge in a cottage,
+ living on the sale of the few jewels she possessed, she was for some weeks
+ almost happy. But Braddell, less grieved by the loss than shocked by the
+ scandal, was indefatigable in his researches,&mdash;he discovered her
+ retreat. The scene between them was terrible. There was no resisting the
+ power which all civilized laws give to the rights of husband and father.
+ Before this man, whom she scorned so unutterably, Lucretia was impotent.
+ Then all the boiling passions long suppressed beneath that command of
+ temper which she owed both to habitual simulation and intense disdain,
+ rushed forth. Then she appalled the impostor with her indignant
+ denunciations of his hypocrisy, his meanness, and his guile. Then,
+ throwing off the mask she had worn, she hurled her anathema on his sect,
+ on his faith, with the same breath that smote his conscience and left it
+ wordless. She shocked all the notions he sincerely entertained, and he
+ stood awed by accusations from a blasphemer whom he dared not rebuke. His
+ rage broke at length from his awe. Stung, maddened by the scorn of
+ himself, his blood fired into juster indignation by her scoff at his
+ creed, he lost all self-possession and struck her to the ground. In the
+ midst of shame and dread at disclosure of his violence, which succeeded
+ the act so provoked, he was not less relieved than amazed when Lucretia,
+ rising slowly, laid her hand gently on his arm and said, &ldquo;Repent not, it
+ is passed; fear not, I will be silent! Come, you are the stronger,&mdash;you
+ prevail. I will follow my child to your home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this unexpected submission in one so imperious, Braddell&rsquo;s imperfect
+ comprehension of character saw but fear, and his stupidity exulted in his
+ triumph. Lucretia returned with him. A few days afterwards Braddell became
+ ill; the illness increased,&mdash;slow, gradual, wearying. It broke his
+ spirit with his health; and then the steadfast imperiousness of Lucretia&rsquo;s
+ stern will ruled and subjugated him. He cowered beneath her haughty,
+ searching gaze, he shivered at her sidelong, malignant glance; but with
+ this fear came necessarily hate, and this hate, sometimes sufficing to
+ vanquish the fear, spitefully evinced itself in thwarting her legitimate
+ control over her infant. He would have it (though he had little real love
+ for children) constantly with him, and affected to contradict all her own
+ orders to the servants, in the sphere in which mothers arrogate most the
+ right. Only on these occasions sometimes would Lucretia lose her grim
+ self-control, and threaten that her child yet should be emancipated from
+ his hands, should yet be taught the scorn for hypocrites which he had
+ taught herself. These words sank deep, not only in the resentment, but in
+ the conscience, of the husband. Meanwhile, Lucretia scrupled not to evince
+ her disdain of Braddell by markedly abstaining from all the ceremonies she
+ had before so rigidly observed. The sect grew scandalized. Braddell did
+ not abstain from making known his causes of complaint. The haughty,
+ imperious woman was condemned in the community, and hated in the
+ household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that Walter Ardworth, who was then striving to eke out
+ his means by political lectures (which in the earlier part of the century
+ found ready audience) in our great towns, came to Liverpool. Braddell and
+ Ardworth had been schoolfellows, and even at school embryo politicians of
+ congenial notions; and the conversion of the former to one of the sects
+ which had grown out of the old creeds, that, under Cromwell, had broken
+ the sceptre of the son of Belial and established the Commonwealth of
+ Saints, had only strengthened the republican tenets of the sour fanatic.
+ Ardworth called on Braddell, and was startled to find in his
+ schoolfellow&rsquo;s wife the niece of his benefactor, Sir Miles St. John. Now,
+ Lucretia had never divulged her true parentage to her husband. In a union
+ so much beneath her birth, she had desired to conceal from all her
+ connections the fall of the once-honoured heiress. She had descended, in
+ search of peace, to obscurity; but her pride revolted from the thought
+ that her low-born husband might boast of her connections and parade her
+ descent to his level. Fortunately, as she thought, she received Ardworth
+ before he was admitted to her husband, who now, growing feebler and
+ feebler, usually kept his room. She stooped to beseech Ardworth not to
+ reveal her secret; and he, comprehending her pride, as a man well-born
+ himself, and pitying her pain, readily gave his promise. At the first
+ interview, Braddell evinced no pleasure in the sight of his old
+ schoolfellow. It was natural enough that one so precise should be somewhat
+ revolted by one so careless of all form. But when Lucretia imprudently
+ evinced satisfaction at his surly remarks on his visitor; when he
+ perceived that it would please her that he should not cultivate the
+ acquaintance offered him,&mdash;he was moved, by the spirit of
+ contradiction, and the spiteful delight even in frivolous annoyance, to
+ conciliate and court the intimacy he had at first disdained: and then, by
+ degrees, sympathy in political matters and old recollections of sportive,
+ careless boyhood cemented the intimacy into a more familiar bond than the
+ sectarian had contracted really with any of his late associates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia regarded this growing friendship with great uneasiness; the
+ uneasiness increased to alarm when one day, in the presence of Ardworth,
+ Braddell, writhing with a sudden spasm, said: &ldquo;I cannot account for these
+ strange seizures; I think verily I am poisoned!&rdquo; and his dull eye rested
+ on Lucretia&rsquo;s pallid brow. She was unusually thoughtful for some days
+ after this remark; and one morning she informed her husband that she had
+ received the intelligence that a relation, from whom she had pecuniary
+ expectations, was dangerously ill, and requested his permission to visit
+ this sick kinsman, who dwelt in a distant county. Braddell&rsquo;s eyes
+ brightened at the thought of her absence; with little further questioning
+ he consented; and Lucretia, sure perhaps that the barb was in the side of
+ her victim, and reckoning, it may be, on greater freedom from suspicion if
+ her husband died in her absence, left the house. It was, indeed, to the
+ neighbourhood of her kindred that she went. In a private conversation with
+ Ardworth, when questioning him of his news of the present possessor of
+ Laughton, he had informed her that he had heard accidentally that Vernon&rsquo;s
+ two sons (Percival was not then born) were sickly; and she went into
+ Hampshire secretly and unknown, to see what were really the chances that
+ her son might yet become the lord of her lost inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this absence, Braddell, now gloomily aware that his days were
+ numbered, resolved to put into practice the idea long contemplated, and
+ even less favoured by his spite than justified by the genuine convictions
+ of his conscience. Whatever his faults, sincere at least in his religious
+ belief, he might well look with dread to the prospect of the training and
+ education his son would receive from the hands of a mother who had
+ blasphemed his sect and openly proclaimed her infidelity. By will, it is
+ true, he might create a trust, and appoint guardians to his child. But to
+ have lived under the same roof with his wife,&mdash;nay, to have carried
+ her back to that roof when she had left it,&mdash;afforded tacit evidence
+ that whatever the disagreement between them, her conduct could hardly have
+ merited her exclusion from the privileges of a mother. The guardianship
+ might therefore avail little to frustrate Lucretia&rsquo;s indirect
+ contamination, if not her positive control. Besides, where guardians are
+ appointed, money must be left; and Braddell knew that at his death his
+ assets would be found insufficient for his debts. Who would be guardian to
+ a penniless infant? He resolved, therefore, to send his child from his
+ roof to some place where, if reared humbly, it might at least be brought
+ up in the right faith,&mdash;some place which might defy the search and be
+ beyond the perversion of the unbelieving mother. He looked round, and
+ discovered no instrument for his purpose that seemed so ready as Walter
+ Ardworth; for by this time he had thoroughly excited the pity and touched
+ the heart of that good-natured, easy man. His representations of the
+ misconduct of Lucretia were the more implicitly believed by one who had
+ always been secretly prepossessed against her; who, admitted to household
+ intimacy, was an eye-witness to her hard indifference to her husband&rsquo;s
+ sufferings; who saw in her very request not to betray her gentle birth,
+ the shame she felt in her election; who regarded with indignation her
+ unfeeling desertion of Braddell in his last moments, and who, besides all
+ this, had some private misfortunes of his own which made him the more
+ ready listener to themes on the faults of women; and had already, by
+ mutual confidences, opened the hearts of the two ancient schoolfellows to
+ each other&rsquo;s complaints and wrongs. The only other confidant in the refuge
+ selected for the child was a member of the same community as Braddell, who
+ kindly undertook to search for a pious, godly woman, who, upon such
+ pecuniary considerations as Braddell, by robbing his creditors, could
+ afford to bestow, would permanently offer to the poor infant a mother&rsquo;s
+ home and a mother&rsquo;s care. When this woman was found, Braddell confided his
+ child to Ardworth, with such a sum as he could scrape together for its
+ future maintenance. And to Ardworth, rather than to his fellow-sectarian,
+ this double trust was given, because the latter feared scandal and
+ misrepresentation if he should be ostensibly mixed up in so equivocal a
+ charge. Poor and embarrassed as Walter Ardworth was, Braddell did not for
+ once misinterpret character when he placed the money in his hands; and
+ this because the characters we have known in transparent boyhood we have
+ known forever. Ardworth was reckless, and his whole life had been wrecked,
+ his whole nature materially degraded, by the want of common thrift and
+ prudence. His own money slipped through his fingers and left him
+ surrounded by creditors, whom, rigidly speaking, he thus defrauded; but
+ direct dishonesty was as wholly out of the chapter of his vices as if he
+ had been a man of the strictest principles and the steadiest honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The child was gone, the father died, Lucretia returned, as we have seen in
+ Grabman&rsquo;s letter, to the house of death, to meet suspicion, and cold
+ looks, and menial accusations, and an inquest on the dead; but through all
+ this the reft tigress mourned her stolen whelp. As soon as all evidence
+ against her was proved legally groundless, and she had leave to depart,
+ she searched blindly and frantically for her lost child; but in vain. The
+ utter and penniless destitution in which she was left by her husband&rsquo;s
+ decease did not suffice to terminate her maddening chase. On foot she
+ wandered from village to village, and begged her way wherever a false clew
+ misled her steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, in reluctant despair, she resigned the pursuit, and found herself
+ one day in the midst of the streets of London, half-famished and in rags;
+ and before her suddenly, now grown into vigorous youth,&mdash;blooming,
+ sleek, and seemingly prosperous,&mdash;stood Gabriel Varney. By her voice,
+ as she approached and spoke, he recognized his stepmother; and after a
+ short pause of hesitation, he led her to his home. It is not our purpose
+ (for it is not necessary to those passages of their lives from which we
+ have selected the thread of our tale) to follow these two, thus united,
+ through their general career of spoliation and crime. Birds of prey, they
+ searched in human follies and human errors for their food: sometimes
+ severed, sometimes together, their interests remained one. Varney profited
+ by the mightier and subtler genius of evil to which he had leashed
+ himself; for, caring little for luxuries, and dead to the softer senses,
+ she abandoned to him readily the larger share of their plunder. Under a
+ variety of names and disguises, through a succession of frauds, some vast
+ and some mean, but chiefly on the Continent, they had pursued their
+ course, eluding all danger and baffling all law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between three and four years before this period, Varney&rsquo;s uncle, the
+ painter, by one of those unexpected caprices of fortune which sometimes
+ find heirs to a millionnaire at the weaver&rsquo;s loom or the labourer&rsquo;s
+ plough, had suddenly, by the death of a very distant kinsman whom he had
+ never seen, come into possession of a small estate, which he sold for
+ 6,000 pounds. Retiring from all his profession, he lived as comfortably as
+ his shattered constitution permitted upon the interest of this sum; and he
+ wrote to his nephew, then at Paris, to communicate the good news and offer
+ the hospitality of his hearth. Varney hastened to London. Shortly
+ afterwards a nurse, recommended as an experienced, useful person in her
+ profession, by Nicholas Grabman, who in many a tortuous scheme had been
+ Gabriel&rsquo;s confederate, was installed in the poor painter&rsquo;s house. From
+ that time his infirmities increased. He died, as his doctor said, &ldquo;by
+ abstaining from the stimulants to which his constitution had been so long
+ accustomed;&rdquo; and Gabriel Varney was summoned to the reading of the will.
+ To his inconceivable disappointment, instead of bequeathing to his nephew
+ the free disposal of his 6,000 pounds, that sum was assigned to trustees
+ for the benefit of Gabriel and his children yet unborn,&mdash;&ldquo;An
+ inducement,&rdquo; said the poor testator, tenderly, &ldquo;for the boy to marry and
+ reform!&rdquo; So that the nephew could only enjoy the interest, and had no
+ control over the capital. The interest of 6,000 pounds invested in the
+ Bank of England was flocci nauci to the voluptuous spendthrift, Gabriel
+ Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, these trustees were selected from the painter&rsquo;s earlier and more
+ respectable associates, who had dropped him, it is true, in his days of
+ beggary and disrepute, but whom the fortune that made him respectable had
+ again conciliated. One of these trustees had lately retired to pass the
+ remainder of his days at Boulogne; the other was a hypochondriacal
+ valetudinarian,&mdash;neither of them, in short, a man of business.
+ Gabriel was left to draw out the interest of the money as it became
+ periodically due at the Bank of England. In a few months the trustee
+ settled at Boulogne died; the trust, of course, lapsed to Mr. Stubmore,
+ the valetudinarian survivor. Soon pinched by extravagances, and emboldened
+ by the character and helpless state of the surviving trustee, Varney
+ forged Mr. Stubmore&rsquo;s signature to an order on the bank to sell out such
+ portion of the capital as his wants required. The impunity of one offence
+ begot courage for others, till the whole was well-nigh expended. Upon
+ these sums Varney had lived very pleasantly, and he saw with a deep sigh
+ the approaching failure of so facile a resource.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of the melancholy moods engendered by this reflection, Varney
+ happened to be in the very town in France in which the Mainwarings, in
+ their later years, had taken refuge, and from which Helen had been removed
+ to the roof of Mr. Fielden. By accident he heard the name, and, his
+ curiosity leading to further inquiries, learned that Helen was made an
+ heiress by the will of her grandfather. With this knowledge came a thought
+ of the most treacherous, the most miscreant, and the vilest crime that
+ even he yet had perpetrated; so black was it that for a while he
+ absolutely struggled against it. But in guilt there seems ever a Necessity
+ that urges on, step after step, to the last consummation. Varney received
+ a letter to inform him that the last surviving trustee was no more, that
+ the trust was therefore now centred in his son and heir, that that
+ gentleman was at present very busy in settling his own affairs and
+ examining into a very mismanaged property in Devonshire which had devolved
+ upon him, but that he hoped in a few months to discharge, more efficiently
+ than his father had done, the duties of trustee, and that some more
+ profitable investment than the Bank of England would probably occur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This new trustee was known personally to Varney,&mdash;a contemporary of
+ his own, and in earlier youth a pupil to his uncle. But, since then, he
+ had made way in life, and retired from the profession of art. This younger
+ Stubmore he knew to be a bustling, officious man of business, somewhat
+ greedy and covetous, but withal somewhat weak of purpose, good-natured in
+ the main, and with a little lukewarm kindness for Gabriel, as a quondam
+ fellow-pupil. That Stubmore would discover the fraud was evident; that he
+ would declare it, for his own sake, was evident also; that the bank would
+ prosecute, that Varney would be convicted, was no less surely to be
+ apprehended. There was only one chance left to the forger: if he could get
+ into his hands, and in time, before Stubmore&rsquo;s bustling interference, a
+ sum sufficient to replace what had been fraudulently taken, he might
+ easily manage, he thought, to prevent the forgery ever becoming known.
+ Nay, if Stubmore, roused into strict personal investigation by the new
+ power of attorney which a new investment in the bank would render
+ necessary, should ascertain what had occurred, his liabilities being now
+ indemnified, and the money replaced, Varney thought he could confidently
+ rely on his ci-devant fellow-pupil&rsquo;s assent to wink at the forgery and
+ hush up the matter. But this was his only chance. How was the money to be
+ gained? He thought of Helen&rsquo;s fortune, and the last scruple gave way to
+ the imminence of his peril and the urgency of his fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this decision, he repaired to Lucretia, whose concurrence was
+ necessary to his designs. Long habits of crime had now deepened still more
+ the dark and stern colour of that dread woman&rsquo;s sombre nature. But through
+ all that had ground the humanity from her soul, one human sentiment,
+ fearfully tainted and adulterated as it was, still struggled for life,&mdash;the
+ memory of the mother. It was by this, her least criminal emotion, that
+ Varney led her to the worst of her crimes. He offered to sell out the
+ remainder of the trust-money by a fresh act of forgery, to devote such
+ proceeds to the search for her lost Vincent; he revived the hopes she had
+ long since gloomily relinquished, till she began to conceive the discovery
+ easy and certain. He then brought before her the prospect of that son&rsquo;s
+ succession to Laughton: but two lives now between him and those broad
+ lands,&mdash;those two lives associated with just cause of revenge. Two
+ lives! Lucretia till then did not know that Susan had left a child, that a
+ pledge of those nuptials, to which she imputed all her infamy, existed to
+ revive a jealousy never extinguished, appeal to the hate that had grown
+ out of her love. More readily than Varney had anticipated, and with fierce
+ exultation, she fell into his horrible schemes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus had she returned to England and claimed the guardianship of her
+ niece. Varney engaged a dull house in the suburb, and looking out for a
+ servant not likely to upset and betray, found the nurse who had watched
+ over his uncle&rsquo;s last illness; but Lucretia, according to her invariable
+ practice, rejected all menial accomplices, reposed no confidence in the
+ tools of her black deeds. Feigning an infirmity that would mock all
+ suspicion of the hand that mixed the draught, and the step that stole to
+ the slumber, she defied the justice of earth, and stood alone under the
+ omniscience of Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Various considerations had delayed the execution of the atrocious deed so
+ coldly contemplated. Lucretia herself drew back, perhaps more daunted by
+ conscience than she herself was distinctly aware, and disguising her
+ scruples in those yet fouler refinements of hoped revenge which her
+ conversations with Varney have betrayed to the reader. The failure of the
+ earlier researches for the lost Vincent, the suspended activity of
+ Stubmore, left the more impatient murderer leisure to make the
+ acquaintance of St. John, steal into the confidence of Helen, and render
+ the insurances on the life of the latter less open to suspicion than if
+ effected immediately on her entrance into that shamble-house, and before
+ she could be supposed to form that affection for her aunt which made
+ probable so tender a forethought. These causes of delay now vanished, the
+ Parcae closed the abrupt woof, and lifted the impending shears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia had long since dropped the name of Braddell. She shrank from
+ proclaiming those second spousals, sullied by the degradation to which
+ they had exposed her, and the suspicions implied in the inquest on her
+ husband, until the hour for acknowledging her son should arrive. She
+ resumed, therefore, the name of Dalibard, and by that we will continue to
+ call her. Nor was Varney uninfluential in dissuading her from proclaiming
+ her second marriage till occasion necessitated. If the son were
+ discovered, and proofs of his birth in the keeping of himself and his
+ accomplice, his avarice naturally suggested the expediency of wringing
+ from that son some pledge of adequate reward on succession to an
+ inheritance which they alone could secure to him; out of this fancied fund
+ not only Grabman, but his employer, was to be paid. The concealment of the
+ identity between Mrs. Braddell and Madame Dalibard might facilitate such
+ an arrangement. This idea Varney locked as yet in his own breast. He did
+ not dare to speak to Lucretia of the bargain he ultimately meditated with
+ her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0029" id="Blink2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. MR. GRABMAN&rsquo;S ADVENTURES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The lackeys in their dress liveries stood at the porch of Laughton as the
+ postilions drove rapidly along the road, sweeping through venerable
+ groves, tinged with the hues of autumn, up to that stately pile. From the
+ window of the large, cumbrous vehicle which Percival, mindful of Madame
+ Dalibard&rsquo;s infirmity, had hired for her special accommodation, Lucretia
+ looked keenly. On the slope of the hill grouped the deer, and below, where
+ the lake gleamed, the swan rested on the wave. Farther on to the left,
+ gaunt and stag-headed, rose, living still, from the depth of the glen,
+ Guy&rsquo;s memorable oak. Coming now in sight, though at a distance, the gray
+ church-tower emerged from the surrounding masses of solemn foliage.
+ Suddenly the road curves round, and straight before her (the rooks cawing
+ above the turrets, the sun reflected from the vanes) Lucretia gazes on the
+ halls of Laughton. And didst thou not, O Guy&rsquo;s oak, murmur warning from
+ thine oracular hollows? And thou who sleepest below the church-tower,
+ didst thou not turn, Miles St. John, in thy grave, when, with such tender
+ care, the young lord of Laughton bore that silent guest across his
+ threshold, and with credulous, moistened eyes, welcomed Treason and Murder
+ to his hearth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, at the porch, paused Helen, gazing with the rapt eye of the poetess
+ on the broad landscape, checkered by the vast shadows cast from the
+ setting sun. There, too, by her side lingered Varney, with an artist&rsquo;s eye
+ for the stately scene, till a thought, not of art, changed the face of the
+ earth, and the view without mirrored back the Golgotha of his soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leave them thus; we must hurry on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day a traveller stopped his gig at a public-house in a village in
+ Lancashire. He chucked the rein to the hostler, and in reply to a question
+ what oats should be given to the horse, said, &ldquo;Hay and water; the beast is
+ on job.&rdquo; Then sauntering to the bar, he called for a glass of raw brandy
+ for himself; and while the host drew the spirit forth from the tap, he
+ asked carelessly if some years ago a woman of the name of Joplin had not
+ resided in the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is strange,&rdquo; said the host, musingly. &ldquo;What is strange?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, we have just had a gent asking the same question. I have only been
+ here nine year come December; but my old hostler was born in the village,
+ and never left it. So the gent had in the hostler, and he is now gone into
+ the village to pick up what else he can learn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intelligence seemed to surprise and displease the traveller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the deuce!&rdquo; he muttered; &ldquo;does Jason mistrust me? Has he set another
+ dog on the scent? Humph!&rdquo; He drained off his brandy, and sallied forth to
+ confer with the hostler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, my friend,&rdquo; said Mr. Grabman,&mdash;for the traveller was no other
+ than that worthy,&mdash;&ldquo;well, so you remember Mrs. Joplin more than
+ twenty years ago, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yees, I guess; more than twenty years since she left the pleck
+ [Lancashire and Yorkshire synonym for place].&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, she seems to have been a restless body. She had a child with her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yees, I moind that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I dare say you heard her say the child was not her own,&mdash;that
+ she was paid well for it, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noa; my missus did not loike me to chaffer much with neighbour Joplin,
+ for she was but a bad &lsquo;un,&mdash;pretty fease, too. She lived agin the
+ wogh [Anglice, wall] yonder, where you see that gent coming out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho! that is the gent who was asking after Mrs. Joplin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and he giv&rsquo; me half-a-croon!&rdquo; said the clever hostler, holding out
+ his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grabman, too thoughtful, too jealous of his rival, to take the hint at
+ that moment, darted off, as fast as his thin legs could carry him, towards
+ the unwelcome interferer in his own business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Approaching the gentleman,&mdash;a tall, powerful-looking young man,&mdash;he
+ somewhat softened his tone, and mechanically touched his hat as he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, sir, are you, too, in search of Mrs. Joplin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I am,&rdquo; answered the young man, eying Grabman deliberately; &ldquo;and you,
+ I suppose, are the person I have found before me on the same search,&mdash;first
+ at Liverpool; next at C&mdash;&mdash;, about fifteen miles from that town;
+ thirdly, at I&mdash;&mdash;; and now we meet here. You have had the start
+ of me. What have you learned?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grabman smiled. &ldquo;Softly, sir, softly. May I first ask&mdash;since open
+ questioning seems the order of the day&mdash;whether I have the honour to
+ address a brother practitioner,&mdash;one of the law, sir, one of the
+ law?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am one of the law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grabman bowed and scowled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And may I make bold to ask the name of your client?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly you may ask. Every man has a right to ask what he pleases, in a
+ civil way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll not answer? Deep! Oh, I understand! Very good. But I am deep
+ too, sir. You know Mr. Varney, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman looked surprised. His bushy brows met over his steady,
+ sagacious eyes; but after a moment&rsquo;s pause the expression of his face
+ cleared up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is as I thought,&rdquo; he said, half to himself. &ldquo;Who else could have had
+ an interest in similar inquiries?&mdash;Sir,&rdquo; he added, with a quick and
+ decided tone, &ldquo;you are doubtless employed by Mr. Varney on behalf of
+ Madame Dalibard and in search of evidence connected with the loss of an
+ unhappy infant. I am on the same quest, and for the same end. The
+ interests of your client are mine. Two heads are better than one; let us
+ unite our ingenuity and endeavours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And share the pec, I suppose?&rdquo; said Grabman, dryly, buttoning up his
+ pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whatever fee you may expect you will have, anyhow, whether I assist you
+ or not. I expect no fee, for mine is a personal interest, which I serve
+ gratuitously; but I can undertake to promise you, on my own part, more
+ than the ordinary professional reward for your co-operation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said Grabman, mollified, &ldquo;you speak very much like a
+ gentleman. My feelings were hurt at first, I own. I am hasty, but I can
+ listen to reason. Will you walk back with me to the house you have just
+ left? And suppose we then turn in and have a chop together, and compare
+ notes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Willingly,&rdquo; answered the tall stranger, and the two inquisitors amicably
+ joined company. The result of their inquiries was not, however, very
+ satisfactory. No one knew whither Mrs. Joplin had gone, though all agreed
+ it was in company with a man of bad character and vagrant habits; all
+ agreed, too, in the vague recollection of the child, and some remembered
+ that it was dressed in clothes finer than would have been natural to an
+ infant legally and filially appertaining to Mrs. Joplin. One old woman
+ remembered that on her reproaching Mrs. Joplin for some act of great
+ cruelty to the poor babe, she replied that it was not her flesh and blood,
+ and that if she had not expected more than she had got, she would never
+ have undertaken the charge. On comparing the information gleaned at the
+ previous places of their research, they found an entire agreement as to
+ the character personally borne by Mrs. Joplin. At the village to which
+ their inquiry had been first directed, she was known as a respectable,
+ precise young woman, one of a small congregation of rigid Dissenters. She
+ had married a member of the sect, and borne him a child, which died two
+ weeks after birth. She was then seen nursing another infant, though how
+ she came by it none knew. Shortly after this, her husband, a journeyman
+ carpenter of good repute, died; but to the surprise of the neighbours,
+ Mrs. Joplin continued to live as comfortably as before, and seemed not to
+ miss the wages of her husband,&mdash;nay, she rather now, as if before
+ kept back by the prudence of the deceased, launched into a less thrifty
+ mode of life, and a gayety of dress at variance both with the mourning her
+ recent loss should have imposed, and the austere tenets of her sect. This
+ indecorum excited angry curiosity, and drew down stern remonstrance. Mrs.
+ Joplin, in apparent disgust at this intermeddling with her affairs,
+ withdrew from the village to a small town, about twenty miles distant, and
+ there set up a shop. But her moral lapse became now confirmed; her life
+ was notoriously abandoned, and her house the resort of all the reprobates
+ of the place. Whether her means began to be exhausted, or the scandal she
+ provoked attracted the notice of the magistrates and imposed a check on
+ her course, was not very certain, but she sold off her goods suddenly, and
+ was next tracked to the village in which Mr. Grabman met his new
+ coadjutor; and there, though her conduct was less flagrant, and her
+ expenses less reckless, she made but a very unfavourable impression, which
+ was confirmed by her flight with an itinerant hawker of the lowest
+ possible character. Seated over their port wine, the two gentlemen
+ compared their experiences, and consulted on the best mode of remending
+ the broken thread of their research; when Mr. Grabman said coolly, &ldquo;But,
+ after all, I think it most likely that we are not on the right scent. This
+ bantling may not be the one we search for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be not misled by that doubt. To arrive at the evidence we desire, we must
+ still track this wretched woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are certain of that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem! Did you ever hear of a Mr. Walter Ardworth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, what of him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, he can best tell us where to look for the child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure he would counsel as I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know him, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, he lives still?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you bring me across him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If necessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that young man, who goes by his name, brought up by Mr. Fielden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he not the son of Mr. Braddell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger was silent, and, shading his face with his hand, seemed
+ buried in thought. He then rose, took up his candle, and said quietly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I wish you good-evening. I have letters to write in my own room. I
+ will consider by to-morrow, if you stay till then, whether we can really
+ aid each other further, or whether we should pursue our researches
+ separately.&rdquo; With these words he closed the door; and Mr. Grabman remained
+ baffled and bewildered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he too had a letter to write; so, calling for pen, ink, and
+ paper, and a pint of brandy, he indited his complaints and his news to
+ Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jason, (he began) are you playing me false? Have you set another man on
+ the track with a view to bilk me of my promised fee? Explain, or I throw
+ up the business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith, Mr. Grabman gave a minute description of the stranger, and
+ related pretty accurately what had passed between that gentleman and
+ himself. He then added the progress of his own inquiries, and renewed, as
+ peremptorily as he dared, his demand for candour and plain dealing. Now,
+ it so happened that in stumbling upstairs to bed, Mr. Grabman passed the
+ room in which his mysterious fellow-seeker was lodged, and as is the usage
+ in hotels, a pair of boots stood outside the door, to be cleaned betimes
+ in the morning. Though somewhat drunk, Grabman still preserved the rays of
+ his habitual astuteness. A clever and a natural idea shot across his
+ brain, illuminating the fumes of the brandy; he stooped, and while one
+ hand on the wall steadied his footing, with the other he fished up a boot,
+ and peering within, saw legibly written: &ldquo;John Ardworth, Esq., Gray&rsquo;s
+ Inn.&rdquo; At that sight he felt what a philosopher feels at the sudden
+ elucidation of a troublesome problem. Downstairs again tottered Grabman,
+ re-opened his letter, and wrote,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P.S.&mdash;I have wronged you, Jason, by my suspicions; never mind,&mdash;jubilate!
+ This interloper who made me so jealous, who think you it is? Why, young
+ Ardworth himself,&mdash;that is, the lad who goes by such name. Now, is it
+ not clear? Of course no one else has such interest in learning his birth
+ as the lost child himself,&mdash;here he is! If old Ardworth lives (as he
+ says), old Ardworth has set him to work on his own business. But then,
+ that Fielden,&mdash;rather a puzzler that! Yet&mdash;no. Now I understand,&mdash;old
+ Ardworth gave the boy to Mrs. Joplin, and took it away from her again when
+ he went to the parson&rsquo;s. Now, certainly, it may be quite necessary to
+ prove,&mdash;first, that the boy he took from Mr. Braddell&rsquo;s he gave to
+ Mrs. Joplin; secondly, that the boy he left with Mr. Fielden was the same
+ that he took again from that woman: therefore, the necessity of finding
+ out Mother Joplin, an essential witness. Q. E. D., Master Jason!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till the sun had been some hours risen that Mr. Grabman
+ imitated that luminary&rsquo;s example. When he did so, he found, somewhat to
+ his chagrin, that John Ardworth had long been gone. In fact, whatever the
+ motive that had led the latter on the search, he had succeeded in gleaning
+ from Grabman all that that person could communicate, and their interview
+ had inspired him with such disgust of the attorney, and so small an
+ opinion of the value of his co-operation (in which last belief, perhaps,
+ he was mistaken), that he had resolved to continue his inquiries alone,
+ and had already, in his early morning&rsquo;s walk through the village,
+ ascertained that the man with whom Mrs. Joplin had quitted the place had
+ some time after been sentenced to six months&rsquo; imprisonment in the county
+ jail. Possibly the prison authorities might know something to lead to his
+ discovery, and through him the news of his paramour might be gained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0030" id="Blink2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. MORE OF MRS. JOPLIN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One day, at the hour of noon, the court boasting the tall residence of Mr.
+ Grabman was startled from the quiet usually reigning there at broad
+ daylight by the appearance of two men, evidently no inhabitants of the
+ place. The squalid, ill-favoured denizens lounging before the doors stared
+ hard, and at the fuller view of one of the men, most of them retreated
+ hastily within. Then, in those houses, you might have heard a murmur of
+ consternation and alarm. The ferret was in the burrow,&mdash;a Bow-Street
+ officer in the court! The two men paused, looked round, and stopping
+ before the dingy towerlike house, selected the bell which appealed to the
+ inmates of the ground-floor, to the left. At that summons Bill the
+ cracksman imprudently presented a full view of his countenance through his
+ barred window; he drew it back with astonishing celerity, but not in time
+ to escape the eye of the Bow-Street runner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open the door, Bill,&mdash;there&rsquo;s nothing to fear; I have no summons
+ against you, &lsquo;pon honour. You know I never deceive. Why should I? Open the
+ door, I say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officer tapped with his cane at the foul window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bill, there&rsquo;s a gentleman who comes to you for information, and he will
+ pay for it handsomely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill again appeared at the casement, and peeped forth very cautiously
+ through the bars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless my vitals, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;, and it is you, is it? What were you
+ saying about paying handsomely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That your evidence is wanted,&mdash;not against a pal, man. It will hurt
+ no one, and put at least five guineas in your pocket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten guineas,&rdquo; said the Bow-Street officer&rsquo;s companion. &ldquo;You be&rsquo;s a man of
+ honour, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo; said Bill, emphatically; &ldquo;and I scorns to
+ doubt you, so here goes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that he withdrew from the window, and in another minute or so the
+ door was opened, and Bill, with a superb bow, asked his visitors into his
+ room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the interval, leisure had been given to the cracksman to remove all
+ trace of the wonted educational employment of his hopeful children. The
+ urchins were seated on the floor playing at push-pin; and the Bow-Street
+ officer benignly patted a pair of curly heads as he passed them, drew a
+ chair to the table, and wiping his forehead, sat down, quite at home. Bill
+ then deliberately seated himself, and unbuttoning his waistcoat, permitted
+ the butt-ends of a brace of pistols to be seen by his guests. Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;&lsquo;s
+ companion seemed very unmoved by this significant action. He bent one
+ inquiring, steady look on the cracksman, which, as Bill afterwards said,
+ went through him &ldquo;like a gimlet through a penny,&rdquo; and taking out a purse,
+ through the network of which the sovereigns gleamed pleasantly, placed it
+ on the table and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This purse is yours if you will tell me what has become of a woman named
+ Joplin, with whom you left the village of &mdash;&mdash;, in Lancashire,
+ in the year 18&mdash;.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; put in Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;, &ldquo;the gentleman wants to know, with no
+ view of harming the woman. It will be to her own advantage to inform us
+ where she is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Pon honour again?&rdquo; said Bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Pon honour!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, I has a heart in my buzzom, and if so be I can do a good turn
+ to the &lsquo;oman wot I has loved and kep&rsquo; company with, why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not, indeed?&rdquo; said Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;. &ldquo;And as we want to learn, not
+ only what has become of Mrs. Joplin, but what she did with the child she
+ carried off from &mdash;&mdash;, begin at the beginning and tell us all
+ you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill mused. &ldquo;How much is there in the pus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eighteen sovereigns.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make it twenty&mdash;you nod&mdash;twenty then? A bargain! Now I&rsquo;ll go on
+ right ahead. You see as how, some months arter we&mdash;that is, Peggy
+ Joplin and self&mdash;left &mdash;&mdash;, I was put in quod in Lancaster
+ jail; so I lost sight of the blowen. When I got out and came to Lunnun, it
+ was a matter of seven year afore, all of a sudding, I came bang up agin
+ her,&mdash;at the corner of Common Garden. &lsquo;Why, Bill!&rsquo; says she. &lsquo;Why,
+ Peggy!&rsquo; says I; and we bussed each other like winky. &lsquo;Shall us come
+ together agin?&rsquo; says she. &lsquo;Why, no,&rsquo; says I; &lsquo;I has a wife wots a good
+ &lsquo;un, and gets her bread by setting up as a widder with seven small
+ childern. By the by, Peg, what&rsquo;s a come of your brat?&rsquo; for as you says,
+ sir, Peg had a child put out to her to nurse. Lor&rsquo;, how she cuffed it!
+ &lsquo;The brat!&rsquo; says she, laughing like mad, &lsquo;oh, I got rid o&rsquo; that when you
+ were in jail, Bill.&rsquo; &lsquo;As how?&rsquo; says I. &lsquo;Why, there was a woman begging
+ agin St. Poll&rsquo;s churchyard; so I purtended to see a friend at a distance:
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Old the babby a moment,&rdquo; says I, puffing and panting, &ldquo;while I ketches
+ my friend yonder.&rdquo; So she &lsquo;olds the brat, and I never sees it agin; and
+ there&rsquo;s an ind of the bother!&rsquo; &lsquo;But won&rsquo;t they ever ax for the child,&mdash;them
+ as giv&rsquo; it you?&rsquo; &lsquo;Oh, no,&rsquo; says Peg, &lsquo;they left it too long for that, and
+ all the tin was agone; and one mouth is hard enough to feed in these days,&mdash;let
+ by other folks&rsquo; bantlings.&rsquo; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; says I, &lsquo;where do you hang out? I&rsquo;ll
+ pop in, in a friendly way.&rsquo; So she tells me,&mdash;som&rsquo;ere in Lambeth,&mdash;I
+ forgets hexactly; and many&rsquo;s the good piece of work we ha&rsquo; done togither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And where is she now?&rdquo; asked Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;&lsquo;s companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doesn&rsquo;t know purcisely, but I can com&rsquo; at her. You see, when my poor
+ wife died, four year com&rsquo; Chris&rsquo;mas, and left me with as fine a famuly,
+ though I says it, as h-old King Georgy himself walked afore, with his
+ gold-&rsquo;eaded cane, on the terris at Vindsor,&mdash;all heights and all
+ h-ages to the babby in arms (for the little &lsquo;un there warn&rsquo;t above a year
+ old, and had been a brought up upon spoon-meat, with a dash o&rsquo; blueruin to
+ make him slim and ginteel); as for the bigger &lsquo;uns wot you don&rsquo;t see, they
+ be doin&rsquo; well in forin parts, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. R. smiled significantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill resumed. &ldquo;Where was I? Oh, when my wife died, I wanted sum &lsquo;un to
+ take care of the childern, so I takes Peg into the &lsquo;ous. But Lor&rsquo;! how she
+ larrupped &lsquo;em,&mdash;she has a cruel heart, has n&rsquo;t she, Bob? Bob is a
+ &lsquo;cute child, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;. Just as I was a thinking of turning her
+ out neck an&rsquo; crop, a gemman what lodges aloft, wot be a laryer, and wot
+ had just saved my nick, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;, by proving a h-alibi, said,
+ &lsquo;That&rsquo;s a tidy body, your Peg!&rsquo; (for you see he was often a wisiting here,
+ an&rsquo; h-indeed, sin&rsquo; then, he has taken our third floor, No. 9); &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve been
+ a speakin&rsquo; to her, and I find she has been a nuss to the sick. I has a
+ frind wots a h-uncle that&rsquo;s ill: can you spare her, Bill, to attind him?&rsquo;
+ That I can,&rsquo; says I; &lsquo;anything to obleedge.&rsquo; So Peg packs off, bag and
+ baggidge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what was the sick gentleman&rsquo;s name?&rdquo; asked Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;&lsquo;s
+ companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was one Mr. Warney,&mdash;a painter, wot lived at Clap&rsquo;am. Since thin
+ I&rsquo;ve lost sight of Peg; for we had &lsquo;igh words about the childern, and she
+ was a spiteful &lsquo;oman. But you can larn where she be at Mr. Warney&rsquo;s, if so
+ be he&rsquo;s still above ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did this woman still go by the name of Joplin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill grinned: &ldquo;She warn&rsquo;t such a spooney as that,&mdash;that name was in
+ your black books too much, Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;, for a &lsquo;spectable nuss for
+ sick bodies; no, she was then called Martha Skeggs, what was her own
+ mother&rsquo;s name afore marriage. Anything more, gemman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am satisfied,&rdquo; said the younger visitor, rising; &ldquo;there is the purse,
+ and Mr. R&mdash;&mdash; will bring you ten sovereigns in addition.
+ Good-day to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bill, with superabundant bows and flourishes, showed his visitors out, and
+ then, in high glee, he began to romp with his children; and the whole
+ family circle was in a state of uproarious enjoyment when the door flew
+ open, and in entered Grabman, his brief-bag in hand, dust-soiled and
+ unshaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, neighbour! your servant, your servant; just come back! Always so
+ merry; for the life of me, I couldn&rsquo;t help looking in! Dear me, Bill, why,
+ you&rsquo;re in luck!&rdquo; and Mr. Grabman pointed to a pile of sovereigns which
+ Bill had emptied from the purse to count over and weigh on the tip of his
+ forefinger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Bill, sweeping the gold into his corduroy pocket; &ldquo;and who do
+ you think brought me these shiners? Why, who but old Peggy, the &lsquo;oman wot
+ you put out at Clapham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, never mind Peggy, now, Bill; I want to ask you what you have done
+ with Margaret Joplin, whom, sly seducer that you are, you carried off from&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, man, Peggy be Joplin, and Joplin be Peggy! And it&rsquo;s for that piece
+ of noos that I got all them pretty new picters of his Majesty Bill,&mdash;my
+ namesake, God bliss &lsquo;im!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&mdash;n,&rdquo; exclaimed Grabman, aghast; &ldquo;the young chap&rsquo;s spoiling my game
+ again!&rdquo; And seizing up his brief-bag, he darted out of the house, in the
+ hope to arrive at least at Clapham before his competitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0031" id="Blink2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. BECK&rsquo;S DISCOVERY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Under the cedar-trees at Laughton sat that accursed and abhorrent being
+ who sat there, young, impassioned, hopeful, as Lucretia Clavering,&mdash;under
+ the old cedar-trees, which, save that their vast branches cast an
+ imperceptibly broader shade over the mossy sward, the irrevocable winters
+ had left the same. Where, through the nether boughs the autumn sunbeams
+ came aslant, the windows, enriched by many a haughty scutcheon, shone
+ brightly against the western rays. From the flower-beds in the quaint
+ garden near at hand, the fresh yet tranquil air wafted faint perfumes from
+ the lingering heliotrope and fading rose. The peacock perched dozily on
+ the heavy balustrade; the blithe robin hopped busily along the sun-track
+ on the lawn; in the distance the tinkling bells of the flock, the plaining
+ low of some wandering heifer, while breaking the silence, seemed still to
+ blend with the repose. All images around lent themselves to complete that
+ picture of stately calm which is the character of those old
+ mansion-houses, which owner after owner has loved and heeded, leaving to
+ them the graces of antiquity, guarding them from the desolation of decay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alone sat Lucretia under the cedar-trees, and her heart made dismal
+ contrast to the noble tranquillity that breathed around. From whatever
+ softening or repentant emotions which the scene of her youth might first
+ have awakened; from whatever of less unholy anguish which memory might
+ have caused when she first, once more, sat under those remembered boughs,
+ and, as a voice from a former world, some faint whisper of youthful love
+ sighed across the waste and ashes of her devastated soul,&mdash;from all
+ such rekindled humanities in the past she had now, with gloomy power,
+ wrenched herself away. Crime such as hers admits not long the sentiment
+ that softens remorse of gentler error. If there wakes one moment from the
+ past the warning and melancholy ghost, soon from that abyss rises the Fury
+ with the lifted scourge, and hunts on the frantic footsteps towards the
+ future. In the future, the haggard intellect of crime must live, must
+ involve itself mechanically in webs and meshes, and lose past and present
+ in the welcome atmosphere of darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus while Lucretia sat, and her eyes rested upon the halls of her youth,
+ her mind overleaped the gulf that yet yawned between her and the object on
+ which she was bent. Already, in fancy, that home was hers again, its
+ present possessor swept away, the interloping race of Vernon ending in one
+ of those abrupt lines familiar to genealogists, which branch out busily
+ from the main tree, as if all pith and sap were monopolized by them,
+ continue for a single generation, and then shrink into a printer&rsquo;s bracket
+ with the formal laconism, &ldquo;Died without issue.&rdquo; Back, then, in the
+ pedigree would turn the eye of some curious descendant, and see the race
+ continue in the posterity of Lucretia Clavering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all her ineffable vices, mere cupidity had not, as we have often
+ seen, been a main characteristic of this fearful woman; and in her design
+ to endow, by the most determined guilt, her son with the heritage of her
+ ancestors, she had hitherto looked but little to mere mercenary advantages
+ for herself: but now, in the sight of that venerable and broad domain, a
+ covetousness, absolute in itself, broke forth. Could she have gained it
+ for her own use rather than her son&rsquo;s, she would have felt a greater zest
+ in her ruthless purpose. She looked upon the scene as a deposed monarch
+ upon his usurped realm,&mdash;it was her right. The early sense of
+ possession in that inheritance returned to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reluctantly would she even yield her claims to her child. Here, too, in
+ this atmosphere she tasted once more what had long been lost to her,&mdash;the
+ luxury of that dignified respect which surrounds the well-born. Here she
+ ceased to be the suspected adventuress, the friendless outcast, the needy
+ wrestler with hostile fortune, the skulking enemy of the law. She rose at
+ once, and without effort, to her original state,&mdash;the honoured
+ daughter of an illustrious house. The homeliest welcome that greeted her
+ from some aged but unforgotten villager, the salutation of homage, the
+ bated breath of humble reverence,&mdash;even trifles like these were dear
+ to her, and made her the more resolute to retain them. In her calm,
+ relentless onward vision she saw herself enshrined in those halls, ruling
+ in the delegated authority of her son, safe evermore from prying suspicion
+ and degrading need and miserable guilt for miserable objects. Here, but
+ one great crime, and she resumed the majesty of her youth! While thus
+ dwelling on the future, her eye did not even turn from those sunlit towers
+ to the forms below, and more immediately inviting its survey. On the very
+ spot where, at the opening of this tale, sat Sir Miles St. John sharing
+ his attention between his dogs and his guest, sat now Helen Mainwaring;
+ against the balustrade where had lounged Charles Vernon, leaned Percival
+ St. John; and in the same place where he had stationed himself that
+ eventful evening, to distort, in his malignant sketch, the features of his
+ father, Gabriel Varney, with almost the same smile of irony upon his lips,
+ was engaged in transferring to his canvas a more faithful likeness of the
+ heir&rsquo;s intended bride. Helen&rsquo;s countenance, indeed, exhibited
+ comparatively but little of the ravages which the pernicious aliment,
+ administered so noiselessly, made upon the frame. The girl&rsquo;s eye, it is
+ true, had sunk, and there was a languid heaviness in its look; but the
+ contour of the cheek was so naturally rounded, and the features so
+ delicately fine, that the fall of the muscles was less evident; and the
+ bright, warm hue of the complexion, and the pearly sparkle of the teeth,
+ still gave a fallacious freshness to the aspect. But as yet the poisoners
+ had forborne those ingredients which invade the springs of life, resorting
+ only to such as undermine the health and prepare the way to unsuspected
+ graves. Out of the infernal variety of the materials at their command,
+ they had selected a mixture which works by sustaining perpetual fever;
+ which gives little pain, little suffering, beyond that of lassitude and
+ thirst; which wastes like consumption, and yet puzzles the physician, by
+ betraying few or none of its ordinary symptoms. But the disorder as yet
+ was not incurable,&mdash;its progress would gradually cease with the
+ discontinuance of the venom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although October was far advanced, the day was as mild and warm as August.
+ But Percival, who had been watching Helen&rsquo;s countenance with the anxiety
+ of love and fear, now proposed that the sitting should be adjourned. The
+ sun was declining, and it was certainly no longer safe for Helen to be
+ exposed to the air without exercise. He proposed that they should walk
+ through the garden, and Helen, rising cheerfully, placed her hand on his
+ arm. But she had scarcely descended the steps of the terrace when she
+ stopped short and breathed hard and painfully. The spasm was soon over,
+ and walking slowly on, they passed Lucretia with a brief word or two, and
+ were soon out of sight amongst the cedars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lean more on my arm, Helen,&rdquo; said Percival. &ldquo;How strange it is that the
+ change of air has done so little for you, and our country doctor still
+ less! I should feel miserable indeed if Simmons, whom my mother always
+ considered very clever, did not assure me that there was no ground for
+ alarm,&mdash;that these symptoms were only nervous. Cheer up, Helen; sweet
+ love, cheer up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen raised her face and strove to smile; but the tears stood in her
+ eyes. &ldquo;It would be hard to die now, Percival!&rdquo; she said falteringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To die&mdash;oh, Helen! No; we must not stay here longer,&mdash;the air
+ is certainly too keen for you. Perhaps your aunt will go to Italy. Why not
+ all go there, and seek my mother? And she will nurse you, Helen, and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ He could not trust his voice farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen pressed his arm tenderly. &ldquo;Forgive me, dear Percival, it is but at
+ moments that I feel so despondent; now, again, it is past. Ah, I so long
+ to see your mother! When shall you hear from her? Are you not too
+ sanguine? Do you really feel sure she will consent to so lowly a choice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never doubt her affection, her appreciation of you,&rdquo; answered Percival,
+ gladly, and hoping that Helen&rsquo;s natural anxiety might be the latent cause
+ of her dejected spirits; &ldquo;often, when talking of the future, under these
+ very cedars, my mother has said: &lsquo;You have no cause to marry for ambition,&mdash;marry
+ only for your happiness.&rsquo; She never had a daughter: in return for all her
+ love, I shall give her that blessing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus talking, the lovers rambled on till the sun set, and then, returning
+ to the house, they found that Varney and Madame Dalibard had preceded
+ them. That evening Helen&rsquo;s spirits rose to their natural buoyancy, and
+ Percival&rsquo;s heart was once more set at ease by her silvery laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, at their usual early hour, the rest of the family retired to sleep,
+ Percival remained in the drawing-room to write again, and at length, to
+ Lady Mary and Captain Greville. While thus engaged, his valet entered to
+ say that Beck, who had been out since the early morning, in search of a
+ horse that had strayed from one of the pastures, had just returned with
+ the animal, who had wandered nearly as far as Southampton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad to hear it,&rdquo; said Percival, abstractedly, and continuing his
+ letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valet still lingered. Percival looked up in surprise. &ldquo;If you please,
+ sir, you said you particularly wished to see Beck when he came back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;oh, true! Tell him to wait; I will speak to him by and by. You
+ need not sit up for me; let Beck attend to the bell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valet withdrew. Percival continued his letter, and filled page after
+ page and sheet after sheet; and when at length the letters, not containing
+ a tithe of what he wished to convey, were brought to a close, he fell into
+ a revery that lasted till the candles burned low, and the clock from the
+ turret tolled one. Starting up in surprise at the lapse of time, Percival
+ then, for the first time, remembered Beck, and rang the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ci-devant sweeper, in his smart livery, appeared at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beck, my poor fellow, I am ashamed to have kept you waiting so long; but
+ I received a letter this morning which relates to you. Let me see,&mdash;I
+ left it in my study upstairs. Ah, you&rsquo;ll never find the way; follow me,&mdash;I
+ have some questions to put to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothin&rsquo; agin my carakter, I hopes, your honour,&rdquo; said Beck, timidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noos of the mattris, then?&rdquo; exclaimed Beck, joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor that either,&rdquo; answered Percival, laughing, as he lighted the chamber
+ candlestick, and, followed by Beck, ascended the grand staircase to a
+ small room which, as it adjoined his sleeping apartment, he had habitually
+ used as his morning writing-room and study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Percival had, indeed, received that day a letter which had occasioned him
+ much surprise; it was from John Ardworth, and ran thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR PERCIVAL,&mdash;It seems that you have taken into your service a
+ young man known only by the name of Beck. Is he now with you at Laughton?
+ If so, pray retain him, and suffer him to be in readiness to come to me at
+ a day&rsquo;s notice if wanted, though it is probable enough that I may rather
+ come to you. At present, strange as it may seem to you, I am detained in
+ London by business connected with that important personage. Will you ask
+ him carelessly, as it were, in the mean while; the following questions:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First, how did he become possessed of a certain child&rsquo;s coral which he
+ left at the house of one Becky Carruthers, in Cole&rsquo;s Building?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, is he aware of any mark on his arm,&mdash;if so, will he
+ describe it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirdly, how long has he known the said Becky Carruthers?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourthly, does he believe her to be honest and truthful?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take a memorandum of his answers, and send it to me. I am pretty well
+ aware of what they are likely to be; but I desire you to put the
+ questions, that I may judge if there be any discrepancy between his
+ statement and that of Mrs. Carruthers. I have much to tell you, and am
+ eager to receive your kind congratulations upon an event that has given me
+ more happiness than the fugitive success of my little book. Tenderest
+ regards to Helen; and hoping soon to see you, Ever affectionately yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.S.&mdash;Say not a word of the contents of this letter to Madame
+ Dalibard, Helen, or to any one except Beck. Caution him to the same
+ discretion. If you can&rsquo;t trust to his silence, send him to town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the post brought this letter, Beck was already gone on his errand,
+ and after puzzling himself with vague conjectures, Percival&rsquo;s mind had
+ been naturally too absorbed with his anxieties for Helen to recur much to
+ the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, refreshing his memory with the contents of the letter, he drew pen
+ and ink before him, put the questions seriatim, noted down the answers as
+ desired, and smiling at Beck&rsquo;s frightened curiosity to know who could
+ possibly care about such matters, and feeling confident (from that very
+ fright) of his discretion, dismissed the groom to his repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck had never been in that part of the house before; and when he got into
+ the corridor he became bewildered, and knew not which turn to take, the
+ right or the left. He had no candle with him; but the moon came clear
+ through a high and wide skylight: the light, however, gave him no guide.
+ While pausing, much perplexed, and not sure that he should even know again
+ the door of the room he had just quitted, if venturing to apply to his
+ young master for a clew through such a labyrinth, he was inexpressibly
+ startled and appalled by a sudden apparition. A door at one end of the
+ corridor opened noiselessly, and a figure, at first scarcely
+ distinguishable, for it was robed from head to foot in a black, shapeless
+ garb, scarcely giving even the outline of the human form, stole forth.
+ Beck rubbed his eyes and crept mechanically close within the recess of one
+ of the doors that communicated with the passage. The figure advanced a few
+ steps towards him; and what words can describe his astonishment when he
+ beheld thus erect, and in full possession of physical power and motion,
+ the palsied cripple whose chair he had often seen wheeled into the garden,
+ and whose unhappy state was the common topic of comment in the servants&rsquo;
+ hall! Yes, the moon from above shone full upon that face which never, once
+ seen, could be forgotten. And it seemed more than mortally stern and pale,
+ contrasted with the sable of the strange garb, and beheld by that mournful
+ light. Had a ghost, indeed, risen from the dead, it could scarcely have
+ appalled him more. Madame Dalibard did not see the involuntary spy; for
+ the recess in which he had crept was on that side of the wall on which the
+ moon&rsquo;s shadow was cast. With a quick step she turned into another room,
+ opposite that which she had quitted, the door of which stood ajar, and
+ vanished noiselessly as she had appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taught suspicion by his earlier acquaintance with the &ldquo;night-side&rdquo; of
+ human nature, Beck had good cause for it here. This detection of an
+ imposture most familiar to his experience,&mdash;that of a pretended
+ cripple; the hour of the night; the evil expression on the face of the
+ deceitful guest; Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s familiar intimacy and near connection
+ with Varney,&mdash;Varney, the visitor to Grabman, who received no
+ visitors but those who desire, not to go to law, but to escape from its
+ penalties; Varney, who had dared to brave the resurrection man in his den,
+ and who seemed so fearlessly at home in abodes where nought but poverty
+ could protect the honest; Varney now, with that strange woman, an inmate
+ of a house in which the master was so young, so inexperienced, so liable
+ to be duped by his own generous nature,&mdash;all these ideas, vaguely
+ combined, inspired Beck with as vague a terror. Surely something, he knew
+ not what, was about to be perpetrated against his benefactor,&mdash;some
+ scheme of villany which it was his duty to detect. He breathed hard,
+ formed his resolves, and stealing on tiptoe, followed the shadowy form of
+ the poisoner through the half-opened doorway. The shutters of the room of
+ which he thus crossed the threshold were not closed,&mdash;the moon shone
+ in bright and still. He kept his body behind the door, peeping in with
+ straining, fearful stare. He saw Madame Dalibard standing beside a bed
+ round which the curtains were closed,&mdash;standing for a moment or so
+ motionless, and as if in the act of listening, with one hand on a table
+ beside the bed. He then saw her take from the folds of her dress something
+ white and glittering, and pour from it what appeared to him but a drop or
+ two, cautiously, slowly, into a phial on the table, from which she
+ withdrew the stopper; that done, she left the phial where she had found
+ it, again paused a moment, and turned towards the door. Beck retreated
+ hastily to his former hiding-place, and gained it in time. Again the
+ shadowy form passed him, and again the white face in the white moonlight
+ froze his blood with its fell and horrible expression. He remained
+ cowering and shrinking against the wall for some time, striving to collect
+ his wits, and considering what he should do. His first thought was to go
+ at once and inform St. John of what he had witnessed. But the poor have a
+ proverbial dread of deposing aught against a superior. Madame Dalibard
+ would deny his tale, the guest would be believed against the menial,&mdash;he
+ would be but dismissed with ignominy. At that idea, he left his
+ hiding-place, and crept along the corridor, in the hope of finding some
+ passage at the end which might lead to the offices. But when he arrived at
+ the other extremity, he was only met by great folding-doors, which
+ evidently communicated with the state apartments; he must retrace his
+ steps. He did so; and when he came to the door which Madame Dalibard had
+ entered, and which still stood ajar, he had recovered some courage, and
+ with courage, curiosity seized him. For what purpose could the strange
+ woman seek that room at night thus feloniously? What could she have
+ poured, and with such stealthy caution, into the phial? Naturally and
+ suddenly the idea of poison flashed across him. Tales of such crime (as,
+ indeed, of all crime) had necessarily often thrilled the ear of the
+ vagrant fellow-lodger with burglars and outlaws. But poison to whom? Could
+ it be meant for his benefactor? Could St. John sleep in that room? Why
+ not? The woman had sought the chamber before her young host had retired to
+ rest, and mingled her potion with some medicinal draught. All fear
+ vanished before the notion of danger to his employer. He stole at once
+ through the doorway, and noiselessly approached the table on which yet lay
+ the phial. His hand closed on it firmly. He resolved to carry it away, and
+ consider next morning what next to do. At all events, it might contain
+ some proof to back his tale and justify his suspicions. When he came once
+ more into the corridor, he made a quick rush onwards, and luckily arrived
+ at the staircase. There the blood-red stains reflected on the stone floors
+ from the blazoned casements daunted him little less than the sight at
+ which his hair still bristled. He scarcely drew breath till he had got
+ into his own little crib, in the wing set apart for the stable-men, when,
+ at length, he fell into broken and agitated sleep,&mdash;the visions of
+ all that had successively disturbed him waking, united confusedly, as in
+ one picture of gloom and terror. He thought that he was in his old loft in
+ St. Giles&rsquo;s, that the Gravestealer was wrestling with Varney for his body,
+ while he himself, lying powerless on his pallet, fancied he should be safe
+ as long as he could retain, as a talisman, his child&rsquo;s coral, which he
+ clasped to his heart. Suddenly, in that black, shapeless garb, in which he
+ had beheld her, Madame Dalibard bent over him with her stern, colourless
+ face, and wrenched from him his charm. Then, ceasing his struggle with his
+ horrible antagonist, Varney laughed aloud, and the Gravestealer seized him
+ in his deadly arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0032" id="Blink2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. THE TAPESTRY CHAMBER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Beck woke the next morning, and gradually recalled all that had so
+ startled and appalled him the previous night, the grateful creature felt,
+ less by the process of reason than by a brute instinct, that in the
+ mysterious resuscitation and nocturnal wanderings of the pretended
+ paralytic, some danger menaced his master; he became anxious to learn
+ whether it was really St. John&rsquo;s room Madame Dalibard stealthily visited.
+ A bright idea struck him; and in the course of the day, at an hour when
+ the family were out of doors, he contrived to coax the good-natured valet,
+ who had taken him under his special protection, to show him over the
+ house. He had heard the other servants say there was such a power of fine
+ things that a peep into the rooms was as good as a show, and the valet
+ felt pride in being cicerone even to Beck. After having stared
+ sufficiently at the banquet-hall and the drawing-room, the armour, the
+ busts, and the pictures, and listened, open-mouthed, to his guide&rsquo;s
+ critical observations, Beck was led up the great stairs into the old
+ family picture-gallery, and into Sir Miles&rsquo;s ancient room at the end,
+ which had been left undisturbed, with the bed still in the angle; on
+ returning thence, Beck found himself in the corridor which communicated
+ with the principal bedrooms, in which he had lost himself the night
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And vot room be that vith the littul vite &lsquo;ead h-over the door?&rdquo; asked
+ Beck, pointing to the chamber from which Madame Dalibard had emerged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That white head, Master Beck, is Floorer the goddess; but a heathen like
+ you knows nothing about goddesses. Floorer has a half-moon in her hair,
+ you see, which shows that the idolatrous Turks worship her; for the
+ Turkish flag is a half-moon, as I have seen at Constantinople. I have
+ travelled, Beck.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And vot room be it? Is it the master&rsquo;s?&rdquo; persisted Beck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, the pretty young lady, Miss Mainwaring, has it at present. There is
+ nothing to see in it. But that one opposite,&rdquo; and the valet advanced to
+ the door through which Madame Dalibard had disappeared,&mdash;&ldquo;that is
+ curious; and as Madame is out, we may just take a peep.&rdquo; He opened the
+ door gently, and Beck looked in. &ldquo;This, which is called the
+ turret-chamber, was Madame&rsquo;s when she was a girl, I have heard old Bessy
+ say; so Master pops her there now. For my part, I&rsquo;d rather sleep in your
+ little crib than have those great gruff-looking figures staring at me by
+ the firelight, and shaking their heads with every wind on a winter&rsquo;s
+ night.&rdquo; And the valet took a pinch of snuff as he drew Beck&rsquo;s attention to
+ the faded tapestry on the walls. As they spoke, the draught between the
+ door and the window caused the gloomy arras to wave with a life-like
+ motion; and to those more superstitious than romantic, the chamber had
+ certainly no inviting aspect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never sees these old tapestry rooms,&rdquo; said the valet, &ldquo;without thinking
+ of the story of the lady who, coming from a ball and taking off her
+ jewels, happened to look up, and saw an eye in one of the figures which
+ she felt sure was no peeper in worsted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vot vos it, then?&rdquo; asked Beck, timidly lifting up the hangings, and
+ noticing that there was a considerable space between them and the wall,
+ which was filled up in part by closets and wardrobes set into the walls,
+ with intervals more than deep enough for the hiding-place of a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered the valet, &ldquo;it was a thief. He had come for the jewels;
+ but the lady had the presence of mind to say aloud, as if to herself, that
+ she had forgotten something, slipped out of the room, locked the door,
+ called up the servants, and the thief&mdash;who was no less a person than
+ the under-butler&mdash;was nabbed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the French &lsquo;oman sleeps &lsquo;ere?&rdquo; said Beck, musingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;French &lsquo;oman! Master Beck, nothing&rsquo;s so vulgar as these nicknames in a
+ first-rate situation. It is all very well when one lives with skinflints,
+ but with such a master as our&rsquo;n, respect&rsquo;s the go. Besides, Madame is not
+ a French &lsquo;oman; she is one of the family,&mdash;and as old a family it is,
+ too, as e&rsquo;er a lord&rsquo;s in the three kingdoms. But come, your curiosity is
+ satisfied now, and you must trot back to your horses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Beck returned to the stables, his mind yet more misgave him as to the
+ criminal designs of his master&rsquo;s visitor. It was from Helen&rsquo;s room that
+ the false cripple had walked, and the ill health of the poor young lady
+ was a general subject of compassionate comment. But Madame Dalibard was
+ Helen&rsquo;s relation: from what motive could she harbour an evil thought
+ against her own niece? But still, if those drops were poured into the
+ healing draught for good, why so secretly? Once more he revolved the idea
+ of speaking to St. John: an accident dissuaded him from this intention,&mdash;the
+ only proof to back his tale was the mysterious phial he had carried away;
+ but unluckily, forgetting that it was in his pocket, at a time when he
+ flung off his coat to groom one of the horses, the bottle struck against
+ the corn-bin and broke; all the contents were spilt. This incident made
+ him suspend his intention, and wait till he could obtain some fresh
+ evidence of evil intentions. The day passed without any other noticeable
+ occurrence. The doctor called, found Helen somewhat better, and ascribed
+ it to his medicines, especially to the effect of his tonic draught the
+ first thing in the morning. Helen smiled. &ldquo;Nay, Doctor,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;this
+ morning, at least, it was forgotten. I did not find it by my bedside.
+ Don&rsquo;t tell my aunt; she would be so angry.&rdquo; The doctor looked rather
+ discomposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he, soon recovering his good humour, &ldquo;since you are certainly
+ better to-day without the draught, discontinue it also to-morrow. I will
+ make an alteration for the day after.&rdquo; So that night Madame Dalibard
+ visited in vain her niece&rsquo;s chamber: Helen had a reprieve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0033" id="Blink2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. THE SHADES ON THE DIAL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The following morning was indeed eventful to the family at Laughton; and
+ as if conscious of what it brought forth, it rose dreary and sunless. One
+ heavy mist covered all the landscape, and a raw, drizzling rain fell
+ pattering through the yellow leaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Dalibard, pleading her infirmities, rarely left her room before
+ noon, and Varney professed himself very irregular in his hours of rising;
+ the breakfast, therefore, afforded no social assembly to the family, but
+ each took that meal in the solitude of his or her own chamber. Percival,
+ in whom all habits partook of the healthfulness and simplicity of his
+ character, rose habitually early, and that day, in spite of the weather,
+ walked forth betimes to meet the person charged with the letters from the
+ post. He had done so for the last three or four days, impatient to hear
+ from his mother, and calculating that it was full time to receive the
+ expected answer to his confession and his prayer. He met the messenger at
+ the bottom of the park, not far from Guy&rsquo;s Oak. This day he was not
+ disappointed. The letter-bag contained three letters for himself,&mdash;two
+ with the foreign postmark, the third in Ardworth&rsquo;s hand. It contained also
+ a letter for Madame Dalibard, and two for Varney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving the messenger to take these last to the Hall, Percival, with his
+ own prizes, plunged into the hollow of the glen before him, and, seating
+ himself at the foot of Guy&rsquo;s Oak, through the vast branches of which the
+ rain scarcely came, and only in single, mournful drops, he opened first
+ the letter in his mother&rsquo;s hand, and read as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR, DEAR SON,&mdash;How can I express to you the alarm your letter
+ has given to me! So these, then, are the new relations you have
+ discovered! I fondly imagined that you were alluding to some of my own
+ family, and conjecturing who, amongst my many cousins, could have so
+ captivated your attention. These the new relations,&mdash;Lucretia
+ Dalibard, Helen Mainwaring! Percival, do you not know &mdash;&mdash; No,
+ you cannot know that Helen Mainwaring is the daughter of a disgraced man,
+ of one who (more than suspected of fraud in the bank in which he was a
+ partner) left his country, condemned even by his own father. If you doubt
+ this, you have but to inquire at &mdash;&mdash;, not ten miles from
+ Laughton, where the elder Mainwaring resided. Ask there what became of
+ William Mainwaring. And Lucretia, you do not know that the dying prayer of
+ her uncle, Sir Miles St. John, was that she might never enter the house he
+ bequeathed to your father. Not till after my poor Charles&rsquo;s death did I
+ know the exact cause for Sir Miles&rsquo;s displeasure, though confident it was
+ just; but then amongst his papers I found the ungrateful letter which
+ betrayed thoughts so dark and passions so unwomanly that I blushed for my
+ sex to read it. Could it be possible that that poor old man&rsquo;s prayers were
+ unheeded, that that treacherous step could ever cross your threshold, that
+ that cruel eye, which read with such barbarous joy the ravages of death on
+ a benefactor&rsquo;s face, could rest on the hearth by which your frank,
+ truthful countenance has so often smiled away my tears, I should feel
+ indeed as if a thunder-cloud hung over the roof. No, if you marry the
+ niece, the aunt must be banished from your house. Good heavens! and it is
+ the daughter of William Mainwaring, the niece and ward of Lucretia
+ Dalibard, to whom you have given your faithful affection, whom you single
+ from the world as your wife! Oh, my son,&mdash;my beloved, my sole
+ surviving child,&mdash;do not think that I blame you, that my heart does
+ not bleed while I write thus; but I implore you on my knees to pause at
+ least, to suspend this intercourse till I myself can reach England. And
+ what then? Why, then, Percival, I promise, on my part, that I will see
+ your Helen with unprejudiced eyes, that I will put away from me, as far as
+ possible, all visions of disappointed pride,&mdash;the remembrance of
+ faults not her own,&mdash;and if she be as you say and think, I will take
+ her to my heart and call her &lsquo;Daughter.&rsquo; Are you satisfied? If so, come to
+ me,&mdash;come at once, and take comfort from your mother&rsquo;s lip. How I
+ long to be with you while you read this; how I tremble at the pain I so
+ rudely give you! But my poor sister still chains me here, I dare not leave
+ her, lest I should lose her last sigh. Come then, come; we will console
+ each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your fond (how fond!) and sorrowing mother,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARY ST. JOHN. SORRENTO, October 3, 1831.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.S.&mdash;You see by this address that we have left Pisa for this place,
+ recommended by our physician; hence an unhappy delay of some days in my
+ reply. Ah, Percival, how sleepless will be my pillow till I hear from you!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long, very long, was it before St. John, mute and overwhelmed with the
+ sudden shock of his anguish, opened his other letters. The first was from
+ Captain Greville.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What trap have you fallen into, foolish boy? That you would get into some
+ silly scrape or another, was natural enough. But a scrape for life, sir,&mdash;that
+ is serious! But&mdash;God bless you for your candour, my Percival; you
+ have written to us in time&mdash;you are old-fashioned enough to think
+ that a mother&rsquo;s consent is necessary to a young man&rsquo;s union; and you have
+ left it in our power to save you yet. It is not every boyish fancy that
+ proves to be true love. But enough of this preaching; I shall do better
+ than write scolding letters,&mdash;I shall come and scold you in person.
+ My servant is at this very moment packing my portmanteau, the
+ laquais-de-place is gone to Naples for my passport. Almost as soon as you
+ receive this I shall be with you; and if I am a day or two later than the
+ mail, be patient: do not commit yourself further. Break your heart if you
+ please, but don&rsquo;t implicate your honour. I shall come at once to Curzon
+ Street. Adieu! H. GREVILLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ardworth&rsquo;s letter was shorter than the others,&mdash;fortunately so, for
+ otherwise it had been unread:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I do not come to you myself the day after you receive this, dear
+ Percival,&mdash;which, indeed, is most probable,&mdash;I shall send you my
+ proxy, in one whom, for my sake, I know that you will kindly welcome. He
+ will undertake my task, and clear up all the mysteries with which, I
+ trust, my correspondence has thoroughly bewildered your lively
+ imagination. Yours ever, JOHN ARDWORTH. GRAY&rsquo;S INN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little indeed did Percival&rsquo;s imagination busy itself with the mysteries of
+ Ardworth&rsquo;s correspondence. His mind scarcely took in the sense of the
+ words over which his eye mechanically wandered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the letter which narrated the visit of Madame Dalibard to the house
+ thus solemnly interdicted to her step was on its way to his mother,&mdash;nay,
+ by this time would almost have reached her! Greville was on the road,&mdash;nay,
+ as his tutor&rsquo;s letter had been forwarded from London, might perhaps be in
+ Curzon Street that day. How desirable to see him before he could reach
+ Laughton, to prepare him for Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s visit, for Helen&rsquo;s illness,
+ explain the position in which he was involved, and conciliate the old
+ soldier&rsquo;s rough, kind heart to his love and his distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not dread the meeting with Greville,&mdash;he yearned for it. He
+ needed an adviser, a confidant, a friend. To dismiss abruptly his guests
+ from his house,&mdash;impossible; to abandon Helen because of her father&rsquo;s
+ crime or her aunt&rsquo;s fault (whatever that last might be, and no clear
+ detail of it was given),&mdash;that never entered his thoughts! Pure and
+ unsullied, the starry face of Helen shone the holier for the cloud around
+ it. An inexpressible and chivalrous compassion mingled with his love and
+ confirmed his faith. She, poor child, to suffer for the deeds of others,&mdash;no.
+ What availed his power as man, and dignity as gentleman, if they could not
+ wrap in their own shelter the one by whom such shelter was now doubly
+ needed? Thus, amidst all his emotions, firm and resolved at least on one
+ point, and beginning already to recover the hope of his sanguine nature,
+ from his reliance on his mother&rsquo;s love, on the promises that softened her
+ disclosures and warnings, and on his conviction that Helen had only to be
+ seen for every scruple to give way, Percival wandered back towards the
+ house, and coming abruptly on the terrace, he encountered Varney, who was
+ leaning motionless against the balustrades, with an open letter in his
+ hand. Varney was deadly pale, and there was the trace of some recent and
+ gloomy agitation in the relaxed muscles of his cheeks, usually so firmly
+ rounded. But Percival did not heed his appearance as he took him gravely
+ by the arm, and leading him into the garden, said, after a painful pause,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Varney, I am about to ask you two questions, which your close connection
+ with Madame Dalibard may enable you to answer, but in which, from obvious
+ motives, I must demand the strictest confidence. You will not hint to her
+ or to Helen what I am about to say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney stared uneasily on Percival&rsquo;s serious countenance, and gave the
+ promise required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First, then, for what offence was Madame Dalibard expelled her uncle&rsquo;s
+ house,&mdash;this house of Laughton?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Secondly, what is the crime with which Mr. Mainwaring, Helen&rsquo;s father, is
+ charged?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With regard to the first,&rdquo; said Varney, recovering his composure, &ldquo;I
+ thought I had already told you that Sir Miles was a proud man, and that in
+ consequence of discovering a girlish flirtation between his niece Lucretia
+ (now Madame Dalibard) and Mainwaring, who afterwards jilted her for
+ Helen&rsquo;s mother, he altered his will; &lsquo;expelled her his house&rsquo; is too harsh
+ a phrase. This is all I know. With regard to the second question, no crime
+ was ever brought home to William Mainwaring; he was suspected of dealing
+ improperly with the funds of the bank, and he repaid the alleged deficit
+ by the sacrifice of all he possessed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the truth?&rdquo; exclaimed Percival, joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The plain truth, I believe; but why these questions at this moment? Ah,
+ you too, I see, have had letters,&mdash;I understand. Lady Mary gives
+ these reasons for withholding her consent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her consent is not withheld,&rdquo; answered Percival; &ldquo;but shall I own it?
+ Remember, I have your promise not to wound and offend Madame Dalibard by
+ the disclosure: my mother does refer to the subjects I have alluded to,
+ and Captain Greville, my old friend and tutor, is on his way to England;
+ perhaps to-morrow he may arrive at Laughton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said Varney, startled, &ldquo;to-morrow! And what sort of a man is this
+ Captain Greville?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The best man possible for such a case as mine,&mdash;kind-hearted, yet
+ cool, sagacious; the finest observer, the quickest judge of character,&mdash;nothing
+ escapes him. Oh, one interview will suffice to show him all Helen&rsquo;s
+ innocent and matchless excellence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow! this man comes to-morrow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All that I fear is,&mdash;for he is rather rough and blunt in his manner,&mdash;all
+ that I fear is his first surprise, and, dare I say displeasure, at seeing
+ this poor Madame Dalibard, whose faults, I fear, were graver than you
+ suppose, at the house from which her uncle&mdash;to whom, indeed, I owe
+ this inheritance&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see, I see!&rdquo; interrupted Varney, quickly. &ldquo;And Madame Dalibard is the
+ most susceptible of women,&mdash;so well-born and so poor, so gifted and
+ so helpless; it is natural. Can you not write, and put off this Captain
+ Greville for a few days,&mdash;until, indeed, I can find some excuse for
+ terminating our visit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my letter may be hardly in time to reach him; he may be in town
+ to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go then to town at once; you can be back late at night, or at least
+ to-morrow. Anything better than wounding the pride of a woman on whom,
+ after all, you must depend for free and open intercourse with Helen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is exactly what I thought of; but what excuse&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse,&mdash;a thousand! Every man coming of age into such a property
+ has business with his lawyers. Or why not say simply that you want to meet
+ a friend of yours who has just left your mother in Italy? In short, any
+ excuse suffices, and none can be offensive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will order my carriage instantly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right!&rdquo; exclaimed Varney; and his eye followed the receding form of
+ Percival with a mixture of fierce exultation and anxious fear. Then,
+ turning towards the window of the turret-chamber in which Madame Dalibard
+ reposed, and seeing it still closed, he muttered an impatient oath; but
+ even while he did so, the shutters were slowly opened, and a footman,
+ stepping from the porch, approached Varney with a message that Madame
+ Dalibard would see him in five minutes, if he would then have the goodness
+ to ascend to her room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before that time was well expired, Varney was in the chamber. Madame
+ Dalibard was up and in her chair; and the unwonted joy which her
+ countenance evinced was in strong contrast with the sombre shade upon her
+ son-in-law&rsquo;s brow, and the nervous quiver of his lip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gabriel,&rdquo; she said, as he drew near to her, &ldquo;my son is found!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; he answered petulantly. &ldquo;You! From whom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From Grabman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I from a still better authority,&mdash;from Walter Ardworth himself.
+ He lives; he will restore my child!&rdquo; She extended a letter while she
+ spoke. He, in return, gave her, not that still crumpled in his hand, but
+ one which he drew from his breast. These letters severally occupied both,
+ begun and finished almost in the same moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That from Grabman ran thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR JASON,&mdash;Toss up your hat and cry &lsquo;hip, hip!&rsquo; At last, from
+ person to person, I have tracked the lost Vincent Braddell. He lives
+ still! We can maintain his identity in any court of law. Scarce in time
+ for the post, I have not a moment for further particulars. I shall employ
+ the next two days in reducing all the evidence to a regular digest, which
+ I will despatch to you. Meanwhile, prepare, as soon as may be, to put me
+ in possession of my fee,&mdash;5000 pounds; and my expedition merits
+ something more. Yours, NICHOLAS GRABMAN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter from Ardworth was no less positive:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MADAM,&mdash;In obedience to the commands of a dying friend, I took charge
+ of his infant and concealed its existence from his mother,&mdash;yourself.
+ On returning to England, I need not say that I was not unmindful of my
+ trust. Your son lives; and after mature reflection I have resolved to
+ restore him to your arms. In this I have been decided by what I have
+ heard, from one whom I can trust, of your altered habits, your decorous
+ life, your melancholy infirmities, and the generous protection you have
+ given to the orphan of my poor cousin Susan, my old friend Mainwaring.
+ Alfred Braddell himself, if it be permitted to him to look down and read
+ my motives, will pardon me, I venture to feel assured, this departure from
+ his injunctions. Whatever the faults which displeased him, they have been
+ amply chastised. And your son, grown to man, can no longer be endangered
+ by example, in tending the couch, or soothing the repentance of his
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words are severe; but you will pardon them in him who gives you back
+ your child. I shall venture to wait on you in person, with such proofs as
+ may satisfy you as to the identity of your son. I count on arriving at
+ Laughton to-morrow. Meanwhile, I simply sign myself by a name in which you
+ will recognize the kinsman to one branch of your family, and the friend of
+ your dead husband. J. WALTER ARDWORTH.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CRAVEN HOTEL, October, 1831.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and are you not rejoiced?&rdquo; said Lucretia, gazing surprised on
+ Varney&rsquo;s sullen and unsympathizing face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! because time presses; because, even while discovering your son, you
+ may fail in securing his heritage; because, in the midst of your triumph,
+ I see Newgate opening to myself. Look you, I too have had my news,&mdash;less
+ pleasing than yours. This Stubmore (curse him!) writes me word that he
+ shall certainly be in town next month at farthest, and that he meditates,
+ immediately on his arrival, transferring the legacy from the Bank of
+ England to an excellent mortgage of which he has heard. Were it not for
+ this scheme of ours, nothing would be left for me but flight and exile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A month,&mdash;that is a long time. Do you think, now that my son is
+ found, and that son like John Ardworth (for there can be no doubt that my
+ surmise was right), with genius to make station the pedestal to the power
+ I dreamed of in my youth, but which my sex forbade me to attain,&mdash;do
+ you think I will keep him a month from his inheritance? Before the month
+ is out, you shall replace what you have taken, and buy your trustee&rsquo;s
+ silence, if need be, either from the sums you have insured, or from the
+ rents of Laughton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lucretia,&rdquo; said Varney, whose fresh colours had grown livid, &ldquo;what is to
+ be done must be done at once. Percival St. John has heard from his mother.
+ Attend.&rdquo; And Varney rapidly related the questions St. John had put to him,
+ the dreaded arrival of Captain Greville, the danger of so keen an
+ observer, the necessity, at all events, of abridging their visit, the
+ urgency of hastening the catastrophe to its close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia listened in ominous and steadfast silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; she said at last, &ldquo;you have persuaded St. John to give this man the
+ meeting in London,&mdash;to put off his visit for the time. St. John will
+ return to us to-morrow. Well, and if he finds his Helen is no more! Two
+ nights ago I, for the first time, mingled in the morning draught that
+ which has no antidote and no cure. This night two drops more, and St. John
+ will return to find that Death is in the house before him. And then for
+ himself,&mdash;the sole remaining barrier between my son and this
+ inheritance,&mdash;for himself, why, grief sometimes kills suddenly; and
+ there be drugs whose effect simulates the death-stroke of grief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet, yet, this rapidity, if necessary, is perilous. Nothing in Helen&rsquo;s
+ state forbodes sudden death by natural means. The strangeness of two
+ deaths, both so young; Greville in England, if not here,&mdash;hastening
+ down to examine, to inquire. With such prepossessions against you, there
+ must be an inquest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and what can be discovered? It was I who shrank before,&mdash;it is
+ I who now urge despatch. I feel as in my proper home in these halls. I
+ would not leave them again but to my grave. I stand on the hearth of my
+ youth; I fight for my rights and my son&rsquo;s! Perish those who oppose me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fell energy and power were in the aspect of the murderess as she thus
+ spoke; and while her determination awed the inferior villany of Varney, it
+ served somewhat to mitigate his fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in more detail they began to arrange their execrable plans, Percival,
+ while the horses were being harnessed to take him to the nearest
+ post-town, sought Helen, and found her in the little chamber which he had
+ described and appropriated as her own, when his fond fancy had sketched
+ the fair outline of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This room had been originally fitted up for the private devotions of the
+ Roman Catholic wife of an ancestor in the reign of Charles II; and in a
+ recess, half veiled by a curtain, there still stood that holy symbol
+ which, whether Protestant or Roman Catholic, no one sincerely penetrated
+ with the solemn pathos of sacred history can behold unmoved,&mdash;the
+ Cross of the Divine Agony. Before this holy symbol Helen stood in earnest
+ reverence. She did not kneel (for the forms of the religion in which she
+ had been reared were opposed to that posture of worship before the graven
+ image), but you could see in that countenance, eloquent at once with the
+ enthusiasm and the meekness of piety, that the soul was filled with the
+ memories and the hopes which, age after age, have consoled the sufferer
+ and inspired the martyr. The soul knelt to the idea, if the knee bowed not
+ to the image, embracing the tender grandeur of the sacrifice and the vast
+ inheritance opened to faith in the redemption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man held his breath while he gazed. He was moved, and he was
+ awed. Slowly Helen turned towards him, and, smiling sweetly, held out to
+ him her hand. They seated themselves in silence in the depth of the
+ overhanging casement; and the mournful character of the scene without,
+ where dimly, through the misty rains, gloomed the dark foliage of the
+ cedars, made them insensibly draw closer to each other in the instinct of
+ love when the world frowns around it. Percival wanted the courage to say
+ that he had come to take farewell, though but for a day, and Helen spoke
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot guess why it is, Percival, but I am startled at the change I
+ feel in myself&mdash;no, not in health, dear Percival; I mean in mind&mdash;during
+ the last few months,&mdash;since, indeed, we have known each other. I
+ remember so well the morning in which my aunt&rsquo;s letter arrived at the dear
+ vicarage. We were returning from the village fair, and my good guardian
+ was smiling at my notions of the world. I was then so giddy and light and
+ thoughtless, everything presented itself to me in such gay colours, I
+ scarcely believed in sorrow. And now I feel as if I were awakened to a
+ truer sense of nature,&mdash;of the ends of our being here; I seem to know
+ that life is a grave and solemn thing. Yet I am not less happy, Percival.
+ No, I think rather that I knew not true happiness till I knew you. I have
+ read somewhere that the slave is gay in his holiday from toil; if you free
+ him, if you educate him, the gayety vanishes, and he cares no more for the
+ dance under the palm-tree. But is he less happy? So it is with me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sweet Helen, I would rather have one gay smile of old, the arch,
+ careless laugh which came so naturally from those rosy lips, than hear you
+ talk of happiness with that quiver in your voice,&mdash;those tears in
+ your eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet gayety,&rdquo; said Helen, thoughtfully, and in the strain of her pure,
+ truthful poetry of soul, &ldquo;is only the light impression of the present
+ moment,&mdash;the play of the mere spirits; and happiness seems a
+ forethought of the future, spreading on, far and broad, over all time and
+ space.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you live, then, in the future at last; you have no misgivings now, my
+ Helen? Well, that comforts me. Say it, Helen,&mdash;say the future will be
+ ours!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will, it will,&mdash;forever and forever,&rdquo; said Helen, earnestly; and
+ her eyes involuntarily rested on the Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his younger spirit and less imaginative nature Percival did not
+ comprehend the depth of sadness implied in Helen&rsquo;s answer; taking it
+ literally, he felt as if a load were lifted from his heart, and kissing
+ with rapture the hand he held, he exclaimed: &ldquo;Yes, this shall soon, oh,
+ soon be mine! I fear nothing while you hope. You cannot guess how those
+ words have cheered me; for I am leaving you, though but for a few hours,
+ and I shall repeat those words, for they will ring in my ear, in my heart,
+ till we meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leaving me!&rdquo; said Helen, turning pale, and her clasp on his hand
+ tightening. Poor child, she felt mysteriously a sentiment of protection in
+ his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But at most for a day. My old tutor, of whom we have so often conversed,
+ is on his way to England,&mdash;perhaps even now in London. He has some
+ wrong impressions against your aunt; his manner is blunt and rough. It is
+ necessary that I should see him before he comes hither,&mdash;you know how
+ susceptible is your aunt&rsquo;s pride,&mdash;just to prepare him for meeting
+ her. You understand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What impressions against my aunt? Does he even know her?&rdquo; asked Helen.
+ And if such a sentiment as suspicion could cross that candid innocence of
+ mind, that sentiment towards this stern relation whose arms had never
+ embraced her, whose lips had never spoken of the past, whose history was
+ as a sealed volume, disturbed and disquieted her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is because he has never known her that he does her wrong. Some old
+ story of her indiscretion as a girl, of her uncle&rsquo;s displeasure,&mdash;what
+ matters now?&rdquo; said Percival, shrinking sensitively from one disclosure
+ that might wound Helen in her kinswoman. &ldquo;Meanwhile, dearest, you will be
+ prudent,&mdash;you will avoid this damp air, and keep quietly at home, and
+ amuse yourself, sweet fancier of the future, in planning how to improve
+ these old halls when they and their unworthy master are your own. God
+ bless you, God guard you, Helen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose, and with that loyal chivalry of love which felt respect the more
+ for the careless guardianship to which his Helen was intrusted, he
+ refrained from that parting kiss which their pure courtship warranted, for
+ which his lip yearned. But as he lingered, an irresistible impulse moved
+ Helen&rsquo;s heart. Mechanically she opened her arms, and her head sank upon
+ his shoulder. In that embrace they remained some moments silent, and an
+ angel might unreprovingly have heard their hearts beat through the
+ stillness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Percival tore himself from those arms which relaxed their
+ imploring hold reluctantly; she heard his hurried step descend the stairs,
+ and in a moment more the roll of the wheels in the court without; a dreary
+ sense, as of some utter desertion, some everlasting bereavement, chilled
+ and appalled her. She stood motionless, as if turned to stone, on the
+ floor; suddenly the touch of something warm on her hand, a plaining whine,
+ awoke her attention; Percival&rsquo;s favourite dog missed his master, and had
+ slunk for refuge to her. The dread sentiment of loneliness vanished in
+ that humble companionship; and seating herself on the ground, she took the
+ dog in her arms, and bending over it, wept in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0034" id="Blink2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. MURDER, TOWARDS HIS DESIGN, MOVES LIKE A GHOST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The reader will doubtless have observed the consummate art with which the
+ poisoner had hitherto advanced upon her prey. The design conceived from
+ afar, and executed with elaborate stealth, defied every chance of
+ detection against which the ingenuity of practised villany could guard.
+ Grant even that the deadly drugs should betray the nature of the death
+ they inflicted, that by some unconjectured secret in the science of
+ chemistry the presence of those vegetable compounds which had hitherto
+ baffled every known and positive test in the posthumous examination of the
+ most experienced surgeons, should be clearly ascertained, not one
+ suspicion seemed likely to fall upon the ministrant of death. The
+ medicines were never brought to Madame Dalibard, were never given by her
+ hand; nothing ever tasted by the victim could be tracked to her aunt. The
+ helpless condition of the cripple, which Lucretia had assumed, forbade all
+ notion even of her power of movement. Only in the dead of night when, as
+ she believed, every human eye that could watch her was sealed in sleep,
+ and then in those dark habiliments which (even as might sometimes happen,
+ if the victim herself were awake) a chance ray of light struggling through
+ chink or shutter could scarcely distinguish from the general gloom, did
+ she steal to the chamber and infuse the colourless and tasteless liquid
+ [The celebrated acqua di Tufania (Tufania water) was wholly without taste
+ or colour] in the morning draught, meant to bring strength and healing.
+ Grant that the draught was untouched, that it was examined by the surgeon,
+ that the fell admixture could be detected, suspicion would wander anywhere
+ rather than to that crippled and helpless kinswoman who could not rise
+ from her bed without aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now this patience was to be abandoned, the folds of the serpent were
+ to coil in one fell clasp upon its prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fiend as Lucretia had become, and hardened as were all her resolves by the
+ discovery of her son, and her impatience to endow him with her forfeited
+ inheritance, she yet shrank from the face of Helen that day; on the excuse
+ of illness, she kept her room, and admitted only Varney, who stole in from
+ time to time, with creeping step and haggard countenance, to sustain her
+ courage or his own. And every time he entered, he found Lucretia sitting
+ with Walter Ardworth&rsquo;s open letter in her hand, and turning with a
+ preternatural excitement that seemed almost like aberration of mind, from
+ the grim and horrid topic which he invited, to thoughts of wealth and
+ power and triumph and exulting prophecies of the fame her son should
+ achieve. He looked but on the blackness of the gulf, and shuddered; her
+ vision overleaped it, and smiled on the misty palaces her fancy built
+ beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late in the evening, before she retired to rest, Helen knocked gently at
+ her aunt&rsquo;s door. A voice, quick and startled, bade her enter; she came in,
+ with her sweet, caressing look, and took Lucretia&rsquo;s hand, which struggled
+ from the clasp. Bending over that haggard brow, she said simply, yet to
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s ear the voice seemed that of command, &ldquo;Let me kiss you this
+ night!&rdquo; and her lips pressed that brow. The murderess shuddered, and
+ closed her eyes; when she opened them, the angel visitor was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night deepened and deepened into those hours from the first of which we
+ number the morn, though night still is at her full. Moonbeam and starbeam
+ came through the casements shyly and fairylike as on that night when the
+ murderess was young and crimeless, in deed, if not in thought,&mdash;that
+ night when, in the book of Leechcraft, she meted out the hours in which
+ the life of her benefactor might still interpose between her passion and
+ its end. Along the stairs, through the hall, marched the armies of light,
+ noiseless and still and clear as the judgments of God amidst the darkness
+ and shadow of mortal destinies. In one chamber alone, the folds, curtained
+ close, forbade all but a single ray; that ray came direct as the stream
+ from a lantern; as the beam reflected back from an eye,&mdash;as an eye it
+ seemed watchful and steadfast through the dark; it shot along the floor,&mdash;it
+ fell at the foot of the bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, in the exceeding hush, there was a strange and ghastly sound,&mdash;it
+ was the howl of a dog! Helen started from her sleep. Percival&rsquo;s dog had
+ followed her into her room; it had coiled itself, grateful for the
+ kindness, at the foot of the bed. Now it was on the pillow, she felt its
+ heart beat against her hand,&mdash;it was trembling; its hairs bristled
+ up, and the howl changed into a shrill bark of terror and wrath. Alarmed,
+ she looked round; quickly between her and that ray from the crevice a
+ shapeless darkness passed, and was gone, so undistinguishable, so without
+ outline, that it had no likeness of any living form; like a cloud, like a
+ thought, like an omen, it came in gloom, and it vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen was seized with a superstitious terror; the dog continued to tremble
+ and growl low. All once more was still; the dog sighed itself to rest. The
+ stillness, the solitude, the glimmer of the moon,&mdash;all contributed
+ yet more to appall the enfeebled nerves of the listening, shrinking girl.
+ At length she buried her face under the clothes, and towards daybreak fell
+ into a broken, feverish sleep, haunted with threatening dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0035" id="Blink2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. THE MESSENGER SPEEDS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Towards the afternoon of the following day, an elderly gentleman was
+ seated in the coffee-room of an hotel at Southampton, engaged in writing a
+ letter, while the waiter in attendance was employed on the wires that
+ fettered the petulant spirit contained in a bottle of Schweppe&rsquo;s
+ soda-water. There was something in the aspect of the old gentleman, and in
+ the very tone of his voice, that inspired respect, and the waiter had
+ cleared the other tables of their latest newspapers to place before him.
+ He had only just arrived by the packet from Havre, and even the newspapers
+ had not been to him that primary attraction they generally constitute to
+ the Englishman returning to his bustling native land, which, somewhat to
+ his surprise, has contrived to go on tolerably well during his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We use our privilege of looking over his shoulder while he writes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here I am, then, dear Lady Mary, at Southampton, and within an easy drive
+ of the old Hall. A file of Galignani&rsquo;s journals, which I found on the road
+ between Marseilles and Paris, informed me, under the head of &ldquo;fashionable
+ movements,&rdquo; that Percival St. John, Esquire, was gone to his seat at
+ Laughton. According to my customary tactics of marching at once to the
+ seat of action, I therefore made direct for Havre, instead of crossing
+ from Calais, and I suppose I shall find our young gentleman engaged in the
+ slaughter of hares and partridges. You see it is a good sign that he can
+ leave London. Keep up your spirits, my dear friend. If Perce has been
+ really duped and taken in,&mdash;as all you mothers are so apt to fancy,&mdash;rely
+ upon an old soldier to defeat the enemy and expose the ruse. But if, after
+ all, the girl is such as he describes and believes,&mdash;innocent,
+ artless, and worthy his affection,&mdash;oh, then I range myself, with
+ your own good heart, upon his side. Never will I run the risk of
+ unsettling a man&rsquo;s whole character for life by wantonly interfering with
+ his affections. But there we are agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few hours I shall be with our dear boy, and his whole heart will come
+ out clear and candid as when it beat under his midshipman&rsquo;s true-blue. In
+ a day or two I shall make him take me to town, to introduce me to the
+ whole nest of them. Then I shall report progress. Adieu, till then! Kind
+ regards to your poor sister. I think we shall have a mild winter. Not one
+ warning twinge as yet of the old rheumatism. Ever your devoted old friend
+ and preux chevalier,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ H. GREVILLE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain had completed his letter, sipped his soda-water, and was
+ affixing to his communication his seal, when he heard the rattle of a
+ post-chaise without. Fancying it was the one he had ordered, he went to
+ the open window which looked on the street; but the chaise contained
+ travellers, only halting to change horses. Somewhat to his surprise, and a
+ little to his chagrin,&mdash;for the captain did not count on finding
+ company at the Hall,&mdash;he heard one of the travellers in the chaise
+ ask the distance to Laughton. The countenance of the questioner was not
+ familiar to him. But leaving the worthy captain to question the landlord,
+ without any satisfactory information, and to hasten the chaise for
+ himself, we accompany the travellers on their way to Laughton. There were
+ but two,&mdash;the proper complement of a post-chaise,&mdash;and they were
+ both of the ruder sex. The elder of the two was a man of middle age, but
+ whom the wear and tear of active life had evidently advanced towards the
+ state called elderly. But there was still abundant life in his quick, dark
+ eye; and that mercurial youthfulness of character which in some happy
+ constitutions seems to defy years and sorrow, evinced itself in a rapid
+ play of countenance and as much gesticulation as the narrow confines of
+ the vehicle and the position of a traveller will permit. The younger man,
+ far more grave in aspect and quiet in manner, leaned back in the corner
+ with folded arms, and listened with respectful attention to his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, Dr. Johnson is right,&mdash;great happiness in an English
+ post-chaise properly driven; more exhilarating than a palanquin. &lsquo;Post
+ equitem sedet atra cura,&rsquo;&mdash;true only of such scrubby hacks as old
+ Horace could have known. Black Care does not sit behind English posters,
+ eh, my boy?&rdquo; As he spoke this, the gentleman had twice let down the glass
+ of the vehicle, and twice put it up again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; he resumed, without noticing the brief, good-humoured reply of his
+ companion,&mdash;&ldquo;yet this is an anxious business enough that we are
+ about. I don&rsquo;t feel quite easy in my conscience. Poor Braddell&rsquo;s
+ injunctions were very strict, and I disobey them. It is on your
+ responsibility, John!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take it without hesitation. All the motives for so stern a severance
+ must have ceased, and is it not a sufficient punishment to find in that
+ hoped-for son a&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor woman!&rdquo; interrupted the elder gentleman, in whom we begin to
+ recognize the soi-disant Mr. Tomkins; &ldquo;true, indeed, too true. How well I
+ remember the impression Lucretia Clavering first produced on me; and to
+ think of her now as a miserable cripple! By Jove, you are right, sir!
+ Drive on, post-boy, quick, quick!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a short silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder gentleman abruptly put his hand upon his companion&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What consummate acuteness; what patient research you have shown! What
+ could I have done in this business without you? How often had that
+ garrulous Mrs. Mivers bored me with Becky Carruthers, and the coral, and
+ St. Paul&rsquo;s, and not a suspicion came across me,&mdash;a word was
+ sufficient for you. And then to track this unfeeling old Joplin from place
+ to place till you find her absolutely a servant under the very roof of
+ Mrs. Braddell herself! Wonderful! Ah, boy, you will be an honour to the
+ law and to your country. And what a hard-hearted rascal you must think me
+ to have deserted you so long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear father,&rdquo; said John Ardworth, tenderly, &ldquo;your love now recompenses
+ me for all. And ought I not rather to rejoice not to have known the tale
+ of a mother&rsquo;s shame until I could half forget it on a father&rsquo;s breast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John,&rdquo; said the elder Ardworth, with a choking voice, &ldquo;I ought to wear
+ sackcloth all my life for having given you such a mother. When I think
+ what I have suffered from the habit of carelessness in those confounded
+ money-matters (&lsquo;irritamenta malorum,&rsquo; indeed!), I have only one
+ consolation,&mdash;that my patient, noble son is free from my vice. You
+ would not believe what a well-principled, honourable fellow I was at your
+ age; and yet, how truly I said to my poor friend William Mainwaring one
+ day at Laughton (I remember it now) &lsquo;Trust me with anything else but
+ half-a-guinea!&rsquo; Why, sir, it was that fault that threw me into low
+ company,&mdash;that brought me in contact with my innkeeper&rsquo;s daughter at
+ Limerick. I fell in love, and I married (for, with all my faults, I was
+ never a seducer, John). I did not own my marriage; why should I?&mdash;my
+ relatives had cut me already. You were born, and, hunted poor devil as I
+ was, I forgot all by your cradle. Then, in the midst of my troubles, that
+ ungrateful woman deserted me; then I was led to believe that it was not my
+ own son whom I had kissed and blessed. Ah, but for that thought should I
+ have left you as I did? And even in infancy, you had the features only of
+ your mother. Then, when the death of the adulteress set me free, and years
+ afterwards, in India, I married again and had new ties, my heart grew
+ still harder to you. I excused myself by knowing that at least you were
+ cared for, and trained to good by a better guide than I. But when, by so
+ strange a hazard, the very priest who had confessed your mother on her
+ deathbed (she was a Catholic) came to India, and (for he had known me at
+ Limerick) recognized my altered person, and obeying his penitent&rsquo;s last
+ injunctions, assured me that you were my son,&mdash;oh, John, then,
+ believe me, I hastened back to England on the wings of remorse! Love you,
+ boy! I have left at Madras three children, young and fair, by a woman now
+ in heaven, who never wronged me, and, by my soul, John Ardworth, you are
+ dearer to me than all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father&rsquo;s head drooped on his son&rsquo;s breast as he spoke; then, dashing
+ away his tears, he resumed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, why would not Braddell permit me, as I proposed, to find for his son
+ the same guardianship as that to which I intrusted my own? But his bigotry
+ besotted him; a clergyman of the High Church,&mdash;that was worse than an
+ atheist. I had no choice left to me but the roof of that she-hypocrite.
+ Yet I ought to have come to England when I heard of the child&rsquo;s loss,
+ braved duns and all; but I was money-making, money-making,&mdash;retribution
+ for money-wasting; and&mdash;well, it&rsquo;s no use repenting! And&mdash;and
+ there is the lodge, the park, the old trees! Poor Sir Miles!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0036" id="Blink2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. THE SPY FLIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile at Laughton there was confusion and alarm. Helen had found
+ herself more than usually unwell in the morning; towards noon, the maid
+ who attended her informed Madame Dalibard that she was afraid the poor
+ young lady had much fever, and inquired if the doctor should be sent for.
+ Madame Dalibard seemed surprised at the intelligence, and directed her
+ chair to be wheeled into her niece&rsquo;s room, in order herself to judge of
+ Helen&rsquo;s state. The maid, sure that the doctor would be summoned, hastened
+ to the stables, and seeing Beck, instructed him to saddle one of the
+ horses and to await further orders. Beck kept her a few moments talking
+ while he saddled his horse, and then followed her into the house,
+ observing that it would save time if he were close at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is quite true,&rdquo; said the maid, &ldquo;and you may as well wait in the
+ corridor. Madame may wish to speak to you herself, and give you her own
+ message or note to the doctor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck, full of gloomy suspicions, gladly obeyed, and while the maid entered
+ the sick-chamber, stood anxiously without. Presently Varney passed him,
+ and knocked at Helen&rsquo;s door; the maid half-opened it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is Miss Mainwaring?&rdquo; said he, eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear she is worse, sir; but Madame Dalibard does not think there is any
+ danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No danger! I am glad; but pray ask Madame Dalibard to let me see her for
+ a few moments in her own room. If she come out, I will wheel her chair to
+ it. Whether there is danger or not, we had better send for other advice
+ than this country doctor, who has perhaps mistaken the case; tell her I am
+ very uneasy, and beg her to join me immediately.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you are quite right, sir,&rdquo; said the maid, closing the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney then, turning round for the first time, noticed Beck, and said
+ roughly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you do here? Wait below till you are sent for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck pulled his forelock, and retreated back, not in the direction of the
+ principal staircase, but towards that used by the servants, and which his
+ researches into the topography of the mansion had now made known to him.
+ To gain these back stairs he had to pass Lucretia&rsquo;s room; the door stood
+ ajar; Varney&rsquo;s face was turned from him. Beck breathed hard, looked round,
+ then crept within, and in a moment was behind the folds of the tapestry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon the chair in which sat Madame Dalibard was drawn by Varney himself
+ into the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shutting the door with care, and turning the key, Gabriel said, with low,
+ suppressed passion,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well; your mind seems wandering,&mdash;speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is strange,&rdquo; said Lucretia, in hollow tones, &ldquo;can Nature turn
+ accomplice, and befriend us here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nature! did you not last night administer the&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; interrupted Lucretia. &ldquo;No; she came into the room, she kissed me
+ here,&mdash;on the brow that even then was meditating murder. The kiss
+ burned; it burns still,&mdash;it eats into the brain like remorse. But I
+ did not yield; I read again her false father&rsquo;s protestation of love; I
+ read again the letter announcing the discovery of my son, and remorse lay
+ still. I went forth as before, I stole into her chamber, I had the fatal
+ crystal in my hand&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And suddenly there came the fearful howl of a dog, and the dog&rsquo;s fierce
+ eyes glared on me. I paused, I trembled; Helen started, woke, called
+ aloud. I turned and fled. The poison was not given.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney ground his teeth. &ldquo;But this illness! Ha! the effect, perhaps, of
+ the drops administered two nights ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; this illness has no symptoms like those the poison should bequeath,&mdash;it
+ is but natural fever, a shock on the nerves; she told me she had been
+ wakened by the dog&rsquo;s howl, and seen a dark form, like a thing from the
+ grave, creeping along the floor. But she is really ill; send for the
+ physician; there is nothing in her illness to betray the hand of man. Be
+ it as it may,&mdash;that kiss still burns; I will stir in this no more. Do
+ what you will yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool, fool!&rdquo; exclaimed Varney, almost rudely grasping her arm. &ldquo;Remember
+ how much we have yet to prepare for, how much to do,&mdash;and the time so
+ short! Percival&rsquo;s return,&mdash;perhaps this Greville&rsquo;s arrival. Give me
+ the drugs; I will mix them for her in the potion the physician sends. And
+ when Percival returns,&mdash;his Helen dead or dying,&mdash;I will attend
+ on him! Silent still? Recall your son! Soon you will clasp him in your
+ arms as a beggar, or as the lord of Laughton!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia shuddered, but did not rise; she drew forth a ring of keys from
+ her bosom, and pointed towards a secretary. Varney snatched the keys,
+ unlocked the secretary, seized the fatal casket, and sat down quietly
+ before it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the dire selections were made, and secreted about his person, Varney
+ rose, approached the fire, and blew the wood embers to a blaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; he said, with his icy irony of smile, &ldquo;we may dismiss these
+ useful instruments,&mdash;perhaps forever. Though Walter Ardworth, in
+ restoring your son, leaves us dependent on that son&rsquo;s filial affection,
+ and I may have, therefore, little to hope for from the succession, to
+ secure which I have risked and am again to risk my life, I yet trust to
+ that influence which you never fail to obtain over others. I take it for
+ granted that when these halls are Vincent Braddell&rsquo;s, we shall have no
+ need of gold, nor of these pale alchemies. Perish, then, the mute
+ witnesses of our acts, the elements we have bowed to our will! No poison
+ shall be found in our hoards! Fire, consume your consuming children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he threw upon the hearth the contents of the casket, and set
+ his heel upon the logs. A bluish flame shot up, breaking into countless
+ sparks, and then died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia watched him without speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In coming back towards the table, Varney felt something hard beneath his
+ tread; he stooped, and picked up the ring which has before been described
+ as amongst the ghastly treasures of the casket, and which had rolled on
+ the floor almost to Lucretia&rsquo;s feet, as he had emptied the contents on the
+ hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, at least, need tell no tales,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a pity to destroy so rare
+ a piece of workmanship,&mdash;one, too, which we never can replace!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Lucretia, abstractedly; &ldquo;and if detection comes, it may secure
+ a refuge from the gibbet. Give me the ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A refuge more terrible than the detection,&rdquo; said Varney,&mdash;&ldquo;beware of
+ such a thought,&rdquo; as Lucretia, taking it from his hand, placed the ring on
+ her finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now I leave you for a while to recollect yourself,&mdash;to compose
+ your countenance and your thoughts. I will send for the physician.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia, with her eyes fixed on the floor, did not heed him, and he
+ withdrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So motionless was her attitude, so still her very breathing, that the
+ unseen witness behind the tapestry, who, while struck with horror at what
+ he had overheard (the general purport of which it was impossible that he
+ could misunderstand), was parched with impatience to escape to rescue his
+ beloved master from his impending fate, and warn him of the fate hovering
+ nearer still over Helen, ventured to creep along the wall to the
+ threshold, to peer forth from the arras, and seeing her eyes still
+ downcast, to emerge, and place his hand on the door. At that very moment
+ Lucretia looked up, and saw him gliding from the tapestry; their eyes met:
+ his were fascinated as the bird&rsquo;s by the snake&rsquo;s. At the sight, all her
+ craft, her intellect, returned. With a glance, she comprehended the
+ terrible danger that awaited her. Before he was aware of her movement, she
+ was at his side; her hand on his own, her voice in his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stir not a step, utter not a sound, or you are&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck did not suffer her to proceed. With the violence rather of fear than
+ of courage, he struck her to the ground; but she clung to him still, and
+ though rendered for the moment speechless by the suddenness of the blow,
+ her eyes took an expression of unspeakable cruelty and fierceness. He
+ struggled with all his might to shake her off; as he did so, she placed
+ feebly her other hand upon the wrist of the lifted arm that had smitten
+ her, and he felt a sharp pain, as if the nails had fastened into the
+ flesh. This but exasperated him to new efforts. He extricated himself from
+ her grasp, which relaxed as her lips writhed into a smile of scorn and
+ triumph, and, spurning her while she lay before the threshold, he opened
+ the door, sprang forward, and escaped. No thought had he of tarrying in
+ that House of Pelops, those human shambles, of denouncing Murder in its
+ lair; to fly to reach his master, warn, and shield him,&mdash;that was the
+ sole thought which crossed his confused, bewildered brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might be from four to five minutes that Lucretia, half-stunned,
+ half-senseless, lay upon those floors,&mdash;for besides the violence of
+ her fall, the shock of the struggle upon nerves weakened by the agony of
+ apprehension, occasioned by the imminent and unforeseen chance of
+ detection, paralyzed her wondrous vigour of mind and frame,&mdash;when
+ Varney entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They tell me she sleeps,&rdquo; he said, in hoarse, muttered accents, before he
+ saw the prostrate form at his very feet. But Varney&rsquo;s step, Varney&rsquo;s
+ voice, had awakened Lucretia&rsquo;s reason to consciousness and the sense of
+ peril. Rising, though with effort, she related hurriedly what had passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fly, fly!&rdquo; she gasped, as she concluded. &ldquo;Fly, to detain, to secrete,
+ this man somewhere for the next few hours. Silence him but till then; I
+ have done the rest!&rdquo; and her finger pointed to the fatal ring. Varney
+ waited for no further words; he hurried out, and made at once to the
+ stables: his shrewdness conjectured that Beck would carry his tale
+ elsewhere. The groom was already gone (his fellows said) without a word,
+ but towards the lodge that led to the Southampton road. Varney ordered the
+ swiftest horse the stables held to be saddled, and said, as he sprang on
+ his back,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, too, must go towards Southampton. The poor young lady! I must prepare
+ your master,&mdash;he is on his road back to us;&rdquo; and the last word was
+ scarce out of his lips as the sparks flew from the flints under the
+ horse&rsquo;s hoofs, and he spurred from the yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he rode at full speed through the park, the villain&rsquo;s mind sped more
+ rapidly than the animal he bestrode,&mdash;sped from fear to hope, hope to
+ assurance. Grant that the spy lived to tell his tale,&mdash;incoherent,
+ improbable as the tale would be,&mdash;who would believe it? How easy to
+ meet tale by tale! The man must own that he was secreted behind the
+ tapestry,&mdash;wherefore but to rob? Detected by Madame Dalibard, he had
+ coined this wretched fable. And the spy, too, could not live through the
+ day; he bore Death with him as he rode, he fed its force by his speed, and
+ the effects of the venom itself would be those of frenzy. Tush! his tale,
+ at best, would seem but the ravings of delirium. Still, it was well to
+ track him where he went,&mdash;delay him, if possible; and Varney&rsquo;s spurs
+ plunged deep and deeper into the bleeding flanks: on desperately scoured
+ the horse. He passed the lodge; he was on the road; a chaise and pair
+ dashed by him; he heard not a voice exclaim &ldquo;Varney!&rdquo; he saw not the
+ wondering face of John Ardworth; bending over the tossing mane, he was
+ deaf, he was blind, to all without and around. A milestone glides by,
+ another, and a third. Ha! his eyes can see now. The object of his chase is
+ before him,&mdash;he views distinctly, on the brow of yon hill, the horse
+ and the rider, spurring fast, like himself. They descend the hill, horse
+ and horseman, and are snatched from his sight. Up the steep strains the
+ pursuer. He is at the summit. He sees the fugitive before him, almost
+ within hearing. Beck has slackened his steed; he seems swaying to and fro
+ in the saddle. Ho, ho! the barbed ring begins to work in his veins. Varney
+ looks round,&mdash;not another soul is in sight; a deep wood skirts the
+ road. Place and time seem to favour; Beck has reined in his horse,&mdash;he
+ bends low over the saddle, as if about to fall. Varney utters a
+ half-suppressed cry of triumph, shakes his reins, and spurs on, when
+ suddenly&mdash;by the curve of the road, hid before&mdash;another chaise
+ comes in sight, close where Beck had wearily halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chaise stops; Varney pulls in, and draws aside to the hedgerow. Some
+ one within the vehicle is speaking to the fugitive! May it not be St. John
+ himself? To his rage and his terror, he sees Beck painfully dismount from
+ his horse, sees him totter to the door of the chaise, sees a servant leap
+ from the box and help him up the step, sees him enter. It must be Percival
+ on his return,&mdash;Percival, to whom he tells that story of horror!
+ Varney&rsquo;s brute-like courage forsook him; his heart was appalled. In one of
+ those panics so common with that boldness which is but animal, his sole
+ thought became that of escape. He turned his horse&rsquo;s head to the fence,
+ forced his way desperately through the barrier, made into the wood, and
+ sat there, cowering and listening, till in another minute he heard the
+ wheels rattle on, and the horses gallop hard down the hill towards the
+ park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The autumn wind swept through the trees, it shook the branches of the
+ lofty ash that overhung the Accursed One. What observer of Nature knows
+ not that peculiar sound which the ash gives forth in the blast? Not the
+ solemn groan of the oak, not the hollow murmur of the beech, but a shrill
+ wail, a shriek as of a human voice in sharp anguish. Varney shuddered, as
+ if he had heard the death-cry of his intended victim. Through briers and
+ thickets, torn by the thorns, bruised by the boughs, he plunged deeper and
+ deeper into the wood, gained at length the main path cut through it, found
+ himself in a lane, and rode on, careless whither, till he had reached a
+ small town, about ten miles from Laughton, where he resolved to wait till
+ his nerves had recovered their tone, and he could more calmly calculate
+ the chances of safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0037" id="Blink2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII. LUCRETIA REGAINS HER SON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if now, when danger became most imminent and present, that
+ that very danger served to restore to Lucretia Dalibard her faculties,
+ which during the earlier day had been steeped in a kind of dreary stupor.
+ The absolute necessity of playing out her execrable part with all suitable
+ and consistent hypocrisy, braced her into iron. But the disguise she
+ assumed was a supernatural effort, it stretched to cracking every fibre of
+ the brain; it seemed almost to herself as if, her object once gained,
+ either life or consciousness could hold out no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A chaise stopped at the porch; two gentlemen descended. The elder paused
+ irresolutely, and at length, taking out a card, inscribed &ldquo;Mr. Walter
+ Ardworth,&rdquo; said, &ldquo;If Madame Dalibard can be spoken to for a moment, will
+ you give her this card?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The footman hesitatingly stared at the card, and then invited the
+ gentleman into the hall while he took up the message. Not long had the
+ visitor to wait, pacing the dark oak floors and gazing on the faded
+ banners, before the servant reappeared: Madame Dalibard would see him. He
+ followed his guide up the stairs, while his young companion turned from
+ the hall, and seated himself musingly on one of the benches on the
+ deserted terrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grasping the arms of her chair with both hands, her eyes fixed eagerly on
+ his face, Lucretia Dalibard awaited the welcome visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prepared as he had been for change, Walter was startled by the ghastly
+ alteration in Lucretia&rsquo;s features, increased as it was at that moment by
+ all the emotions which raged within. He sank into the chair placed for him
+ opposite Lucretia, and clearing his throat, said falteringly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grieve indeed, Madame, that my visit, intended to bring but joy, should
+ chance thus inopportunely. The servant informed me as we came up the
+ stairs that your niece was ill; and I sympathize with your natural
+ anxiety,&mdash;Susan&rsquo;s only child, too; poor Susan!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Lucretia, impatiently, &ldquo;these moments are precious. Sir, sir,
+ my son,&mdash;my son!&rdquo; and her eyes glanced to the door. &ldquo;You have brought
+ with you a companion,&mdash;does he wait without? My son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame, give me a moment&rsquo;s patience. I will be brief, and compress what
+ in other moments might be a long narrative into a few sentences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rapidly then Walter Ardworth passed over the details, unnecessary now to
+ repeat to the reader,&mdash;the injunctions of Braddell, the delivery of
+ the child to the woman selected by his fellow-sectarian (who, it seemed,
+ by John Ardworth&rsquo;s recent inquiries, was afterwards expelled the
+ community, and who, there was reason to believe, had been the first
+ seducer of the woman thus recommended). No clew to the child&rsquo;s parentage
+ had been given to the woman with the sum intrusted for his maintenance,
+ which sum had perhaps been the main cause of her reckless progress to
+ infamy and ruin. The narrator passed lightly over the neglect and cruelty
+ of the nurse, to her abandonment of the child when the money was
+ exhausted. Fortunately she had overlooked the coral round its neck. By
+ that coral, and by the initials V. B., which Ardworth had had the
+ precaution to have burned into the child&rsquo;s wrist, the lost son had been
+ discovered; the nurse herself (found in the person of Martha Skeggs,
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s own servant) had been confronted with the woman to whom she
+ gave the child, and recognized at once. Nor had it been difficult to
+ obtain from her the confession which completed the evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In this discovery,&rdquo; concluded Ardworth, &ldquo;the person I employed met your
+ own agent, and the last links in the chain they traced together. But to
+ that person&mdash;to his zeal and intelligence&mdash;you owe the happiness
+ I trust to give you. He sympathized with me the more that he knew you
+ personally, felt for your sorrows, and had a lingering belief that you
+ supposed him to be the child you yearned for. Madame, thank my son for the
+ restoration of your own!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without sound, Lucretia had listened to these details, though her
+ countenance changed fearfully as the narrator proceeded. But now she
+ groaned aloud and in agony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Madame,&rdquo; said Ardworth, feelingly, and in some surprise, &ldquo;surely the
+ discovery of your son should create gladder emotions! Though, indeed, you
+ will be prepared to find that the poor youth so reared wants education and
+ refinement, I have heard enough to convince me that his dispositions are
+ good and his heart grateful. Judge of this yourself; he is in these walls,
+ he is&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Abandoned by a harlot,&mdash;reared by a beggar! My son!&rdquo; interrupted
+ Lucretia, in broken sentences. &ldquo;Well, sir, have you discharged your task!
+ Well have you replaced a mother!&rdquo; Before Ardworth could reply, loud and
+ rapid steps were heard in the corridor, and a voice, cracked, indistinct,
+ but vehement. The door was thrown open, and, half-supported by Captain
+ Greville, half dragging him along, his features convulsed, whether by pain
+ or passion, the spy upon Lucretia&rsquo;s secrets, the denouncer of her crime,
+ tottered to the threshold. Pointing to where she sat with his long, lean
+ arm, Beck exclaimed, &ldquo;Seize her! I &lsquo;cuse her, face to face, of the murder
+ of her niece,&mdash;of&mdash;of I told you, sir&mdash;I told you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; said Captain Greville, &ldquo;you stand charged by this witness with
+ the most terrible of human crimes. I judge you not. Your niece, I rejoice
+ to bear, yet lives. Pray God that her death be not traced to those kindred
+ hands!&rdquo; Turning her eyes from one to the other with a wandering stare,
+ Lucretia Dalibard remained silent. But there was still scorn on her lip,
+ and defiance on her brow. At last she said slowly, and to Ardworth,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is my son? You say he is within these walls. Call him forth to
+ protect his mother! Give me at least my son,&mdash;my son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her last words were drowned by a fresh burst of fury from her denouncer.
+ In all the coarsest invective his education could supply, in all the
+ hideous vulgarities of his untutored dialect, in that uncurbed
+ licentiousness of tone, look, and manner which passion, once aroused,
+ gives to the dregs and scum of the populace, Beck poured forth his
+ frightful charges, his frantic execrations. In vain Captain Greville
+ strove to check him; in vain Walter Ardworth sought to draw him from the
+ room. But while the poor wretch&mdash;maddening not more with the
+ consciousness of the crime than with the excitement of the poison in his
+ blood&mdash;thus raved and stormed, a terrible suspicion crossed Walter
+ Ardworth; mechanically,&mdash;as his grasp was on the accuser&rsquo;s arm,&mdash;he
+ bared the sleeve, and on the wrist were the dark-blue letters burned into
+ the skin and bearing witness to his identity with the lost Vincent
+ Braddell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, hold!&rdquo; he exclaimed then; &ldquo;hold, unhappy man!&mdash;it is your
+ mother whom you denounce!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucretia sprang up erect; her eyes seemed starting from her head. She
+ caught at the arm pointed towards her in wrath and menace, and there,
+ amidst those letters that proclaimed her son, was the small puncture,
+ surrounded by a livid circle, that announced her victim. In the same
+ instant she discovered her child in the man who was calling down upon her
+ head the hatred of Earth and the justice of Heaven, and knew herself his
+ murderess!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She dropped the arm, and sank back on the chair; and whether the poison
+ had now reached to the vitals, or whether so unwonted a passion in so
+ frail a frame sufficed for the death-stroke, Beck himself, with a low,
+ suffocated cry, slid from the hand of Ardworth, and tottering a step or
+ so, the blood gushed from his mouth over Lucretia&rsquo;s robe; his head drooped
+ an instant, and, falling, rested first upon her lap, then struck heavily
+ upon the floor. The two men bent over him and raised him in their arms;
+ his eyes opened and closed, his throat rattled, and as he fell back into
+ their arms a corpse, a laugh rose close at hand,&mdash;it rang through the
+ walls, it was heard near and afar, above and below; not an ear in that
+ house that heard it not. In that laugh fled forever, till the
+ Judgment-day, from the blackened ruins of her lost soul, the reason of the
+ murderess-mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2HCH0038" id="Blink2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. THE LOTS VANISH WITHIN THE URN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Varney&rsquo;s self-commune restored to him his constitutional audacity. He
+ returned to Laughton towards the evening, and held a long conference with
+ Greville. Fortunately for him, perhaps, and happily for all, Helen had
+ lost all more dangerous symptoms; and the physician, who was in the house,
+ saw in her state nothing not easily to be accounted for by natural causes.
+ Percival had arrived, had seen Helen,&mdash;no wonder she was better! Both
+ from him and from Helen, Madame Dalibard&rsquo;s fearful condition was for the
+ present concealed. Ardworth&rsquo;s story, and the fact of Beck&rsquo;s identity with
+ Vincent Braddell, were also reserved for a later occasion. The tale which
+ Beck had poured into the ear of Greville (when, recognizing the St. John
+ livery, the captain stopped his chaise to inquire if Percival were at the
+ Hall, and when thrilled by the hideous import of his broken reply, that
+ gentleman had caused him to enter the vehicle to explain himself further),
+ Varney, with his wonted art and address, contrived to strip of all
+ probable semblance. Evidently the poor lad had been already delirious; his
+ story must be deemed the nightmare of his disordered reason. Varney
+ insisted upon surgical examination as to the cause of his death. The
+ membranes of the brain were found surcharged with blood, as in cases of
+ great mental excitement; the slight puncture in the wrist, ascribed to the
+ prick of a rusty nail, provoked no suspicion. If some doubts remained
+ still in Greville&rsquo;s acute mind, he was not eager to express, still less to
+ act upon them. Helen was declared to be out of danger; Percival was safe,&mdash;why
+ affix by minute inquiry into the alleged guilt of Madame Dalibard (already
+ so awfully affected by the death of her son and by the loss of her reason)
+ so foul a stain on the honoured family of St. John? But Greville was
+ naturally anxious to free the house as soon as possible both of Varney and
+ that ominous Lucretia, whose sojourn under its roof seemed accursed. He
+ therefore readily assented when Varney proposed, as his obvious and
+ personal duty, to take charge of his mother-in-law, and remove her to
+ London for immediate advice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the dead of the black-clouded night, no moon and no stars, the son of
+ Olivier Dalibard bore away the form of the once-formidable Lucretia,&mdash;the
+ form, for the mind was gone; that teeming, restless, and fertile
+ intellect, which had carried along the projects with the preterhuman
+ energies of the fiend, was hurled into night and chaos. Manacled and
+ bound, for at times her paroxysms were terrible, and all partook of the
+ destructive and murderous character which her faculties, when present, had
+ betrayed, she was placed in the vehicle by the shrinking side of her
+ accomplice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long before he arrived in London, Varney had got rid of his fearful
+ companion. His chaise had stopped at the iron gates of a large building
+ somewhat out of the main road, and the doors of the madhouse closed on
+ Lucretia Dalibard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney then hastened to Dover, with intention of flight into France; he
+ was just about to step into the vessel, when he was tapped rudely on the
+ shoulder, and a determined voice said, &ldquo;Mr. Gabriel Varney, you are my
+ prisoner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For what? Some paltry debt?&rdquo; said Varney, haughtily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For forgery on the Bank of England!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Varney&rsquo;s hand plunged into his vest. The officer seized it in time, and
+ wrested the blade from his grasp. Once arrested for an offence it was
+ impossible to disprove, although the very smallest of which his conscience
+ might charge him, Varney sank into the blackest despair. Though he had
+ often boasted, not only to others, but to his own vain breast, of the easy
+ courage with which, when life ceased to yield enjoyment, he could dismiss
+ it by the act of his own will; though he had possessed himself of
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s murderous ring, and death, if fearful, was therefore at his
+ command,&mdash;self-destruction was the last thought that occurred to him;
+ that morbid excitability of fancy which, whether in his art or in his
+ deeds, had led him to strange delight in horror, now served but to haunt
+ him with the images of death in those ghastliest shapes familiar to them
+ who look only into the bottom of the charnel, and see but the rat and the
+ worm and the loathsome agencies of corruption. It was not the despair of
+ conscience that seized him, it was the abject clinging to life; not the
+ remorse of the soul,&mdash;that still slept within him, too noble an
+ agency for one so debased,&mdash;but the gross physical terror. As the
+ fear of the tiger, once aroused, is more paralyzing than that of the deer,
+ proportioned to the savageness of a disposition to which fear is a
+ novelty, so the very boldness of Varney, coming only from the perfection
+ of the nervous organization, and unsupported by one moral sentiment, once
+ struck down, was corrupted into the vilest cowardice. With his audacity,
+ his shrewdness forsook him. Advised by his lawyer to plead guilty, he
+ obeyed, and the sentence of transportation for life gave him at first a
+ feeling of reprieve; but when his imagination began to picture, in the
+ darkness of his cell, all the true tortures of that penalty,&mdash;not so
+ much, perhaps, to the uneducated peasant-felon, inured to toil, and
+ familiarized with coarse companionship, as to one pampered like himself by
+ all soft and half-womanly indulgences,&mdash;the shaven hair, the
+ convict&rsquo;s dress, the rigorous privation, the drudging toil, the exile,
+ seemed as grim as the grave. In the dotage of faculties smitten into
+ drivelling, he wrote to the Home Office, offering to disclose secrets
+ connected with crimes that had hitherto escaped or baffled justice, on
+ condition that his sentence might be repealed, or mitigated into the
+ gentler forms of ordinary transportation. No answer was returned to him,
+ but his letter provoked research. Circumstances connected with his uncle&rsquo;s
+ death, and with various other dark passages in his life, sealed against
+ him all hope of a more merciful sentence; and when some acquaintances,
+ whom his art had made for him, and who, while grieving for his crime, saw
+ in it some excuses (ignorant of his feller deeds), sought to intercede in
+ his behalf, the reply of the Home Office was obvious: &ldquo;He is a fortunate
+ man to have been tried and condemned for his least offence.&rdquo; Not one
+ indulgence that could distinguish him from the most execrable ruffian
+ condemned to the same sentence was conceded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of the gibbet lost all its horror. Here was a gibbet for every
+ hour. No hope,&mdash;no escape. Already that Future Doom which comprehends
+ the &ldquo;Forever&rdquo; opened upon him black and fathomless. The hour-glass was
+ broken up, the hand of the timepiece was arrested. The Beyond stretched
+ before him without limit, without goal,&mdash;on into Annihilation or into
+ Hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="Blink2H_EPIL" id="Blink2H_EPIL">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EPILOGUE TO PART THE SECOND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Stand, O Man! upon the hill-top in the stillness of the evening hour, and
+ gaze, not with joyous, but with contented eyes, upon the beautiful world
+ around thee. See where the mists, soft and dim, rise over the green
+ meadows, through which the rivulet steals its way. See where, broadest and
+ stillest, the wave expands to the full smile of the setting sun, and the
+ willow that trembles on the breeze, and the oak that stands firm in the
+ storm, are reflected back, peaceful both, from the clear glass of the
+ tides. See where, begirt by the gold of the harvests, and backed by the
+ pomp of a thousand groves, the roofs of the town bask, noiseless, in the
+ calm glow of the sky. Not a sound from those abodes floats in discord to
+ thine ear; only from the church-tower, soaring high above the rest,
+ perhaps faintly heard through the stillness, swells the note of the holy
+ bell. Along the mead low skims the swallow,&mdash;on the wave the silver
+ circlet, breaking into spray, shows the sport of the fish. See the Earth,
+ how serene, though all eloquent of activity and life! See the Heavens, how
+ benign, though dark clouds, by yon mountain, blend the purple with the
+ gold! Gaze contented, for Good is around thee,&mdash;not joyous, for Evil
+ is the shadow of Good! Let thy soul pierce through the veil of the senses,
+ and thy sight plunge deeper than the surface which gives delight to thine
+ eye. Below the glass of that river, the pike darts on his prey; the circle
+ in the wave, the soft plash amongst the reeds, are but signs of Destroyer
+ and Victim. In the ivy round the oak by the margin, the owl hungers for
+ the night, which shall give its beak and its talons living food for its
+ young; and the spray of the willow trembles with the wing of the
+ redbreast, whose bright eye sees the worm on the sod. Canst thou count
+ too, O Man! all the cares, all the sins, that those noiseless rooftops
+ conceal? With every curl of that smoke to the sky, a human thought soars
+ as dark, a human hope melts as briefly. And the bell from the
+ church-tower, that to thy ear gives but music, perhaps knolls for the
+ dead. The swallow but chases the moth, and the cloud, that deepens the
+ glory of the heaven and the sweet shadows on the earth, nurses but the
+ thunder that shall rend the grove, and the storm that shall devastate the
+ harvests. Not with fear, not with doubt, recognize, O Mortal, the presence
+ of Evil in the world. [Not, indeed, that the evil here narrated is the
+ ordinary evil of the world,&mdash;the lesson it inculcates would be lost
+ if so construed,&mdash;but that the mystery of evil, whatever its degree,
+ only increases the necessity of faith in the vindication of the
+ contrivance which requires infinity for its range, and eternity for its
+ consummation. It is in the existence of evil that man finds his duties,
+ and his soul its progress.] Hush thy heart in the humbleness of awe, that
+ its mirror may reflect as serenely the shadow as the light. Vainly, for
+ its moral, dost thou gaze on the landscape, if thy soul puts no check on
+ the dull delight of the senses. Two wings only raise thee to the summit of
+ Truth, where the Cherub shall comfort the sorrow, where the Seraph shall
+ enlighten the joy. Dark as ebon spreads the one wing, white as snow gleams
+ the other,&mdash;mournful as thy reason when it descends into the deep;
+ exulting as thy faith when it springs to the day-star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beck sleeps in the churchyard of Laughton. He had lived to frustrate the
+ monstrous design intended to benefit himself, and to become the
+ instrument, while the victim, of the dread Eumenides. That done, his life
+ passed with the crimes that had gathered around, out of the sight of
+ mortals. Helen slowly regained her health in the atmosphere of love and
+ happiness; and Lady Mary soon learned to forget the fault of the father in
+ the virtues of the child. Married to Percival, Helen fulfilled the
+ destinies of woman&rsquo;s genius, in calling forth into action man&rsquo;s earnest
+ duties. She breathed into Percival&rsquo;s warm, beneficent heart her own more
+ steadfast and divine intelligence. Like him she grew ambitious, by her he
+ became distinguished. While I write, fair children play under the cedars
+ of Laughton. And the husband tells the daughters to resemble their mother;
+ and the wife&rsquo;s highest praise to the boys is: &ldquo;You have spoken truth, or
+ done good, like your father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Ardworth has not paused in his career, nor belied the promise of his
+ youth. Though the elder Ardworth, partly by his own exertions, partly by
+ his second marriage with the daughter of the French merchant (through
+ whose agency he had corresponded with Fielden), had realized a moderate
+ fortune, it but sufficed for his own wants and for the children of his
+ later nuptials, upon whom the bulk of it was settled. Hence, happily
+ perhaps for himself and others, the easy circumstances of his father
+ allowed to John Ardworth no exemption from labour. His success in the
+ single episode from active life to literature did not intoxicate or
+ mislead him. He knew that his real element was not in the field of
+ letters, but in the world of men. Not undervaluing the noble destinies of
+ the author, he felt that those destinies, if realized to the utmost,
+ demanded powers other than his own, and that man is only true to his
+ genius when the genius is at home in his career. He would not renounce for
+ a brief celebrity distant and solid fame. He continued for a few years in
+ patience and privation and confident self-reliance to drudge on, till the
+ occupation for the intellect fed by restraint, and the learning
+ accumulated by study, came and found the whole man developed and prepared.
+ Then he rose rapidly from step to step; then, still retaining his high
+ enthusiasm, he enlarged his sphere of action from the cold practice of law
+ into those vast social improvements which law, rightly regarded, should
+ lead and vivify and create. Then, and long before the twenty years he had
+ imposed on his probation had expired, he gazed again upon the senate and
+ the abbey, and saw the doors of the one open to his resolute tread, and
+ anticipated the glorious sepulchre which heart and brain should win him in
+ the other. John Ardworth has never married. When Percival rebukes him for
+ his celibacy, his lip quivers slightly, and he applies himself with more
+ dogged earnestness to his studies or his career. But he never complains
+ that his lot is lonely or his affections void. For him who aspires, and
+ for him who loves, life may lead through the thorns, but it never stops in
+ the desert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the minor personages involved in this history, there is little need to
+ dwell. Mr. Fielden, thanks to St. John, has obtained a much better living
+ in the rectory of Laughton, but has found new sources of pleasant trouble
+ for himself in seeking to drill into the mind of Percival&rsquo;s eldest son the
+ elements of Euclid, and the principles of Latin syntax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may feel satisfied that the Miverses will go on much the same while
+ trade enriches without refining, and while, nevertheless, right feelings
+ in the common paths of duty may unite charitable emotions with graceless
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may rest assured that the poor widow who had reared the lost son of
+ Lucretia received from the bounty of Percival all that could comfort her
+ for his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no need to track the dull crimes of Martha, or the quick, cunning
+ vices of Grabman, to their inevitable goals, in the hospital or the
+ prison, the dunghill or the gibbet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the elder Ardworth our parting notice may be less brief. We first saw
+ him in sanguine and generous youth, with higher principles and clearer
+ insight into honour than William Mainwaring. We have seen him next a
+ spendthrift and a fugitive, his principles debased and his honour dimmed.
+ He presents to us no uncommon example of the corruption engendered by that
+ vulgar self-indulgence which mortgages the morrow for the pleasures of
+ to-day. No Deity presides where Prudence is absent. Man, a world in
+ himself, requires for the development of his faculties patience, and for
+ the balance of his actions, order. Even where he had deemed himself most
+ oppressively made the martyr,&mdash;namely, in the profession of mere
+ political opinions,&mdash;Walter Ardworth had but followed out into theory
+ the restless, uncalculating impatience which had brought adversity on his
+ manhood, and, despite his constitutional cheerfulness, shadowed his age
+ with remorse. The death of the child committed to his charge long (perhaps
+ to the last) embittered his pride in the son whom, without merit of his
+ own, Providence had spared to a brighter fate. But for the faults which
+ had banished him his country, and the habits which had seared his sense of
+ duty, could that child have been so abandoned, and have so perished?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It remains only to cast our glance over the punishments which befell the
+ sensual villany of Varney, the intellectual corruption of his fell
+ stepmother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two persons had made a very trade of those crimes to which man&rsquo;s law
+ awards death. They had said in their hearts that they would dare the
+ crime, but elude the penalty. By wonderful subtlety, craft, and dexterity,
+ which reduced guilt to a science, Providence seemed, as in disdain of the
+ vulgar instruments of common retribution, to concede to them that which
+ they had schemed for,&mdash;escape from the rope and gibbet. Varney, saved
+ from detection of his darker and more inexpiable crimes, punished only for
+ the least one, retained what had seemed to him the master boon,&mdash;life.
+ Safer still from the law, no mortal eye had plumbed the profound night of
+ Lucretia&rsquo;s awful guilt. Murderess of husband and son, the blinded law bade
+ her go unscathed, unsuspected. Direct, as from heaven, without a cloud,
+ fell the thunderbolt. Is the life they have saved worth the prizing? Doth
+ the chalice, unspilt on the ground, not return to the hand? Is the sudden
+ pang of the hangman more fearful than the doom which they breathe and
+ bear? Look, and judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold that dark ship on the waters! Its burdens are not of Ormus and
+ Tyre. No goodly merchandise doth it waft over the wave, no blessing
+ cleaves to its sails; freighted with terror and with guilt, with remorse
+ and despair, or, more ghastly than either, the sullen apathy of souls
+ hardened into stone, it carries the dregs and offal of the old world to
+ populate the new. On a bench in that ship sit side by side two men,
+ companions assigned to each other. Pale, abject, cowering, all the bravery
+ rent from his garb, all the gay insolence vanished from his brow,&mdash;can
+ that hollow-eyed, haggard wretch be the same man whose senses opened on
+ every joy, whose nerves mocked at every peril? But beside him, with a grin
+ of vile glee on his features, all muscle and brawn in the form, all
+ malice, at once spiteful and dull, in the heavy eye, sits his fit comrade,
+ the Gravestealer! At the first glance each had recognized each, and the
+ prophecy and the vision rushed back upon the daintier convict. If he seek
+ to escape from him, the Gravestealer claims him as a prey; he threatens
+ him with his eye as a slave; he kicks him with his hoof as they sit, and
+ laughs at the writhings of the pain. Carry on your gaze from the ship,
+ hear the cry from the masthead, see the land arise from the waste,&mdash;a
+ land without hope. At first, despite the rigour of the Home Office, the
+ education and intelligence of Varney have their price,&mdash;the sole
+ crime for which he is convicted is not of the darkest. He escapes from
+ that hideous comrade; he can teach as a schoolmaster,&mdash;let his brain
+ work, not his hands. But the most irredeemable of convicts are ever those
+ of nurture and birth and culture better than the ruffian rest. You may
+ enlighten the clod, but the meteor still must feed on the marsh; and the
+ pride and the vanity work where the crime itself seems to lose its
+ occasion. Ever avid, ever grasping, he falls, step by step, in the foul
+ sink, and the colony sees in Gabriel Varney its most pestilent rogue.
+ Arch-convict amidst convicts, doubly lost amongst the damned, they banish
+ him to the sternest of the penal settlements; they send him forth with the
+ vilest to break stones upon the roads. Shrivelled and bowed and old
+ prematurely, see that sharp face peering forth amongst that gang, scarcely
+ human, see him cringe to the lash of the scornful overseer, see the pairs
+ chained together, night and day! Ho, ho! his comrade hath found him again,&mdash;the
+ Artist and the Gravestealer leashed together! Conceive that fancy so
+ nurtured by habit, those tastes, so womanized by indulgence,&mdash;the one
+ suggesting the very horrors that are not; the other revolting at all toil
+ as a torture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But intellect, not all gone, though hourly dying heavily down to the level
+ of the brute, yet schemes for delivery and escape. Let the plot ripen, and
+ the heart bound; break his chain, set him free, send him forth to the
+ wilderness. Hark, the whoop of the wild men! See those things that ape our
+ species dance and gibber round the famishing, hunted wretch. Hark, how he
+ shrieks at the torture! How they tear and they pinch and they burn and
+ they rend him! They, too, spare his life,&mdash;it is charmed. A Caliban
+ amidst Calibans, they heap him with their burdens, and feed him on their
+ offal. Let him live; he loved life for himself; he has cheated the gibbet,&mdash;LET
+ HIM LIVE! Let him watch, let him once more escape; all naked and mangled,
+ let him wander back to the huts of his gang. Lo, where he kneels, the foul
+ tears streaming down, and cries aloud: &ldquo;I have broken all your laws, I
+ will tell you all my crimes; I ask but one sentence,&mdash;hang me up; let
+ me die!&rdquo; And from the gang groan many voices: &ldquo;Hang us up; let us die!&rdquo;
+ The overseer turns on his heel, and Gabriel Varney again is chained to the
+ laughing Gravestealer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You enter those gates so jealously guarded, you pass, with a quick beat of
+ the heart, by those groups on the lawn, though they are harmless; you
+ follow your guide through those passages; where the open doors will
+ permit, you see the emperor brandish his sceptre of straw, hear the
+ speculator counting his millions, sigh where the maiden sits smiling the
+ return of her shipwrecked lover, or gravely shake the head and hurry on
+ where the fanatic raves his Apocalypse, and reigns in judgment on the
+ world; you pass by strong gates into corridors gloomier and more remote.
+ Nearer and nearer you hear the yell and the oath and blaspheming curse;
+ you are in the heart of the madhouse, where they chain those at once
+ cureless and dangerous,&mdash;who have but sense enough left them to smite
+ and to throttle and to murder. Your guide opens that door, massive as a
+ wall; you see (as we, who narrate, have seen her) Lucretia Dalibard,&mdash;a
+ grisly, squalid, ferocious mockery of a human being, more appalling and
+ more fallen than Dante ever fabled in his spectres, than Swift ever
+ scoffed in his Yahoos! Only, where all other feature seems to have lost
+ its stamp of humanity, still burns with unquenchable fever the red,
+ devouring eye. That eye never seems to sleep, or in sleep, the lid never
+ closes over it. As you shrink from its light, it seems to you as if the
+ mind, that had lost coherence and harmony, still retained latent and
+ incommunicable consciousness as its curse. For days, for weeks, that awful
+ maniac will preserve obstinate, unbroken silence; but as the eye never
+ closes, so the hands never rest,&mdash;they open and grasp, as if at some
+ palpable object on which they close, vicelike, as a bird&rsquo;s talons on its
+ prey; sometimes they wander over that brow, where the furrows seem torn as
+ the thunder scars, as if to wipe from it a stain, or charm from it a pang;
+ sometimes they gather up the hem of that sordid robe, and seem, for hours
+ together, striving to rub from it a soil. Then, out from prolonged
+ silence, without cause or warning, will ring, peal after peal (till the
+ frame, exhausted with the effort sinks senseless into stupor), the
+ frightful laugh. But speech, intelligible and coherent, those lips rarely
+ yield. There are times, indeed, when the attendants are persuaded that her
+ mind in part returns to her; and those times experience has taught them to
+ watch with peculiar caution. The crisis evinces itself by a change in the
+ manner,&mdash;by a quick apprehension of all that is said; by a straining,
+ anxious look at the dismal walls; by a soft, fawning docility; by murmured
+ complaints of the chains that fetter; and (though, as we have said, but
+ very rarely) by prayers, that seem rational, for greater ease and freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the earlier time of her dread captivity, perhaps when it was believed
+ at the asylum that she was a patient of condition, with friends who cared
+ for her state, and would liberally reward her cure, they in those moments
+ relaxed her confinement, and sought the gentler remedies their art
+ employs; but then invariably, and, it was said, with a cunning that
+ surpassed all the proverbial astuteness of the mad, she turned this
+ indulgence to the most deadly uses,&mdash;she crept to the pallet of some
+ adjacent sufferer weaker than herself, and the shrieks that brought the
+ attendants into the cell scarcely saved the intended victim from her
+ hands. It seemed, in those imperfectly lucid intervals, as if the reason
+ only returned to guide her to destroy,&mdash;only to animate the broken
+ mechanism into the beast of prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years have now passed since her entrance within those walls. He who placed
+ her there never had returned. He had given a false name,&mdash;no clew to
+ him was obtained; the gold he had left was but the quarter&rsquo;s pay. When
+ Varney had been first apprehended, Percival requested the younger Ardworth
+ to seek the forger in prison, and to question him as to Madame Dalibard;
+ but Varney was then so apprehensive that, even if still insane, her very
+ ravings might betray his share in her crimes, or still more, if she
+ recovered, that the remembrance of her son&rsquo;s murder would awaken the
+ repentance and the confession of crushed despair, that the wretch had
+ judged it wiser to say that his accomplice was no more,&mdash;that her
+ insanity had already terminated in death. The place of her confinement
+ thus continued a secret locked in his own breast. Egotist to the last, she
+ was henceforth dead to him,&mdash;why not to the world? Thus the partner
+ of her crimes had cut off her sole resource, in the compassion of her
+ unconscious kindred; thus the gates of the living world were shut to her
+ evermore. Still, in a kind of compassion, or as an object of experiment,&mdash;as
+ a subject to be dealt with unscrupulously in that living dissection-hall,&mdash;her
+ grim jailers did not grudge her an asylum. But, year after year, the
+ attendance was more slovenly, the treatment more harsh; and strange to
+ say, while the features were scarcely recognizable, while the form
+ underwent all the change which the shape suffers when mind deserts it,
+ that prodigious vitality which belonged to the temperament still survived.
+ No signs of decay are yet visible. Death, as if spurning the carcass,
+ stands inexorably afar off. Baffler of man&rsquo;s law, thou, too, hast escaped
+ with life! Not for thee is the sentence, &ldquo;Blood for blood!&rdquo; Thou livest,
+ thou mayst pass the extremest boundaries of age. Live on, to wipe the
+ blood from thy robe,&mdash;LIVE ON!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not for the coarse object of creating an idle terror, not for the shock
+ upon the nerves and the thrill of the grosser interest which the narrative
+ of crime creates, has this book been compiled from the facts and materials
+ afforded to the author. When the great German poet describes, in not the
+ least noble of his lyrics, the sudden apparition of some &ldquo;Monster Fate&rdquo; in
+ the circles of careless Joy, he assigns to him who teaches the world,
+ through parable or song, the right to invoke the spectre. It is well to be
+ awakened at times from the easy commonplace that surrounds our habitual
+ life; to cast broad and steady and patient light on the darker secrets of
+ the heart,&mdash;on the vaults and caverns of the social state over which
+ we build the market-place and the palace. We recover from the dread and
+ the awe and the half-incredulous wonder, to set closer watch upon our
+ inner and hidden selves. In him who cultivates only the reason, and
+ suffers the heart and the spirit to lie waste and dead, who schemes and
+ constructs, and revolves round the axle of self, unwarmed by the
+ affections, unpoised by the attraction of right, lies the germ Fate might
+ ripen into the guilt of Olivier Dalibard. Let him who but lives through
+ the senses, spreads the wings of the fancy in the gaudy glare of enjoyment
+ corrupted, avid to seize, and impatient to toil, whose faculties are
+ curbed but to the range of physical perception, whose very courage is but
+ the strength of the nerves, who develops but the animal as he stifles the
+ man,&mdash;let him gaze on the villany of Varney, and startle to see some
+ magnified shadow of himself thrown dimly on the glass! Let those who, with
+ powers to command and passions to wing the powers, would sweep without
+ scruple from the aim to the end, who, trampling beneath their footprint of
+ iron the humanities that bloom up in their path, would march to success
+ with the proud stride of the destroyer, hear, in the laugh of yon maniac
+ murderess, the glee of the fiend they have wooed to their own souls! Guard
+ well, O Heir of Eternity, the portal of sin,&mdash;the thought! From the
+ thought to the deed, the subtler thy brain and the bolder thy courage, the
+ briefer and straighter is the way. Read these pages in disdain of
+ self-commune,&mdash;they shall revolt thee, not instruct; read them,
+ looking steadfastly within,&mdash;and how humble soever the art of the
+ narrator, the facts he narrates, like all history, shall teach by example.
+ Every human act, good or ill, is an angel to guide or to warn; and the
+ deeds of the worst have messages from Heaven to the listening hearts of
+ the best. Amidst the glens in the Apennine, in the lone wastes of
+ Calabria, the sign of the cross marks the spot where a deed of violence
+ has been done; on all that pass by the road, the symbol has varying
+ effect: sometimes it startles the conscience, sometimes it invokes the
+ devotion; the robber drops the blade, the priest counts the rosary. So is
+ it with the record of crime; and in the witness of Guilt, Man is thrilled
+ with the whisper of Religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our acts our angels are, or good or ill, The fatal shadows that walk by us
+ still. FLETCHER.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg&rsquo;s Lucretia, Complete, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>