Addted table of content and links
[gender-roles-text-analysis.git] / pg145.txt
1 Middlemarch
2
3
4 By
5
6 George Eliot
7
8
9
10
11 New York and Boston
12
13 H. M. Caldwell Company Publishers
14
15
16
17
18 To my dear Husband, George Henry Lewes, in this nineteenth year of our
19 blessed union.
20
21
22
23
24 CONTENTS
25
26 BOOK I
27
28 CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI
29 CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XII
30
31
32 BOOK II
33
34 CHAPTER XIII CHAPTER XIV CHAPTER XV CHAPTER XVI CHAPTER XVII
35 CHAPTER XVIII CHAPTER XIX CHAPTER XX CHAPTER XXI CHAPTER XXII
36
37
38 BOOK III
39
40 CHAPTER XXIII CHAPTER XXIV CHAPTER XXV CHAPTER XXVI CHAPTER XXVII
41 CHAPTER XXVIII CHAPTER XXIX CHAPTER XXX CHAPTER XXXI CHAPTER XXXII
42 CHAPTER XXXIII
43
44
45 BOOK IV
46
47 CHAPTER XXXIV CHAPTER XXXV CHAPTER XXXVI CHAPTER XXXVII CHAPTER XXXVIII
48 CHAPTER XXXIX CHAPTER XL CHAPTER XLI CHAPTER XLII
49
50
51 BOOK V
52
53 CHAPTER XLIII CHAPTER XLIV CHAPTER XLV CHAPTER XLVI CHAPTER XLVII
54 CHAPTER XLVIII CHAPTER XLIX CHAPTER L CHAPTER LI CHAPTER LII
55 CHAPTER LIII
56
57
58 BOOK VI
59
60 CHAPTER LIV CHAPTER LV CHAPTER LVI CHAPTER LVII CHAPTER LVIII
61 CHAPTER LIX CHAPTER LX CHAPTER LXI CHAPTER LXII
62
63
64 BOOK VII
65
66 CHAPTER LXIII CHAPTER LXIV CHAPTER LXV CHAPTER LXVI CHAPTER LXVII
67 CHAPTER LXVIII CHAPTER LXIX CHAPTER LXX CHAPTER LXXI
68
69
70 BOOK VIII
71
72 CHAPTER LXXII CHAPTER LXXIII CHAPTER LXXIV CHAPTER LXXV CHAPTER LXXVI
73 CHAPTER LXXVII CHAPTER LXXVIII CHAPTER LXXIX CHAPTER LXXX CHAPTER LXXXI
74
75
76
77
78 PRELUDE
79
80
81 Who that cares much to know the history of man, and how the mysterious
82 mixture behaves under the varying experiments of Time, has not dwelt,
83 at least briefly, on the life of Saint Theresa, has not smiled with
84 some gentleness at the thought of the little girl walking forth one
85 morning hand-in-hand with her still smaller brother, to go and seek
86 martyrdom in the country of the Moors? Out they toddled from rugged
87 Avila, wide-eyed and helpless-looking as two fawns, but with human
88 hearts, already beating to a national idea; until domestic reality met
89 them in the shape of uncles, and turned them back from their great
90 resolve. That child-pilgrimage was a fit beginning. Theresa's
91 passionate, ideal nature demanded an epic life: what were many-volumed
92 romances of chivalry and the social conquests of a brilliant girl to
93 her? Her flame quickly burned up that light fuel; and, fed from
94 within, soared after some illimitable satisfaction, some object which
95 would never justify weariness, which would reconcile self-despair with
96 the rapturous consciousness of life beyond self. She found her epos in
97 the reform of a religious order.
98
99 That Spanish woman who lived three hundred years ago, was certainly not
100 the last of her kind. Many Theresas have been born who found for
101 themselves no epic life wherein there was a constant unfolding of
102 far-resonant action; perhaps only a life of mistakes, the offspring of
103 a certain spiritual grandeur ill-matched with the meanness of
104 opportunity; perhaps a tragic failure which found no sacred poet and
105 sank unwept into oblivion. With dim lights and tangled circumstance
106 they tried to shape their thought and deed in noble agreement; but
107 after all, to common eyes their struggles seemed mere inconsistency and
108 formlessness; for these later-born Theresas were helped by no coherent
109 social faith and order which could perform the function of knowledge
110 for the ardently willing soul. Their ardor alternated between a vague
111 ideal and the common yearning of womanhood; so that the one was
112 disapproved as extravagance, and the other condemned as a lapse.
113
114 Some have felt that these blundering lives are due to the inconvenient
115 indefiniteness with which the Supreme Power has fashioned the natures
116 of women: if there were one level of feminine incompetence as strict as
117 the ability to count three and no more, the social lot of women might
118 be treated with scientific certitude. Meanwhile the indefiniteness
119 remains, and the limits of variation are really much wider than any one
120 would imagine from the sameness of women's coiffure and the favorite
121 love-stories in prose and verse. Here and there a cygnet is reared
122 uneasily among the ducklings in the brown pond, and never finds the
123 living stream in fellowship with its own oary-footed kind. Here and
124 there is born a Saint Theresa, foundress of nothing, whose loving
125 heart-beats and sobs after an unattained goodness tremble off and are
126 dispersed among hindrances, instead of centring in some
127 long-recognizable deed.
128
129
130
131
132
133 BOOK I.
134
135 MISS BROOKE.
136
137
138
139 CHAPTER I.
140
141 "Since I can do no good because a woman,
142 Reach constantly at something that is near it.
143 --The Maid's Tragedy: BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER.
144
145
146 Miss Brooke had that kind of beauty which seems to be thrown into
147 relief by poor dress. Her hand and wrist were so finely formed that
148 she could wear sleeves not less bare of style than those in which the
149 Blessed Virgin appeared to Italian painters; and her profile as well as
150 her stature and bearing seemed to gain the more dignity from her plain
151 garments, which by the side of provincial fashion gave her the
152 impressiveness of a fine quotation from the Bible,--or from one of our
153 elder poets,--in a paragraph of to-day's newspaper. She was usually
154 spoken of as being remarkably clever, but with the addition that her
155 sister Celia had more common-sense. Nevertheless, Celia wore scarcely
156 more trimmings; and it was only to close observers that her dress
157 differed from her sister's, and had a shade of coquetry in its
158 arrangements; for Miss Brooke's plain dressing was due to mixed
159 conditions, in most of which her sister shared. The pride of being
160 ladies had something to do with it: the Brooke connections, though not
161 exactly aristocratic, were unquestionably "good:" if you inquired
162 backward for a generation or two, you would not find any yard-measuring
163 or parcel-tying forefathers--anything lower than an admiral or a
164 clergyman; and there was even an ancestor discernible as a Puritan
165 gentleman who served under Cromwell, but afterwards conformed, and
166 managed to come out of all political troubles as the proprietor of a
167 respectable family estate. Young women of such birth, living in a
168 quiet country-house, and attending a village church hardly larger than
169 a parlor, naturally regarded frippery as the ambition of a huckster's
170 daughter. Then there was well-bred economy, which in those days made
171 show in dress the first item to be deducted from, when any margin was
172 required for expenses more distinctive of rank. Such reasons would
173 have been enough to account for plain dress, quite apart from religious
174 feeling; but in Miss Brooke's case, religion alone would have
175 determined it; and Celia mildly acquiesced in all her sister's
176 sentiments, only infusing them with that common-sense which is able to
177 accept momentous doctrines without any eccentric agitation. Dorothea
178 knew many passages of Pascal's Pensees and of Jeremy Taylor by heart;
179 and to her the destinies of mankind, seen by the light of Christianity,
180 made the solicitudes of feminine fashion appear an occupation for
181 Bedlam. She could not reconcile the anxieties of a spiritual life
182 involving eternal consequences, with a keen interest in gimp and
183 artificial protrusions of drapery. Her mind was theoretic, and yearned
184 by its nature after some lofty conception of the world which might
185 frankly include the parish of Tipton and her own rule of conduct there;
186 she was enamoured of intensity and greatness, and rash in embracing
187 whatever seemed to her to have those aspects; likely to seek martyrdom,
188 to make retractations, and then to incur martyrdom after all in a
189 quarter where she had not sought it. Certainly such elements in the
190 character of a marriageable girl tended to interfere with her lot, and
191 hinder it from being decided according to custom, by good looks,
192 vanity, and merely canine affection. With all this, she, the elder of
193 the sisters, was not yet twenty, and they had both been educated, since
194 they were about twelve years old and had lost their parents, on plans
195 at once narrow and promiscuous, first in an English family and
196 afterwards in a Swiss family at Lausanne, their bachelor uncle and
197 guardian trying in this way to remedy the disadvantages of their
198 orphaned condition.
199
200 It was hardly a year since they had come to live at Tipton Grange with
201 their uncle, a man nearly sixty, of acquiescent temper, miscellaneous
202 opinions, and uncertain vote. He had travelled in his younger years,
203 and was held in this part of the county to have contracted a too
204 rambling habit of mind. Mr. Brooke's conclusions were as difficult to
205 predict as the weather: it was only safe to say that he would act with
206 benevolent intentions, and that he would spend as little money as
207 possible in carrying them out. For the most glutinously indefinite
208 minds enclose some hard grains of habit; and a man has been seen lax
209 about all his own interests except the retention of his snuff-box,
210 concerning which he was watchful, suspicious, and greedy of clutch.
211
212 In Mr. Brooke the hereditary strain of Puritan energy was clearly in
213 abeyance; but in his niece Dorothea it glowed alike through faults and
214 virtues, turning sometimes into impatience of her uncle's talk or his
215 way of "letting things be" on his estate, and making her long all the
216 more for the time when she would be of age and have some command of
217 money for generous schemes. She was regarded as an heiress; for not
218 only had the sisters seven hundred a-year each from their parents, but
219 if Dorothea married and had a son, that son would inherit Mr. Brooke's
220 estate, presumably worth about three thousand a-year--a rental which
221 seemed wealth to provincial families, still discussing Mr. Peel's late
222 conduct on the Catholic question, innocent of future gold-fields, and
223 of that gorgeous plutocracy which has so nobly exalted the necessities
224 of genteel life.
225
226 And how should Dorothea not marry?--a girl so handsome and with such
227 prospects? Nothing could hinder it but her love of extremes, and her
228 insistence on regulating life according to notions which might cause a
229 wary man to hesitate before he made her an offer, or even might lead
230 her at last to refuse all offers. A young lady of some birth and
231 fortune, who knelt suddenly down on a brick floor by the side of a sick
232 laborer and prayed fervidly as if she thought herself living in the
233 time of the Apostles--who had strange whims of fasting like a Papist,
234 and of sitting up at night to read old theological books! Such a wife
235 might awaken you some fine morning with a new scheme for the
236 application of her income which would interfere with political economy
237 and the keeping of saddle-horses: a man would naturally think twice
238 before he risked himself in such fellowship. Women were expected to
239 have weak opinions; but the great safeguard of society and of domestic
240 life was, that opinions were not acted on. Sane people did what their
241 neighbors did, so that if any lunatics were at large, one might know
242 and avoid them.
243
244 The rural opinion about the new young ladies, even among the cottagers,
245 was generally in favor of Celia, as being so amiable and
246 innocent-looking, while Miss Brooke's large eyes seemed, like her
247 religion, too unusual and striking. Poor Dorothea! compared with her,
248 the innocent-looking Celia was knowing and worldly-wise; so much
249 subtler is a human mind than the outside tissues which make a sort of
250 blazonry or clock-face for it.
251
252 Yet those who approached Dorothea, though prejudiced against her by
253 this alarming hearsay, found that she had a charm unaccountably
254 reconcilable with it. Most men thought her bewitching when she was on
255 horseback. She loved the fresh air and the various aspects of the
256 country, and when her eyes and cheeks glowed with mingled pleasure she
257 looked very little like a devotee. Riding was an indulgence which she
258 allowed herself in spite of conscientious qualms; she felt that she
259 enjoyed it in a pagan sensuous way, and always looked forward to
260 renouncing it.
261
262 She was open, ardent, and not in the least self-admiring; indeed, it
263 was pretty to see how her imagination adorned her sister Celia with
264 attractions altogether superior to her own, and if any gentleman
265 appeared to come to the Grange from some other motive than that of
266 seeing Mr. Brooke, she concluded that he must be in love with Celia:
267 Sir James Chettam, for example, whom she constantly considered from
268 Celia's point of view, inwardly debating whether it would be good for
269 Celia to accept him. That he should be regarded as a suitor to herself
270 would have seemed to her a ridiculous irrelevance. Dorothea, with all
271 her eagerness to know the truths of life, retained very childlike ideas
272 about marriage. She felt sure that she would have accepted the
273 judicious Hooker, if she had been born in time to save him from that
274 wretched mistake he made in matrimony; or John Milton when his
275 blindness had come on; or any of the other great men whose odd habits
276 it would have been glorious piety to endure; but an amiable handsome
277 baronet, who said "Exactly" to her remarks even when she expressed
278 uncertainty,--how could he affect her as a lover? The really
279 delightful marriage must be that where your husband was a sort of
280 father, and could teach you even Hebrew, if you wished it.
281
282 These peculiarities of Dorothea's character caused Mr. Brooke to be all
283 the more blamed in neighboring families for not securing some
284 middle-aged lady as guide and companion to his nieces. But he himself
285 dreaded so much the sort of superior woman likely to be available for
286 such a position, that he allowed himself to be dissuaded by Dorothea's
287 objections, and was in this case brave enough to defy the world--that
288 is to say, Mrs. Cadwallader the Rector's wife, and the small group of
289 gentry with whom he visited in the northeast corner of Loamshire. So
290 Miss Brooke presided in her uncle's household, and did not at all
291 dislike her new authority, with the homage that belonged to it.
292
293 Sir James Chettam was going to dine at the Grange to-day with another
294 gentleman whom the girls had never seen, and about whom Dorothea felt
295 some venerating expectation. This was the Reverend Edward Casaubon,
296 noted in the county as a man of profound learning, understood for many
297 years to be engaged on a great work concerning religious history; also
298 as a man of wealth enough to give lustre to his piety, and having views
299 of his own which were to be more clearly ascertained on the publication
300 of his book. His very name carried an impressiveness hardly to be
301 measured without a precise chronology of scholarship.
302
303 Early in the day Dorothea had returned from the infant school which she
304 had set going in the village, and was taking her usual place in the
305 pretty sitting-room which divided the bedrooms of the sisters, bent on
306 finishing a plan for some buildings (a kind of work which she delighted
307 in), when Celia, who had been watching her with a hesitating desire to
308 propose something, said--
309
310 "Dorothea, dear, if you don't mind--if you are not very busy--suppose
311 we looked at mamma's jewels to-day, and divided them? It is exactly
312 six months to-day since uncle gave them to you, and you have not looked
313 at them yet."
314
315 Celia's face had the shadow of a pouting expression in it, the full
316 presence of the pout being kept back by an habitual awe of Dorothea and
317 principle; two associated facts which might show a mysterious
318 electricity if you touched them incautiously. To her relief,
319 Dorothea's eyes were full of laughter as she looked up.
320
321 "What a wonderful little almanac you are, Celia! Is it six calendar or
322 six lunar months?"
323
324 "It is the last day of September now, and it was the first of April
325 when uncle gave them to you. You know, he said that he had forgotten
326 them till then. I believe you have never thought of them since you
327 locked them up in the cabinet here."
328
329 "Well, dear, we should never wear them, you know." Dorothea spoke in a
330 full cordial tone, half caressing, half explanatory. She had her
331 pencil in her hand, and was making tiny side-plans on a margin.
332
333 Celia colored, and looked very grave. "I think, dear, we are wanting
334 in respect to mamma's memory, to put them by and take no notice of
335 them. And," she added, after hesitating a little, with a rising sob of
336 mortification, "necklaces are quite usual now; and Madame Poincon, who
337 was stricter in some things even than you are, used to wear ornaments.
338 And Christians generally--surely there are women in heaven now who wore
339 jewels." Celia was conscious of some mental strength when she really
340 applied herself to argument.
341
342 "You would like to wear them?" exclaimed Dorothea, an air of astonished
343 discovery animating her whole person with a dramatic action which she
344 had caught from that very Madame Poincon who wore the ornaments. "Of
345 course, then, let us have them out. Why did you not tell me before?
346 But the keys, the keys!" She pressed her hands against the sides of her
347 head and seemed to despair of her memory.
348
349 "They are here," said Celia, with whom this explanation had been long
350 meditated and prearranged.
351
352 "Pray open the large drawer of the cabinet and get out the jewel-box."
353
354 The casket was soon open before them, and the various jewels spread
355 out, making a bright parterre on the table. It was no great
356 collection, but a few of the ornaments were really of remarkable
357 beauty, the finest that was obvious at first being a necklace of purple
358 amethysts set in exquisite gold work, and a pearl cross with five
359 brilliants in it. Dorothea immediately took up the necklace and
360 fastened it round her sister's neck, where it fitted almost as closely
361 as a bracelet; but the circle suited the Henrietta-Maria style of
362 Celia's head and neck, and she could see that it did, in the pier-glass
363 opposite.
364
365 "There, Celia! you can wear that with your Indian muslin. But this
366 cross you must wear with your dark dresses."
367
368 Celia was trying not to smile with pleasure. "O Dodo, you must keep
369 the cross yourself."
370
371 "No, no, dear, no," said Dorothea, putting up her hand with careless
372 deprecation.
373
374 "Yes, indeed you must; it would suit you--in your black dress, now,"
375 said Celia, insistingly. "You _might_ wear that."
376
377 "Not for the world, not for the world. A cross is the last thing I
378 would wear as a trinket." Dorothea shuddered slightly.
379
380 "Then you will think it wicked in me to wear it," said Celia, uneasily.
381
382 "No, dear, no," said Dorothea, stroking her sister's cheek. "Souls
383 have complexions too: what will suit one will not suit another."
384
385 "But you might like to keep it for mamma's sake."
386
387 "No, I have other things of mamma's--her sandal-wood box which I am so
388 fond of--plenty of things. In fact, they are all yours, dear. We need
389 discuss them no longer. There--take away your property."
390
391 Celia felt a little hurt. There was a strong assumption of superiority
392 in this Puritanic toleration, hardly less trying to the blond flesh of
393 an unenthusiastic sister than a Puritanic persecution.
394
395 "But how can I wear ornaments if you, who are the elder sister, will
396 never wear them?"
397
398 "Nay, Celia, that is too much to ask, that I should wear trinkets to
399 keep you in countenance. If I were to put on such a necklace as that,
400 I should feel as if I had been pirouetting. The world would go round
401 with me, and I should not know how to walk."
402
403 Celia had unclasped the necklace and drawn it off. "It would be a
404 little tight for your neck; something to lie down and hang would suit
405 you better," she said, with some satisfaction. The complete unfitness
406 of the necklace from all points of view for Dorothea, made Celia
407 happier in taking it. She was opening some ring-boxes, which disclosed
408 a fine emerald with diamonds, and just then the sun passing beyond a
409 cloud sent a bright gleam over the table.
410
411 "How very beautiful these gems are!" said Dorothea, under a new current
412 of feeling, as sudden as the gleam. "It is strange how deeply colors
413 seem to penetrate one, like scent. I suppose that is the reason why
414 gems are used as spiritual emblems in the Revelation of St. John. They
415 look like fragments of heaven. I think that emerald is more beautiful
416 than any of them."
417
418 "And there is a bracelet to match it," said Celia. "We did not notice
419 this at first."
420
421 "They are lovely," said Dorothea, slipping the ring and bracelet on her
422 finely turned finger and wrist, and holding them towards the window on
423 a level with her eyes. All the while her thought was trying to justify
424 her delight in the colors by merging them in her mystic religious joy.
425
426 "You _would_ like those, Dorothea," said Celia, rather falteringly,
427 beginning to think with wonder that her sister showed some weakness,
428 and also that emeralds would suit her own complexion even better than
429 purple amethysts. "You must keep that ring and bracelet--if nothing
430 else. But see, these agates are very pretty and quiet."
431
432 "Yes! I will keep these--this ring and bracelet," said Dorothea.
433 Then, letting her hand fall on the table, she said in another
434 tone--"Yet what miserable men find such things, and work at them, and
435 sell them!" She paused again, and Celia thought that her sister was
436 going to renounce the ornaments, as in consistency she ought to do.
437
438 "Yes, dear, I will keep these," said Dorothea, decidedly. "But take
439 all the rest away, and the casket."
440
441 She took up her pencil without removing the jewels, and still looking
442 at them. She thought of often having them by her, to feed her eye at
443 these little fountains of pure color.
444
445 "Shall you wear them in company?" said Celia, who was watching her with
446 real curiosity as to what she would do.
447
448 Dorothea glanced quickly at her sister. Across all her imaginative
449 adornment of those whom she loved, there darted now and then a keen
450 discernment, which was not without a scorching quality. If Miss Brooke
451 ever attained perfect meekness, it would not be for lack of inward fire.
452
453 "Perhaps," she said, rather haughtily. "I cannot tell to what level I
454 may sink."
455
456 Celia blushed, and was unhappy: she saw that she had offended her
457 sister, and dared not say even anything pretty about the gift of the
458 ornaments which she put back into the box and carried away. Dorothea
459 too was unhappy, as she went on with her plan-drawing, questioning the
460 purity of her own feeling and speech in the scene which had ended with
461 that little explosion.
462
463 Celia's consciousness told her that she had not been at all in the
464 wrong: it was quite natural and justifiable that she should have asked
465 that question, and she repeated to herself that Dorothea was
466 inconsistent: either she should have taken her full share of the
467 jewels, or, after what she had said, she should have renounced them
468 altogether.
469
470 "I am sure--at least, I trust," thought Celia, "that the wearing of a
471 necklace will not interfere with my prayers. And I do not see that I
472 should be bound by Dorothea's opinions now we are going into society,
473 though of course she herself ought to be bound by them. But Dorothea
474 is not always consistent."
475
476 Thus Celia, mutely bending over her tapestry, until she heard her
477 sister calling her.
478
479 "Here, Kitty, come and look at my plan; I shall think I am a great
480 architect, if I have not got incompatible stairs and fireplaces."
481
482 As Celia bent over the paper, Dorothea put her cheek against her
483 sister's arm caressingly. Celia understood the action. Dorothea saw
484 that she had been in the wrong, and Celia pardoned her. Since they
485 could remember, there had been a mixture of criticism and awe in the
486 attitude of Celia's mind towards her elder sister. The younger had
487 always worn a yoke; but is there any yoked creature without its private
488 opinions?
489
490
491
492 CHAPTER II.
493
494 "'Dime; no ves aquel caballero que hacia nosotros viene
495 sobre un caballo rucio rodado que trae puesto en la cabeza
496 un yelmo de oro?' 'Lo que veo y columbro,' respondio Sancho,
497 'no es sino un hombre sobre un as no pardo como el mio, que
498 trae sobre la cabeza una cosa que relumbra.' 'Pues ese es el
499 yelmo de Mambrino,' dijo Don Quijote."--CERVANTES.
500
501 "'Seest thou not yon cavalier who cometh toward us on a
502 dapple-gray steed, and weareth a golden helmet?' 'What I
503 see,' answered Sancho, 'is nothing but a man on a gray ass
504 like my own, who carries something shiny on his head.' 'Just
505 so,' answered Don Quixote: 'and that resplendent object is
506 the helmet of Mambrino.'"
507
508
509 "Sir Humphry Davy?" said Mr. Brooke, over the soup, in his easy smiling
510 way, taking up Sir James Chettam's remark that he was studying Davy's
511 Agricultural Chemistry. "Well, now, Sir Humphry Davy; I dined with him
512 years ago at Cartwright's, and Wordsworth was there too--the poet
513 Wordsworth, you know. Now there was something singular. I was at
514 Cambridge when Wordsworth was there, and I never met him--and I dined
515 with him twenty years afterwards at Cartwright's. There's an oddity in
516 things, now. But Davy was there: he was a poet too. Or, as I may say,
517 Wordsworth was poet one, and Davy was poet two. That was true in every
518 sense, you know."
519
520 Dorothea felt a little more uneasy than usual. In the beginning of
521 dinner, the party being small and the room still, these motes from the
522 mass of a magistrate's mind fell too noticeably. She wondered how a
523 man like Mr. Casaubon would support such triviality. His manners, she
524 thought, were very dignified; the set of his iron-gray hair and his
525 deep eye-sockets made him resemble the portrait of Locke. He had the
526 spare form and the pale complexion which became a student; as different
527 as possible from the blooming Englishman of the red-whiskered type
528 represented by Sir James Chettam.
529
530 "I am reading the Agricultural Chemistry," said this excellent baronet,
531 "because I am going to take one of the farms into my own hands, and see
532 if something cannot be done in setting a good pattern of farming among
533 my tenants. Do you approve of that, Miss Brooke?"
534
535 "A great mistake, Chettam," interposed Mr. Brooke, "going into
536 electrifying your land and that kind of thing, and making a parlor of
537 your cow-house. It won't do. I went into science a great deal myself
538 at one time; but I saw it would not do. It leads to everything; you
539 can let nothing alone. No, no--see that your tenants don't sell their
540 straw, and that kind of thing; and give them draining-tiles, you know.
541 But your fancy farming will not do--the most expensive sort of whistle
542 you can buy: you may as well keep a pack of hounds."
543
544 "Surely," said Dorothea, "it is better to spend money in finding out
545 how men can make the most of the land which supports them all, than in
546 keeping dogs and horses only to gallop over it. It is not a sin to
547 make yourself poor in performing experiments for the good of all."
548
549 She spoke with more energy than is expected of so young a lady, but Sir
550 James had appealed to her. He was accustomed to do so, and she had
551 often thought that she could urge him to many good actions when he was
552 her brother-in-law.
553
554 Mr. Casaubon turned his eyes very markedly on Dorothea while she was
555 speaking, and seemed to observe her newly.
556
557 "Young ladies don't understand political economy, you know," said Mr.
558 Brooke, smiling towards Mr. Casaubon. "I remember when we were all
559 reading Adam Smith. _There_ is a book, now. I took in all the new
560 ideas at one time--human perfectibility, now. But some say, history
561 moves in circles; and that may be very well argued; I have argued it
562 myself. The fact is, human reason may carry you a little too far--over
563 the hedge, in fact. It carried me a good way at one time; but I saw it
564 would not do. I pulled up; I pulled up in time. But not too hard. I
565 have always been in favor of a little theory: we must have Thought;
566 else we shall be landed back in the dark ages. But talking of books,
567 there is Southey's 'Peninsular War.' I am reading that of a morning.
568 You know Southey?"
569
570 "No" said Mr. Casaubon, not keeping pace with Mr. Brooke's impetuous
571 reason, and thinking of the book only. "I have little leisure for such
572 literature just now. I have been using up my eyesight on old
573 characters lately; the fact is, I want a reader for my evenings; but I
574 am fastidious in voices, and I cannot endure listening to an imperfect
575 reader. It is a misfortune, in some senses: I feed too much on the
576 inward sources; I live too much with the dead. My mind is something
577 like the ghost of an ancient, wandering about the world and trying
578 mentally to construct it as it used to be, in spite of ruin and
579 confusing changes. But I find it necessary to use the utmost caution
580 about my eyesight."
581
582 This was the first time that Mr. Casaubon had spoken at any length. He
583 delivered himself with precision, as if he had been called upon to make
584 a public statement; and the balanced sing-song neatness of his speech,
585 occasionally corresponded to by a movement of his head, was the more
586 conspicuous from its contrast with good Mr. Brooke's scrappy
587 slovenliness. Dorothea said to herself that Mr. Casaubon was the most
588 interesting man she had ever seen, not excepting even Monsieur Liret,
589 the Vaudois clergyman who had given conferences on the history of the
590 Waldenses. To reconstruct a past world, doubtless with a view to the
591 highest purposes of truth--what a work to be in any way present at, to
592 assist in, though only as a lamp-holder! This elevating thought lifted
593 her above her annoyance at being twitted with her ignorance of
594 political economy, that never-explained science which was thrust as an
595 extinguisher over all her lights.
596
597 "But you are fond of riding, Miss Brooke," Sir James presently took an
598 opportunity of saying. "I should have thought you would enter a little
599 into the pleasures of hunting. I wish you would let me send over a
600 chestnut horse for you to try. It has been trained for a lady. I saw
601 you on Saturday cantering over the hill on a nag not worthy of you. My
602 groom shall bring Corydon for you every day, if you will only mention
603 the time."
604
605 "Thank you, you are very good. I mean to give up riding. I shall not
606 ride any more," said Dorothea, urged to this brusque resolution by a
607 little annoyance that Sir James would be soliciting her attention when
608 she wanted to give it all to Mr. Casaubon.
609
610 "No, that is too hard," said Sir James, in a tone of reproach that
611 showed strong interest. "Your sister is given to self-mortification,
612 is she not?" he continued, turning to Celia, who sat at his right hand.
613
614 "I think she is," said Celia, feeling afraid lest she should say
615 something that would not please her sister, and blushing as prettily as
616 possible above her necklace. "She likes giving up."
617
618 "If that were true, Celia, my giving-up would be self-indulgence, not
619 self-mortification. But there may be good reasons for choosing not to
620 do what is very agreeable," said Dorothea.
621
622 Mr. Brooke was speaking at the same time, but it was evident that Mr.
623 Casaubon was observing Dorothea, and she was aware of it.
624
625 "Exactly," said Sir James. "You give up from some high, generous
626 motive."
627
628 "No, indeed, not exactly. I did not say that of myself," answered
629 Dorothea, reddening. Unlike Celia, she rarely blushed, and only from
630 high delight or anger. At this moment she felt angry with the perverse
631 Sir James. Why did he not pay attention to Celia, and leave her to
632 listen to Mr. Casaubon?--if that learned man would only talk, instead
633 of allowing himself to be talked to by Mr. Brooke, who was just then
634 informing him that the Reformation either meant something or it did
635 not, that he himself was a Protestant to the core, but that Catholicism
636 was a fact; and as to refusing an acre of your ground for a Romanist
637 chapel, all men needed the bridle of religion, which, properly
638 speaking, was the dread of a Hereafter.
639
640 "I made a great study of theology at one time," said Mr. Brooke, as if
641 to explain the insight just manifested. "I know something of all
642 schools. I knew Wilberforce in his best days. Do you know
643 Wilberforce?"
644
645 Mr. Casaubon said, "No."
646
647 "Well, Wilberforce was perhaps not enough of a thinker; but if I went
648 into Parliament, as I have been asked to do, I should sit on the
649 independent bench, as Wilberforce did, and work at philanthropy."
650
651 Mr. Casaubon bowed, and observed that it was a wide field.
652
653 "Yes," said Mr. Brooke, with an easy smile, "but I have documents. I
654 began a long while ago to collect documents. They want arranging, but
655 when a question has struck me, I have written to somebody and got an
656 answer. I have documents at my back. But now, how do you arrange your
657 documents?"
658
659 "In pigeon-holes partly," said Mr. Casaubon, with rather a startled air
660 of effort.
661
662 "Ah, pigeon-holes will not do. I have tried pigeon-holes, but
663 everything gets mixed in pigeon-holes: I never know whether a paper is
664 in A or Z."
665
666 "I wish you would let me sort your papers for you, uncle," said
667 Dorothea. "I would letter them all, and then make a list of subjects
668 under each letter."
669
670 Mr. Casaubon gravely smiled approval, and said to Mr. Brooke, "You have
671 an excellent secretary at hand, you perceive."
672
673 "No, no," said Mr. Brooke, shaking his head; "I cannot let young ladies
674 meddle with my documents. Young ladies are too flighty."
675
676 Dorothea felt hurt. Mr. Casaubon would think that her uncle had some
677 special reason for delivering this opinion, whereas the remark lay in
678 his mind as lightly as the broken wing of an insect among all the other
679 fragments there, and a chance current had sent it alighting on _her_.
680
681 When the two girls were in the drawing-room alone, Celia said--
682
683 "How very ugly Mr. Casaubon is!"
684
685 "Celia! He is one of the most distinguished-looking men I ever saw.
686 He is remarkably like the portrait of Locke. He has the same deep
687 eye-sockets."
688
689 "Had Locke those two white moles with hairs on them?"
690
691 "Oh, I dare say! when people of a certain sort looked at him," said
692 Dorothea, walking away a little.
693
694 "Mr. Casaubon is so sallow."
695
696 "All the better. I suppose you admire a man with the complexion of a
697 cochon de lait."
698
699 "Dodo!" exclaimed Celia, looking after her in surprise. "I never heard
700 you make such a comparison before."
701
702 "Why should I make it before the occasion came? It is a good
703 comparison: the match is perfect."
704
705 Miss Brooke was clearly forgetting herself, and Celia thought so.
706
707 "I wonder you show temper, Dorothea."
708
709 "It is so painful in you, Celia, that you will look at human beings as
710 if they were merely animals with a toilet, and never see the great soul
711 in a man's face."
712
713 "Has Mr. Casaubon a great soul?" Celia was not without a touch of naive
714 malice.
715
716 "Yes, I believe he has," said Dorothea, with the full voice of
717 decision. "Everything I see in him corresponds to his pamphlet on
718 Biblical Cosmology."
719
720 "He talks very little," said Celia
721
722 "There is no one for him to talk to."
723
724 Celia thought privately, "Dorothea quite despises Sir James Chettam; I
725 believe she would not accept him." Celia felt that this was a pity.
726 She had never been deceived as to the object of the baronet's interest.
727 Sometimes, indeed, she had reflected that Dodo would perhaps not make a
728 husband happy who had not her way of looking at things; and stifled in
729 the depths of her heart was the feeling that her sister was too
730 religious for family comfort. Notions and scruples were like spilt
731 needles, making one afraid of treading, or sitting down, or even eating.
732
733 When Miss Brooke was at the tea-table, Sir James came to sit down by
734 her, not having felt her mode of answering him at all offensive. Why
735 should he? He thought it probable that Miss Brooke liked him, and
736 manners must be very marked indeed before they cease to be interpreted
737 by preconceptions either confident or distrustful. She was thoroughly
738 charming to him, but of course he theorized a little about his
739 attachment. He was made of excellent human dough, and had the rare
740 merit of knowing that his talents, even if let loose, would not set the
741 smallest stream in the county on fire: hence he liked the prospect of a
742 wife to whom he could say, "What shall we do?" about this or that; who
743 could help her husband out with reasons, and would also have the
744 property qualification for doing so. As to the excessive religiousness
745 alleged against Miss Brooke, he had a very indefinite notion of what it
746 consisted in, and thought that it would die out with marriage. In
747 short, he felt himself to be in love in the right place, and was ready
748 to endure a great deal of predominance, which, after all, a man could
749 always put down when he liked. Sir James had no idea that he should
750 ever like to put down the predominance of this handsome girl, in whose
751 cleverness he delighted. Why not? A man's mind--what there is of
752 it--has always the advantage of being masculine,--as the smallest
753 birch-tree is of a higher kind than the most soaring palm,--and even
754 his ignorance is of a sounder quality. Sir James might not have
755 originated this estimate; but a kind Providence furnishes the limpest
756 personality with a little gum or starch in the form of tradition.
757
758 "Let me hope that you will rescind that resolution about the horse,
759 Miss Brooke," said the persevering admirer. "I assure you, riding is
760 the most healthy of exercises."
761
762 "I am aware of it," said Dorothea, coldly. "I think it would do Celia
763 good--if she would take to it."
764
765 "But you are such a perfect horsewoman."
766
767 "Excuse me; I have had very little practice, and I should be easily
768 thrown."
769
770 "Then that is a reason for more practice. Every lady ought to be a
771 perfect horsewoman, that she may accompany her husband."
772
773 "You see how widely we differ, Sir James. I have made up my mind that
774 I ought not to be a perfect horsewoman, and so I should never
775 correspond to your pattern of a lady." Dorothea looked straight before
776 her, and spoke with cold brusquerie, very much with the air of a
777 handsome boy, in amusing contrast with the solicitous amiability of her
778 admirer.
779
780 "I should like to know your reasons for this cruel resolution. It is
781 not possible that you should think horsemanship wrong."
782
783 "It is quite possible that I should think it wrong for me."
784
785 "Oh, why?" said Sir James, in a tender tone of remonstrance.
786
787 Mr. Casaubon had come up to the table, teacup in hand, and was
788 listening.
789
790 "We must not inquire too curiously into motives," he interposed, in his
791 measured way. "Miss Brooke knows that they are apt to become feeble in
792 the utterance: the aroma is mixed with the grosser air. We must keep
793 the germinating grain away from the light."
794
795 Dorothea colored with pleasure, and looked up gratefully to the
796 speaker. Here was a man who could understand the higher inward life,
797 and with whom there could be some spiritual communion; nay, who could
798 illuminate principle with the widest knowledge a man whose learning
799 almost amounted to a proof of whatever he believed!
800
801 Dorothea's inferences may seem large; but really life could never have
802 gone on at any period but for this liberal allowance of conclusions,
803 which has facilitated marriage under the difficulties of civilization.
804 Has any one ever pinched into its pilulous smallness the cobweb of
805 pre-matrimonial acquaintanceship?
806
807 "Certainly," said good Sir James. "Miss Brooke shall not be urged to
808 tell reasons she would rather be silent upon. I am sure her reasons
809 would do her honor."
810
811 He was not in the least jealous of the interest with which Dorothea had
812 looked up at Mr. Casaubon: it never occurred to him that a girl to whom
813 he was meditating an offer of marriage could care for a dried bookworm
814 towards fifty, except, indeed, in a religious sort of way, as for a
815 clergyman of some distinction.
816
817 However, since Miss Brooke had become engaged in a conversation with
818 Mr. Casaubon about the Vaudois clergy, Sir James betook himself to
819 Celia, and talked to her about her sister; spoke of a house in town,
820 and asked whether Miss Brooke disliked London. Away from her sister,
821 Celia talked quite easily, and Sir James said to himself that the
822 second Miss Brooke was certainly very agreeable as well as pretty,
823 though not, as some people pretended, more clever and sensible than the
824 elder sister. He felt that he had chosen the one who was in all
825 respects the superior; and a man naturally likes to look forward to
826 having the best. He would be the very Mawworm of bachelors who
827 pretended not to expect it.
828
829
830
831 CHAPTER III.
832
833 "Say, goddess, what ensued, when Raphael,
834 The affable archangel . . .
835 Eve
836 The story heard attentive, and was filled
837 With admiration, and deep muse, to hear
838 Of things so high and strange."
839 --Paradise Lost, B. vii.
840
841
842 If it had really occurred to Mr. Casaubon to think of Miss Brooke as a
843 suitable wife for him, the reasons that might induce her to accept him
844 were already planted in her mind, and by the evening of the next day
845 the reasons had budded and bloomed. For they had had a long
846 conversation in the morning, while Celia, who did not like the company
847 of Mr. Casaubon's moles and sallowness, had escaped to the vicarage to
848 play with the curate's ill-shod but merry children.
849
850 Dorothea by this time had looked deep into the ungauged reservoir of
851 Mr. Casaubon's mind, seeing reflected there in vague labyrinthine
852 extension every quality she herself brought; had opened much of her own
853 experience to him, and had understood from him the scope of his great
854 work, also of attractively labyrinthine extent. For he had been as
855 instructive as Milton's "affable archangel;" and with something of the
856 archangelic manner he told her how he had undertaken to show (what
857 indeed had been attempted before, but not with that thoroughness,
858 justice of comparison, and effectiveness of arrangement at which Mr.
859 Casaubon aimed) that all the mythical systems or erratic mythical
860 fragments in the world were corruptions of a tradition originally
861 revealed. Having once mastered the true position and taken a firm
862 footing there, the vast field of mythical constructions became
863 intelligible, nay, luminous with the reflected light of
864 correspondences. But to gather in this great harvest of truth was no
865 light or speedy work. His notes already made a formidable range of
866 volumes, but the crowning task would be to condense these voluminous
867 still-accumulating results and bring them, like the earlier vintage of
868 Hippocratic books, to fit a little shelf. In explaining this to
869 Dorothea, Mr. Casaubon expressed himself nearly as he would have done
870 to a fellow-student, for he had not two styles of talking at command:
871 it is true that when he used a Greek or Latin phrase he always gave the
872 English with scrupulous care, but he would probably have done this in
873 any case. A learned provincial clergyman is accustomed to think of his
874 acquaintances as of "lords, knyghtes, and other noble and worthi men,
875 that conne Latyn but lytille."
876
877 Dorothea was altogether captivated by the wide embrace of this
878 conception. Here was something beyond the shallows of ladies' school
879 literature: here was a living Bossuet, whose work would reconcile
880 complete knowledge with devoted piety; here was a modern Augustine who
881 united the glories of doctor and saint.
882
883 The sanctity seemed no less clearly marked than the learning, for when
884 Dorothea was impelled to open her mind on certain themes which she
885 could speak of to no one whom she had before seen at Tipton, especially
886 on the secondary importance of ecclesiastical forms and articles of
887 belief compared with that spiritual religion, that submergence of self
888 in communion with Divine perfection which seemed to her to be expressed
889 in the best Christian books of widely distant ages, she found in Mr.
890 Casaubon a listener who understood her at once, who could assure her of
891 his own agreement with that view when duly tempered with wise
892 conformity, and could mention historical examples before unknown to her.
893
894 "He thinks with me," said Dorothea to herself, "or rather, he thinks a
895 whole world of which my thought is but a poor twopenny mirror. And his
896 feelings too, his whole experience--what a lake compared with my little
897 pool!"
898
899 Miss Brooke argued from words and dispositions not less unhesitatingly
900 than other young ladies of her age. Signs are small measurable things,
901 but interpretations are illimitable, and in girls of sweet, ardent
902 nature, every sign is apt to conjure up wonder, hope, belief, vast as a
903 sky, and colored by a diffused thimbleful of matter in the shape of
904 knowledge. They are not always too grossly deceived; for Sinbad
905 himself may have fallen by good-luck on a true description, and wrong
906 reasoning sometimes lands poor mortals in right conclusions: starting a
907 long way off the true point, and proceeding by loops and zigzags, we
908 now and then arrive just where we ought to be. Because Miss Brooke was
909 hasty in her trust, it is not therefore clear that Mr. Casaubon was
910 unworthy of it.
911
912 He stayed a little longer than he had intended, on a slight pressure of
913 invitation from Mr. Brooke, who offered no bait except his own
914 documents on machine-breaking and rick-burning. Mr. Casaubon was called
915 into the library to look at these in a heap, while his host picked up
916 first one and then the other to read aloud from in a skipping and
917 uncertain way, passing from one unfinished passage to another with a
918 "Yes, now, but here!" and finally pushing them all aside to open the
919 journal of his youthful Continental travels.
920
921 "Look here--here is all about Greece. Rhamnus, the ruins of
922 Rhamnus--you are a great Grecian, now. I don't know whether you have
923 given much study to the topography. I spent no end of time in making
924 out these things--Helicon, now. Here, now!--'We started the next
925 morning for Parnassus, the double-peaked Parnassus.' All this volume is
926 about Greece, you know," Mr. Brooke wound up, rubbing his thumb
927 transversely along the edges of the leaves as he held the book forward.
928
929 Mr. Casaubon made a dignified though somewhat sad audience; bowed in
930 the right place, and avoided looking at anything documentary as far as
931 possible, without showing disregard or impatience; mindful that this
932 desultoriness was associated with the institutions of the country, and
933 that the man who took him on this severe mental scamper was not only an
934 amiable host, but a landholder and custos rotulorum. Was his endurance
935 aided also by the reflection that Mr. Brooke was the uncle of Dorothea?
936
937 Certainly he seemed more and more bent on making her talk to him, on
938 drawing her out, as Celia remarked to herself; and in looking at her
939 his face was often lit up by a smile like pale wintry sunshine. Before
940 he left the next morning, while taking a pleasant walk with Miss Brooke
941 along the gravelled terrace, he had mentioned to her that he felt the
942 disadvantage of loneliness, the need of that cheerful companionship
943 with which the presence of youth can lighten or vary the serious toils
944 of maturity. And he delivered this statement with as much careful
945 precision as if he had been a diplomatic envoy whose words would be
946 attended with results. Indeed, Mr. Casaubon was not used to expect
947 that he should have to repeat or revise his communications of a
948 practical or personal kind. The inclinations which he had deliberately
949 stated on the 2d of October he would think it enough to refer to by the
950 mention of that date; judging by the standard of his own memory, which
951 was a volume where a vide supra could serve instead of repetitions, and
952 not the ordinary long-used blotting-book which only tells of forgotten
953 writing. But in this case Mr. Casaubon's confidence was not likely to
954 be falsified, for Dorothea heard and retained what he said with the
955 eager interest of a fresh young nature to which every variety in
956 experience is an epoch.
957
958 It was three o'clock in the beautiful breezy autumn day when Mr.
959 Casaubon drove off to his Rectory at Lowick, only five miles from
960 Tipton; and Dorothea, who had on her bonnet and shawl, hurried along
961 the shrubbery and across the park that she might wander through the
962 bordering wood with no other visible companionship than that of Monk,
963 the Great St. Bernard dog, who always took care of the young ladies in
964 their walks. There had risen before her the girl's vision of a
965 possible future for herself to which she looked forward with trembling
966 hope, and she wanted to wander on in that visionary future without
967 interruption. She walked briskly in the brisk air, the color rose in
968 her cheeks, and her straw bonnet (which our contemporaries might look
969 at with conjectural curiosity as at an obsolete form of basket) fell a
970 little backward. She would perhaps be hardly characterized enough if
971 it were omitted that she wore her brown hair flatly braided and coiled
972 behind so as to expose the outline of her head in a daring manner at a
973 time when public feeling required the meagreness of nature to be
974 dissimulated by tall barricades of frizzed curls and bows, never
975 surpassed by any great race except the Feejeean. This was a trait of
976 Miss Brooke's asceticism. But there was nothing of an ascetic's
977 expression in her bright full eyes, as she looked before her, not
978 consciously seeing, but absorbing into the intensity of her mood, the
979 solemn glory of the afternoon with its long swathes of light between
980 the far-off rows of limes, whose shadows touched each other.
981
982 All people, young or old (that is, all people in those ante-reform
983 times), would have thought her an interesting object if they had
984 referred the glow in her eyes and cheeks to the newly awakened ordinary
985 images of young love: the illusions of Chloe about Strephon have been
986 sufficiently consecrated in poetry, as the pathetic loveliness of all
987 spontaneous trust ought to be. Miss Pippin adoring young Pumpkin, and
988 dreaming along endless vistas of unwearying companionship, was a little
989 drama which never tired our fathers and mothers, and had been put into
990 all costumes. Let but Pumpkin have a figure which would sustain the
991 disadvantages of the shortwaisted swallow-tail, and everybody felt it
992 not only natural but necessary to the perfection of womanhood, that a
993 sweet girl should be at once convinced of his virtue, his exceptional
994 ability, and above all, his perfect sincerity. But perhaps no persons
995 then living--certainly none in the neighborhood of Tipton--would have
996 had a sympathetic understanding for the dreams of a girl whose notions
997 about marriage took their color entirely from an exalted enthusiasm
998 about the ends of life, an enthusiasm which was lit chiefly by its own
999 fire, and included neither the niceties of the trousseau, the pattern
1000 of plate, nor even the honors and sweet joys of the blooming matron.
1001
1002 It had now entered Dorothea's mind that Mr. Casaubon might wish to make
1003 her his wife, and the idea that he would do so touched her with a sort
1004 of reverential gratitude. How good of him--nay, it would be almost as
1005 if a winged messenger had suddenly stood beside her path and held out
1006 his hand towards her! For a long while she had been oppressed by the
1007 indefiniteness which hung in her mind, like a thick summer haze, over
1008 all her desire to make her life greatly effective. What could she do,
1009 what ought she to do?--she, hardly more than a budding woman, but yet
1010 with an active conscience and a great mental need, not to be satisfied
1011 by a girlish instruction comparable to the nibblings and judgments of a
1012 discursive mouse. With some endowment of stupidity and conceit, she
1013 might have thought that a Christian young lady of fortune should find
1014 her ideal of life in village charities, patronage of the humbler
1015 clergy, the perusal of "Female Scripture Characters," unfolding the
1016 private experience of Sara under the Old Dispensation, and Dorcas under
1017 the New, and the care of her soul over her embroidery in her own
1018 boudoir--with a background of prospective marriage to a man who, if
1019 less strict than herself, as being involved in affairs religiously
1020 inexplicable, might be prayed for and seasonably exhorted. From such
1021 contentment poor Dorothea was shut out. The intensity of her religious
1022 disposition, the coercion it exercised over her life, was but one
1023 aspect of a nature altogether ardent, theoretic, and intellectually
1024 consequent: and with such a nature struggling in the bands of a narrow
1025 teaching, hemmed in by a social life which seemed nothing but a
1026 labyrinth of petty courses, a walled-in maze of small paths that led no
1027 whither, the outcome was sure to strike others as at once exaggeration
1028 and inconsistency. The thing which seemed to her best, she wanted to
1029 justify by the completest knowledge; and not to live in a pretended
1030 admission of rules which were never acted on. Into this soul-hunger as
1031 yet all her youthful passion was poured; the union which attracted her
1032 was one that would deliver her from her girlish subjection to her own
1033 ignorance, and give her the freedom of voluntary submission to a guide
1034 who would take her along the grandest path.
1035
1036 "I should learn everything then," she said to herself, still walking
1037 quickly along the bridle road through the wood. "It would be my duty
1038 to study that I might help him the better in his great works. There
1039 would be nothing trivial about our lives. Every-day things with us
1040 would mean the greatest things. It would be like marrying Pascal. I
1041 should learn to see the truth by the same light as great men have seen
1042 it by. And then I should know what to do, when I got older: I should
1043 see how it was possible to lead a grand life here--now--in England. I
1044 don't feel sure about doing good in any way now: everything seems like
1045 going on a mission to a people whose language I don't know;--unless it
1046 were building good cottages--there can be no doubt about that. Oh, I
1047 hope I should be able to get the people well housed in Lowick! I will
1048 draw plenty of plans while I have time."
1049
1050 Dorothea checked herself suddenly with self-rebuke for the presumptuous
1051 way in which she was reckoning on uncertain events, but she was spared
1052 any inward effort to change the direction of her thoughts by the
1053 appearance of a cantering horseman round a turning of the road. The
1054 well-groomed chestnut horse and two beautiful setters could leave no
1055 doubt that the rider was Sir James Chettam. He discerned Dorothea,
1056 jumped off his horse at once, and, having delivered it to his groom,
1057 advanced towards her with something white on his arm, at which the two
1058 setters were barking in an excited manner.
1059
1060 "How delightful to meet you, Miss Brooke," he said, raising his hat and
1061 showing his sleekly waving blond hair. "It has hastened the pleasure I
1062 was looking forward to."
1063
1064 Miss Brooke was annoyed at the interruption. This amiable baronet,
1065 really a suitable husband for Celia, exaggerated the necessity of
1066 making himself agreeable to the elder sister. Even a prospective
1067 brother-in-law may be an oppression if he will always be presupposing
1068 too good an understanding with you, and agreeing with you even when you
1069 contradict him. The thought that he had made the mistake of paying his
1070 addresses to herself could not take shape: all her mental activity was
1071 used up in persuasions of another kind. But he was positively
1072 obtrusive at this moment, and his dimpled hands were quite
1073 disagreeable. Her roused temper made her color deeply, as she returned
1074 his greeting with some haughtiness.
1075
1076 Sir James interpreted the heightened color in the way most gratifying
1077 to himself, and thought he never saw Miss Brooke looking so handsome.
1078
1079 "I have brought a little petitioner," he said, "or rather, I have
1080 brought him to see if he will be approved before his petition is
1081 offered." He showed the white object under his arm, which was a tiny
1082 Maltese puppy, one of nature's most naive toys.
1083
1084 "It is painful to me to see these creatures that are bred merely as
1085 pets," said Dorothea, whose opinion was forming itself that very moment
1086 (as opinions will) under the heat of irritation.
1087
1088 "Oh, why?" said Sir James, as they walked forward.
1089
1090 "I believe all the petting that is given them does not make them happy.
1091 They are too helpless: their lives are too frail. A weasel or a mouse
1092 that gets its own living is more interesting. I like to think that the
1093 animals about us have souls something like our own, and either carry on
1094 their own little affairs or can be companions to us, like Monk here.
1095 Those creatures are parasitic."
1096
1097 "I am so glad I know that you do not like them," said good Sir James.
1098 "I should never keep them for myself, but ladies usually are fond of
1099 these Maltese dogs. Here, John, take this dog, will you?"
1100
1101 The objectionable puppy, whose nose and eyes were equally black and
1102 expressive, was thus got rid of, since Miss Brooke decided that it had
1103 better not have been born. But she felt it necessary to explain.
1104
1105 "You must not judge of Celia's feeling from mine. I think she likes
1106 these small pets. She had a tiny terrier once, which she was very fond
1107 of. It made me unhappy, because I was afraid of treading on it. I am
1108 rather short-sighted."
1109
1110 "You have your own opinion about everything, Miss Brooke, and it is
1111 always a good opinion."
1112
1113 What answer was possible to such stupid complimenting?
1114
1115 "Do you know, I envy you that," Sir James said, as they continued
1116 walking at the rather brisk pace set by Dorothea.
1117
1118 "I don't quite understand what you mean."
1119
1120 "Your power of forming an opinion. I can form an opinion of persons.
1121 I know when I like people. But about other matters, do you know, I
1122 have often a difficulty in deciding. One hears very sensible things
1123 said on opposite sides."
1124
1125 "Or that seem sensible. Perhaps we don't always discriminate between
1126 sense and nonsense."
1127
1128 Dorothea felt that she was rather rude.
1129
1130 "Exactly," said Sir James. "But you seem to have the power of
1131 discrimination."
1132
1133 "On the contrary, I am often unable to decide. But that is from
1134 ignorance. The right conclusion is there all the same, though I am
1135 unable to see it."
1136
1137 "I think there are few who would see it more readily. Do you know,
1138 Lovegood was telling me yesterday that you had the best notion in the
1139 world of a plan for cottages--quite wonderful for a young lady, he
1140 thought. You had a real _genus_, to use his expression. He said you
1141 wanted Mr. Brooke to build a new set of cottages, but he seemed to
1142 think it hardly probable that your uncle would consent. Do you know,
1143 that is one of the things I wish to do--I mean, on my own estate. I
1144 should be so glad to carry out that plan of yours, if you would let me
1145 see it. Of course, it is sinking money; that is why people object to
1146 it. Laborers can never pay rent to make it answer. But, after all, it
1147 is worth doing."
1148
1149 "Worth doing! yes, indeed," said Dorothea, energetically, forgetting
1150 her previous small vexations. "I think we deserve to be beaten out of
1151 our beautiful houses with a scourge of small cords--all of us who let
1152 tenants live in such sties as we see round us. Life in cottages might
1153 be happier than ours, if they were real houses fit for human beings
1154 from whom we expect duties and affections."
1155
1156 "Will you show me your plan?"
1157
1158 "Yes, certainly. I dare say it is very faulty. But I have been
1159 examining all the plans for cottages in Loudon's book, and picked out
1160 what seem the best things. Oh what a happiness it would be to set the
1161 pattern about here! I think instead of Lazarus at the gate, we should
1162 put the pigsty cottages outside the park-gate."
1163
1164 Dorothea was in the best temper now. Sir James, as brother in-law,
1165 building model cottages on his estate, and then, perhaps, others being
1166 built at Lowick, and more and more elsewhere in imitation--it would be
1167 as if the spirit of Oberlin had passed over the parishes to make the
1168 life of poverty beautiful!
1169
1170 Sir James saw all the plans, and took one away to consult upon with
1171 Lovegood. He also took away a complacent sense that he was making
1172 great progress in Miss Brooke's good opinion. The Maltese puppy was
1173 not offered to Celia; an omission which Dorothea afterwards thought of
1174 with surprise; but she blamed herself for it. She had been engrossing
1175 Sir James. After all, it was a relief that there was no puppy to tread
1176 upon.
1177
1178 Celia was present while the plans were being examined, and observed Sir
1179 James's illusion. "He thinks that Dodo cares about him, and she only
1180 cares about her plans. Yet I am not certain that she would refuse him
1181 if she thought he would let her manage everything and carry out all her
1182 notions. And how very uncomfortable Sir James would be! I cannot bear
1183 notions."
1184
1185 It was Celia's private luxury to indulge in this dislike. She dared
1186 not confess it to her sister in any direct statement, for that would be
1187 laying herself open to a demonstration that she was somehow or other at
1188 war with all goodness. But on safe opportunities, she had an indirect
1189 mode of making her negative wisdom tell upon Dorothea, and calling her
1190 down from her rhapsodic mood by reminding her that people were staring,
1191 not listening. Celia was not impulsive: what she had to say could
1192 wait, and came from her always with the same quiet staccato evenness.
1193 When people talked with energy and emphasis she watched their faces and
1194 features merely. She never could understand how well-bred persons
1195 consented to sing and open their mouths in the ridiculous manner
1196 requisite for that vocal exercise.
1197
1198 It was not many days before Mr. Casaubon paid a morning visit, on which
1199 he was invited again for the following week to dine and stay the night.
1200 Thus Dorothea had three more conversations with him, and was convinced
1201 that her first impressions had been just. He was all she had at first
1202 imagined him to be: almost everything he had said seemed like a
1203 specimen from a mine, or the inscription on the door of a museum which
1204 might open on the treasures of past ages; and this trust in his mental
1205 wealth was all the deeper and more effective on her inclination because
1206 it was now obvious that his visits were made for her sake. This
1207 accomplished man condescended to think of a young girl, and take the
1208 pains to talk to her, not with absurd compliment, but with an appeal to
1209 her understanding, and sometimes with instructive correction. What
1210 delightful companionship! Mr. Casaubon seemed even unconscious that
1211 trivialities existed, and never handed round that small-talk of heavy
1212 men which is as acceptable as stale bride-cake brought forth with an
1213 odor of cupboard. He talked of what he was interested in, or else he
1214 was silent and bowed with sad civility. To Dorothea this was adorable
1215 genuineness, and religious abstinence from that artificiality which
1216 uses up the soul in the efforts of pretence. For she looked as
1217 reverently at Mr. Casaubon's religious elevation above herself as she
1218 did at his intellect and learning. He assented to her expressions of
1219 devout feeling, and usually with an appropriate quotation; he allowed
1220 himself to say that he had gone through some spiritual conflicts in his
1221 youth; in short, Dorothea saw that here she might reckon on
1222 understanding, sympathy, and guidance. On one--only one--of her
1223 favorite themes she was disappointed. Mr. Casaubon apparently did not
1224 care about building cottages, and diverted the talk to the extremely
1225 narrow accommodation which was to be had in the dwellings of the
1226 ancient Egyptians, as if to check a too high standard. After he was
1227 gone, Dorothea dwelt with some agitation on this indifference of his;
1228 and her mind was much exercised with arguments drawn from the varying
1229 conditions of climate which modify human needs, and from the admitted
1230 wickedness of pagan despots. Should she not urge these arguments on
1231 Mr. Casaubon when he came again? But further reflection told her that
1232 she was presumptuous in demanding his attention to such a subject; he
1233 would not disapprove of her occupying herself with it in leisure
1234 moments, as other women expected to occupy themselves with their dress
1235 and embroidery--would not forbid it when--Dorothea felt rather ashamed
1236 as she detected herself in these speculations. But her uncle had been
1237 invited to go to Lowick to stay a couple of days: was it reasonable to
1238 suppose that Mr. Casaubon delighted in Mr. Brooke's society for its own
1239 sake, either with or without documents?
1240
1241 Meanwhile that little disappointment made her delight the more in Sir
1242 James Chettam's readiness to set on foot the desired improvements. He
1243 came much oftener than Mr. Casaubon, and Dorothea ceased to find him
1244 disagreeable since he showed himself so entirely in earnest; for he had
1245 already entered with much practical ability into Lovegood's estimates,
1246 and was charmingly docile. She proposed to build a couple of cottages,
1247 and transfer two families from their old cabins, which could then be
1248 pulled down, so that new ones could be built on the old sites. Sir
1249 James said "Exactly," and she bore the word remarkably well.
1250
1251 Certainly these men who had so few spontaneous ideas might be very
1252 useful members of society under good feminine direction, if they were
1253 fortunate in choosing their sisters-in-law! It is difficult to say
1254 whether there was or was not a little wilfulness in her continuing
1255 blind to the possibility that another sort of choice was in question in
1256 relation to her. But her life was just now full of hope and action:
1257 she was not only thinking of her plans, but getting down learned books
1258 from the library and reading many things hastily (that she might be a
1259 little less ignorant in talking to Mr. Casaubon), all the while being
1260 visited with conscientious questionings whether she were not exalting
1261 these poor doings above measure and contemplating them with that
1262 self-satisfaction which was the last doom of ignorance and folly.
1263
1264
1265
1266 CHAPTER IV.
1267
1268 1st Gent. Our deeds are fetters that we forge ourselves.
1269 2d Gent. Ay, truly: but I think it is the world
1270 That brings the iron.
1271
1272
1273 "Sir James seems determined to do everything you wish," said Celia, as
1274 they were driving home from an inspection of the new building-site.
1275
1276 "He is a good creature, and more sensible than any one would imagine,"
1277 said Dorothea, inconsiderately.
1278
1279 "You mean that he appears silly."
1280
1281 "No, no," said Dorothea, recollecting herself, and laying her hand on
1282 her sister's a moment, "but he does not talk equally well on all
1283 subjects."
1284
1285 "I should think none but disagreeable people do," said Celia, in her
1286 usual purring way. "They must be very dreadful to live with. Only
1287 think! at breakfast, and always."
1288
1289 Dorothea laughed. "O Kitty, you are a wonderful creature!" She pinched
1290 Celia's chin, being in the mood now to think her very winning and
1291 lovely--fit hereafter to be an eternal cherub, and if it were not
1292 doctrinally wrong to say so, hardly more in need of salvation than a
1293 squirrel. "Of course people need not be always talking well. Only one
1294 tells the quality of their minds when they try to talk well."
1295
1296 "You mean that Sir James tries and fails."
1297
1298 "I was speaking generally. Why do you catechise me about Sir James?
1299 It is not the object of his life to please me."
1300
1301 "Now, Dodo, can you really believe that?"
1302
1303 "Certainly. He thinks of me as a future sister--that is all." Dorothea
1304 had never hinted this before, waiting, from a certain shyness on such
1305 subjects which was mutual between the sisters, until it should be
1306 introduced by some decisive event. Celia blushed, but said at once--
1307
1308 "Pray do not make that mistake any longer, Dodo. When Tantripp was
1309 brushing my hair the other day, she said that Sir James's man knew from
1310 Mrs. Cadwallader's maid that Sir James was to marry the eldest Miss
1311 Brooke."
1312
1313 "How can you let Tantripp talk such gossip to you, Celia?" said
1314 Dorothea, indignantly, not the less angry because details asleep in her
1315 memory were now awakened to confirm the unwelcome revelation. "You
1316 must have asked her questions. It is degrading."
1317
1318 "I see no harm at all in Tantripp's talking to me. It is better to
1319 hear what people say. You see what mistakes you make by taking up
1320 notions. I am quite sure that Sir James means to make you an offer;
1321 and he believes that you will accept him, especially since you have
1322 been so pleased with him about the plans. And uncle too--I know he
1323 expects it. Every one can see that Sir James is very much in love with
1324 you."
1325
1326 The revulsion was so strong and painful in Dorothea's mind that the
1327 tears welled up and flowed abundantly. All her dear plans were
1328 embittered, and she thought with disgust of Sir James's conceiving that
1329 she recognized him as her lover. There was vexation too on account of
1330 Celia.
1331
1332 "How could he expect it?" she burst forth in her most impetuous manner.
1333 "I have never agreed with him about anything but the cottages: I was
1334 barely polite to him before."
1335
1336 "But you have been so pleased with him since then; he has begun to feel
1337 quite sure that you are fond of him."
1338
1339 "Fond of him, Celia! How can you choose such odious expressions?" said
1340 Dorothea, passionately.
1341
1342 "Dear me, Dorothea, I suppose it would be right for you to be fond of a
1343 man whom you accepted for a husband."
1344
1345 "It is offensive to me to say that Sir James could think I was fond of
1346 him. Besides, it is not the right word for the feeling I must have
1347 towards the man I would accept as a husband."
1348
1349 "Well, I am sorry for Sir James. I thought it right to tell you,
1350 because you went on as you always do, never looking just where you are,
1351 and treading in the wrong place. You always see what nobody else sees;
1352 it is impossible to satisfy you; yet you never see what is quite plain.
1353 That's your way, Dodo." Something certainly gave Celia unusual courage;
1354 and she was not sparing the sister of whom she was occasionally in awe.
1355 Who can tell what just criticisms Murr the Cat may be passing on us
1356 beings of wider speculation?
1357
1358 "It is very painful," said Dorothea, feeling scourged. "I can have no
1359 more to do with the cottages. I must be uncivil to him. I must tell
1360 him I will have nothing to do with them. It is very painful." Her eyes
1361 filled again with tears.
1362
1363 "Wait a little. Think about it. You know he is going away for a day
1364 or two to see his sister. There will be nobody besides Lovegood."
1365 Celia could not help relenting. "Poor Dodo," she went on, in an
1366 amiable staccato. "It is very hard: it is your favorite _fad_ to draw
1367 plans."
1368
1369 "_Fad_ to draw plans! Do you think I only care about my
1370 fellow-creatures' houses in that childish way? I may well make
1371 mistakes. How can one ever do anything nobly Christian, living among
1372 people with such petty thoughts?"
1373
1374 No more was said; Dorothea was too much jarred to recover her temper
1375 and behave so as to show that she admitted any error in herself. She
1376 was disposed rather to accuse the intolerable narrowness and the
1377 purblind conscience of the society around her: and Celia was no longer
1378 the eternal cherub, but a thorn in her spirit, a pink-and-white
1379 nullifidian, worse than any discouraging presence in the "Pilgrim's
1380 Progress." The _fad_ of drawing plans! What was life worth--what great
1381 faith was possible when the whole effect of one's actions could be
1382 withered up into such parched rubbish as that? When she got out of the
1383 carriage, her cheeks were pale and her eyelids red. She was an image
1384 of sorrow, and her uncle who met her in the hall would have been
1385 alarmed, if Celia had not been close to her looking so pretty and
1386 composed, that he at once concluded Dorothea's tears to have their
1387 origin in her excessive religiousness. He had returned, during their
1388 absence, from a journey to the county town, about a petition for the
1389 pardon of some criminal.
1390
1391 "Well, my dears," he said, kindly, as they went up to kiss him, "I hope
1392 nothing disagreeable has happened while I have been away."
1393
1394 "No, uncle," said Celia, "we have been to Freshitt to look at the
1395 cottages. We thought you would have been at home to lunch."
1396
1397 "I came by Lowick to lunch--you didn't know I came by Lowick. And I
1398 have brought a couple of pamphlets for you, Dorothea--in the library,
1399 you know; they lie on the table in the library."
1400
1401 It seemed as if an electric stream went through Dorothea, thrilling her
1402 from despair into expectation. They were pamphlets about the early
1403 Church. The oppression of Celia, Tantripp, and Sir James was shaken
1404 off, and she walked straight to the library. Celia went up-stairs. Mr.
1405 Brooke was detained by a message, but when he re-entered the library,
1406 he found Dorothea seated and already deep in one of the pamphlets which
1407 had some marginal manuscript of Mr. Casaubon's,--taking it in as
1408 eagerly as she might have taken in the scent of a fresh bouquet after a
1409 dry, hot, dreary walk.
1410
1411 She was getting away from Tipton and Freshitt, and her own sad
1412 liability to tread in the wrong places on her way to the New Jerusalem.
1413
1414 Mr. Brooke sat down in his arm-chair, stretched his legs towards the
1415 wood-fire, which had fallen into a wondrous mass of glowing dice
1416 between the dogs, and rubbed his hands gently, looking very mildly
1417 towards Dorothea, but with a neutral leisurely air, as if he had
1418 nothing particular to say. Dorothea closed her pamphlet, as soon as
1419 she was aware of her uncle's presence, and rose as if to go. Usually
1420 she would have been interested about her uncle's merciful errand on
1421 behalf of the criminal, but her late agitation had made her
1422 absent-minded.
1423
1424 "I came back by Lowick, you know," said Mr. Brooke, not as if with any
1425 intention to arrest her departure, but apparently from his usual
1426 tendency to say what he had said before. This fundamental principle of
1427 human speech was markedly exhibited in Mr. Brooke. "I lunched there
1428 and saw Casaubon's library, and that kind of thing. There's a sharp
1429 air, driving. Won't you sit down, my dear? You look cold."
1430
1431 Dorothea felt quite inclined to accept the invitation. Some times,
1432 when her uncle's easy way of taking things did not happen to be
1433 exasperating, it was rather soothing. She threw off her mantle and
1434 bonnet, and sat down opposite to him, enjoying the glow, but lifting up
1435 her beautiful hands for a screen. They were not thin hands, or small
1436 hands; but powerful, feminine, maternal hands. She seemed to be
1437 holding them up in propitiation for her passionate desire to know and
1438 to think, which in the unfriendly mediums of Tipton and Freshitt had
1439 issued in crying and red eyelids.
1440
1441 She bethought herself now of the condemned criminal. "What news have
1442 you brought about the sheep-stealer, uncle?"
1443
1444 "What, poor Bunch?--well, it seems we can't get him off--he is to be
1445 hanged."
1446
1447 Dorothea's brow took an expression of reprobation and pity.
1448
1449 "Hanged, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with a quiet nod. "Poor Romilly!
1450 he would have helped us. I knew Romilly. Casaubon didn't know
1451 Romilly. He is a little buried in books, you know, Casaubon is."
1452
1453 "When a man has great studies and is writing a great work, he must of
1454 course give up seeing much of the world. How can he go about making
1455 acquaintances?"
1456
1457 "That's true. But a man mopes, you know. I have always been a
1458 bachelor too, but I have that sort of disposition that I never moped;
1459 it was my way to go about everywhere and take in everything. I never
1460 moped: but I can see that Casaubon does, you know. He wants a
1461 companion--a companion, you know."
1462
1463 "It would be a great honor to any one to be his companion," said
1464 Dorothea, energetically.
1465
1466 "You like him, eh?" said Mr. Brooke, without showing any surprise, or
1467 other emotion. "Well, now, I've known Casaubon ten years, ever since
1468 he came to Lowick. But I never got anything out of him--any ideas, you
1469 know. However, he is a tiptop man and may be a bishop--that kind of
1470 thing, you know, if Peel stays in. And he has a very high opinion of
1471 you, my dear."
1472
1473 Dorothea could not speak.
1474
1475 "The fact is, he has a very high opinion indeed of you. And he speaks
1476 uncommonly well--does Casaubon. He has deferred to me, you not being
1477 of age. In short, I have promised to speak to you, though I told him I
1478 thought there was not much chance. I was bound to tell him that. I
1479 said, my niece is very young, and that kind of thing. But I didn't
1480 think it necessary to go into everything. However, the long and the
1481 short of it is, that he has asked my permission to make you an offer of
1482 marriage--of marriage, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with his explanatory
1483 nod. "I thought it better to tell you, my dear."
1484
1485 No one could have detected any anxiety in Mr. Brooke's manner, but he
1486 did really wish to know something of his niece's mind, that, if there
1487 were any need for advice, he might give it in time. What feeling he,
1488 as a magistrate who had taken in so many ideas, could make room for,
1489 was unmixedly kind. Since Dorothea did not speak immediately, he
1490 repeated, "I thought it better to tell you, my dear."
1491
1492 "Thank you, uncle," said Dorothea, in a clear unwavering tone. "I am
1493 very grateful to Mr. Casaubon. If he makes me an offer, I shall accept
1494 him. I admire and honor him more than any man I ever saw."
1495
1496 Mr. Brooke paused a little, and then said in a lingering low tone, "Ah?
1497 . . . Well! He is a good match in some respects. But now, Chettam is
1498 a good match. And our land lies together. I shall never interfere
1499 against your wishes, my dear. People should have their own way in
1500 marriage, and that sort of thing--up to a certain point, you know. I
1501 have always said that, up to a certain point. I wish you to marry
1502 well; and I have good reason to believe that Chettam wishes to marry
1503 you. I mention it, you know."
1504
1505 "It is impossible that I should ever marry Sir James Chettam," said
1506 Dorothea. "If he thinks of marrying me, he has made a great mistake."
1507
1508 "That is it, you see. One never knows. I should have thought Chettam
1509 was just the sort of man a woman would like, now."
1510
1511 "Pray do not mention him in that light again, uncle," said Dorothea,
1512 feeling some of her late irritation revive.
1513
1514 Mr. Brooke wondered, and felt that women were an inexhaustible subject
1515 of study, since even he at his age was not in a perfect state of
1516 scientific prediction about them. Here was a fellow like Chettam with
1517 no chance at all.
1518
1519 "Well, but Casaubon, now. There is no hurry--I mean for you. It's
1520 true, every year will tell upon him. He is over five-and-forty, you
1521 know. I should say a good seven-and-twenty years older than you. To
1522 be sure,--if you like learning and standing, and that sort of thing, we
1523 can't have everything. And his income is good--he has a handsome
1524 property independent of the Church--his income is good. Still he is
1525 not young, and I must not conceal from you, my dear, that I think his
1526 health is not over-strong. I know nothing else against him."
1527
1528 "I should not wish to have a husband very near my own age," said
1529 Dorothea, with grave decision. "I should wish to have a husband who
1530 was above me in judgment and in all knowledge."
1531
1532 Mr. Brooke repeated his subdued, "Ah?--I thought you had more of your
1533 own opinion than most girls. I thought you liked your own
1534 opinion--liked it, you know."
1535
1536 "I cannot imagine myself living without some opinions, but I should
1537 wish to have good reasons for them, and a wise man could help me to see
1538 which opinions had the best foundation, and would help me to live
1539 according to them."
1540
1541 "Very true. You couldn't put the thing better--couldn't put it better,
1542 beforehand, you know. But there are oddities in things," continued Mr.
1543 Brooke, whose conscience was really roused to do the best he could for
1544 his niece on this occasion. "Life isn't cast in a mould--not cut out
1545 by rule and line, and that sort of thing. I never married myself, and
1546 it will be the better for you and yours. The fact is, I never loved
1547 any one well enough to put myself into a noose for them. It _is_ a
1548 noose, you know. Temper, now. There is temper. And a husband likes
1549 to be master."
1550
1551 "I know that I must expect trials, uncle. Marriage is a state of
1552 higher duties. I never thought of it as mere personal ease," said poor
1553 Dorothea.
1554
1555 "Well, you are not fond of show, a great establishment, balls, dinners,
1556 that kind of thing. I can see that Casaubon's ways might suit you
1557 better than Chettam's. And you shall do as you like, my dear. I would
1558 not hinder Casaubon; I said so at once; for there is no knowing how
1559 anything may turn out. You have not the same tastes as every young
1560 lady; and a clergyman and scholar--who may be a bishop--that kind of
1561 thing--may suit you better than Chettam. Chettam is a good fellow, a
1562 good sound-hearted fellow, you know; but he doesn't go much into ideas.
1563 I did, when I was his age. But Casaubon's eyes, now. I think he has
1564 hurt them a little with too much reading."
1565
1566 "I should be all the happier, uncle, the more room there was for me to
1567 help him," said Dorothea, ardently.
1568
1569 "You have quite made up your mind, I see. Well, my dear, the fact is,
1570 I have a letter for you in my pocket." Mr. Brooke handed the letter to
1571 Dorothea, but as she rose to go away, he added, "There is not too much
1572 hurry, my dear. Think about it, you know."
1573
1574 When Dorothea had left him, he reflected that he had certainly spoken
1575 strongly: he had put the risks of marriage before her in a striking
1576 manner. It was his duty to do so. But as to pretending to be wise for
1577 young people,--no uncle, however much he had travelled in his youth,
1578 absorbed the new ideas, and dined with celebrities now deceased, could
1579 pretend to judge what sort of marriage would turn out well for a young
1580 girl who preferred Casaubon to Chettam. In short, woman was a problem
1581 which, since Mr. Brooke's mind felt blank before it, could be hardly
1582 less complicated than the revolutions of an irregular solid.
1583
1584
1585
1586 CHAPTER V.
1587
1588 "Hard students are commonly troubled with gowts, catarrhs,
1589 rheums, cachexia, bradypepsia, bad eyes, stone, and collick,
1590 crudities, oppilations, vertigo, winds, consumptions, and
1591 all such diseases as come by over-much sitting: they are
1592 most part lean, dry, ill-colored . . . and all through
1593 immoderate pains and extraordinary studies. If you will not
1594 believe the truth of this, look upon great Tostatus and
1595 Thomas Aquainas' works; and tell me whether those men took
1596 pains."--BURTON'S Anatomy of Melancholy, P. I, s. 2.
1597
1598
1599 This was Mr. Casaubon's letter.
1600
1601
1602 MY DEAR MISS BROOKE,--I have your guardian's permission to address you
1603 on a subject than which I have none more at heart. I am not, I trust,
1604 mistaken in the recognition of some deeper correspondence than that of
1605 date in the fact that a consciousness of need in my own life had arisen
1606 contemporaneously with the possibility of my becoming acquainted with
1607 you. For in the first hour of meeting you, I had an impression of your
1608 eminent and perhaps exclusive fitness to supply that need (connected, I
1609 may say, with such activity of the affections as even the
1610 preoccupations of a work too special to be abdicated could not
1611 uninterruptedly dissimulate); and each succeeding opportunity for
1612 observation has given the impression an added depth by convincing me
1613 more emphatically of that fitness which I had preconceived, and thus
1614 evoking more decisively those affections to which I have but now
1615 referred. Our conversations have, I think, made sufficiently clear to
1616 you the tenor of my life and purposes: a tenor unsuited, I am aware, to
1617 the commoner order of minds. But I have discerned in you an elevation
1618 of thought and a capability of devotedness, which I had hitherto not
1619 conceived to be compatible either with the early bloom of youth or with
1620 those graces of sex that may be said at once to win and to confer
1621 distinction when combined, as they notably are in you, with the mental
1622 qualities above indicated. It was, I confess, beyond my hope to meet
1623 with this rare combination of elements both solid and attractive,
1624 adapted to supply aid in graver labors and to cast a charm over vacant
1625 hours; and but for the event of my introduction to you (which, let me
1626 again say, I trust not to be superficially coincident with
1627 foreshadowing needs, but providentially related thereto as stages
1628 towards the completion of a life's plan), I should presumably have gone
1629 on to the last without any attempt to lighten my solitariness by a
1630 matrimonial union.
1631
1632 Such, my dear Miss Brooke, is the accurate statement of my feelings;
1633 and I rely on your kind indulgence in venturing now to ask you how far
1634 your own are of a nature to confirm my happy presentiment. To be
1635 accepted by you as your husband and the earthly guardian of your
1636 welfare, I should regard as the highest of providential gifts. In
1637 return I can at least offer you an affection hitherto unwasted, and the
1638 faithful consecration of a life which, however short in the sequel, has
1639 no backward pages whereon, if you choose to turn them, you will find
1640 records such as might justly cause you either bitterness or shame. I
1641 await the expression of your sentiments with an anxiety which it would
1642 be the part of wisdom (were it possible) to divert by a more arduous
1643 labor than usual. But in this order of experience I am still young,
1644 and in looking forward to an unfavorable possibility I cannot but feel
1645 that resignation to solitude will be more difficult after the temporary
1646 illumination of hope.
1647
1648 In any case, I shall remain,
1649 Yours with sincere devotion,
1650 EDWARD CASAUBON.
1651
1652
1653 Dorothea trembled while she read this letter; then she fell on her
1654 knees, buried her face, and sobbed. She could not pray: under the rush
1655 of solemn emotion in which thoughts became vague and images floated
1656 uncertainly, she could but cast herself, with a childlike sense of
1657 reclining, in the lap of a divine consciousness which sustained her
1658 own. She remained in that attitude till it was time to dress for
1659 dinner.
1660
1661 How could it occur to her to examine the letter, to look at it
1662 critically as a profession of love? Her whole soul was possessed by
1663 the fact that a fuller life was opening before her: she was a neophyte
1664 about to enter on a higher grade of initiation. She was going to have
1665 room for the energies which stirred uneasily under the dimness and
1666 pressure of her own ignorance and the petty peremptoriness of the
1667 world's habits.
1668
1669 Now she would be able to devote herself to large yet definite duties;
1670 now she would be allowed to live continually in the light of a mind
1671 that she could reverence. This hope was not unmixed with the glow of
1672 proud delight--the joyous maiden surprise that she was chosen by the
1673 man whom her admiration had chosen. All Dorothea's passion was
1674 transfused through a mind struggling towards an ideal life; the
1675 radiance of her transfigured girlhood fell on the first object that
1676 came within its level. The impetus with which inclination became
1677 resolution was heightened by those little events of the day which had
1678 roused her discontent with the actual conditions of her life.
1679
1680 After dinner, when Celia was playing an "air, with variations," a small
1681 kind of tinkling which symbolized the aesthetic part of the young
1682 ladies' education, Dorothea went up to her room to answer Mr.
1683 Casaubon's letter. Why should she defer the answer? She wrote it over
1684 three times, not because she wished to change the wording, but because
1685 her hand was unusually uncertain, and she could not bear that Mr.
1686 Casaubon should think her handwriting bad and illegible. She piqued
1687 herself on writing a hand in which each letter was distinguishable
1688 without any large range of conjecture, and she meant to make much use
1689 of this accomplishment, to save Mr. Casaubon's eyes. Three times she
1690 wrote.
1691
1692 MY DEAR MR. CASAUBON,--I am very grateful to you for loving me, and
1693 thinking me worthy to be your wife. I can look forward to no better
1694 happiness than that which would be one with yours. If I said more, it
1695 would only be the same thing written out at greater length, for I
1696 cannot now dwell on any other thought than that I may be through life
1697
1698 Yours devotedly,
1699 DOROTHEA BROOKE.
1700
1701
1702 Later in the evening she followed her uncle into the library to give
1703 him the letter, that he might send it in the morning. He was
1704 surprised, but his surprise only issued in a few moments' silence,
1705 during which he pushed about various objects on his writing-table, and
1706 finally stood with his back to the fire, his glasses on his nose,
1707 looking at the address of Dorothea's letter.
1708
1709 "Have you thought enough about this, my dear?" he said at last.
1710
1711 "There was no need to think long, uncle. I know of nothing to make me
1712 vacillate. If I changed my mind, it must be because of something
1713 important and entirely new to me."
1714
1715 "Ah!--then you have accepted him? Then Chettam has no chance? Has
1716 Chettam offended you--offended you, you know? What is it you don't
1717 like in Chettam?"
1718
1719 "There is nothing that I like in him," said Dorothea, rather
1720 impetuously.
1721
1722 Mr. Brooke threw his head and shoulders backward as if some one had
1723 thrown a light missile at him. Dorothea immediately felt some
1724 self-rebuke, and said--
1725
1726 "I mean in the light of a husband. He is very kind, I think--really
1727 very good about the cottages. A well-meaning man."
1728
1729 "But you must have a scholar, and that sort of thing? Well, it lies a
1730 little in our family. I had it myself--that love of knowledge, and
1731 going into everything--a little too much--it took me too far; though
1732 that sort of thing doesn't often run in the female-line; or it runs
1733 underground like the rivers in Greece, you know--it comes out in the
1734 sons. Clever sons, clever mothers. I went a good deal into that, at
1735 one time. However, my dear, I have always said that people should do
1736 as they like in these things, up to a certain point. I couldn't, as
1737 your guardian, have consented to a bad match. But Casaubon stands
1738 well: his position is good. I am afraid Chettam will be hurt, though,
1739 and Mrs. Cadwallader will blame me."
1740
1741 That evening, of course, Celia knew nothing of what had happened. She
1742 attributed Dorothea's abstracted manner, and the evidence of further
1743 crying since they had got home, to the temper she had been in about Sir
1744 James Chettam and the buildings, and was careful not to give further
1745 offence: having once said what she wanted to say, Celia had no
1746 disposition to recur to disagreeable subjects. It had been her nature
1747 when a child never to quarrel with any one--only to observe with wonder
1748 that they quarrelled with her, and looked like turkey-cocks; whereupon
1749 she was ready to play at cat's cradle with them whenever they recovered
1750 themselves. And as to Dorothea, it had always been her way to find
1751 something wrong in her sister's words, though Celia inwardly protested
1752 that she always said just how things were, and nothing else: she never
1753 did and never could put words together out of her own head. But the
1754 best of Dodo was, that she did not keep angry for long together. Now,
1755 though they had hardly spoken to each other all the evening, yet when
1756 Celia put by her work, intending to go to bed, a proceeding in which
1757 she was always much the earlier, Dorothea, who was seated on a low
1758 stool, unable to occupy herself except in meditation, said, with the
1759 musical intonation which in moments of deep but quiet feeling made her
1760 speech like a fine bit of recitative--
1761
1762 "Celia, dear, come and kiss me," holding her arms open as she spoke.
1763
1764 Celia knelt down to get the right level and gave her little butterfly
1765 kiss, while Dorothea encircled her with gentle arms and pressed her
1766 lips gravely on each cheek in turn.
1767
1768 "Don't sit up, Dodo, you are so pale to-night: go to bed soon," said
1769 Celia, in a comfortable way, without any touch of pathos.
1770
1771 "No, dear, I am very, very happy," said Dorothea, fervently.
1772
1773 "So much the better," thought Celia. "But how strangely Dodo goes from
1774 one extreme to the other."
1775
1776 The next day, at luncheon, the butler, handing something to Mr. Brooke,
1777 said, "Jonas is come back, sir, and has brought this letter."
1778
1779 Mr. Brooke read the letter, and then, nodding toward Dorothea, said,
1780 "Casaubon, my dear: he will be here to dinner; he didn't wait to write
1781 more--didn't wait, you know."
1782
1783 It could not seem remarkable to Celia that a dinner guest should be
1784 announced to her sister beforehand, but, her eyes following the same
1785 direction as her uncle's, she was struck with the peculiar effect of
1786 the announcement on Dorothea. It seemed as if something like the
1787 reflection of a white sunlit wing had passed across her features,
1788 ending in one of her rare blushes. For the first time it entered into
1789 Celia's mind that there might be something more between Mr. Casaubon
1790 and her sister than his delight in bookish talk and her delight in
1791 listening. Hitherto she had classed the admiration for this "ugly" and
1792 learned acquaintance with the admiration for Monsieur Liret at
1793 Lausanne, also ugly and learned. Dorothea had never been tired of
1794 listening to old Monsieur Liret when Celia's feet were as cold as
1795 possible, and when it had really become dreadful to see the skin of his
1796 bald head moving about. Why then should her enthusiasm not extend to
1797 Mr. Casaubon simply in the same way as to Monsieur Liret? And it
1798 seemed probable that all learned men had a sort of schoolmaster's view
1799 of young people.
1800
1801 But now Celia was really startled at the suspicion which had darted
1802 into her mind. She was seldom taken by surprise in this way, her
1803 marvellous quickness in observing a certain order of signs generally
1804 preparing her to expect such outward events as she had an interest in.
1805 Not that she now imagined Mr. Casaubon to be already an accepted lover:
1806 she had only begun to feel disgust at the possibility that anything in
1807 Dorothea's mind could tend towards such an issue. Here was something
1808 really to vex her about Dodo: it was all very well not to accept Sir
1809 James Chettam, but the idea of marrying Mr. Casaubon! Celia felt a
1810 sort of shame mingled with a sense of the ludicrous. But perhaps Dodo,
1811 if she were really bordering on such an extravagance, might be turned
1812 away from it: experience had often shown that her impressibility might
1813 be calculated on. The day was damp, and they were not going to walk
1814 out, so they both went up to their sitting-room; and there Celia
1815 observed that Dorothea, instead of settling down with her usual
1816 diligent interest to some occupation, simply leaned her elbow on an
1817 open book and looked out of the window at the great cedar silvered with
1818 the damp. She herself had taken up the making of a toy for the
1819 curate's children, and was not going to enter on any subject too
1820 precipitately.
1821
1822 Dorothea was in fact thinking that it was desirable for Celia to know
1823 of the momentous change in Mr. Casaubon's position since he had last
1824 been in the house: it did not seem fair to leave her in ignorance of
1825 what would necessarily affect her attitude towards him; but it was
1826 impossible not to shrink from telling her. Dorothea accused herself of
1827 some meanness in this timidity: it was always odious to her to have any
1828 small fears or contrivances about her actions, but at this moment she
1829 was seeking the highest aid possible that she might not dread the
1830 corrosiveness of Celia's pretty carnally minded prose. Her reverie was
1831 broken, and the difficulty of decision banished, by Celia's small and
1832 rather guttural voice speaking in its usual tone, of a remark aside or
1833 a "by the bye."
1834
1835 "Is any one else coming to dine besides Mr. Casaubon?"
1836
1837 "Not that I know of."
1838
1839 "I hope there is some one else. Then I shall not hear him eat his soup
1840 so."
1841
1842 "What is there remarkable about his soup-eating?"
1843
1844 "Really, Dodo, can't you hear how he scrapes his spoon? And he always
1845 blinks before he speaks. I don't know whether Locke blinked, but I'm
1846 sure I am sorry for those who sat opposite to him if he did."
1847
1848 "Celia," said Dorothea, with emphatic gravity, "pray don't make any
1849 more observations of that kind."
1850
1851 "Why not? They are quite true," returned Celia, who had her reasons
1852 for persevering, though she was beginning to be a little afraid.
1853
1854 "Many things are true which only the commonest minds observe."
1855
1856 "Then I think the commonest minds must be rather useful. I think it is
1857 a pity Mr. Casaubon's mother had not a commoner mind: she might have
1858 taught him better." Celia was inwardly frightened, and ready to run
1859 away, now she had hurled this light javelin.
1860
1861 Dorothea's feelings had gathered to an avalanche, and there could be no
1862 further preparation.
1863
1864 "It is right to tell you, Celia, that I am engaged to marry Mr.
1865 Casaubon."
1866
1867 Perhaps Celia had never turned so pale before. The paper man she was
1868 making would have had his leg injured, but for her habitual care of
1869 whatever she held in her hands. She laid the fragile figure down at
1870 once, and sat perfectly still for a few moments. When she spoke there
1871 was a tear gathering.
1872
1873 "Oh, Dodo, I hope you will be happy." Her sisterly tenderness could not
1874 but surmount other feelings at this moment, and her fears were the
1875 fears of affection.
1876
1877 Dorothea was still hurt and agitated.
1878
1879 "It is quite decided, then?" said Celia, in an awed under tone. "And
1880 uncle knows?"
1881
1882 "I have accepted Mr. Casaubon's offer. My uncle brought me the letter
1883 that contained it; he knew about it beforehand."
1884
1885 "I beg your pardon, if I have said anything to hurt you, Dodo," said
1886 Celia, with a slight sob. She never could have thought that she should
1887 feel as she did. There was something funereal in the whole affair, and
1888 Mr. Casaubon seemed to be the officiating clergyman, about whom it
1889 would be indecent to make remarks.
1890
1891 "Never mind, Kitty, do not grieve. We should never admire the same
1892 people. I often offend in something of the same way; I am apt to speak
1893 too strongly of those who don't please me."
1894
1895 In spite of this magnanimity Dorothea was still smarting: perhaps as
1896 much from Celia's subdued astonishment as from her small criticisms.
1897 Of course all the world round Tipton would be out of sympathy with this
1898 marriage. Dorothea knew of no one who thought as she did about life
1899 and its best objects.
1900
1901 Nevertheless before the evening was at an end she was very happy. In
1902 an hour's tete-a-tete with Mr. Casaubon she talked to him with more
1903 freedom than she had ever felt before, even pouring out her joy at the
1904 thought of devoting herself to him, and of learning how she might best
1905 share and further all his great ends. Mr. Casaubon was touched with an
1906 unknown delight (what man would not have been?) at this childlike
1907 unrestrained ardor: he was not surprised (what lover would have been?)
1908 that he should be the object of it.
1909
1910 "My dear young lady--Miss Brooke--Dorothea!" he said, pressing her hand
1911 between his hands, "this is a happiness greater than I had ever
1912 imagined to be in reserve for me. That I should ever meet with a mind
1913 and person so rich in the mingled graces which could render marriage
1914 desirable, was far indeed from my conception. You have all--nay, more
1915 than all--those qualities which I have ever regarded as the
1916 characteristic excellences of womanhood. The great charm of your sex
1917 is its capability of an ardent self-sacrificing affection, and herein
1918 we see its fitness to round and complete the existence of our own.
1919 Hitherto I have known few pleasures save of the severer kind: my
1920 satisfactions have been those of the solitary student. I have been
1921 little disposed to gather flowers that would wither in my hand, but now
1922 I shall pluck them with eagerness, to place them in your bosom."
1923
1924 No speech could have been more thoroughly honest in its intention: the
1925 frigid rhetoric at the end was as sincere as the bark of a dog, or the
1926 cawing of an amorous rook. Would it not be rash to conclude that there
1927 was no passion behind those sonnets to Delia which strike us as the
1928 thin music of a mandolin?
1929
1930 Dorothea's faith supplied all that Mr. Casaubon's words seemed to leave
1931 unsaid: what believer sees a disturbing omission or infelicity? The
1932 text, whether of prophet or of poet, expands for whatever we can put
1933 into it, and even his bad grammar is sublime.
1934
1935 "I am very ignorant--you will quite wonder at my ignorance," said
1936 Dorothea. "I have so many thoughts that may be quite mistaken; and now
1937 I shall be able to tell them all to you, and ask you about them. But,"
1938 she added, with rapid imagination of Mr. Casaubon's probable feeling,
1939 "I will not trouble you too much; only when you are inclined to listen
1940 to me. You must often be weary with the pursuit of subjects in your
1941 own track. I shall gain enough if you will take me with you there."
1942
1943 "How should I be able now to persevere in any path without your
1944 companionship?" said Mr. Casaubon, kissing her candid brow, and feeling
1945 that heaven had vouchsafed him a blessing in every way suited to his
1946 peculiar wants. He was being unconsciously wrought upon by the charms
1947 of a nature which was entirely without hidden calculations either for
1948 immediate effects or for remoter ends. It was this which made Dorothea
1949 so childlike, and, according to some judges, so stupid, with all her
1950 reputed cleverness; as, for example, in the present case of throwing
1951 herself, metaphorically speaking, at Mr. Casaubon's feet, and kissing
1952 his unfashionable shoe-ties as if he were a Protestant Pope. She was
1953 not in the least teaching Mr. Casaubon to ask if he were good enough
1954 for her, but merely asking herself anxiously how she could be good
1955 enough for Mr. Casaubon. Before he left the next day it had been
1956 decided that the marriage should take place within six weeks. Why not?
1957 Mr. Casaubon's house was ready. It was not a parsonage, but a
1958 considerable mansion, with much land attached to it. The parsonage was
1959 inhabited by the curate, who did all the duty except preaching the
1960 morning sermon.
1961
1962
1963
1964 CHAPTER VI.
1965
1966 My lady's tongue is like the meadow blades,
1967 That cut you stroking them with idle hand.
1968 Nice cutting is her function: she divides
1969 With spiritual edge the millet-seed,
1970 And makes intangible savings.
1971
1972
1973 As Mr. Casaubon's carriage was passing out of the gateway, it arrested
1974 the entrance of a pony phaeton driven by a lady with a servant seated
1975 behind. It was doubtful whether the recognition had been mutual, for
1976 Mr. Casaubon was looking absently before him; but the lady was
1977 quick-eyed, and threw a nod and a "How do you do?" in the nick of time.
1978 In spite of her shabby bonnet and very old Indian shawl, it was plain
1979 that the lodge-keeper regarded her as an important personage, from the
1980 low curtsy which was dropped on the entrance of the small phaeton.
1981
1982 "Well, Mrs. Fitchett, how are your fowls laying now?" said the
1983 high-colored, dark-eyed lady, with the clearest chiselled utterance.
1984
1985 "Pretty well for laying, madam, but they've ta'en to eating their eggs:
1986 I've no peace o' mind with 'em at all."
1987
1988 "Oh, the cannibals! Better sell them cheap at once. What will you
1989 sell them a couple? One can't eat fowls of a bad character at a high
1990 price."
1991
1992 "Well, madam, half-a-crown: I couldn't let 'em go, not under."
1993
1994 "Half-a-crown, these times! Come now--for the Rector's chicken-broth
1995 on a Sunday. He has consumed all ours that I can spare. You are half
1996 paid with the sermon, Mrs. Fitchett, remember that. Take a pair of
1997 tumbler-pigeons for them--little beauties. You must come and see them.
1998 You have no tumblers among your pigeons."
1999
2000 "Well, madam, Master Fitchett shall go and see 'em after work. He's
2001 very hot on new sorts; to oblige you."
2002
2003 "Oblige me! It will be the best bargain he ever made. A pair of
2004 church pigeons for a couple of wicked Spanish fowls that eat their own
2005 eggs! Don't you and Fitchett boast too much, that is all!"
2006
2007 The phaeton was driven onwards with the last words, leaving Mrs.
2008 Fitchett laughing and shaking her head slowly, with an interjectional
2009 "Sure_ly_, sure_ly_!"--from which it might be inferred that she would
2010 have found the country-side somewhat duller if the Rector's lady had
2011 been less free-spoken and less of a skinflint. Indeed, both the
2012 farmers and laborers in the parishes of Freshitt and Tipton would have
2013 felt a sad lack of conversation but for the stories about what Mrs.
2014 Cadwallader said and did: a lady of immeasurably high birth, descended,
2015 as it were, from unknown earls, dim as the crowd of heroic shades--who
2016 pleaded poverty, pared down prices, and cut jokes in the most
2017 companionable manner, though with a turn of tongue that let you know
2018 who she was. Such a lady gave a neighborliness to both rank and
2019 religion, and mitigated the bitterness of uncommuted tithe. A much
2020 more exemplary character with an infusion of sour dignity would not
2021 have furthered their comprehension of the Thirty-nine Articles, and
2022 would have been less socially uniting.
2023
2024 Mr. Brooke, seeing Mrs. Cadwallader's merits from a different point of
2025 view, winced a little when her name was announced in the library, where
2026 he was sitting alone.
2027
2028 "I see you have had our Lowick Cicero here," she said, seating herself
2029 comfortably, throwing back her wraps, and showing a thin but well-built
2030 figure. "I suspect you and he are brewing some bad polities, else you
2031 would not be seeing so much of the lively man. I shall inform against
2032 you: remember you are both suspicious characters since you took Peel's
2033 side about the Catholic Bill. I shall tell everybody that you are
2034 going to put up for Middlemarch on the Whig side when old Pinkerton
2035 resigns, and that Casaubon is going to help you in an underhand manner:
2036 going to bribe the voters with pamphlets, and throw open the
2037 public-houses to distribute them. Come, confess!"
2038
2039 "Nothing of the sort," said Mr. Brooke, smiling and rubbing his
2040 eye-glasses, but really blushing a little at the impeachment.
2041 "Casaubon and I don't talk politics much. He doesn't care much about
2042 the philanthropic side of things; punishments, and that kind of thing.
2043 He only cares about Church questions. That is not my line of action,
2044 you know."
2045
2046 "Ra-a-ther too much, my friend. I have heard of your doings. Who was
2047 it that sold his bit of land to the Papists at Middlemarch? I believe
2048 you bought it on purpose. You are a perfect Guy Faux. See if you are
2049 not burnt in effigy this 5th of November coming. Humphrey would not
2050 come to quarrel with you about it, so I am come."
2051
2052 "Very good. I was prepared to be persecuted for not persecuting--not
2053 persecuting, you know."
2054
2055 "There you go! That is a piece of clap-trap you have got ready for the
2056 hustings. Now, _do not_ let them lure you to the hustings, my dear Mr.
2057 Brooke. A man always makes a fool of himself, speechifying: there's no
2058 excuse but being on the right side, so that you can ask a blessing on
2059 your humming and hawing. You will lose yourself, I forewarn you. You
2060 will make a Saturday pie of all parties' opinions, and be pelted by
2061 everybody."
2062
2063 "That is what I expect, you know," said Mr. Brooke, not wishing to
2064 betray how little he enjoyed this prophetic sketch--"what I expect as
2065 an independent man. As to the Whigs, a man who goes with the thinkers
2066 is not likely to be hooked on by any party. He may go with them up to
2067 a certain point--up to a certain point, you know. But that is what you
2068 ladies never understand."
2069
2070 "Where your certain point is? No. I should like to be told how a man
2071 can have any certain point when he belongs to no party--leading a
2072 roving life, and never letting his friends know his address. 'Nobody
2073 knows where Brooke will be--there's no counting on Brooke'--that is
2074 what people say of you, to be quite frank. Now, do turn respectable.
2075 How will you like going to Sessions with everybody looking shy on you,
2076 and you with a bad conscience and an empty pocket?"
2077
2078 "I don't pretend to argue with a lady on politics," said Mr. Brooke,
2079 with an air of smiling indifference, but feeling rather unpleasantly
2080 conscious that this attack of Mrs. Cadwallader's had opened the
2081 defensive campaign to which certain rash steps had exposed him. "Your
2082 sex are not thinkers, you know--varium et mutabile semper--that kind of
2083 thing. You don't know Virgil. I knew"--Mr. Brooke reflected in time
2084 that he had not had the personal acquaintance of the Augustan poet--"I
2085 was going to say, poor Stoddart, you know. That was what _he_ said.
2086 You ladies are always against an independent attitude--a man's caring
2087 for nothing but truth, and that sort of thing. And there is no part of
2088 the county where opinion is narrower than it is here--I don't mean to
2089 throw stones, you know, but somebody is wanted to take the independent
2090 line; and if I don't take it, who will?"
2091
2092 "Who? Why, any upstart who has got neither blood nor position. People
2093 of standing should consume their independent nonsense at home, not hawk
2094 it about. And you! who are going to marry your niece, as good as your
2095 daughter, to one of our best men. Sir James would be cruelly annoyed:
2096 it will be too hard on him if you turn round now and make yourself a
2097 Whig sign-board."
2098
2099 Mr. Brooke again winced inwardly, for Dorothea's engagement had no
2100 sooner been decided, than he had thought of Mrs. Cadwallader's
2101 prospective taunts. It might have been easy for ignorant observers to
2102 say, "Quarrel with Mrs. Cadwallader;" but where is a country gentleman
2103 to go who quarrels with his oldest neighbors? Who could taste the fine
2104 flavor in the name of Brooke if it were delivered casually, like wine
2105 without a seal? Certainly a man can only be cosmopolitan up to a
2106 certain point.
2107
2108 "I hope Chettam and I shall always be good friends; but I am sorry to
2109 say there is no prospect of his marrying my niece," said Mr. Brooke,
2110 much relieved to see through the window that Celia was coming in.
2111
2112 "Why not?" said Mrs. Cadwallader, with a sharp note of surprise. "It
2113 is hardly a fortnight since you and I were talking about it."
2114
2115 "My niece has chosen another suitor--has chosen him, you know. I have
2116 had nothing to do with it. I should have preferred Chettam; and I
2117 should have said Chettam was the man any girl would have chosen. But
2118 there is no accounting for these things. Your sex is capricious, you
2119 know."
2120
2121 "Why, whom do you mean to say that you are going to let her marry?"
2122 Mrs. Cadwallader's mind was rapidly surveying the possibilities of
2123 choice for Dorothea.
2124
2125 But here Celia entered, blooming from a walk in the garden, and the
2126 greeting with her delivered Mr. Brooke from the necessity of answering
2127 immediately. He got up hastily, and saying, "By the way, I must speak
2128 to Wright about the horses," shuffled quickly out of the room.
2129
2130 "My dear child, what is this?--this about your sister's engagement?"
2131 said Mrs. Cadwallader.
2132
2133 "She is engaged to marry Mr. Casaubon," said Celia, resorting, as
2134 usual, to the simplest statement of fact, and enjoying this opportunity
2135 of speaking to the Rector's wife alone.
2136
2137 "This is frightful. How long has it been going on?"
2138
2139 "I only knew of it yesterday. They are to be married in six weeks."
2140
2141 "Well, my dear, I wish you joy of your brother-in-law."
2142
2143 "I am so sorry for Dorothea."
2144
2145 "Sorry! It is her doing, I suppose."
2146
2147 "Yes; she says Mr. Casaubon has a great soul."
2148
2149 "With all my heart."
2150
2151 "Oh, Mrs. Cadwallader, I don't think it can be nice to marry a man with
2152 a great soul."
2153
2154 "Well, my dear, take warning. You know the look of one now; when the
2155 next comes and wants to marry you, don't you accept him."
2156
2157 "I'm sure I never should."
2158
2159 "No; one such in a family is enough. So your sister never cared about
2160 Sir James Chettam? What would you have said to _him_ for a
2161 brother-in-law?"
2162
2163 "I should have liked that very much. I am sure he would have been a
2164 good husband. Only," Celia added, with a slight blush (she sometimes
2165 seemed to blush as she breathed), "I don't think he would have suited
2166 Dorothea."
2167
2168 "Not high-flown enough?"
2169
2170 "Dodo is very strict. She thinks so much about everything, and is so
2171 particular about what one says. Sir James never seemed to please her."
2172
2173 "She must have encouraged him, I am sure. That is not very creditable."
2174
2175 "Please don't be angry with Dodo; she does not see things. She thought
2176 so much about the cottages, and she was rude to Sir James sometimes;
2177 but he is so kind, he never noticed it."
2178
2179 "Well," said Mrs. Cadwallader, putting on her shawl, and rising, as if
2180 in haste, "I must go straight to Sir James and break this to him. He
2181 will have brought his mother back by this time, and I must call. Your
2182 uncle will never tell him. We are all disappointed, my dear. Young
2183 people should think of their families in marrying. I set a bad
2184 example--married a poor clergyman, and made myself a pitiable object
2185 among the De Bracys--obliged to get my coals by stratagem, and pray to
2186 heaven for my salad oil. However, Casaubon has money enough; I must do
2187 him that justice. As to his blood, I suppose the family quarterings
2188 are three cuttle-fish sable, and a commentator rampant. By the bye,
2189 before I go, my dear, I must speak to your Mrs. Carter about pastry. I
2190 want to send my young cook to learn of her. Poor people with four
2191 children, like us, you know, can't afford to keep a good cook. I have
2192 no doubt Mrs. Carter will oblige me. Sir James's cook is a perfect
2193 dragon."
2194
2195 In less than an hour, Mrs. Cadwallader had circumvented Mrs. Carter and
2196 driven to Freshitt Hall, which was not far from her own parsonage, her
2197 husband being resident in Freshitt and keeping a curate in Tipton.
2198
2199 Sir James Chettam had returned from the short journey which had kept
2200 him absent for a couple of days, and had changed his dress, intending
2201 to ride over to Tipton Grange. His horse was standing at the door when
2202 Mrs. Cadwallader drove up, and he immediately appeared there himself,
2203 whip in hand. Lady Chettam had not yet returned, but Mrs.
2204 Cadwallader's errand could not be despatched in the presence of grooms,
2205 so she asked to be taken into the conservatory close by, to look at the
2206 new plants; and on coming to a contemplative stand, she said--
2207
2208 "I have a great shock for you; I hope you are not so far gone in love
2209 as you pretended to be."
2210
2211 It was of no use protesting, against Mrs. Cadwallader's way of putting
2212 things. But Sir James's countenance changed a little. He felt a vague
2213 alarm.
2214
2215 "I do believe Brooke is going to expose himself after all. I accused
2216 him of meaning to stand for Middlemarch on the Liberal side, and he
2217 looked silly and never denied it--talked about the independent line,
2218 and the usual nonsense."
2219
2220 "Is that all?" said Sir James, much relieved.
2221
2222 "Why," rejoined Mrs. Cadwallader, with a sharper note, "you don't mean
2223 to say that you would like him to turn public man in that way--making a
2224 sort of political Cheap Jack of himself?"
2225
2226 "He might be dissuaded, I should think. He would not like the expense."
2227
2228 "That is what I told him. He is vulnerable to reason there--always a
2229 few grains of common-sense in an ounce of miserliness. Miserliness is
2230 a capital quality to run in families; it's the safe side for madness to
2231 dip on. And there must be a little crack in the Brooke family, else we
2232 should not see what we are to see."
2233
2234 "What? Brooke standing for Middlemarch?"
2235
2236 "Worse than that. I really feel a little responsible. I always told
2237 you Miss Brooke would be such a fine match. I knew there was a great
2238 deal of nonsense in her--a flighty sort of Methodistical stuff. But
2239 these things wear out of girls. However, I am taken by surprise for
2240 once."
2241
2242 "What do you mean, Mrs. Cadwallader?" said Sir James. His fear lest
2243 Miss Brooke should have run away to join the Moravian Brethren, or some
2244 preposterous sect unknown to good society, was a little allayed by the
2245 knowledge that Mrs. Cadwallader always made the worst of things. "What
2246 has happened to Miss Brooke? Pray speak out."
2247
2248 "Very well. She is engaged to be married." Mrs. Cadwallader paused a
2249 few moments, observing the deeply hurt expression in her friend's face,
2250 which he was trying to conceal by a nervous smile, while he whipped his
2251 boot; but she soon added, "Engaged to Casaubon."
2252
2253 Sir James let his whip fall and stooped to pick it up. Perhaps his
2254 face had never before gathered so much concentrated disgust as when he
2255 turned to Mrs. Cadwallader and repeated, "Casaubon?"
2256
2257 "Even so. You know my errand now."
2258
2259 "Good God! It is horrible! He is no better than a mummy!" (The point
2260 of view has to be allowed for, as that of a blooming and disappointed
2261 rival.)
2262
2263 "She says, he is a great soul.--A great bladder for dried peas to
2264 rattle in!" said Mrs. Cadwallader.
2265
2266 "What business has an old bachelor like that to marry?" said Sir James.
2267 "He has one foot in the grave."
2268
2269 "He means to draw it out again, I suppose."
2270
2271 "Brooke ought not to allow it: he should insist on its being put off
2272 till she is of age. She would think better of it then. What is a
2273 guardian for?"
2274
2275 "As if you could ever squeeze a resolution out of Brooke!"
2276
2277 "Cadwallader might talk to him."
2278
2279 "Not he! Humphrey finds everybody charming. I never can get him to
2280 abuse Casaubon. He will even speak well of the bishop, though I tell
2281 him it is unnatural in a beneficed clergyman; what can one do with a
2282 husband who attends so little to the decencies? I hide it as well as I
2283 can by abusing everybody myself. Come, come, cheer up! you are well
2284 rid of Miss Brooke, a girl who would have been requiring you to see the
2285 stars by daylight. Between ourselves, little Celia is worth two of
2286 her, and likely after all to be the better match. For this marriage to
2287 Casaubon is as good as going to a nunnery."
2288
2289 "Oh, on my own account--it is for Miss Brooke's sake I think her
2290 friends should try to use their influence."
2291
2292 "Well, Humphrey doesn't know yet. But when I tell him, you may depend
2293 on it he will say, 'Why not? Casaubon is a good fellow--and
2294 young--young enough.' These charitable people never know vinegar from
2295 wine till they have swallowed it and got the colic. However, if I were
2296 a man I should prefer Celia, especially when Dorothea was gone. The
2297 truth is, you have been courting one and have won the other. I can see
2298 that she admires you almost as much as a man expects to be admired. If
2299 it were any one but me who said so, you might think it exaggeration.
2300 Good-by!"
2301
2302 Sir James handed Mrs. Cadwallader to the phaeton, and then jumped on
2303 his horse. He was not going to renounce his ride because of his
2304 friend's unpleasant news--only to ride the faster in some other
2305 direction than that of Tipton Grange.
2306
2307 Now, why on earth should Mrs. Cadwallader have been at all busy about
2308 Miss Brooke's marriage; and why, when one match that she liked to think
2309 she had a hand in was frustrated, should she have straightway contrived
2310 the preliminaries of another? Was there any ingenious plot, any
2311 hide-and-seek course of action, which might be detected by a careful
2312 telescopic watch? Not at all: a telescope might have swept the
2313 parishes of Tipton and Freshitt, the whole area visited by Mrs.
2314 Cadwallader in her phaeton, without witnessing any interview that could
2315 excite suspicion, or any scene from which she did not return with the
2316 same unperturbed keenness of eye and the same high natural color. In
2317 fact, if that convenient vehicle had existed in the days of the Seven
2318 Sages, one of them would doubtless have remarked, that you can know
2319 little of women by following them about in their pony-phaetons. Even
2320 with a microscope directed on a water-drop we find ourselves making
2321 interpretations which turn out to be rather coarse; for whereas under a
2322 weak lens you may seem to see a creature exhibiting an active voracity
2323 into which other smaller creatures actively play as if they were so
2324 many animated tax-pennies, a stronger lens reveals to you certain
2325 tiniest hairlets which make vortices for these victims while the
2326 swallower waits passively at his receipt of custom. In this way,
2327 metaphorically speaking, a strong lens applied to Mrs. Cadwallader's
2328 match-making will show a play of minute causes producing what may be
2329 called thought and speech vortices to bring her the sort of food she
2330 needed. Her life was rurally simple, quite free from secrets either
2331 foul, dangerous, or otherwise important, and not consciously affected
2332 by the great affairs of the world. All the more did the affairs of the
2333 great world interest her, when communicated in the letters of high-born
2334 relations: the way in which fascinating younger sons had gone to the
2335 dogs by marrying their mistresses; the fine old-blooded idiocy of young
2336 Lord Tapir, and the furious gouty humors of old Lord Megatherium; the
2337 exact crossing of genealogies which had brought a coronet into a new
2338 branch and widened the relations of scandal,--these were topics of
2339 which she retained details with the utmost accuracy, and reproduced
2340 them in an excellent pickle of epigrams, which she herself enjoyed the
2341 more because she believed as unquestionably in birth and no-birth as
2342 she did in game and vermin. She would never have disowned any one on
2343 the ground of poverty: a De Bracy reduced to take his dinner in a basin
2344 would have seemed to her an example of pathos worth exaggerating, and I
2345 fear his aristocratic vices would not have horrified her. But her
2346 feeling towards the vulgar rich was a sort of religious hatred: they
2347 had probably made all their money out of high retail prices, and Mrs.
2348 Cadwallader detested high prices for everything that was not paid in
2349 kind at the Rectory: such people were no part of God's design in making
2350 the world; and their accent was an affliction to the ears. A town
2351 where such monsters abounded was hardly more than a sort of low comedy,
2352 which could not be taken account of in a well-bred scheme of the
2353 universe. Let any lady who is inclined to be hard on Mrs. Cadwallader
2354 inquire into the comprehensiveness of her own beautiful views, and be
2355 quite sure that they afford accommodation for all the lives which have
2356 the honor to coexist with hers.
2357
2358 With such a mind, active as phosphorus, biting everything that came
2359 near into the form that suited it, how could Mrs. Cadwallader feel that
2360 the Miss Brookes and their matrimonial prospects were alien to her?
2361 especially as it had been the habit of years for her to scold Mr.
2362 Brooke with the friendliest frankness, and let him know in confidence
2363 that she thought him a poor creature. From the first arrival of the
2364 young ladies in Tipton she had prearranged Dorothea's marriage with Sir
2365 James, and if it had taken place would have been quite sure that it was
2366 her doing: that it should not take place after she had preconceived it,
2367 caused her an irritation which every thinker will sympathize with. She
2368 was the diplomatist of Tipton and Freshitt, and for anything to happen
2369 in spite of her was an offensive irregularity. As to freaks like this
2370 of Miss Brooke's, Mrs. Cadwallader had no patience with them, and now
2371 saw that her opinion of this girl had been infected with some of her
2372 husband's weak charitableness: those Methodistical whims, that air of
2373 being more religious than the rector and curate together, came from a
2374 deeper and more constitutional disease than she had been willing to
2375 believe.
2376
2377 "However," said Mrs. Cadwallader, first to herself and afterwards to
2378 her husband, "I throw her over: there was a chance, if she had married
2379 Sir James, of her becoming a sane, sensible woman. He would never have
2380 contradicted her, and when a woman is not contradicted, she has no
2381 motive for obstinacy in her absurdities. But now I wish her joy of her
2382 hair shirt."
2383
2384 It followed that Mrs. Cadwallader must decide on another match for Sir
2385 James, and having made up her mind that it was to be the younger Miss
2386 Brooke, there could not have been a more skilful move towards the
2387 success of her plan than her hint to the baronet that he had made an
2388 impression on Celia's heart. For he was not one of those gentlemen who
2389 languish after the unattainable Sappho's apple that laughs from the
2390 topmost bough--the charms which
2391
2392 "Smile like the knot of cowslips on the cliff,
2393 Not to be come at by the willing hand."
2394
2395 He had no sonnets to write, and it could not strike him agreeably that
2396 he was not an object of preference to the woman whom he had preferred.
2397 Already the knowledge that Dorothea had chosen Mr. Casaubon had bruised
2398 his attachment and relaxed its hold. Although Sir James was a
2399 sportsman, he had some other feelings towards women than towards grouse
2400 and foxes, and did not regard his future wife in the light of prey,
2401 valuable chiefly for the excitements of the chase. Neither was he so
2402 well acquainted with the habits of primitive races as to feel that an
2403 ideal combat for her, tomahawk in hand, so to speak, was necessary to
2404 the historical continuity of the marriage-tie. On the contrary, having
2405 the amiable vanity which knits us to those who are fond of us, and
2406 disinclines us to those who are indifferent, and also a good grateful
2407 nature, the mere idea that a woman had a kindness towards him spun
2408 little threads of tenderness from out his heart towards hers.
2409
2410 Thus it happened, that after Sir James had ridden rather fast for half
2411 an hour in a direction away from Tipton Grange, he slackened his pace,
2412 and at last turned into a road which would lead him back by a shorter
2413 cut. Various feelings wrought in him the determination after all to go
2414 to the Grange to-day as if nothing new had happened. He could not help
2415 rejoicing that he had never made the offer and been rejected; mere
2416 friendly politeness required that he should call to see Dorothea about
2417 the cottages, and now happily Mrs. Cadwallader had prepared him to
2418 offer his congratulations, if necessary, without showing too much
2419 awkwardness. He really did not like it: giving up Dorothea was very
2420 painful to him; but there was something in the resolve to make this
2421 visit forthwith and conquer all show of feeling, which was a sort of
2422 file-biting and counter-irritant. And without his distinctly
2423 recognizing the impulse, there certainly was present in him the sense
2424 that Celia would be there, and that he should pay her more attention
2425 than he had done before.
2426
2427 We mortals, men and women, devour many a disappointment between
2428 breakfast and dinner-time; keep back the tears and look a little pale
2429 about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say, "Oh, nothing!" Pride
2430 helps us; and pride is not a bad thing when it only urges us to hide
2431 our own hurts--not to hurt others.
2432
2433
2434
2435 CHAPTER VII.
2436
2437 "Piacer e popone
2438 Vuol la sua stagione."
2439 --Italian Proverb.
2440
2441
2442 Mr. Casaubon, as might be expected, spent a great deal of his time at
2443 the Grange in these weeks, and the hindrance which courtship occasioned
2444 to the progress of his great work--the Key to all
2445 Mythologies--naturally made him look forward the more eagerly to the
2446 happy termination of courtship. But he had deliberately incurred the
2447 hindrance, having made up his mind that it was now time for him to
2448 adorn his life with the graces of female companionship, to irradiate
2449 the gloom which fatigue was apt to hang over the intervals of studious
2450 labor with the play of female fancy, and to secure in this, his
2451 culminating age, the solace of female tendance for his declining years.
2452 Hence he determined to abandon himself to the stream of feeling, and
2453 perhaps was surprised to find what an exceedingly shallow rill it was.
2454 As in droughty regions baptism by immersion could only be performed
2455 symbolically, Mr. Casaubon found that sprinkling was the utmost
2456 approach to a plunge which his stream would afford him; and he
2457 concluded that the poets had much exaggerated the force of masculine
2458 passion. Nevertheless, he observed with pleasure that Miss Brooke
2459 showed an ardent submissive affection which promised to fulfil his most
2460 agreeable previsions of marriage. It had once or twice crossed his
2461 mind that possibly there was some deficiency in Dorothea to account for
2462 the moderation of his abandonment; but he was unable to discern the
2463 deficiency, or to figure to himself a woman who would have pleased him
2464 better; so that there was clearly no reason to fall back upon but the
2465 exaggerations of human tradition.
2466
2467 "Could I not be preparing myself now to be more useful?" said Dorothea
2468 to him, one morning, early in the time of courtship; "could I not learn
2469 to read Latin and Greek aloud to you, as Milton's daughters did to
2470 their father, without understanding what they read?"
2471
2472 "I fear that would be wearisome to you," said Mr. Casaubon, smiling;
2473 "and, indeed, if I remember rightly, the young women you have mentioned
2474 regarded that exercise in unknown tongues as a ground for rebellion
2475 against the poet."
2476
2477 "Yes; but in the first place they were very naughty girls, else they
2478 would have been proud to minister to such a father; and in the second
2479 place they might have studied privately and taught themselves to
2480 understand what they read, and then it would have been interesting. I
2481 hope you don't expect me to be naughty and stupid?"
2482
2483 "I expect you to be all that an exquisite young lady can be in every
2484 possible relation of life. Certainly it might be a great advantage if
2485 you were able to copy the Greek character, and to that end it were well
2486 to begin with a little reading."
2487
2488 Dorothea seized this as a precious permission. She would not have
2489 asked Mr. Casaubon at once to teach her the languages, dreading of all
2490 things to be tiresome instead of helpful; but it was not entirely out
2491 of devotion to her future husband that she wished to know Latin and
2492 Greek. Those provinces of masculine knowledge seemed to her a
2493 standing-ground from which all truth could be seen more truly. As it
2494 was, she constantly doubted her own conclusions, because she felt her
2495 own ignorance: how could she be confident that one-roomed cottages were
2496 not for the glory of God, when men who knew the classics appeared to
2497 conciliate indifference to the cottages with zeal for the glory?
2498 Perhaps even Hebrew might be necessary--at least the alphabet and a few
2499 roots--in order to arrive at the core of things, and judge soundly on
2500 the social duties of the Christian. And she had not reached that point
2501 of renunciation at which she would have been satisfied with having a
2502 wise husband: she wished, poor child, to be wise herself. Miss Brooke
2503 was certainly very naive with all her alleged cleverness. Celia, whose
2504 mind had never been thought too powerful, saw the emptiness of other
2505 people's pretensions much more readily. To have in general but little
2506 feeling, seems to be the only security against feeling too much on any
2507 particular occasion.
2508
2509 However, Mr. Casaubon consented to listen and teach for an hour
2510 together, like a schoolmaster of little boys, or rather like a lover,
2511 to whom a mistress's elementary ignorance and difficulties have a
2512 touching fitness. Few scholars would have disliked teaching the
2513 alphabet under such circumstances. But Dorothea herself was a little
2514 shocked and discouraged at her own stupidity, and the answers she got
2515 to some timid questions about the value of the Greek accents gave her a
2516 painful suspicion that here indeed there might be secrets not capable
2517 of explanation to a woman's reason.
2518
2519 Mr. Brooke had no doubt on that point, and expressed himself with his
2520 usual strength upon it one day that he came into the library while the
2521 reading was going forward.
2522
2523 "Well, but now, Casaubon, such deep studies, classics, mathematics,
2524 that kind of thing, are too taxing for a woman--too taxing, you know."
2525
2526 "Dorothea is learning to read the characters simply," said Mr.
2527 Casaubon, evading the question. "She had the very considerate thought
2528 of saving my eyes."
2529
2530 "Ah, well, without understanding, you know--that may not be so bad.
2531 But there is a lightness about the feminine mind--a touch and
2532 go--music, the fine arts, that kind of thing--they should study those
2533 up to a certain point, women should; but in a light way, you know. A
2534 woman should be able to sit down and play you or sing you a good old
2535 English tune. That is what I like; though I have heard most
2536 things--been at the opera in Vienna: Gluck, Mozart, everything of that
2537 sort. But I'm a conservative in music--it's not like ideas, you know.
2538 I stick to the good old tunes."
2539
2540 "Mr. Casaubon is not fond of the piano, and I am very glad he is not,"
2541 said Dorothea, whose slight regard for domestic music and feminine fine
2542 art must be forgiven her, considering the small tinkling and smearing
2543 in which they chiefly consisted at that dark period. She smiled and
2544 looked up at her betrothed with grateful eyes. If he had always been
2545 asking her to play the "Last Rose of Summer," she would have required
2546 much resignation. "He says there is only an old harpsichord at Lowick,
2547 and it is covered with books."
2548
2549 "Ah, there you are behind Celia, my dear. Celia, now, plays very
2550 prettily, and is always ready to play. However, since Casaubon does
2551 not like it, you are all right. But it's a pity you should not have
2552 little recreations of that sort, Casaubon: the bow always strung--that
2553 kind of thing, you know--will not do."
2554
2555 "I never could look on it in the light of a recreation to have my ears
2556 teased with measured noises," said Mr. Casaubon. "A tune much iterated
2557 has the ridiculous effect of making the words in my mind perform a sort
2558 of minuet to keep time--an effect hardly tolerable, I imagine, after
2559 boyhood. As to the grander forms of music, worthy to accompany solemn
2560 celebrations, and even to serve as an educating influence according to
2561 the ancient conception, I say nothing, for with these we are not
2562 immediately concerned."
2563
2564 "No; but music of that sort I should enjoy," said Dorothea. "When we
2565 were coming home from Lausanne my uncle took us to hear the great organ
2566 at Freiberg, and it made me sob."
2567
2568 "That kind of thing is not healthy, my dear," said Mr. Brooke.
2569 "Casaubon, she will be in your hands now: you must teach my niece to
2570 take things more quietly, eh, Dorothea?"
2571
2572 He ended with a smile, not wishing to hurt his niece, but really
2573 thinking that it was perhaps better for her to be early married to so
2574 sober a fellow as Casaubon, since she would not hear of Chettam.
2575
2576 "It is wonderful, though," he said to himself as he shuffled out of the
2577 room--"it is wonderful that she should have liked him. However, the
2578 match is good. I should have been travelling out of my brief to have
2579 hindered it, let Mrs. Cadwallader say what she will. He is pretty
2580 certain to be a bishop, is Casaubon. That was a very seasonable
2581 pamphlet of his on the Catholic Question:--a deanery at least. They
2582 owe him a deanery."
2583
2584 And here I must vindicate a claim to philosophical reflectiveness, by
2585 remarking that Mr. Brooke on this occasion little thought of the
2586 Radical speech which, at a later period, he was led to make on the
2587 incomes of the bishops. What elegant historian would neglect a
2588 striking opportunity for pointing out that his heroes did not foresee
2589 the history of the world, or even their own actions?--For example, that
2590 Henry of Navarre, when a Protestant baby, little thought of being a
2591 Catholic monarch; or that Alfred the Great, when he measured his
2592 laborious nights with burning candles, had no idea of future gentlemen
2593 measuring their idle days with watches. Here is a mine of truth,
2594 which, however vigorously it may be worked, is likely to outlast our
2595 coal.
2596
2597 But of Mr. Brooke I make a further remark perhaps less warranted by
2598 precedent--namely, that if he had foreknown his speech, it might not
2599 have made any great difference. To think with pleasure of his niece's
2600 husband having a large ecclesiastical income was one thing--to make a
2601 Liberal speech was another thing; and it is a narrow mind which cannot
2602 look at a subject from various points of view.
2603
2604
2605
2606 CHAPTER VIII.
2607
2608 "Oh, rescue her! I am her brother now,
2609 And you her father. Every gentle maid
2610 Should have a guardian in each gentleman."
2611
2612
2613 It was wonderful to Sir James Chettam how well he continued to like
2614 going to the Grange after he had once encountered the difficulty of
2615 seeing Dorothea for the first time in the light of a woman who was
2616 engaged to another man. Of course the forked lightning seemed to pass
2617 through him when he first approached her, and he remained conscious
2618 throughout the interview of hiding uneasiness; but, good as he was, it
2619 must be owned that his uneasiness was less than it would have been if
2620 he had thought his rival a brilliant and desirable match. He had no
2621 sense of being eclipsed by Mr. Casaubon; he was only shocked that
2622 Dorothea was under a melancholy illusion, and his mortification lost
2623 some of its bitterness by being mingled with compassion.
2624
2625 Nevertheless, while Sir James said to himself that he had completely
2626 resigned her, since with the perversity of a Desdemona she had not
2627 affected a proposed match that was clearly suitable and according to
2628 nature; he could not yet be quite passive under the idea of her
2629 engagement to Mr. Casaubon. On the day when he first saw them together
2630 in the light of his present knowledge, it seemed to him that he had not
2631 taken the affair seriously enough. Brooke was really culpable; he
2632 ought to have hindered it. Who could speak to him? Something might be
2633 done perhaps even now, at least to defer the marriage. On his way home
2634 he turned into the Rectory and asked for Mr. Cadwallader. Happily, the
2635 Rector was at home, and his visitor was shown into the study, where all
2636 the fishing tackle hung. But he himself was in a little room
2637 adjoining, at work with his turning apparatus, and he called to the
2638 baronet to join him there. The two were better friends than any other
2639 landholder and clergyman in the county--a significant fact which was in
2640 agreement with the amiable expression of their faces.
2641
2642 Mr. Cadwallader was a large man, with full lips and a sweet smile; very
2643 plain and rough in his exterior, but with that solid imperturbable ease
2644 and good-humor which is infectious, and like great grassy hills in the
2645 sunshine, quiets even an irritated egoism, and makes it rather ashamed
2646 of itself. "Well, how are you?" he said, showing a hand not quite fit
2647 to be grasped. "Sorry I missed you before. Is there anything
2648 particular? You look vexed."
2649
2650 Sir James's brow had a little crease in it, a little depression of the
2651 eyebrow, which he seemed purposely to exaggerate as he answered.
2652
2653 "It is only this conduct of Brooke's. I really think somebody should
2654 speak to him."
2655
2656 "What? meaning to stand?" said Mr. Cadwallader, going on with the
2657 arrangement of the reels which he had just been turning. "I hardly
2658 think he means it. But where's the harm, if he likes it? Any one who
2659 objects to Whiggery should be glad when the Whigs don't put up the
2660 strongest fellow. They won't overturn the Constitution with our friend
2661 Brooke's head for a battering ram."
2662
2663 "Oh, I don't mean that," said Sir James, who, after putting down his
2664 hat and throwing himself into a chair, had begun to nurse his leg and
2665 examine the sole of his boot with much bitterness. "I mean this
2666 marriage. I mean his letting that blooming young girl marry Casaubon."
2667
2668 "What is the matter with Casaubon? I see no harm in him--if the girl
2669 likes him."
2670
2671 "She is too young to know what she likes. Her guardian ought to
2672 interfere. He ought not to allow the thing to be done in this headlong
2673 manner. I wonder a man like you, Cadwallader--a man with daughters,
2674 can look at the affair with indifference: and with such a heart as
2675 yours! Do think seriously about it."
2676
2677 "I am not joking; I am as serious as possible," said the Rector, with a
2678 provoking little inward laugh. "You are as bad as Elinor. She has
2679 been wanting me to go and lecture Brooke; and I have reminded her that
2680 her friends had a very poor opinion of the match she made when she
2681 married me."
2682
2683 "But look at Casaubon," said Sir James, indignantly. "He must be
2684 fifty, and I don't believe he could ever have been much more than the
2685 shadow of a man. Look at his legs!"
2686
2687 "Confound you handsome young fellows! you think of having it all your
2688 own way in the world. You don't under stand women. They don't admire
2689 you half so much as you admire yourselves. Elinor used to tell her
2690 sisters that she married me for my ugliness--it was so various and
2691 amusing that it had quite conquered her prudence."
2692
2693 "You! it was easy enough for a woman to love you. But this is no
2694 question of beauty. I don't _like_ Casaubon." This was Sir James's
2695 strongest way of implying that he thought ill of a man's character.
2696
2697 "Why? what do you know against him?" said the Rector laying down his
2698 reels, and putting his thumbs into his armholes with an air of
2699 attention.
2700
2701 Sir James paused. He did not usually find it easy to give his reasons:
2702 it seemed to him strange that people should not know them without being
2703 told, since he only felt what was reasonable. At last he said--
2704
2705 "Now, Cadwallader, has he got any heart?"
2706
2707 "Well, yes. I don't mean of the melting sort, but a sound kernel,
2708 _that_ you may be sure of. He is very good to his poor relations:
2709 pensions several of the women, and is educating a young fellow at a
2710 good deal of expense. Casaubon acts up to his sense of justice. His
2711 mother's sister made a bad match--a Pole, I think--lost herself--at any
2712 rate was disowned by her family. If it had not been for that, Casaubon
2713 would not have had so much money by half. I believe he went himself to
2714 find out his cousins, and see what he could do for them. Every man
2715 would not ring so well as that, if you tried his metal. _You_ would,
2716 Chettam; but not every man."
2717
2718 "I don't know," said Sir James, coloring. "I am not so sure of
2719 myself." He paused a moment, and then added, "That was a right thing
2720 for Casaubon to do. But a man may wish to do what is right, and yet be
2721 a sort of parchment code. A woman may not be happy with him. And I
2722 think when a girl is so young as Miss Brooke is, her friends ought to
2723 interfere a little to hinder her from doing anything foolish. You
2724 laugh, because you fancy I have some feeling on my own account. But
2725 upon my honor, it is not that. I should feel just the same if I were
2726 Miss Brooke's brother or uncle."
2727
2728 "Well, but what should you do?"
2729
2730 "I should say that the marriage must not be decided on until she was of
2731 age. And depend upon it, in that case, it would never come off. I
2732 wish you saw it as I do--I wish you would talk to Brooke about it."
2733
2734 Sir James rose as he was finishing his sentence, for he saw Mrs.
2735 Cadwallader entering from the study. She held by the hand her youngest
2736 girl, about five years old, who immediately ran to papa, and was made
2737 comfortable on his knee.
2738
2739 "I hear what you are talking about," said the wife. "But you will make
2740 no impression on Humphrey. As long as the fish rise to his bait,
2741 everybody is what he ought to be. Bless you, Casaubon has got a
2742 trout-stream, and does not care about fishing in it himself: could
2743 there be a better fellow?"
2744
2745 "Well, there is something in that," said the Rector, with his quiet,
2746 inward laugh. "It is a very good quality in a man to have a
2747 trout-stream."
2748
2749 "But seriously," said Sir James, whose vexation had not yet spent
2750 itself, "don't you think the Rector might do some good by speaking?"
2751
2752 "Oh, I told you beforehand what he would say," answered Mrs.
2753 Cadwallader, lifting up her eyebrows. "I have done what I could: I
2754 wash my hands of the marriage."
2755
2756 "In the first place," said the Rector, looking rather grave, "it would
2757 be nonsensical to expect that I could convince Brooke, and make him act
2758 accordingly. Brooke is a very good fellow, but pulpy; he will run into
2759 any mould, but he won't keep shape."
2760
2761 "He might keep shape long enough to defer the marriage," said Sir James.
2762
2763 "But, my dear Chettam, why should I use my influence to Casaubon's
2764 disadvantage, unless I were much surer than I am that I should be
2765 acting for the advantage of Miss Brooke? I know no harm of Casaubon.
2766 I don't care about his Xisuthrus and Fee-fo-fum and the rest; but then
2767 he doesn't care about my fishing-tackle. As to the line he took on the
2768 Catholic Question, that was unexpected; but he has always been civil to
2769 me, and I don't see why I should spoil his sport. For anything I can
2770 tell, Miss Brooke may be happier with him than she would be with any
2771 other man."
2772
2773 "Humphrey! I have no patience with you. You know you would rather
2774 dine under the hedge than with Casaubon alone. You have nothing to say
2775 to each other."
2776
2777 "What has that to do with Miss Brooke's marrying him? She does not do
2778 it for my amusement."
2779
2780 "He has got no good red blood in his body," said Sir James.
2781
2782 "No. Somebody put a drop under a magnifying-glass and it was all
2783 semicolons and parentheses," said Mrs. Cadwallader.
2784
2785 "Why does he not bring out his book, instead of marrying," said Sir
2786 James, with a disgust which he held warranted by the sound feeling of
2787 an English layman.
2788
2789 "Oh, he dreams footnotes, and they run away with all his brains. They
2790 say, when he was a little boy, he made an abstract of 'Hop o' my
2791 Thumb,' and he has been making abstracts ever since. Ugh! And that is
2792 the man Humphrey goes on saying that a woman may be happy with."
2793
2794 "Well, he is what Miss Brooke likes," said the Rector. "I don't
2795 profess to understand every young lady's taste."
2796
2797 "But if she were your own daughter?" said Sir James.
2798
2799 "That would be a different affair. She is _not_ my daughter, and I
2800 don't feel called upon to interfere. Casaubon is as good as most of
2801 us. He is a scholarly clergyman, and creditable to the cloth. Some
2802 Radical fellow speechifying at Middlemarch said Casaubon was the
2803 learned straw-chopping incumbent, and Freke was the brick-and-mortar
2804 incumbent, and I was the angling incumbent. And upon my word, I don't
2805 see that one is worse or better than the other." The Rector ended with
2806 his silent laugh. He always saw the joke of any satire against
2807 himself. His conscience was large and easy, like the rest of him: it
2808 did only what it could do without any trouble.
2809
2810 Clearly, there would be no interference with Miss Brooke's marriage
2811 through Mr. Cadwallader; and Sir James felt with some sadness that she
2812 was to have perfect liberty of misjudgment. It was a sign of his good
2813 disposition that he did not slacken at all in his intention of carrying
2814 out Dorothea's design of the cottages. Doubtless this persistence was
2815 the best course for his own dignity: but pride only helps us to be
2816 generous; it never makes us so, any more than vanity makes us witty.
2817 She was now enough aware of Sir James's position with regard to her, to
2818 appreciate the rectitude of his perseverance in a landlord's duty, to
2819 which he had at first been urged by a lover's complaisance, and her
2820 pleasure in it was great enough to count for something even in her
2821 present happiness. Perhaps she gave to Sir James Chettam's cottages
2822 all the interest she could spare from Mr. Casaubon, or rather from the
2823 symphony of hopeful dreams, admiring trust, and passionate self
2824 devotion which that learned gentleman had set playing in her soul.
2825 Hence it happened that in the good baronet's succeeding visits, while
2826 he was beginning to pay small attentions to Celia, he found himself
2827 talking with more and more pleasure to Dorothea. She was perfectly
2828 unconstrained and without irritation towards him now, and he was
2829 gradually discovering the delight there is in frank kindness and
2830 companionship between a man and a woman who have no passion to hide or
2831 confess.
2832
2833
2834
2835 CHAPTER IX.
2836
2837 1st Gent. An ancient land in ancient oracles
2838 Is called "law-thirsty": all the struggle there
2839 Was after order and a perfect rule.
2840 Pray, where lie such lands now? . . .
2841 2d Gent. Why, where they lay of old--in human souls.
2842
2843
2844 Mr. Casaubon's behavior about settlements was highly satisfactory to
2845 Mr. Brooke, and the preliminaries of marriage rolled smoothly along,
2846 shortening the weeks of courtship. The betrothed bride must see her
2847 future home, and dictate any changes that she would like to have made
2848 there. A woman dictates before marriage in order that she may have an
2849 appetite for submission afterwards. And certainly, the mistakes that
2850 we male and female mortals make when we have our own way might fairly
2851 raise some wonder that we are so fond of it.
2852
2853 On a gray but dry November morning Dorothea drove to Lowick in company
2854 with her uncle and Celia. Mr. Casaubon's home was the manor-house.
2855 Close by, visible from some parts of the garden, was the little church,
2856 with the old parsonage opposite. In the beginning of his career, Mr.
2857 Casaubon had only held the living, but the death of his brother had put
2858 him in possession of the manor also. It had a small park, with a fine
2859 old oak here and there, and an avenue of limes towards the southwest
2860 front, with a sunk fence between park and pleasure-ground, so that from
2861 the drawing-room windows the glance swept uninterruptedly along a slope
2862 of greensward till the limes ended in a level of corn and pastures,
2863 which often seemed to melt into a lake under the setting sun. This was
2864 the happy side of the house, for the south and east looked rather
2865 melancholy even under the brightest morning. The grounds here were
2866 more confined, the flower-beds showed no very careful tendance, and
2867 large clumps of trees, chiefly of sombre yews, had risen high, not ten
2868 yards from the windows. The building, of greenish stone, was in the
2869 old English style, not ugly, but small-windowed and melancholy-looking:
2870 the sort of house that must have children, many flowers, open windows,
2871 and little vistas of bright things, to make it seem a joyous home. In
2872 this latter end of autumn, with a sparse remnant of yellow leaves
2873 falling slowly athwart the dark evergreens in a stillness without
2874 sunshine, the house too had an air of autumnal decline, and Mr.
2875 Casaubon, when he presented himself, had no bloom that could be thrown
2876 into relief by that background.
2877
2878 "Oh dear!" Celia said to herself, "I am sure Freshitt Hall would have
2879 been pleasanter than this." She thought of the white freestone, the
2880 pillared portico, and the terrace full of flowers, Sir James smiling
2881 above them like a prince issuing from his enchantment in a rose-bush,
2882 with a handkerchief swiftly metamorphosed from the most delicately
2883 odorous petals--Sir James, who talked so agreeably, always about things
2884 which had common-sense in them, and not about learning! Celia had
2885 those light young feminine tastes which grave and weatherworn gentlemen
2886 sometimes prefer in a wife; but happily Mr. Casaubon's bias had been
2887 different, for he would have had no chance with Celia.
2888
2889 Dorothea, on the contrary, found the house and grounds all that she
2890 could wish: the dark book-shelves in the long library, the carpets and
2891 curtains with colors subdued by time, the curious old maps and
2892 bird's-eye views on the walls of the corridor, with here and there an
2893 old vase below, had no oppression for her, and seemed more cheerful
2894 than the easts and pictures at the Grange, which her uncle had long ago
2895 brought home from his travels--they being probably among the ideas he
2896 had taken in at one time. To poor Dorothea these severe classical
2897 nudities and smirking Renaissance-Correggiosities were painfully
2898 inexplicable, staring into the midst of her Puritanic conceptions: she
2899 had never been taught how she could bring them into any sort of
2900 relevance with her life. But the owners of Lowick apparently had not
2901 been travellers, and Mr. Casaubon's studies of the past were not
2902 carried on by means of such aids.
2903
2904 Dorothea walked about the house with delightful emotion. Everything
2905 seemed hallowed to her: this was to be the home of her wifehood, and
2906 she looked up with eyes full of confidence to Mr. Casaubon when he drew
2907 her attention specially to some actual arrangement and asked her if she
2908 would like an alteration. All appeals to her taste she met gratefully,
2909 but saw nothing to alter. His efforts at exact courtesy and formal
2910 tenderness had no defect for her. She filled up all blanks with
2911 unmanifested perfections, interpreting him as she interpreted the works
2912 of Providence, and accounting for seeming discords by her own deafness
2913 to the higher harmonies. And there are many blanks left in the weeks
2914 of courtship which a loving faith fills with happy assurance.
2915
2916 "Now, my dear Dorothea, I wish you to favor me by pointing out which
2917 room you would like to have as your boudoir," said Mr. Casaubon,
2918 showing that his views of the womanly nature were sufficiently large to
2919 include that requirement.
2920
2921 "It is very kind of you to think of that," said Dorothea, "but I assure
2922 you I would rather have all those matters decided for me. I shall be
2923 much happier to take everything as it is--just as you have been used to
2924 have it, or as you will yourself choose it to be. I have no motive for
2925 wishing anything else."
2926
2927 "Oh, Dodo," said Celia, "will you not have the bow-windowed room
2928 up-stairs?"
2929
2930 Mr. Casaubon led the way thither. The bow-window looked down the
2931 avenue of limes; the furniture was all of a faded blue, and there were
2932 miniatures of ladies and gentlemen with powdered hair hanging in a
2933 group. A piece of tapestry over a door also showed a blue-green world
2934 with a pale stag in it. The chairs and tables were thin-legged and
2935 easy to upset. It was a room where one might fancy the ghost of a
2936 tight-laced lady revisiting the scene of her embroidery. A light
2937 bookcase contained duodecimo volumes of polite literature in calf,
2938 completing the furniture.
2939
2940 "Yes," said Mr. Brooke, "this would be a pretty room with some new
2941 hangings, sofas, and that sort of thing. A little bare now."
2942
2943 "No, uncle," said Dorothea, eagerly. "Pray do not speak of altering
2944 anything. There are so many other things in the world that want
2945 altering--I like to take these things as they are. And you like them
2946 as they are, don't you?" she added, looking at Mr. Casaubon. "Perhaps
2947 this was your mother's room when she was young."
2948
2949 "It was," he said, with his slow bend of the head.
2950
2951 "This is your mother," said Dorothea, who had turned to examine the
2952 group of miniatures. "It is like the tiny one you brought me; only, I
2953 should think, a better portrait. And this one opposite, who is this?"
2954
2955 "Her elder sister. They were, like you and your sister, the only two
2956 children of their parents, who hang above them, you see."
2957
2958 "The sister is pretty," said Celia, implying that she thought less
2959 favorably of Mr. Casaubon's mother. It was a new opening to Celia's
2960 imagination, that he came of a family who had all been young in their
2961 time--the ladies wearing necklaces.
2962
2963 "It is a peculiar face," said Dorothea, looking closely. "Those deep
2964 gray eyes rather near together--and the delicate irregular nose with a
2965 sort of ripple in it--and all the powdered curls hanging backward.
2966 Altogether it seems to me peculiar rather than pretty. There is not
2967 even a family likeness between her and your mother."
2968
2969 "No. And they were not alike in their lot."
2970
2971 "You did not mention her to me," said Dorothea.
2972
2973 "My aunt made an unfortunate marriage. I never saw her."
2974
2975 Dorothea wondered a little, but felt that it would be indelicate just
2976 then to ask for any information which Mr. Casaubon did not proffer, and
2977 she turned to the window to admire the view. The sun had lately
2978 pierced the gray, and the avenue of limes cast shadows.
2979
2980 "Shall we not walk in the garden now?" said Dorothea.
2981
2982 "And you would like to see the church, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "It
2983 is a droll little church. And the village. It all lies in a
2984 nut-shell. By the way, it will suit you, Dorothea; for the cottages are
2985 like a row of alms-houses--little gardens, gilly-flowers, that sort of
2986 thing."
2987
2988 "Yes, please," said Dorothea, looking at Mr. Casaubon, "I should like
2989 to see all that." She had got nothing from him more graphic about the
2990 Lowick cottages than that they were "not bad."
2991
2992 They were soon on a gravel walk which led chiefly between grassy
2993 borders and clumps of trees, this being the nearest way to the church,
2994 Mr. Casaubon said. At the little gate leading into the churchyard
2995 there was a pause while Mr. Casaubon went to the parsonage close by to
2996 fetch a key. Celia, who had been hanging a little in the rear, came up
2997 presently, when she saw that Mr. Casaubon was gone away, and said in
2998 her easy staccato, which always seemed to contradict the suspicion of
2999 any malicious intent--
3000
3001 "Do you know, Dorothea, I saw some one quite young coming up one of the
3002 walks."
3003
3004 "Is that astonishing, Celia?"
3005
3006 "There may be a young gardener, you know--why not?" said Mr. Brooke.
3007 "I told Casaubon he should change his gardener."
3008
3009 "No, not a gardener," said Celia; "a gentleman with a sketch-book. He
3010 had light-brown curls. I only saw his back. But he was quite young."
3011
3012 "The curate's son, perhaps," said Mr. Brooke. "Ah, there is Casaubon
3013 again, and Tucker with him. He is going to introduce Tucker. You
3014 don't know Tucker yet."
3015
3016 Mr. Tucker was the middle-aged curate, one of the "inferior clergy,"
3017 who are usually not wanting in sons. But after the introduction, the
3018 conversation did not lead to any question about his family, and the
3019 startling apparition of youthfulness was forgotten by every one but
3020 Celia. She inwardly declined to believe that the light-brown curls and
3021 slim figure could have any relationship to Mr. Tucker, who was just as
3022 old and musty-looking as she would have expected Mr. Casaubon's curate
3023 to be; doubtless an excellent man who would go to heaven (for Celia
3024 wished not to be unprincipled), but the corners of his mouth were so
3025 unpleasant. Celia thought with some dismalness of the time she should
3026 have to spend as bridesmaid at Lowick, while the curate had probably no
3027 pretty little children whom she could like, irrespective of principle.
3028
3029 Mr. Tucker was invaluable in their walk; and perhaps Mr. Casaubon had
3030 not been without foresight on this head, the curate being able to
3031 answer all Dorothea's questions about the villagers and the other
3032 parishioners. Everybody, he assured her, was well off in Lowick: not a
3033 cottager in those double cottages at a low rent but kept a pig, and the
3034 strips of garden at the back were well tended. The small boys wore
3035 excellent corduroy, the girls went out as tidy servants, or did a
3036 little straw-plaiting at home: no looms here, no Dissent; and though
3037 the public disposition was rather towards laying by money than towards
3038 spirituality, there was not much vice. The speckled fowls were so
3039 numerous that Mr. Brooke observed, "Your farmers leave some barley for
3040 the women to glean, I see. The poor folks here might have a fowl in
3041 their pot, as the good French king used to wish for all his people.
3042 The French eat a good many fowls--skinny fowls, you know."
3043
3044 "I think it was a very cheap wish of his," said Dorothea, indignantly.
3045 "Are kings such monsters that a wish like that must be reckoned a royal
3046 virtue?"
3047
3048 "And if he wished them a skinny fowl," said Celia, "that would not be
3049 nice. But perhaps he wished them to have fat fowls."
3050
3051 "Yes, but the word has dropped out of the text, or perhaps was
3052 subauditum; that is, present in the king's mind, but not uttered," said
3053 Mr. Casaubon, smiling and bending his head towards Celia, who
3054 immediately dropped backward a little, because she could not bear Mr.
3055 Casaubon to blink at her.
3056
3057 Dorothea sank into silence on the way back to the house. She felt some
3058 disappointment, of which she was yet ashamed, that there was nothing
3059 for her to do in Lowick; and in the next few minutes her mind had
3060 glanced over the possibility, which she would have preferred, of
3061 finding that her home would be in a parish which had a larger share of
3062 the world's misery, so that she might have had more active duties in
3063 it. Then, recurring to the future actually before her, she made a
3064 picture of more complete devotion to Mr. Casaubon's aims in which she
3065 would await new duties. Many such might reveal themselves to the
3066 higher knowledge gained by her in that companionship.
3067
3068 Mr. Tucker soon left them, having some clerical work which would not
3069 allow him to lunch at the Hall; and as they were re-entering the garden
3070 through the little gate, Mr. Casaubon said--
3071
3072 "You seem a little sad, Dorothea. I trust you are pleased with what
3073 you have seen."
3074
3075 "I am feeling something which is perhaps foolish and wrong," answered
3076 Dorothea, with her usual openness--"almost wishing that the people
3077 wanted more to be done for them here. I have known so few ways of
3078 making my life good for anything. Of course, my notions of usefulness
3079 must be narrow. I must learn new ways of helping people."
3080
3081 "Doubtless," said Mr. Casaubon. "Each position has its corresponding
3082 duties. Yours, I trust, as the mistress of Lowick, will not leave any
3083 yearning unfulfilled."
3084
3085 "Indeed, I believe that," said Dorothea, earnestly. "Do not suppose
3086 that I am sad."
3087
3088 "That is well. But, if you are not tired, we will take another way to
3089 the house than that by which we came."
3090
3091 Dorothea was not at all tired, and a little circuit was made towards a
3092 fine yew-tree, the chief hereditary glory of the grounds on this side
3093 of the house. As they approached it, a figure, conspicuous on a dark
3094 background of evergreens, was seated on a bench, sketching the old
3095 tree. Mr. Brooke, who was walking in front with Celia, turned his
3096 head, and said--
3097
3098 "Who is that youngster, Casaubon?"
3099
3100 They had come very near when Mr. Casaubon answered--
3101
3102 "That is a young relative of mine, a second cousin: the grandson, in
3103 fact," he added, looking at Dorothea, "of the lady whose portrait you
3104 have been noticing, my aunt Julia."
3105
3106 The young man had laid down his sketch-book and risen. His bushy
3107 light-brown curls, as well as his youthfulness, identified him at once
3108 with Celia's apparition.
3109
3110 "Dorothea, let me introduce to you my cousin, Mr. Ladislaw. Will, this
3111 is Miss Brooke."
3112
3113 The cousin was so close now, that, when he lifted his hat, Dorothea
3114 could see a pair of gray eyes rather near together, a delicate
3115 irregular nose with a little ripple in it, and hair falling backward;
3116 but there was a mouth and chin of a more prominent, threatening aspect
3117 than belonged to the type of the grandmother's miniature. Young
3118 Ladislaw did not feel it necessary to smile, as if he were charmed with
3119 this introduction to his future second cousin and her relatives; but
3120 wore rather a pouting air of discontent.
3121
3122 "You are an artist, I see," said Mr. Brooke, taking up the sketch-book
3123 and turning it over in his unceremonious fashion.
3124
3125 "No, I only sketch a little. There is nothing fit to be seen there,"
3126 said young Ladislaw, coloring, perhaps with temper rather than modesty.
3127
3128 "Oh, come, this is a nice bit, now. I did a little in this way myself
3129 at one time, you know. Look here, now; this is what I call a nice
3130 thing, done with what we used to call _brio_." Mr. Brooke held out
3131 towards the two girls a large colored sketch of stony ground and trees,
3132 with a pool.
3133
3134 "I am no judge of these things," said Dorothea, not coldly, but with an
3135 eager deprecation of the appeal to her. "You know, uncle, I never see
3136 the beauty of those pictures which you say are so much praised. They
3137 are a language I do not understand. I suppose there is some relation
3138 between pictures and nature which I am too ignorant to feel--just as
3139 you see what a Greek sentence stands for which means nothing to me."
3140 Dorothea looked up at Mr. Casaubon, who bowed his head towards her,
3141 while Mr. Brooke said, smiling nonchalantly--
3142
3143 "Bless me, now, how different people are! But you had a bad style of
3144 teaching, you know--else this is just the thing for girls--sketching,
3145 fine art and so on. But you took to drawing plans; you don't
3146 understand morbidezza, and that kind of thing. You will come to my
3147 house, I hope, and I will show you what I did in this way," he
3148 continued, turning to young Ladislaw, who had to be recalled from his
3149 preoccupation in observing Dorothea. Ladislaw had made up his mind
3150 that she must be an unpleasant girl, since she was going to marry
3151 Casaubon, and what she said of her stupidity about pictures would have
3152 confirmed that opinion even if he had believed her. As it was, he took
3153 her words for a covert judgment, and was certain that she thought his
3154 sketch detestable. There was too much cleverness in her apology: she
3155 was laughing both at her uncle and himself. But what a voice! It was
3156 like the voice of a soul that had once lived in an Aeolian harp. This
3157 must be one of Nature's inconsistencies. There could be no sort of
3158 passion in a girl who would marry Casaubon. But he turned from her,
3159 and bowed his thanks for Mr. Brooke's invitation.
3160
3161 "We will turn over my Italian engravings together," continued that
3162 good-natured man. "I have no end of those things, that I have laid by
3163 for years. One gets rusty in this part of the country, you know. Not
3164 you, Casaubon; you stick to your studies; but my best ideas get
3165 undermost--out of use, you know. You clever young men must guard
3166 against indolence. I was too indolent, you know: else I might have
3167 been anywhere at one time."
3168
3169 "That is a seasonable admonition," said Mr. Casaubon; "but now we will
3170 pass on to the house, lest the young ladies should be tired of
3171 standing."
3172
3173 When their backs were turned, young Ladislaw sat down to go on with his
3174 sketching, and as he did so his face broke into an expression of
3175 amusement which increased as he went on drawing, till at last he threw
3176 back his head and laughed aloud. Partly it was the reception of his
3177 own artistic production that tickled him; partly the notion of his
3178 grave cousin as the lover of that girl; and partly Mr. Brooke's
3179 definition of the place he might have held but for the impediment of
3180 indolence. Mr. Will Ladislaw's sense of the ludicrous lit up his
3181 features very agreeably: it was the pure enjoyment of comicality, and
3182 had no mixture of sneering and self-exaltation.
3183
3184 "What is your nephew going to do with himself, Casaubon?" said Mr.
3185 Brooke, as they went on.
3186
3187 "My cousin, you mean--not my nephew."
3188
3189 "Yes, yes, cousin. But in the way of a career, you know."
3190
3191 "The answer to that question is painfully doubtful. On leaving Rugby
3192 he declined to go to an English university, where I would gladly have
3193 placed him, and chose what I must consider the anomalous course of
3194 studying at Heidelberg. And now he wants to go abroad again, without
3195 any special object, save the vague purpose of what he calls culture,
3196 preparation for he knows not what. He declines to choose a profession."
3197
3198 "He has no means but what you furnish, I suppose."
3199
3200 "I have always given him and his friends reason to understand that I
3201 would furnish in moderation what was necessary for providing him with a
3202 scholarly education, and launching him respectably. I am-therefore
3203 bound to fulfil the expectation so raised," said Mr. Casaubon, putting
3204 his conduct in the light of mere rectitude: a trait of delicacy which
3205 Dorothea noticed with admiration.
3206
3207 "He has a thirst for travelling; perhaps he may turn out a Bruce or a
3208 Mungo Park," said Mr. Brooke. "I had a notion of that myself at one
3209 time."
3210
3211 "No, he has no bent towards exploration, or the enlargement of our
3212 geognosis: that would be a special purpose which I could recognize with
3213 some approbation, though without felicitating him on a career which so
3214 often ends in premature and violent death. But so far is he from
3215 having any desire for a more accurate knowledge of the earth's surface,
3216 that he said he should prefer not to know the sources of the Nile, and
3217 that there should be some unknown regions preserved as hunting grounds
3218 for the poetic imagination."
3219
3220 "Well, there is something in that, you know," said Mr. Brooke, who had
3221 certainly an impartial mind.
3222
3223 "It is, I fear, nothing more than a part of his general inaccuracy and
3224 indisposition to thoroughness of all kinds, which would be a bad augury
3225 for him in any profession, civil or sacred, even were he so far
3226 submissive to ordinary rule as to choose one."
3227
3228 "Perhaps he has conscientious scruples founded on his own unfitness,"
3229 said Dorothea, who was interesting herself in finding a favorable
3230 explanation. "Because the law and medicine should be very serious
3231 professions to undertake, should they not? People's lives and fortunes
3232 depend on them."
3233
3234 "Doubtless; but I fear that my young relative Will Ladislaw is chiefly
3235 determined in his aversion to these callings by a dislike to steady
3236 application, and to that kind of acquirement which is needful
3237 instrumentally, but is not charming or immediately inviting to
3238 self-indulgent taste. I have insisted to him on what Aristotle has
3239 stated with admirable brevity, that for the achievement of any work
3240 regarded as an end there must be a prior exercise of many energies or
3241 acquired facilities of a secondary order, demanding patience. I have
3242 pointed to my own manuscript volumes, which represent the toil of years
3243 preparatory to a work not yet accomplished. But in vain. To careful
3244 reasoning of this kind he replies by calling himself Pegasus, and every
3245 form of prescribed work 'harness.'"
3246
3247 Celia laughed. She was surprised to find that Mr. Casaubon could say
3248 something quite amusing.
3249
3250 "Well, you know, he may turn out a Byron, a Chatterton, a
3251 Churchill--that sort of thing--there's no telling," said Mr. Brooke.
3252 "Shall you let him go to Italy, or wherever else he wants to go?"
3253
3254 "Yes; I have agreed to furnish him with moderate supplies for a year or
3255 so; he asks no more. I shall let him be tried by the test of freedom."
3256
3257 "That is very kind of you," said Dorothea, looking up at Mr. Casaubon
3258 with delight. "It is noble. After all, people may really have in them
3259 some vocation which is not quite plain to themselves, may they not?
3260 They may seem idle and weak because they are growing. We should be
3261 very patient with each other, I think."
3262
3263 "I suppose it is being engaged to be married that has made you think
3264 patience good," said Celia, as soon as she and Dorothea were alone
3265 together, taking off their wrappings.
3266
3267 "You mean that I am very impatient, Celia."
3268
3269 "Yes; when people don't do and say just what you like." Celia had
3270 become less afraid of "saying things" to Dorothea since this
3271 engagement: cleverness seemed to her more pitiable than ever.
3272
3273
3274
3275 CHAPTER X.
3276
3277 "He had catched a great cold, had he had no other clothes
3278 to wear than the skin of a bear not yet killed."--FULLER.
3279
3280
3281 Young Ladislaw did not pay that visit to which Mr. Brooke had invited
3282 him, and only six days afterwards Mr. Casaubon mentioned that his young
3283 relative had started for the Continent, seeming by this cold vagueness
3284 to waive inquiry. Indeed, Will had declined to fix on any more precise
3285 destination than the entire area of Europe. Genius, he held, is
3286 necessarily intolerant of fetters: on the one hand it must have the
3287 utmost play for its spontaneity; on the other, it may confidently await
3288 those messages from the universe which summon it to its peculiar work,
3289 only placing itself in an attitude of receptivity towards all sublime
3290 chances. The attitudes of receptivity are various, and Will had
3291 sincerely tried many of them. He was not excessively fond of wine, but
3292 he had several times taken too much, simply as an experiment in that
3293 form of ecstasy; he had fasted till he was faint, and then supped on
3294 lobster; he had made himself ill with doses of opium. Nothing greatly
3295 original had resulted from these measures; and the effects of the opium
3296 had convinced him that there was an entire dissimilarity between his
3297 constitution and De Quincey's. The superadded circumstance which would
3298 evolve the genius had not yet come; the universe had not yet beckoned.
3299 Even Caesar's fortune at one time was, but a grand presentiment. We
3300 know what a masquerade all development is, and what effective shapes
3301 may be disguised in helpless embryos.--In fact, the world is full of
3302 hopeful analogies and handsome dubious eggs called possibilities. Will
3303 saw clearly enough the pitiable instances of long incubation producing
3304 no chick, and but for gratitude would have laughed at Casaubon, whose
3305 plodding application, rows of note-books, and small taper of learned
3306 theory exploring the tossed ruins of the world, seemed to enforce a
3307 moral entirely encouraging to Will's generous reliance on the
3308 intentions of the universe with regard to himself. He held that
3309 reliance to be a mark of genius; and certainly it is no mark to the
3310 contrary; genius consisting neither in self-conceit nor in humility,
3311 but in a power to make or do, not anything in general, but something in
3312 particular. Let him start for the Continent, then, without our
3313 pronouncing on his future. Among all forms of mistake, prophecy is the
3314 most gratuitous.
3315
3316 But at present this caution against a too hasty judgment interests me
3317 more in relation to Mr. Casaubon than to his young cousin. If to
3318 Dorothea Mr. Casaubon had been the mere occasion which had set alight
3319 the fine inflammable material of her youthful illusions, does it follow
3320 that he was fairly represented in the minds of those less impassioned
3321 personages who have hitherto delivered their judgments concerning him?
3322 I protest against any absolute conclusion, any prejudice derived from
3323 Mrs. Cadwallader's contempt for a neighboring clergyman's alleged
3324 greatness of soul, or Sir James Chettam's poor opinion of his rival's
3325 legs,--from Mr. Brooke's failure to elicit a companion's ideas, or from
3326 Celia's criticism of a middle-aged scholar's personal appearance. I am
3327 not sure that the greatest man of his age, if ever that solitary
3328 superlative existed, could escape these unfavorable reflections of
3329 himself in various small mirrors; and even Milton, looking for his
3330 portrait in a spoon, must submit to have the facial angle of a bumpkin.
3331 Moreover, if Mr. Casaubon, speaking for himself, has rather a chilling
3332 rhetoric, it is not therefore certain that there is no good work or
3333 fine feeling in him. Did not an immortal physicist and interpreter of
3334 hieroglyphs write detestable verses? Has the theory of the solar
3335 system been advanced by graceful manners and conversational tact?
3336 Suppose we turn from outside estimates of a man, to wonder, with keener
3337 interest, what is the report of his own consciousness about his doings
3338 or capacity: with what hindrances he is carrying on his daily labors;
3339 what fading of hopes, or what deeper fixity of self-delusion the years
3340 are marking off within him; and with what spirit he wrestles against
3341 universal pressure, which will one day be too heavy for him, and bring
3342 his heart to its final pause. Doubtless his lot is important in his
3343 own eyes; and the chief reason that we think he asks too large a place
3344 in our consideration must be our want of room for him, since we refer
3345 him to the Divine regard with perfect confidence; nay, it is even held
3346 sublime for our neighbor to expect the utmost there, however little he
3347 may have got from us. Mr. Casaubon, too, was the centre of his own
3348 world; if he was liable to think that others were providentially made
3349 for him, and especially to consider them in the light of their fitness
3350 for the author of a "Key to all Mythologies," this trait is not quite
3351 alien to us, and, like the other mendicant hopes of mortals, claims
3352 some of our pity.
3353
3354 Certainly this affair of his marriage with Miss Brooke touched him more
3355 nearly than it did any one of the persons who have hitherto shown their
3356 disapproval of it, and in the present stage of things I feel more
3357 tenderly towards his experience of success than towards the
3358 disappointment of the amiable Sir James. For in truth, as the day
3359 fixed for his marriage came nearer, Mr. Casaubon did not find his
3360 spirits rising; nor did the contemplation of that matrimonial garden
3361 scene, where, as all experience showed, the path was to be bordered
3362 with flowers, prove persistently more enchanting to him than the
3363 accustomed vaults where he walked taper in hand. He did not confess to
3364 himself, still less could he have breathed to another, his surprise
3365 that though he had won a lovely and noble-hearted girl he had not won
3366 delight,--which he had also regarded as an object to be found by
3367 search. It is true that he knew all the classical passages implying
3368 the contrary; but knowing classical passages, we find, is a mode of
3369 motion, which explains why they leave so little extra force for their
3370 personal application.
3371
3372 Poor Mr. Casaubon had imagined that his long studious bachelorhood had
3373 stored up for him a compound interest of enjoyment, and that large
3374 drafts on his affections would not fail to be honored; for we all of
3375 us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act
3376 fatally on the strength of them. And now he was in danger of being
3377 saddened by the very conviction that his circumstances were unusually
3378 happy: there was nothing external by which he could account for a
3379 certain blankness of sensibility which came over him just when his
3380 expectant gladness should have been most lively, just when he exchanged
3381 the accustomed dulness of his Lowick library for his visits to the
3382 Grange. Here was a weary experience in which he was as utterly
3383 condemned to loneliness as in the despair which sometimes threatened
3384 him while toiling in the morass of authorship without seeming nearer to
3385 the goal. And his was that worst loneliness which would shrink from
3386 sympathy. He could not but wish that Dorothea should think him not
3387 less happy than the world would expect her successful suitor to be; and
3388 in relation to his authorship he leaned on her young trust and
3389 veneration, he liked to draw forth her fresh interest in listening, as
3390 a means of encouragement to himself: in talking to her he presented all
3391 his performance and intention with the reflected confidence of the
3392 pedagogue, and rid himself for the time of that chilling ideal audience
3393 which crowded his laborious uncreative hours with the vaporous pressure
3394 of Tartarean shades.
3395
3396 For to Dorothea, after that toy-box history of the world adapted to
3397 young ladies which had made the chief part of her education, Mr.
3398 Casaubon's talk about his great book was full of new vistas; and this
3399 sense of revelation, this surprise of a nearer introduction to Stoics
3400 and Alexandrians, as people who had ideas not totally unlike her own,
3401 kept in abeyance for the time her usual eagerness for a binding theory
3402 which could bring her own life and doctrine into strict connection with
3403 that amazing past, and give the remotest sources of knowledge some
3404 bearing on her actions. That more complete teaching would come--Mr.
3405 Casaubon would tell her all that: she was looking forward to higher
3406 initiation in ideas, as she was looking forward to marriage, and
3407 blending her dim conceptions of both. It would be a great mistake to
3408 suppose that Dorothea would have cared about any share in Mr.
3409 Casaubon's learning as mere accomplishment; for though opinion in the
3410 neighborhood of Freshitt and Tipton had pronounced her clever, that
3411 epithet would not have described her to circles in whose more precise
3412 vocabulary cleverness implies mere aptitude for knowing and doing,
3413 apart from character. All her eagerness for acquirement lay within
3414 that full current of sympathetic motive in which her ideas and impulses
3415 were habitually swept along. She did not want to deck herself with
3416 knowledge--to wear it loose from the nerves and blood that fed her
3417 action; and if she had written a book she must have done it as Saint
3418 Theresa did, under the command of an authority that constrained her
3419 conscience. But something she yearned for by which her life might be
3420 filled with action at once rational and ardent; and since the time was
3421 gone by for guiding visions and spiritual directors, since prayer
3422 heightened yearning but not instruction, what lamp was there but
3423 knowledge? Surely learned men kept the only oil; and who more learned
3424 than Mr. Casaubon?
3425
3426 Thus in these brief weeks Dorothea's joyous grateful expectation was
3427 unbroken, and however her lover might occasionally be conscious of
3428 flatness, he could never refer it to any slackening of her affectionate
3429 interest.
3430
3431 The season was mild enough to encourage the project of extending the
3432 wedding journey as far as Rome, and Mr. Casaubon was anxious for this
3433 because he wished to inspect some manuscripts in the Vatican.
3434
3435 "I still regret that your sister is not to accompany us," he said one
3436 morning, some time after it had been ascertained that Celia objected to
3437 go, and that Dorothea did not wish for her companionship. "You will
3438 have many lonely hours, Dorothea, for I shall be constrained to make
3439 the utmost use of my time during our stay in Rome, and I should feel
3440 more at liberty if you had a companion."
3441
3442 The words "I should feel more at liberty" grated on Dorothea. For the
3443 first time in speaking to Mr. Casaubon she colored from annoyance.
3444
3445 "You must have misunderstood me very much," she said, "if you think I
3446 should not enter into the value of your time--if you think that I
3447 should not willingly give up whatever interfered with your using it to
3448 the best purpose."
3449
3450 "That is very amiable in you, my dear Dorothea," said Mr. Casaubon, not
3451 in the least noticing that she was hurt; "but if you had a lady as your
3452 companion, I could put you both under the care of a cicerone, and we
3453 could thus achieve two purposes in the same space of time."
3454
3455 "I beg you will not refer to this again," said Dorothea, rather
3456 haughtily. But immediately she feared that she was wrong, and turning
3457 towards him she laid her hand on his, adding in a different tone, "Pray
3458 do not be anxious about me. I shall have so much to think of when I am
3459 alone. And Tantripp will be a sufficient companion, just to take care
3460 of me. I could not bear to have Celia: she would be miserable."
3461
3462 It was time to dress. There was to be a dinner-party that day, the
3463 last of the parties which were held at the Grange as proper
3464 preliminaries to the wedding, and Dorothea was glad of a reason for
3465 moving away at once on the sound of the bell, as if she needed more
3466 than her usual amount of preparation. She was ashamed of being
3467 irritated from some cause she could not define even to herself; for
3468 though she had no intention to be untruthful, her reply had not touched
3469 the real hurt within her. Mr. Casaubon's words had been quite
3470 reasonable, yet they had brought a vague instantaneous sense of
3471 aloofness on his part.
3472
3473 "Surely I am in a strangely selfish weak state of mind," she said to
3474 herself. "How can I have a husband who is so much above me without
3475 knowing that he needs me less than I need him?"
3476
3477 Having convinced herself that Mr. Casaubon was altogether right, she
3478 recovered her equanimity, and was an agreeable image of serene dignity
3479 when she came into the drawing-room in her silver-gray dress--the
3480 simple lines of her dark-brown hair parted over her brow and coiled
3481 massively behind, in keeping with the entire absence from her manner
3482 and expression of all search after mere effect. Sometimes when
3483 Dorothea was in company, there seemed to be as complete an air of
3484 repose about her as if she had been a picture of Santa Barbara looking
3485 out from her tower into the clear air; but these intervals of quietude
3486 made the energy of her speech and emotion the more remarked when some
3487 outward appeal had touched her.
3488
3489 She was naturally the subject of many observations this evening, for
3490 the dinner-party was large and rather more miscellaneous as to the male
3491 portion than any which had been held at the Grange since Mr. Brooke's
3492 nieces had resided with him, so that the talking was done in duos and
3493 trios more or less inharmonious. There was the newly elected mayor of
3494 Middlemarch, who happened to be a manufacturer; the philanthropic
3495 banker his brother-in-law, who predominated so much in the town that
3496 some called him a Methodist, others a hypocrite, according to the
3497 resources of their vocabulary; and there were various professional men.
3498 In fact, Mrs. Cadwallader said that Brooke was beginning to treat the
3499 Middlemarchers, and that she preferred the farmers at the tithe-dinner,
3500 who drank her health unpretentiously, and were not ashamed of their
3501 grandfathers' furniture. For in that part of the country, before
3502 reform had done its notable part in developing the political
3503 consciousness, there was a clearer distinction of ranks and a dimmer
3504 distinction of parties; so that Mr. Brooke's miscellaneous invitations
3505 seemed to belong to that general laxity which came from his inordinate
3506 travel and habit of taking too much in the form of ideas.
3507
3508 Already, as Miss Brooke passed out of the dining-room, opportunity was
3509 found for some interjectional "asides."
3510
3511 "A fine woman, Miss Brooke! an uncommonly fine woman, by God!" said Mr.
3512 Standish, the old lawyer, who had been so long concerned with the
3513 landed gentry that he had become landed himself, and used that oath in
3514 a deep-mouthed manner as a sort of armorial bearings, stamping the
3515 speech of a man who held a good position.
3516
3517 Mr. Bulstrode, the banker, seemed to be addressed, but that gentleman
3518 disliked coarseness and profanity, and merely bowed. The remark was
3519 taken up by Mr. Chichely, a middle-aged bachelor and coursing
3520 celebrity, who had a complexion something like an Easter egg, a few
3521 hairs carefully arranged, and a carriage implying the consciousness of
3522 a distinguished appearance.
3523
3524 "Yes, but not my style of woman: I like a woman who lays herself out a
3525 little more to please us. There should be a little filigree about a
3526 woman--something of the coquette. A man likes a sort of challenge.
3527 The more of a dead set she makes at you the better."
3528
3529 "There's some truth in that," said Mr. Standish, disposed to be genial.
3530 "And, by God, it's usually the way with them. I suppose it answers
3531 some wise ends: Providence made them so, eh, Bulstrode?"
3532
3533 "I should be disposed to refer coquetry to another source," said Mr.
3534 Bulstrode. "I should rather refer it to the devil."
3535
3536 "Ay, to be sure, there should be a little devil in a woman," said Mr.
3537 Chichely, whose study of the fair sex seemed to have been detrimental
3538 to his theology. "And I like them blond, with a certain gait, and a
3539 swan neck. Between ourselves, the mayor's daughter is more to my taste
3540 than Miss Brooke or Miss Celia either. If I were a marrying man I
3541 should choose Miss Vincy before either of them."
3542
3543 "Well, make up, make up," said Mr. Standish, jocosely; "you see the
3544 middle-aged fellows early the day."
3545
3546 Mr. Chichely shook his head with much meaning: he was not going to
3547 incur the certainty of being accepted by the woman he would choose.
3548
3549 The Miss Vincy who had the honor of being Mr. Chichely's ideal was of
3550 course not present; for Mr. Brooke, always objecting to go too far,
3551 would not have chosen that his nieces should meet the daughter of a
3552 Middlemarch manufacturer, unless it were on a public occasion. The
3553 feminine part of the company included none whom Lady Chettam or Mrs.
3554 Cadwallader could object to; for Mrs. Renfrew, the colonel's widow, was
3555 not only unexceptionable in point of breeding, but also interesting on
3556 the ground of her complaint, which puzzled the doctors, and seemed
3557 clearly a case wherein the fulness of professional knowledge might need
3558 the supplement of quackery. Lady Chettam, who attributed her own
3559 remarkable health to home-made bitters united with constant medical
3560 attendance, entered with much exercise of the imagination into Mrs.
3561 Renfrew's account of symptoms, and into the amazing futility in her
3562 case of all strengthening medicines.
3563
3564 "Where can all the strength of those medicines go, my dear?" said the
3565 mild but stately dowager, turning to Mrs. Cadwallader reflectively,
3566 when Mrs. Renfrew's attention was called away.
3567
3568 "It strengthens the disease," said the Rector's wife, much too
3569 well-born not to be an amateur in medicine. "Everything depends on the
3570 constitution: some people make fat, some blood, and some bile--that's
3571 my view of the matter; and whatever they take is a sort of grist to the
3572 mill."
3573
3574 "Then she ought to take medicines that would reduce--reduce the
3575 disease, you know, if you are right, my dear. And I think what you say
3576 is reasonable."
3577
3578 "Certainly it is reasonable. You have two sorts of potatoes, fed on
3579 the same soil. One of them grows more and more watery--"
3580
3581 "Ah! like this poor Mrs. Renfrew--that is what I think. Dropsy! There
3582 is no swelling yet--it is inward. I should say she ought to take
3583 drying medicines, shouldn't you?--or a dry hot-air bath. Many things
3584 might be tried, of a drying nature."
3585
3586 "Let her try a certain person's pamphlets," said Mrs. Cadwallader in an
3587 undertone, seeing the gentlemen enter. "He does not want drying."
3588
3589 "Who, my dear?" said Lady Chettam, a charming woman, not so quick as to
3590 nullify the pleasure of explanation.
3591
3592 "The bridegroom--Casaubon. He has certainly been drying up faster since
3593 the engagement: the flame of passion, I suppose."
3594
3595 "I should think he is far from having a good constitution," said Lady
3596 Chettam, with a still deeper undertone. "And then his studies--so very
3597 dry, as you say."
3598
3599 "Really, by the side of Sir James, he looks like a death's head skinned
3600 over for the occasion. Mark my words: in a year from this time that
3601 girl will hate him. She looks up to him as an oracle now, and
3602 by-and-by she will be at the other extreme. All flightiness!"
3603
3604 "How very shocking! I fear she is headstrong. But tell me--you know
3605 all about him--is there anything very bad? What is the truth?"
3606
3607 "The truth? he is as bad as the wrong physic--nasty to take, and sure
3608 to disagree."
3609
3610 "There could not be anything worse than that," said Lady Chettam, with
3611 so vivid a conception of the physic that she seemed to have learned
3612 something exact about Mr. Casaubon's disadvantages. "However, James
3613 will hear nothing against Miss Brooke. He says she is the mirror of
3614 women still."
3615
3616 "That is a generous make-believe of his. Depend upon it, he likes
3617 little Celia better, and she appreciates him. I hope you like my
3618 little Celia?"
3619
3620 "Certainly; she is fonder of geraniums, and seems more docile, though
3621 not so fine a figure. But we were talking of physic. Tell me about
3622 this new young surgeon, Mr. Lydgate. I am told he is wonderfully
3623 clever: he certainly looks it--a fine brow indeed."
3624
3625 "He is a gentleman. I heard him talking to Humphrey. He talks well."
3626
3627 "Yes. Mr. Brooke says he is one of the Lydgates of Northumberland,
3628 really well connected. One does not expect it in a practitioner of
3629 that kind. For my own part, I like a medical man more on a footing
3630 with the servants; they are often all the cleverer. I assure you I
3631 found poor Hicks's judgment unfailing; I never knew him wrong. He was
3632 coarse and butcher-like, but he knew my constitution. It was a loss to
3633 me his going off so suddenly. Dear me, what a very animated
3634 conversation Miss Brooke seems to be having with this Mr. Lydgate!"
3635
3636 "She is talking cottages and hospitals with him," said Mrs.
3637 Cadwallader, whose ears and power of interpretation were quick. "I
3638 believe he is a sort of philanthropist, so Brooke is sure to take him
3639 up."
3640
3641 "James," said Lady Chettam when her son came near, "bring Mr. Lydgate
3642 and introduce him to me. I want to test him."
3643
3644 The affable dowager declared herself delighted with this opportunity of
3645 making Mr. Lydgate's acquaintance, having heard of his success in
3646 treating fever on a new plan.
3647
3648 Mr. Lydgate had the medical accomplishment of looking perfectly grave
3649 whatever nonsense was talked to him, and his dark steady eyes gave him
3650 impressiveness as a listener. He was as little as possible like the
3651 lamented Hicks, especially in a certain careless refinement about his
3652 toilet and utterance. Yet Lady Chettam gathered much confidence in
3653 him. He confirmed her view of her own constitution as being peculiar,
3654 by admitting that all constitutions might be called peculiar, and he
3655 did not deny that hers might be more peculiar than others. He did not
3656 approve of a too lowering system, including reckless cupping, nor, on
3657 the other hand, of incessant port wine and bark. He said "I think so"
3658 with an air of so much deference accompanying the insight of agreement,
3659 that she formed the most cordial opinion of his talents.
3660
3661 "I am quite pleased with your protege," she said to Mr. Brooke before
3662 going away.
3663
3664 "My protege?--dear me!--who is that?" said Mr. Brooke.
3665
3666 "This young Lydgate, the new doctor. He seems to me to understand his
3667 profession admirably."
3668
3669 "Oh, Lydgate! he is not my protege, you know; only I knew an uncle of
3670 his who sent me a letter about him. However, I think he is likely to
3671 be first-rate--has studied in Paris, knew Broussais; has ideas, you
3672 know--wants to raise the profession."
3673
3674 "Lydgate has lots of ideas, quite new, about ventilation and diet, that
3675 sort of thing," resumed Mr. Brooke, after he had handed out Lady
3676 Chettam, and had returned to be civil to a group of Middlemarchers.
3677
3678 "Hang it, do you think that is quite sound?--upsetting The old
3679 treatment, which has made Englishmen what they are?" said Mr. Standish.
3680
3681 "Medical knowledge is at a low ebb among us," said Mr. Bulstrode, who
3682 spoke in a subdued tone, and had rather a sickly air. "I, for my part,
3683 hail the advent of Mr. Lydgate. I hope to find good reason for
3684 confiding the new hospital to his management."
3685
3686 "That is all very fine," replied Mr. Standish, who was not fond of Mr.
3687 Bulstrode; "if you like him to try experiments on your hospital
3688 patients, and kill a few people for charity I have no objection. But I
3689 am not going to hand money out of my purse to have experiments tried on
3690 me. I like treatment that has been tested a little."
3691
3692 "Well, you know, Standish, every dose you take is an experiment-an
3693 experiment, you know," said Mr. Brooke, nodding towards the lawyer.
3694
3695 "Oh, if you talk in that sense!" said Mr. Standish, with as much
3696 disgust at such non-legal quibbling as a man can well betray towards a
3697 valuable client.
3698
3699 "I should be glad of any treatment that would cure me without reducing
3700 me to a skeleton, like poor Grainger," said Mr. Vincy, the mayor, a
3701 florid man, who would have served for a study of flesh in striking
3702 contrast with the Franciscan tints of Mr. Bulstrode. "It's an
3703 uncommonly dangerous thing to be left without any padding against the
3704 shafts of disease, as somebody said,--and I think it a very good
3705 expression myself."
3706
3707 Mr. Lydgate, of course, was out of hearing. He had quitted the party
3708 early, and would have thought it altogether tedious but for the novelty
3709 of certain introductions, especially the introduction to Miss Brooke,
3710 whose youthful bloom, with her approaching marriage to that faded
3711 scholar, and her interest in matters socially useful, gave her the
3712 piquancy of an unusual combination.
3713
3714 "She is a good creature--that fine girl--but a little too earnest," he
3715 thought. "It is troublesome to talk to such women. They are always
3716 wanting reasons, yet they are too ignorant to understand the merits of
3717 any question, and usually fall back on their moral sense to settle
3718 things after their own taste."
3719
3720 Evidently Miss Brooke was not Mr. Lydgate's style of woman any more
3721 than Mr. Chichely's. Considered, indeed, in relation to the latter,
3722 whose mind was matured, she was altogether a mistake, and calculated to
3723 shock his trust in final causes, including the adaptation of fine young
3724 women to purplefaced bachelors. But Lydgate was less ripe, and might
3725 possibly have experience before him which would modify his opinion as
3726 to the most excellent things in woman.
3727
3728 Miss Brooke, however, was not again seen by either of these gentlemen
3729 under her maiden name. Not long after that dinner-party she had become
3730 Mrs. Casaubon, and was on her way to Rome.
3731
3732
3733
3734 CHAPTER XI.
3735
3736 "But deeds and language such as men do use,
3737 And persons such as comedy would choose,
3738 When she would show an image of the times,
3739 And sport with human follies, not with crimes."
3740 --BEN JONSON.
3741
3742
3743 Lydgate, in fact, was already conscious of being fascinated by a woman
3744 strikingly different from Miss Brooke: he did not in the least suppose
3745 that he had lost his balance and fallen in love, but he had said of
3746 that particular woman, "She is grace itself; she is perfectly lovely
3747 and accomplished. That is what a woman ought to be: she ought to
3748 produce the effect of exquisite music." Plain women he regarded as he
3749 did the other severe facts of life, to be faced with philosophy and
3750 investigated by science. But Rosamond Vincy seemed to have the true
3751 melodic charm; and when a man has seen the woman whom he would have
3752 chosen if he had intended to marry speedily, his remaining a bachelor
3753 will usually depend on her resolution rather than on his. Lydgate
3754 believed that he should not marry for several years: not marry until he
3755 had trodden out a good clear path for himself away from the broad road
3756 which was quite ready made. He had seen Miss Vincy above his horizon
3757 almost as long as it had taken Mr. Casaubon to become engaged and
3758 married: but this learned gentleman was possessed of a fortune; he had
3759 assembled his voluminous notes, and had made that sort of reputation
3760 which precedes performance,--often the larger part of a man's fame. He
3761 took a wife, as we have seen, to adorn the remaining quadrant of his
3762 course, and be a little moon that would cause hardly a calculable
3763 perturbation. But Lydgate was young, poor, ambitious. He had his
3764 half-century before him instead of behind him, and he had come to
3765 Middlemarch bent on doing many things that were not directly fitted to
3766 make his fortune or even secure him a good income. To a man under such
3767 circumstances, taking a wife is something more than a question of
3768 adornment, however highly he may rate this; and Lydgate was disposed to
3769 give it the first place among wifely functions. To his taste, guided
3770 by a single conversation, here was the point on which Miss Brooke would
3771 be found wanting, notwithstanding her undeniable beauty. She did not
3772 look at things from the proper feminine angle. The society of such
3773 women was about as relaxing as going from your work to teach the second
3774 form, instead of reclining in a paradise with sweet laughs for
3775 bird-notes, and blue eyes for a heaven.
3776
3777 Certainly nothing at present could seem much less important to Lydgate
3778 than the turn of Miss Brooke's mind, or to Miss Brooke than the
3779 qualities of the woman who had attracted this young surgeon. But any
3780 one watching keenly the stealthy convergence of human lots, sees a slow
3781 preparation of effects from one life on another, which tells like a
3782 calculated irony on the indifference or the frozen stare with which we
3783 look at our unintroduced neighbor. Destiny stands by sarcastic with
3784 our dramatis personae folded in her hand.
3785
3786 Old provincial society had its share of this subtle movement: had not
3787 only its striking downfalls, its brilliant young professional dandies
3788 who ended by living up an entry with a drab and six children for their
3789 establishment, but also those less marked vicissitudes which are
3790 constantly shifting the boundaries of social intercourse, and begetting
3791 new consciousness of interdependence. Some slipped a little downward,
3792 some got higher footing: people denied aspirates, gained wealth, and
3793 fastidious gentlemen stood for boroughs; some were caught in political
3794 currents, some in ecclesiastical, and perhaps found themselves
3795 surprisingly grouped in consequence; while a few personages or families
3796 that stood with rocky firmness amid all this fluctuation, were slowly
3797 presenting new aspects in spite of solidity, and altering with the
3798 double change of self and beholder. Municipal town and rural parish
3799 gradually made fresh threads of connection--gradually, as the old
3800 stocking gave way to the savings-bank, and the worship of the solar
3801 guinea became extinct; while squires and baronets, and even lords who
3802 had once lived blamelessly afar from the civic mind, gathered the
3803 faultiness of closer acquaintanceship. Settlers, too, came from
3804 distant counties, some with an alarming novelty of skill, others with
3805 an offensive advantage in cunning. In fact, much the same sort of
3806 movement and mixture went on in old England as we find in older
3807 Herodotus, who also, in telling what had been, thought it well to take
3808 a woman's lot for his starting-point; though Io, as a maiden apparently
3809 beguiled by attractive merchandise, was the reverse of Miss Brooke, and
3810 in this respect perhaps bore more resemblance to Rosamond Vincy, who
3811 had excellent taste in costume, with that nymph-like figure and pure
3812 blindness which give the largest range to choice in the flow and color
3813 of drapery. But these things made only part of her charm. She was
3814 admitted to be the flower of Mrs. Lemon's school, the chief school in
3815 the county, where the teaching included all that was demanded in the
3816 accomplished female--even to extras, such as the getting in and out of
3817 a carriage. Mrs. Lemon herself had always held up Miss Vincy as an
3818 example: no pupil, she said, exceeded that young lady for mental
3819 acquisition and propriety of speech, while her musical execution was
3820 quite exceptional. We cannot help the way in which people speak of us,
3821 and probably if Mrs. Lemon had undertaken to describe Juliet or Imogen,
3822 these heroines would not have seemed poetical. The first vision of
3823 Rosamond would have been enough with most judges to dispel any
3824 prejudice excited by Mrs. Lemon's praise.
3825
3826 Lydgate could not be long in Middlemarch without having that agreeable
3827 vision, or even without making the acquaintance of the Vincy family;
3828 for though Mr. Peacock, whose practice he had paid something to enter
3829 on, had not been their doctor (Mrs. Vincy not liking the lowering
3830 system adopted by him), he had many patients among their connections
3831 and acquaintances. For who of any consequence in Middlemarch was not
3832 connected or at least acquainted with the Vincys? They were old
3833 manufacturers, and had kept a good house for three generations, in
3834 which there had naturally been much intermarrying with neighbors more
3835 or less decidedly genteel. Mr. Vincy's sister had made a wealthy match
3836 in accepting Mr. Bulstrode, who, however, as a man not born in the
3837 town, and altogether of dimly known origin, was considered to have done
3838 well in uniting himself with a real Middlemarch family; on the other
3839 hand, Mr. Vincy had descended a little, having taken an innkeeper's
3840 daughter. But on this side too there was a cheering sense of money;
3841 for Mrs. Vincy's sister had been second wife to rich old Mr.
3842 Featherstone, and had died childless years ago, so that her nephews and
3843 nieces might be supposed to touch the affections of the widower. And
3844 it happened that Mr. Bulstrode and Mr. Featherstone, two of Peacock's
3845 most important patients, had, from different causes, given an
3846 especially good reception to his successor, who had raised some
3847 partisanship as well as discussion. Mr. Wrench, medical attendant to
3848 the Vincy family, very early had grounds for thinking lightly of
3849 Lydgate's professional discretion, and there was no report about him
3850 which was not retailed at the Vincys', where visitors were frequent.
3851 Mr. Vincy was more inclined to general good-fellowship than to taking
3852 sides, but there was no need for him to be hasty in making any new man
3853 acquaintance. Rosamond silently wished that her father would invite
3854 Mr. Lydgate. She was tired of the faces and figures she had always
3855 been used to--the various irregular profiles and gaits and turns of
3856 phrase distinguishing those Middlemarch young men whom she had known as
3857 boys. She had been at school with girls of higher position, whose
3858 brothers, she felt sure, it would have been possible for her to be more
3859 interested in, than in these inevitable Middlemarch companions. But
3860 she would not have chosen to mention her wish to her father; and he,
3861 for his part, was in no hurry on the subject. An alderman about to be
3862 mayor must by-and-by enlarge his dinner-parties, but at present there
3863 were plenty of guests at his well-spread table.
3864
3865 That table often remained covered with the relics of the family
3866 breakfast long after Mr. Vincy had gone with his second son to the
3867 warehouse, and when Miss Morgan was already far on in morning lessons
3868 with the younger girls in the schoolroom. It awaited the family
3869 laggard, who found any sort of inconvenience (to others) less
3870 disagreeable than getting up when he was called. This was the case one
3871 morning of the October in which we have lately seen Mr. Casaubon
3872 visiting the Grange; and though the room was a little overheated with
3873 the fire, which had sent the spaniel panting to a remote corner,
3874 Rosamond, for some reason, continued to sit at her embroidery longer
3875 than usual, now and then giving herself a little shake, and laying her
3876 work on her knee to contemplate it with an air of hesitating weariness.
3877 Her mamma, who had returned from an excursion to the kitchen, sat on
3878 the other side of the small work-table with an air of more entire
3879 placidity, until, the clock again giving notice that it was going to
3880 strike, she looked up from the lace-mending which was occupying her
3881 plump fingers and rang the bell.
3882
3883 "Knock at Mr. Fred's door again, Pritchard, and tell him it has struck
3884 half-past ten."
3885
3886 This was said without any change in the radiant good-humor of Mrs.
3887 Vincy's face, in which forty-five years had delved neither angles nor
3888 parallels; and pushing back her pink capstrings, she let her work rest
3889 on her lap, while she looked admiringly at her daughter.
3890
3891 "Mamma," said Rosamond, "when Fred comes down I wish you would not let
3892 him have red herrings. I cannot bear the smell of them all over the
3893 house at this hour of the morning."
3894
3895 "Oh, my dear, you are so hard on your brothers! It is the only fault I
3896 have to find with you. You are the sweetest temper in the world, but
3897 you are so tetchy with your brothers."
3898
3899 "Not tetchy, mamma: you never hear me speak in an unladylike way."
3900
3901 "Well, but you want to deny them things."
3902
3903 "Brothers are so unpleasant."
3904
3905 "Oh, my dear, you must allow for young men. Be thankful if they have
3906 good hearts. A woman must learn to put up with little things. You
3907 will be married some day."
3908
3909 "Not to any one who is like Fred."
3910
3911 "Don't decry your own brother, my dear. Few young men have less
3912 against them, although he couldn't take his degree--I'm sure I can't
3913 understand why, for he seems to me most clever. And you know yourself
3914 he was thought equal to the best society at college. So particular as
3915 you are, my dear, I wonder you are not glad to have such a gentlemanly
3916 young man for a brother. You are always finding fault with Bob because
3917 he is not Fred."
3918
3919 "Oh no, mamma, only because he is Bob."
3920
3921 "Well, my dear, you will not find any Middlemarch young man who has not
3922 something against him."
3923
3924 "But"--here Rosamond's face broke into a smile which suddenly revealed
3925 two dimples. She herself thought unfavorably of these dimples and
3926 smiled little in general society. "But I shall not marry any
3927 Middlemarch young man."
3928
3929 "So it seems, my love, for you have as good as refused the pick of
3930 them; and if there's better to be had, I'm sure there's no girl better
3931 deserves it."
3932
3933 "Excuse me, mamma--I wish you would not say, 'the pick of them.'"
3934
3935 "Why, what else are they?"
3936
3937 "I mean, mamma, it is rather a vulgar expression."
3938
3939 "Very likely, my dear; I never was a good speaker. What should I say?"
3940
3941 "The best of them."
3942
3943 "Why, that seems just as plain and common. If I had had time to think,
3944 I should have said, 'the most superior young men.' But with your
3945 education you must know."
3946
3947 "What must Rosy know, mother?" said Mr. Fred, who had slid in
3948 unobserved through the half-open door while the ladies were bending
3949 over their work, and now going up to the fire stood with his back
3950 towards it, warming the soles of his slippers.
3951
3952 "Whether it's right to say 'superior young men,'" said Mrs. Vincy,
3953 ringing the bell.
3954
3955 "Oh, there are so many superior teas and sugars now. Superior is
3956 getting to be shopkeepers' slang."
3957
3958 "Are you beginning to dislike slang, then?" said Rosamond, with mild
3959 gravity.
3960
3961 "Only the wrong sort. All choice of words is slang. It marks a class."
3962
3963 "There is correct English: that is not slang."
3964
3965 "I beg your pardon: correct English is the slang of prigs who write
3966 history and essays. And the strongest slang of all is the slang of
3967 poets."
3968
3969 "You will say anything, Fred, to gain your point."
3970
3971 "Well, tell me whether it is slang or poetry to call an ox a
3972 leg-plaiter."
3973
3974 "Of course you can call it poetry if you like."
3975
3976 "Aha, Miss Rosy, you don't know Homer from slang. I shall invent a new
3977 game; I shall write bits of slang and poetry on slips, and give them to
3978 you to separate."
3979
3980 "Dear me, how amusing it is to hear young people talk!" said Mrs.
3981 Vincy, with cheerful admiration.
3982
3983 "Have you got nothing else for my breakfast, Pritchard?" said Fred, to
3984 the servant who brought in coffee and buttered toast; while he walked
3985 round the table surveying the ham, potted beef, and other cold
3986 remnants, with an air of silent rejection, and polite forbearance from
3987 signs of disgust.
3988
3989 "Should you like eggs, sir?"
3990
3991 "Eggs, no! Bring me a grilled bone."
3992
3993 "Really, Fred," said Rosamond, when the servant had left the room, "if
3994 you must have hot things for breakfast, I wish you would come down
3995 earlier. You can get up at six o'clock to go out hunting; I cannot
3996 understand why you find it so difficult to get up on other mornings."
3997
3998 "That is your want of understanding, Rosy. I can get up to go hunting
3999 because I like it."
4000
4001 "What would you think of me if I came down two hours after every one
4002 else and ordered grilled bone?"
4003
4004 "I should think you were an uncommonly fast young lady," said Fred,
4005 eating his toast with the utmost composure.
4006
4007 "I cannot see why brothers are to make themselves disagreeable, any
4008 more than sisters."
4009
4010 "I don't make myself disagreeable; it is you who find me so.
4011 Disagreeable is a word that describes your feelings and not my actions."
4012
4013 "I think it describes the smell of grilled bone."
4014
4015 "Not at all. It describes a sensation in your little nose associated
4016 with certain finicking notions which are the classics of Mrs. Lemon's
4017 school. Look at my mother; you don't see her objecting to everything
4018 except what she does herself. She is my notion of a pleasant woman."
4019
4020 "Bless you both, my dears, and don't quarrel," said Mrs. Vincy, with
4021 motherly cordiality. "Come, Fred, tell us all about the new doctor.
4022 How is your uncle pleased with him?"
4023
4024 "Pretty well, I think. He asks Lydgate all sorts of questions and then
4025 screws up his face while he hears the answers, as if they were pinching
4026 his toes. That's his way. Ah, here comes my grilled bone."
4027
4028 "But how came you to stay out so late, my dear? You only said you were
4029 going to your uncle's."
4030
4031 "Oh, I dined at Plymdale's. We had whist. Lydgate was there too."
4032
4033 "And what do you think of him? He is very gentlemanly, I suppose.
4034 They say he is of excellent family--his relations quite county people."
4035
4036 "Yes," said Fred. "There was a Lydgate at John's who spent no end of
4037 money. I find this man is a second cousin of his. But rich men may
4038 have very poor devils for second cousins."
4039
4040 "It always makes a difference, though, to be of good family," said
4041 Rosamond, with a tone of decision which showed that she had thought on
4042 this subject. Rosamond felt that she might have been happier if she
4043 had not been the daughter of a Middlemarch manufacturer. She disliked
4044 anything which reminded her that her mother's father had been an
4045 innkeeper. Certainly any one remembering the fact might think that
4046 Mrs. Vincy had the air of a very handsome good-humored landlady,
4047 accustomed to the most capricious orders of gentlemen.
4048
4049 "I thought it was odd his name was Tertius," said the bright-faced
4050 matron, "but of course it's a name in the family. But now, tell us
4051 exactly what sort of man he is."
4052
4053 "Oh, tallish, dark, clever--talks well--rather a prig, I think."
4054
4055 "I never can make out what you mean by a prig," said Rosamond.
4056
4057 "A fellow who wants to show that he has opinions."
4058
4059 "Why, my dear, doctors must have opinions," said Mrs. Vincy. "What are
4060 they there for else?"
4061
4062 "Yes, mother, the opinions they are paid for. But a prig is a fellow
4063 who is always making you a present of his opinions."
4064
4065 "I suppose Mary Garth admires Mr. Lydgate," said Rosamond, not without
4066 a touch of innuendo.
4067
4068 "Really, I can't say." said Fred, rather glumly, as he left the table,
4069 and taking up a novel which he had brought down with him, threw himself
4070 into an arm-chair. "If you are jealous of her, go oftener to Stone
4071 Court yourself and eclipse her."
4072
4073 "I wish you would not be so vulgar, Fred. If you have finished, pray
4074 ring the bell."
4075
4076 "It is true, though--what your brother says, Rosamond," Mrs. Vincy
4077 began, when the servant had cleared the table. "It is a thousand
4078 pities you haven't patience to go and see your uncle more, so proud of
4079 you as he is, and wanted you to live with him. There's no knowing what
4080 he might have done for you as well as for Fred. God knows, I'm fond of
4081 having you at home with me, but I can part with my children for their
4082 good. And now it stands to reason that your uncle Featherstone will do
4083 something for Mary Garth."
4084
4085 "Mary Garth can bear being at Stone Court, because she likes that
4086 better than being a governess," said Rosamond, folding up her work. "I
4087 would rather not have anything left to me if I must earn it by enduring
4088 much of my uncle's cough and his ugly relations."
4089
4090 "He can't be long for this world, my dear; I wouldn't hasten his end,
4091 but what with asthma and that inward complaint, let us hope there is
4092 something better for him in another. And I have no ill-will toward's
4093 Mary Garth, but there's justice to be thought of. And Mr.
4094 Featherstone's first wife brought him no money, as my sister did. Her
4095 nieces and nephews can't have so much claim as my sister's. And I must
4096 say I think Mary Garth a dreadful plain girl--more fit for a governess."
4097
4098 "Every one would not agree with you there, mother," said Fred, who
4099 seemed to be able to read and listen too.
4100
4101 "Well, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, wheeling skilfully, "if she _had_
4102 some fortune left her,--a man marries his wife's relations, and the
4103 Garths are so poor, and live in such a small way. But I shall leave
4104 you to your studies, my dear; for I must go and do some shopping."
4105
4106 "Fred's studies are not very deep," said Rosamond, rising with her
4107 mamma, "he is only reading a novel."
4108
4109 "Well, well, by-and-by he'll go to his Latin and things," said Mrs.
4110 Vincy, soothingly, stroking her son's head. "There's a fire in the
4111 smoking-room on purpose. It's your father's wish, you know--Fred, my
4112 dear--and I always tell him you will be good, and go to college again
4113 to take your degree."
4114
4115 Fred drew his mother's hand down to his lips, but said nothing.
4116
4117 "I suppose you are not going out riding to-day?" said Rosamond,
4118 lingering a little after her mamma was gone.
4119
4120 "No; why?"
4121
4122 "Papa says I may have the chestnut to ride now."
4123
4124 "You can go with me to-morrow, if you like. Only I am going to Stone
4125 Court, remember."
4126
4127 "I want to ride so much, it is indifferent to me where we go." Rosamond
4128 really wished to go to Stone Court, of all other places.
4129
4130 "Oh, I say, Rosy," said Fred, as she was passing out of the room, "if
4131 you are going to the piano, let me come and play some airs with you."
4132
4133 "Pray do not ask me this morning."
4134
4135 "Why not this morning?"
4136
4137 "Really, Fred, I wish you would leave off playing the flute. A man
4138 looks very silly playing the flute. And you play so out of tune."
4139
4140 "When next any one makes love to you, Miss Rosamond, I will tell him
4141 how obliging you are."
4142
4143 "Why should you expect me to oblige you by hearing you play the flute,
4144 any more than I should expect you to oblige me by not playing it?"
4145
4146 "And why should you expect me to take you out riding?"
4147
4148 This question led to an adjustment, for Rosamond had set her mind on
4149 that particular ride.
4150
4151 So Fred was gratified with nearly an hour's practice of "Ar hyd y nos,"
4152 "Ye banks and braes," and other favorite airs from his "Instructor on
4153 the Flute;" a wheezy performance, into which he threw much ambition and
4154 an irrepressible hopefulness.
4155
4156
4157
4158 CHAPTER XII.
4159
4160 "He had more tow on his distaffe
4161 Than Gerveis knew."
4162 --CHAUCER.
4163
4164
4165 The ride to Stone Court, which Fred and Rosamond took the next morning,
4166 lay through a pretty bit of midland landscape, almost all meadows and
4167 pastures, with hedgerows still allowed to grow in bushy beauty and to
4168 spread out coral fruit for the birds. Little details gave each field a
4169 particular physiognomy, dear to the eyes that have looked on them from
4170 childhood: the pool in the corner where the grasses were dank and trees
4171 leaned whisperingly; the great oak shadowing a bare place in
4172 mid-pasture; the high bank where the ash-trees grew; the sudden slope
4173 of the old marl-pit making a red background for the burdock; the
4174 huddled roofs and ricks of the homestead without a traceable way of
4175 approach; the gray gate and fences against the depths of the bordering
4176 wood; and the stray hovel, its old, old thatch full of mossy hills and
4177 valleys with wondrous modulations of light and shadow such as we travel
4178 far to see in later life, and see larger, but not more beautiful.
4179 These are the things that make the gamut of joy in landscape to
4180 midland-bred souls--the things they toddled among, or perhaps learned
4181 by heart standing between their father's knees while he drove leisurely.
4182
4183 But the road, even the byroad, was excellent; for Lowick, as we have
4184 seen, was not a parish of muddy lanes and poor tenants; and it was into
4185 Lowick parish that Fred and Rosamond entered after a couple of miles'
4186 riding. Another mile would bring them to Stone Court, and at the end
4187 of the first half, the house was already visible, looking as if it had
4188 been arrested in its growth toward a stone mansion by an unexpected
4189 budding of farm-buildings on its left flank, which had hindered it from
4190 becoming anything more than the substantial dwelling of a gentleman
4191 farmer. It was not the less agreeable an object in the distance for
4192 the cluster of pinnacled corn-ricks which balanced the fine row of
4193 walnuts on the right.
4194
4195 Presently it was possible to discern something that might be a gig on
4196 the circular drive before the front door.
4197
4198 "Dear me," said Rosamond, "I hope none of my uncle's horrible relations
4199 are there."
4200
4201 "They are, though. That is Mrs. Waule's gig--the last yellow gig left,
4202 I should think. When I see Mrs. Waule in it, I understand how yellow
4203 can have been worn for mourning. That gig seems to me more funereal
4204 than a hearse. But then Mrs. Waule always has black crape on. How
4205 does she manage it, Rosy? Her friends can't always be dying."
4206
4207 "I don't know at all. And she is not in the least evangelical," said
4208 Rosamond, reflectively, as if that religious point of view would have
4209 fully accounted for perpetual crape. "And, not poor," she added, after
4210 a moment's pause.
4211
4212 "No, by George! They are as rich as Jews, those Waules and
4213 Featherstones; I mean, for people like them, who don't want to spend
4214 anything. And yet they hang about my uncle like vultures, and are
4215 afraid of a farthing going away from their side of the family. But I
4216 believe he hates them all."
4217
4218 The Mrs. Waule who was so far from being admirable in the eyes of these
4219 distant connections, had happened to say this very morning (not at all
4220 with a defiant air, but in a low, muffled, neutral tone, as of a voice
4221 heard through cotton wool) that she did not wish "to enjoy their good
4222 opinion." She was seated, as she observed, on her own brother's hearth,
4223 and had been Jane Featherstone five-and-twenty years before she had
4224 been Jane Waule, which entitled her to speak when her own brother's
4225 name had been made free with by those who had no right to it.
4226
4227 "What are you driving at there?" said Mr. Featherstone, holding his
4228 stick between his knees and settling his wig, while he gave her a
4229 momentary sharp glance, which seemed to react on him like a draught of
4230 cold air and set him coughing.
4231
4232 Mrs. Waule had to defer her answer till he was quiet again, till Mary
4233 Garth had supplied him with fresh syrup, and he had begun to rub the
4234 gold knob of his stick, looking bitterly at the fire. It was a bright
4235 fire, but it made no difference to the chill-looking purplish tint of
4236 Mrs. Waule's face, which was as neutral as her voice; having mere
4237 chinks for eyes, and lips that hardly moved in speaking.
4238
4239 "The doctors can't master that cough, brother. It's just like what I
4240 have; for I'm your own sister, constitution and everything. But, as I
4241 was saying, it's a pity Mrs. Vincy's family can't be better conducted."
4242
4243 "Tchah! you said nothing o' the sort. You said somebody had made free
4244 with my name."
4245
4246 "And no more than can be proved, if what everybody says is true. My
4247 brother Solomon tells me it's the talk up and down in Middlemarch how
4248 unsteady young Vincy is, and has been forever gambling at billiards
4249 since home he came."
4250
4251 "Nonsense! What's a game at billiards? It's a good gentlemanly game;
4252 and young Vincy is not a clodhopper. If your son John took to
4253 billiards, now, he'd make a fool of himself."
4254
4255 "Your nephew John never took to billiards or any other game, brother,
4256 and is far from losing hundreds of pounds, which, if what everybody
4257 says is true, must be found somewhere else than out of Mr. Vincy the
4258 father's pocket. For they say he's been losing money for years, though
4259 nobody would think so, to see him go coursing and keeping open house as
4260 they do. And I've heard say Mr. Bulstrode condemns Mrs. Vincy beyond
4261 anything for her flightiness, and spoiling her children so."
4262
4263 "What's Bulstrode to me? I don't bank with him."
4264
4265 "Well, Mrs. Bulstrode is Mr. Vincy's own sister, and they do say that
4266 Mr. Vincy mostly trades on the Bank money; and you may see yourself,
4267 brother, when a woman past forty has pink strings always flying, and
4268 that light way of laughing at everything, it's very unbecoming. But
4269 indulging your children is one thing, and finding money to pay their
4270 debts is another. And it's openly said that young Vincy has raised
4271 money on his expectations. I don't say what expectations. Miss Garth
4272 hears me, and is welcome to tell again. I know young people hang
4273 together."
4274
4275 "No, thank you, Mrs. Waule," said Mary Garth. "I dislike hearing
4276 scandal too much to wish to repeat it."
4277
4278 Mr. Featherstone rubbed the knob of his stick and made a brief
4279 convulsive show of laughter, which had much the same genuineness as an
4280 old whist-player's chuckle over a bad hand. Still looking at the fire,
4281 he said--
4282
4283 "And who pretends to say Fred Vincy hasn't got expectations? Such a
4284 fine, spirited fellow is like enough to have 'em."
4285
4286 There was a slight pause before Mrs. Waule replied, and when she did
4287 so, her voice seemed to be slightly moistened with tears, though her
4288 face was still dry.
4289
4290 "Whether or no, brother, it is naturally painful to me and my brother
4291 Solomon to hear your name made free with, and your complaint being such
4292 as may carry you off sudden, and people who are no more Featherstones
4293 than the Merry-Andrew at the fair, openly reckoning on your property
4294 coming to _them_. And me your own sister, and Solomon your own
4295 brother! And if that's to be it, what has it pleased the Almighty to
4296 make families for?" Here Mrs. Waule's tears fell, but with moderation.
4297
4298 "Come, out with it, Jane!" said Mr. Featherstone, looking at her. "You
4299 mean to say, Fred Vincy has been getting somebody to advance him money
4300 on what he says he knows about my will, eh?"
4301
4302 "I never said so, brother" (Mrs. Waule's voice had again become dry and
4303 unshaken). "It was told me by my brother Solomon last night when he
4304 called coming from market to give me advice about the old wheat, me
4305 being a widow, and my son John only three-and-twenty, though steady
4306 beyond anything. And he had it from most undeniable authority, and not
4307 one, but many."
4308
4309 "Stuff and nonsense! I don't believe a word of it. It's all a got-up
4310 story. Go to the window, missy; I thought I heard a horse. See if the
4311 doctor's coming."
4312
4313 "Not got up by me, brother, nor yet by Solomon, who, whatever else he
4314 may be--and I don't deny he has oddities--has made his will and parted
4315 his property equal between such kin as he's friends with; though, for
4316 my part, I think there are times when some should be considered more
4317 than others. But Solomon makes it no secret what he means to do."
4318
4319 "The more fool he!" said Mr. Featherstone, with some difficulty;
4320 breaking into a severe fit of coughing that required Mary Garth to
4321 stand near him, so that she did not find out whose horses they were
4322 which presently paused stamping on the gravel before the door.
4323
4324 Before Mr. Featherstone's cough was quiet, Rosamond entered, bearing up
4325 her riding-habit with much grace. She bowed ceremoniously to Mrs.
4326 Waule, who said stiffly, "How do you do, miss?" smiled and nodded
4327 silently to Mary, and remained standing till the coughing should cease,
4328 and allow her uncle to notice her.
4329
4330 "Heyday, miss!" he said at last, "you have a fine color. Where's Fred?"
4331
4332 "Seeing about the horses. He will be in presently."
4333
4334 "Sit down, sit down. Mrs. Waule, you'd better go."
4335
4336 Even those neighbors who had called Peter Featherstone an old fox, had
4337 never accused him of being insincerely polite, and his sister was quite
4338 used to the peculiar absence of ceremony with which he marked his sense
4339 of blood-relationship. Indeed, she herself was accustomed to think that
4340 entire freedom from the necessity of behaving agreeably was included in
4341 the Almighty's intentions about families. She rose slowly without any
4342 sign of resentment, and said in her usual muffled monotone, "Brother, I
4343 hope the new doctor will be able to do something for you. Solomon says
4344 there's great talk of his cleverness. I'm sure it's my wish you should
4345 be spared. And there's none more ready to nurse you than your own
4346 sister and your own nieces, if you'd only say the word. There's
4347 Rebecca, and Joanna, and Elizabeth, you know."
4348
4349 "Ay, ay, I remember--you'll see I've remembered 'em all--all dark and
4350 ugly. They'd need have some money, eh? There never was any beauty in
4351 the women of our family; but the Featherstones have always had some
4352 money, and the Waules too. Waule had money too. A warm man was Waule.
4353 Ay, ay; money's a good egg; and if you 've got money to leave behind
4354 you, lay it in a warm nest. Good-by, Mrs. Waule." Here Mr.
4355 Featherstone pulled at both sides of his wig as if he wanted to deafen
4356 himself, and his sister went away ruminating on this oracular speech of
4357 his. Notwithstanding her jealousy of the Vincys and of Mary Garth,
4358 there remained as the nethermost sediment in her mental shallows a
4359 persuasion that her brother Peter Featherstone could never leave his
4360 chief property away from his blood-relations:--else, why had the
4361 Almighty carried off his two wives both childless, after he had gained
4362 so much by manganese and things, turning up when nobody expected
4363 it?--and why was there a Lowick parish church, and the Waules and
4364 Powderells all sitting in the same pew for generations, and the
4365 Featherstone pew next to them, if, the Sunday after her brother Peter's
4366 death, everybody was to know that the property was gone out of the
4367 family? The human mind has at no period accepted a moral chaos; and so
4368 preposterous a result was not strictly conceivable. But we are
4369 frightened at much that is not strictly conceivable.
4370
4371 When Fred came in the old man eyed him with a peculiar twinkle, which
4372 the younger had often had reason to interpret as pride in the
4373 satisfactory details of his appearance.
4374
4375 "You two misses go away," said Mr. Featherstone. "I want to speak to
4376 Fred."
4377
4378 "Come into my room, Rosamond, you will not mind the cold for a little
4379 while," said Mary. The two girls had not only known each other in
4380 childhood, but had been at the same provincial school together (Mary as
4381 an articled pupil), so that they had many memories in common, and liked
4382 very well to talk in private. Indeed, this tete-a-tete was one of
4383 Rosamond's objects in coming to Stone Court.
4384
4385 Old Featherstone would not begin the dialogue till the door had been
4386 closed. He continued to look at Fred with the same twinkle and with
4387 one of his habitual grimaces, alternately screwing and widening his
4388 mouth; and when he spoke, it was in a low tone, which might be taken
4389 for that of an informer ready to be bought off, rather than for the
4390 tone of an offended senior. He was not a man to feel any strong moral
4391 indignation even on account of trespasses against himself. It was
4392 natural that others should want to get an advantage over him, but then,
4393 he was a little too cunning for them.
4394
4395 "So, sir, you've been paying ten per cent for money which you've
4396 promised to pay off by mortgaging my land when I'm dead and gone, eh?
4397 You put my life at a twelvemonth, say. But I can alter my will yet."
4398
4399 Fred blushed. He had not borrowed money in that way, for excellent
4400 reasons. But he was conscious of having spoken with some confidence
4401 (perhaps with more than he exactly remembered) about his prospect of
4402 getting Featherstone's land as a future means of paying present debts.
4403
4404 "I don't know what you refer to, sir. I have certainly never borrowed
4405 any money on such an insecurity. Please do explain."
4406
4407 "No, sir, it's you must explain. I can alter my will yet, let me tell
4408 you. I'm of sound mind--can reckon compound interest in my head, and
4409 remember every fool's name as well as I could twenty years ago. What
4410 the deuce? I'm under eighty. I say, you must contradict this story."
4411
4412 "I have contradicted it, sir," Fred answered, with a touch of
4413 impatience, not remembering that his uncle did not verbally
4414 discriminate contradicting from disproving, though no one was further
4415 from confounding the two ideas than old Featherstone, who often
4416 wondered that so many fools took his own assertions for proofs. "But I
4417 contradict it again. The story is a silly lie."
4418
4419 "Nonsense! you must bring dockiments. It comes from authority."
4420
4421 "Name the authority, and make him name the man of whom I borrowed the
4422 money, and then I can disprove the story."
4423
4424 "It's pretty good authority, I think--a man who knows most of what goes
4425 on in Middlemarch. It's that fine, religious, charitable uncle o'
4426 yours. Come now!" Here Mr. Featherstone had his peculiar inward shake
4427 which signified merriment.
4428
4429 "Mr. Bulstrode?"
4430
4431 "Who else, eh?"
4432
4433 "Then the story has grown into this lie out of some sermonizing words
4434 he may have let fall about me. Do they pretend that he named the man
4435 who lent me the money?"
4436
4437 "If there is such a man, depend upon it Bulstrode knows him. But,
4438 supposing you only tried to get the money lent, and didn't get
4439 it--Bulstrode 'ud know that too. You bring me a writing from Bulstrode
4440 to say he doesn't believe you've ever promised to pay your debts out o'
4441 my land. Come now!"
4442
4443 Mr. Featherstone's face required its whole scale of grimaces as a
4444 muscular outlet to his silent triumph in the soundness of his faculties.
4445
4446 Fred felt himself to be in a disgusting dilemma.
4447
4448 "You must be joking, sir. Mr. Bulstrode, like other men, believes
4449 scores of things that are not true, and he has a prejudice against me.
4450 I could easily get him to write that he knew no facts in proof of the
4451 report you speak of, though it might lead to unpleasantness. But I
4452 could hardly ask him to write down what he believes or does not believe
4453 about me." Fred paused an instant, and then added, in politic appeal to
4454 his uncle's vanity, "That is hardly a thing for a gentleman to ask."
4455 But he was disappointed in the result.
4456
4457 "Ay, I know what you mean. You'd sooner offend me than Bulstrode. And
4458 what's he?--he's got no land hereabout that ever I heard tell of. A
4459 speckilating fellow! He may come down any day, when the devil leaves
4460 off backing him. And that's what his religion means: he wants God
4461 A'mighty to come in. That's nonsense! There's one thing I made out
4462 pretty clear when I used to go to church--and it's this: God A'mighty
4463 sticks to the land. He promises land, and He gives land, and He makes
4464 chaps rich with corn and cattle. But you take the other side. You
4465 like Bulstrode and speckilation better than Featherstone and land."
4466
4467 "I beg your pardon, sir," said Fred, rising, standing with his back to
4468 the fire and beating his boot with his whip. "I like neither Bulstrode
4469 nor speculation." He spoke rather sulkily, feeling himself stalemated.
4470
4471 "Well, well, you can do without me, that's pretty clear," said old
4472 Featherstone, secretly disliking the possibility that Fred would show
4473 himself at all independent. "You neither want a bit of land to make a
4474 squire of you instead of a starving parson, nor a lift of a hundred
4475 pound by the way. It's all one to me. I can make five codicils if I
4476 like, and I shall keep my bank-notes for a nest-egg. It's all one to
4477 me."
4478
4479 Fred colored again. Featherstone had rarely given him presents of
4480 money, and at this moment it seemed almost harder to part with the
4481 immediate prospect of bank-notes than with the more distant prospect of
4482 the land.
4483
4484 "I am not ungrateful, sir. I never meant to show disregard for any
4485 kind intentions you might have towards me. On the contrary."
4486
4487 "Very good. Then prove it. You bring me a letter from Bulstrode
4488 saying he doesn't believe you've been cracking and promising to pay
4489 your debts out o' my land, and then, if there's any scrape you've got
4490 into, we'll see if I can't back you a bit. Come now! That's a
4491 bargain. Here, give me your arm. I'll try and walk round the room."
4492
4493 Fred, in spite of his irritation, had kindness enough in him to be a
4494 little sorry for the unloved, unvenerated old man, who with his
4495 dropsical legs looked more than usually pitiable in walking. While
4496 giving his arm, he thought that he should not himself like to be an old
4497 fellow with his constitution breaking up; and he waited
4498 good-temperedly, first before the window to hear the wonted remarks
4499 about the guinea-fowls and the weather-cock, and then before the scanty
4500 book-shelves, of which the chief glories in dark calf were Josephus,
4501 Culpepper, Klopstock's "Messiah," and several volumes of the
4502 "Gentleman's Magazine."
4503
4504 "Read me the names o' the books. Come now! you're a college man."
4505
4506 Fred gave him the titles.
4507
4508 "What did missy want with more books? What must you be bringing her
4509 more books for?"
4510
4511 "They amuse her, sir. She is very fond of reading."
4512
4513 "A little too fond," said Mr. Featherstone, captiously. "She was for
4514 reading when she sat with me. But I put a stop to that. She's got the
4515 newspaper to read out loud. That's enough for one day, I should think.
4516 I can't abide to see her reading to herself. You mind and not bring
4517 her any more books, do you hear?"
4518
4519 "Yes, sir, I hear." Fred had received this order before, and had
4520 secretly disobeyed it. He intended to disobey it again.
4521
4522 "Ring the bell," said Mr. Featherstone; "I want missy to come down."
4523
4524 Rosamond and Mary had been talking faster than their male friends.
4525 They did not think of sitting down, but stood at the toilet-table near
4526 the window while Rosamond took off her hat, adjusted her veil, and
4527 applied little touches of her finger-tips to her hair--hair of
4528 infantine fairness, neither flaxen nor yellow. Mary Garth seemed all
4529 the plainer standing at an angle between the two nymphs--the one in the
4530 glass, and the one out of it, who looked at each other with eyes of
4531 heavenly blue, deep enough to hold the most exquisite meanings an
4532 ingenious beholder could put into them, and deep enough to hide the
4533 meanings of the owner if these should happen to be less exquisite.
4534 Only a few children in Middlemarch looked blond by the side of
4535 Rosamond, and the slim figure displayed by her riding-habit had
4536 delicate undulations. In fact, most men in Middlemarch, except her
4537 brothers, held that Miss Vincy was the best girl in the world, and some
4538 called her an angel. Mary Garth, on the contrary, had the aspect of an
4539 ordinary sinner: she was brown; her curly dark hair was rough and
4540 stubborn; her stature was low; and it would not be true to declare, in
4541 satisfactory antithesis, that she had all the virtues. Plainness has
4542 its peculiar temptations and vices quite as much as beauty; it is apt
4543 either to feign amiability, or, not feigning it, to show all the
4544 repulsiveness of discontent: at any rate, to be called an ugly thing in
4545 contrast with that lovely creature your companion, is apt to produce
4546 some effect beyond a sense of fine veracity and fitness in the phrase.
4547 At the age of two-and-twenty Mary had certainly not attained that
4548 perfect good sense and good principle which are usually recommended to
4549 the less fortunate girl, as if they were to be obtained in quantities
4550 ready mixed, with a flavor of resignation as required. Her shrewdness
4551 had a streak of satiric bitterness continually renewed and never
4552 carried utterly out of sight, except by a strong current of gratitude
4553 towards those who, instead of telling her that she ought to be
4554 contented, did something to make her so. Advancing womanhood had
4555 tempered her plainness, which was of a good human sort, such as the
4556 mothers of our race have very commonly worn in all latitudes under a
4557 more or less becoming headgear. Rembrandt would have painted her with
4558 pleasure, and would have made her broad features look out of the canvas
4559 with intelligent honesty. For honesty, truth-telling fairness, was
4560 Mary's reigning virtue: she neither tried to create illusions, nor
4561 indulged in them for her own behoof, and when she was in a good mood
4562 she had humor enough in her to laugh at herself. When she and Rosamond
4563 happened both to be reflected in the glass, she said, laughingly--
4564
4565 "What a brown patch I am by the side of you, Rosy! You are the most
4566 unbecoming companion."
4567
4568 "Oh no! No one thinks of your appearance, you are so sensible and
4569 useful, Mary. Beauty is of very little consequence in reality," said
4570 Rosamond, turning her head towards Mary, but with eyes swerving towards
4571 the new view of her neck in the glass.
4572
4573 "You mean my beauty," said Mary, rather sardonically.
4574
4575 Rosamond thought, "Poor Mary, she takes the kindest things ill." Aloud
4576 she said, "What have you been doing lately?"
4577
4578 "I? Oh, minding the house--pouring out syrup--pretending to be amiable
4579 and contented--learning to have a bad opinion of everybody."
4580
4581 "It is a wretched life for you."
4582
4583 "No," said Mary, curtly, with a little toss of her head. "I think my
4584 life is pleasanter than your Miss Morgan's."
4585
4586 "Yes; but Miss Morgan is so uninteresting, and not young."
4587
4588 "She is interesting to herself, I suppose; and I am not at all sure
4589 that everything gets easier as one gets older."
4590
4591 "No," said Rosamond, reflectively; "one wonders what such people do,
4592 without any prospect. To be sure, there is religion as a support.
4593 But," she added, dimpling, "it is very different with you, Mary. You
4594 may have an offer."
4595
4596 "Has any one told you he means to make me one?"
4597
4598 "Of course not. I mean, there is a gentleman who may fall in love with
4599 you, seeing you almost every day."
4600
4601 A certain change in Mary's face was chiefly determined by the resolve
4602 not to show any change.
4603
4604 "Does that always make people fall in love?" she answered, carelessly;
4605 "it seems to me quite as often a reason for detesting each other."
4606
4607 "Not when they are interesting and agreeable. I hear that Mr. Lydgate
4608 is both."
4609
4610 "Oh, Mr. Lydgate!" said Mary, with an unmistakable lapse into
4611 indifference. "You want to know something about him," she added, not
4612 choosing to indulge Rosamond's indirectness.
4613
4614 "Merely, how you like him."
4615
4616 "There is no question of liking at present. My liking always wants
4617 some little kindness to kindle it. I am not magnanimous enough to like
4618 people who speak to me without seeming to see me."
4619
4620 "Is he so haughty?" said Rosamond, with heightened satisfaction. "You
4621 know that he is of good family?"
4622
4623 "No; he did not give that as a reason."
4624
4625 "Mary! you are the oddest girl. But what sort of looking man is he?
4626 Describe him to me."
4627
4628 "How can one describe a man? I can give you an inventory: heavy
4629 eyebrows, dark eyes, a straight nose, thick dark hair, large solid
4630 white hands--and--let me see--oh, an exquisite cambric
4631 pocket-handkerchief. But you will see him. You know this is about the
4632 time of his visits."
4633
4634 Rosamond blushed a little, but said, meditatively, "I rather like a
4635 haughty manner. I cannot endure a rattling young man."
4636
4637 "I did not tell you that Mr. Lydgate was haughty; but il y en a pour
4638 tous les gouts, as little Mamselle used to say, and if any girl can
4639 choose the particular sort of conceit she would like, I should think it
4640 is you, Rosy."
4641
4642 "Haughtiness is not conceit; I call Fred conceited."
4643
4644 "I wish no one said any worse of him. He should be more careful. Mrs.
4645 Waule has been telling uncle that Fred is very unsteady." Mary spoke
4646 from a girlish impulse which got the better of her judgment. There was
4647 a vague uneasiness associated with the word "unsteady" which she hoped
4648 Rosamond might say something to dissipate. But she purposely abstained
4649 from mentioning Mrs. Waule's more special insinuation.
4650
4651 "Oh, Fred is horrid!" said Rosamond. She would not have allowed
4652 herself so unsuitable a word to any one but Mary.
4653
4654 "What do you mean by horrid?"
4655
4656 "He is so idle, and makes papa so angry, and says he will not take
4657 orders."
4658
4659 "I think Fred is quite right."
4660
4661 "How can you say he is quite right, Mary? I thought you had more sense
4662 of religion."
4663
4664 "He is not fit to be a clergyman."
4665
4666 "But he ought to be fit."--"Well, then, he is not what he ought to be.
4667 I know some other people who are in the same case."
4668
4669 "But no one approves of them. I should not like to marry a clergyman;
4670 but there must be clergymen."
4671
4672 "It does not follow that Fred must be one."
4673
4674 "But when papa has been at the expense of educating him for it! And
4675 only suppose, if he should have no fortune left him?"
4676
4677 "I can suppose that very well," said Mary, dryly.
4678
4679 "Then I wonder you can defend Fred," said Rosamond, inclined to push
4680 this point.
4681
4682 "I don't defend him," said Mary, laughing; "I would defend any parish
4683 from having him for a clergyman."
4684
4685 "But of course if he were a clergyman, he must be different."
4686
4687 "Yes, he would be a great hypocrite; and he is not that yet."
4688
4689 "It is of no use saying anything to you, Mary. You always take Fred's
4690 part."
4691
4692 "Why should I not take his part?" said Mary, lighting up. "He would
4693 take mine. He is the only person who takes the least trouble to oblige
4694 me."
4695
4696 "You make me feel very uncomfortable, Mary," said Rosamond, with her
4697 gravest mildness; "I would not tell mamma for the world."
4698
4699 "What would you not tell her?" said Mary, angrily.
4700
4701 "Pray do not go into a rage, Mary," said Rosamond, mildly as ever.
4702
4703 "If your mamma is afraid that Fred will make me an offer, tell her that
4704 I would not marry him if he asked me. But he is not going to do so,
4705 that I am aware. He certainly never has asked me."
4706
4707 "Mary, you are always so violent."
4708
4709 "And you are always so exasperating."
4710
4711 "I? What can you blame me for?"
4712
4713 "Oh, blameless people are always the most exasperating. There is the
4714 bell--I think we must go down."
4715
4716 "I did not mean to quarrel," said Rosamond, putting on her hat.
4717
4718 "Quarrel? Nonsense; we have not quarrelled. If one is not to get into
4719 a rage sometimes, what is the good of being friends?"
4720
4721 "Am I to repeat what you have said?" "Just as you please. I never say
4722 what I am afraid of having repeated. But let us go down."
4723
4724 Mr. Lydgate was rather late this morning, but the visitors stayed long
4725 enough to see him; for Mr. Featherstone asked Rosamond to sing to him,
4726 and she herself was so kind as to propose a second favorite song of
4727 his--"Flow on, thou shining river"--after she had sung "Home, sweet
4728 home" (which she detested). This hard-headed old Overreach approved of
4729 the sentimental song, as the suitable garnish for girls, and also as
4730 fundamentally fine, sentiment being the right thing for a song.
4731
4732 Mr. Featherstone was still applauding the last performance, and
4733 assuring missy that her voice was as clear as a blackbird's, when Mr.
4734 Lydgate's horse passed the window.
4735
4736 His dull expectation of the usual disagreeable routine with an aged
4737 patient--who can hardly believe that medicine would not "set him up" if
4738 the doctor were only clever enough--added to his general disbelief in
4739 Middlemarch charms, made a doubly effective background to this vision
4740 of Rosamond, whom old Featherstone made haste ostentatiously to
4741 introduce as his niece, though he had never thought it worth while to
4742 speak of Mary Garth in that light. Nothing escaped Lydgate in
4743 Rosamond's graceful behavior: how delicately she waived the notice
4744 which the old man's want of taste had thrust upon her by a quiet
4745 gravity, not showing her dimples on the wrong occasion, but showing
4746 them afterwards in speaking to Mary, to whom she addressed herself with
4747 so much good-natured interest, that Lydgate, after quickly examining
4748 Mary more fully than he had done before, saw an adorable kindness in
4749 Rosamond's eyes. But Mary from some cause looked rather out of temper.
4750
4751 "Miss Rosy has been singing me a song--you've nothing to say against
4752 that, eh, doctor?" said Mr. Featherstone. "I like it better than your
4753 physic."
4754
4755 "That has made me forget how the time was going," said Rosamond, rising
4756 to reach her hat, which she had laid aside before singing, so that her
4757 flower-like head on its white stem was seen in perfection above-her
4758 riding-habit. "Fred, we must really go."
4759
4760 "Very good," said Fred, who had his own reasons for not being in the
4761 best spirits, and wanted to get away.
4762
4763 "Miss Vincy is a musician?" said Lydgate, following her with his eyes.
4764 (Every nerve and muscle in Rosamond was adjusted to the consciousness
4765 that she was being looked at. She was by nature an actress of parts
4766 that entered into her physique: she even acted her own character, and
4767 so well, that she did not know it to be precisely her own.)
4768
4769 "The best in Middlemarch, I'll be bound," said Mr. Featherstone, "let
4770 the next be who she will. Eh, Fred? Speak up for your sister."
4771
4772 "I'm afraid I'm out of court, sir. My evidence would be good for
4773 nothing."
4774
4775 "Middlemarch has not a very high standard, uncle," said Rosamond, with
4776 a pretty lightness, going towards her whip, which lay at a distance.
4777
4778 Lydgate was quick in anticipating her. He reached the whip before she
4779 did, and turned to present it to her. She bowed and looked at him: he
4780 of course was looking at her, and their eyes met with that peculiar
4781 meeting which is never arrived at by effort, but seems like a sudden
4782 divine clearance of haze. I think Lydgate turned a little paler than
4783 usual, but Rosamond blushed deeply and felt a certain astonishment.
4784 After that, she was really anxious to go, and did not know what sort of
4785 stupidity her uncle was talking of when she went to shake hands with
4786 him.
4787
4788 Yet this result, which she took to be a mutual impression, called
4789 falling in love, was just what Rosamond had contemplated beforehand.
4790 Ever since that important new arrival in Middlemarch she had woven a
4791 little future, of which something like this scene was the necessary
4792 beginning. Strangers, whether wrecked and clinging to a raft, or duly
4793 escorted and accompanied by portmanteaus, have always had a
4794 circumstantial fascination for the virgin mind, against which native
4795 merit has urged itself in vain. And a stranger was absolutely
4796 necessary to Rosamond's social romance, which had always turned on a
4797 lover and bridegroom who was not a Middlemarcher, and who had no
4798 connections at all like her own: of late, indeed, the construction
4799 seemed to demand that he should somehow be related to a baronet. Now
4800 that she and the stranger had met, reality proved much more moving than
4801 anticipation, and Rosamond could not doubt that this was the great
4802 epoch of her life. She judged of her own symptoms as those of
4803 awakening love, and she held it still more natural that Mr. Lydgate
4804 should have fallen in love at first sight of her. These things
4805 happened so often at balls, and why not by the morning light, when the
4806 complexion showed all the better for it? Rosamond, though no older
4807 than Mary, was rather used to being fallen in love with; but she, for
4808 her part, had remained indifferent and fastidiously critical towards
4809 both fresh sprig and faded bachelor. And here was Mr. Lydgate suddenly
4810 corresponding to her ideal, being altogether foreign to Middlemarch,
4811 carrying a certain air of distinction congruous with good family, and
4812 possessing connections which offered vistas of that middle-class
4813 heaven, rank; a man of talent, also, whom it would be especially
4814 delightful to enslave: in fact, a man who had touched her nature quite
4815 newly, and brought a vivid interest into her life which was better than
4816 any fancied "might-be" such as she was in the habit of opposing to the
4817 actual.
4818
4819 Thus, in riding home, both the brother and the sister were preoccupied
4820 and inclined to be silent. Rosamond, whose basis for her structure had
4821 the usual airy slightness, was of remarkably detailed and realistic
4822 imagination when the foundation had been once presupposed; and before
4823 they had ridden a mile she was far on in the costume and introductions
4824 of her wedded life, having determined on her house in Middlemarch, and
4825 foreseen the visits she would pay to her husband's high-bred relatives
4826 at a distance, whose finished manners she could appropriate as
4827 thoroughly as she had done her school accomplishments, preparing
4828 herself thus for vaguer elevations which might ultimately come. There
4829 was nothing financial, still less sordid, in her previsions: she cared
4830 about what were considered refinements, and not about the money that
4831 was to pay for them.
4832
4833 Fred's mind, on the other hand, was busy with an anxiety which even his
4834 ready hopefulness could not immediately quell. He saw no way of
4835 eluding Featherstone's stupid demand without incurring consequences
4836 which he liked less even than the task of fulfilling it. His father
4837 was already out of humor with him, and would be still more so if he
4838 were the occasion of any additional coolness between his own family and
4839 the Bulstrodes. Then, he himself hated having to go and speak to his
4840 uncle Bulstrode, and perhaps after drinking wine he had said many
4841 foolish things about Featherstone's property, and these had been
4842 magnified by report. Fred felt that he made a wretched figure as a
4843 fellow who bragged about expectations from a queer old miser like
4844 Featherstone, and went to beg for certificates at his bidding.
4845 But--those expectations! He really had them, and he saw no agreeable
4846 alternative if he gave them up; besides, he had lately made a debt
4847 which galled him extremely, and old Featherstone had almost bargained
4848 to pay it off. The whole affair was miserably small: his debts were
4849 small, even his expectations were not anything so very magnificent.
4850 Fred had known men to whom he would have been ashamed of confessing the
4851 smallness of his scrapes. Such ruminations naturally produced a streak
4852 of misanthropic bitterness. To be born the son of a Middlemarch
4853 manufacturer, and inevitable heir to nothing in particular, while such
4854 men as Mainwaring and Vyan--certainly life was a poor business, when a
4855 spirited young fellow, with a good appetite for the best of everything,
4856 had so poor an outlook.
4857
4858 It had not occurred to Fred that the introduction of Bulstrode's name
4859 in the matter was a fiction of old Featherstone's; nor could this have
4860 made any difference to his position. He saw plainly enough that the
4861 old man wanted to exercise his power by tormenting him a little, and
4862 also probably to get some satisfaction out of seeing him on unpleasant
4863 terms with Bulstrode. Fred fancied that he saw to the bottom of his
4864 uncle Featherstone's soul, though in reality half what he saw there was
4865 no more than the reflex of his own inclinations. The difficult task of
4866 knowing another soul is not for young gentlemen whose consciousness is
4867 chiefly made up of their own wishes.
4868
4869 Fred's main point of debate with himself was, whether he should tell
4870 his father, or try to get through the affair without his father's
4871 knowledge. It was probably Mrs. Waule who had been talking about him;
4872 and if Mary Garth had repeated Mrs. Waule's report to Rosamond, it
4873 would be sure to reach his father, who would as surely question him
4874 about it. He said to Rosamond, as they slackened their pace--
4875
4876 "Rosy, did Mary tell you that Mrs. Waule had said anything about me?"
4877
4878 "Yes, indeed, she did."
4879
4880 "What?"
4881
4882 "That you were very unsteady."
4883
4884 "Was that all?"
4885
4886 "I should think that was enough, Fred."
4887
4888 "You are sure she said no more?"
4889
4890 "Mary mentioned nothing else. But really, Fred, I think you ought to
4891 be ashamed."
4892
4893 "Oh, fudge! Don't lecture me. What did Mary say about it?"
4894
4895 "I am not obliged to tell you. You care so very much what Mary says,
4896 and you are too rude to allow me to speak."
4897
4898 "Of course I care what Mary says. She is the best girl I know."
4899
4900 "I should never have thought she was a girl to fall in love with."
4901
4902 "How do you know what men would fall in love with? Girls never know."
4903
4904 "At least, Fred, let me advise _you_ not to fall in love with her, for
4905 she says she would not marry you if you asked her."
4906
4907 "She might have waited till I did ask her."
4908
4909 "I knew it would nettle you, Fred."
4910
4911 "Not at all. She would not have said so if you had not provoked her."
4912 Before reaching home, Fred concluded that he would tell the whole
4913 affair as simply as possible to his father, who might perhaps take on
4914 himself the unpleasant business of speaking to Bulstrode.
4915
4916
4917
4918
4919
4920 BOOK II.
4921
4922
4923
4924
4925 OLD AND YOUNG.
4926
4927
4928
4929 CHAPTER XIII.
4930
4931 1st Gent. How class your man?--as better than the most,
4932 Or, seeming better, worse beneath that cloak?
4933 As saint or knave, pilgrim or hypocrite?
4934 2d Gent. Nay, tell me how you class your wealth of books
4935 The drifted relics of all time.
4936 As well sort them at once by size and livery:
4937 Vellum, tall copies, and the common calf
4938 Will hardly cover more diversity
4939 Than all your labels cunningly devised
4940 To class your unread authors.
4941
4942
4943 In consequence of what he had heard from Fred, Mr. Vincy determined to
4944 speak with Mr. Bulstrode in his private room at the Bank at half-past
4945 one, when he was usually free from other callers. But a visitor had
4946 come in at one o'clock, and Mr. Bulstrode had so much to say to him,
4947 that there was little chance of the interview being over in half an
4948 hour. The banker's speech was fluent, but it was also copious, and he
4949 used up an appreciable amount of time in brief meditative pauses. Do
4950 not imagine his sickly aspect to have been of the yellow, black-haired
4951 sort: he had a pale blond skin, thin gray-besprinkled brown hair,
4952 light-gray eyes, and a large forehead. Loud men called his subdued
4953 tone an undertone, and sometimes implied that it was inconsistent with
4954 openness; though there seems to be no reason why a loud man should not
4955 be given to concealment of anything except his own voice, unless it can
4956 be shown that Holy Writ has placed the seat of candor in the lungs.
4957 Mr. Bulstrode had also a deferential bending attitude in listening, and
4958 an apparently fixed attentiveness in his eyes which made those persons
4959 who thought themselves worth hearing infer that he was seeking the
4960 utmost improvement from their discourse. Others, who expected to make
4961 no great figure, disliked this kind of moral lantern turned on them.
4962 If you are not proud of your cellar, there is no thrill of satisfaction
4963 in seeing your guest hold up his wine-glass to the light and look
4964 judicial. Such joys are reserved for conscious merit. Hence Mr.
4965 Bulstrode's close attention was not agreeable to the publicans and
4966 sinners in Middlemarch; it was attributed by some to his being a
4967 Pharisee, and by others to his being Evangelical. Less superficial
4968 reasoners among them wished to know who his father and grandfather
4969 were, observing that five-and-twenty years ago nobody had ever heard of
4970 a Bulstrode in Middlemarch. To his present visitor, Lydgate, the
4971 scrutinizing look was a matter of indifference: he simply formed an
4972 unfavorable opinion of the banker's constitution, and concluded that he
4973 had an eager inward life with little enjoyment of tangible things.
4974
4975 "I shall be exceedingly obliged if you will look in on me here
4976 occasionally, Mr. Lydgate," the banker observed, after a brief pause.
4977 "If, as I dare to hope, I have the privilege of finding you a valuable
4978 coadjutor in the interesting matter of hospital management, there will
4979 be many questions which we shall need to discuss in private. As to the
4980 new hospital, which is nearly finished, I shall consider what you have
4981 said about the advantages of the special destination for fevers. The
4982 decision will rest with me, for though Lord Medlicote has given the
4983 land and timber for the building, he is not disposed to give his
4984 personal attention to the object."
4985
4986 "There are few things better worth the pains in a provincial town like
4987 this," said Lydgate. "A fine fever hospital in addition to the old
4988 infirmary might be the nucleus of a medical school here, when once we
4989 get our medical reforms; and what would do more for medical education
4990 than the spread of such schools over the country? A born provincial
4991 man who has a grain of public spirit as well as a few ideas, should do
4992 what he can to resist the rush of everything that is a little better
4993 than common towards London. Any valid professional aims may often find
4994 a freer, if not a richer field, in the provinces."
4995
4996 One of Lydgate's gifts was a voice habitually deep and sonorous, yet
4997 capable of becoming very low and gentle at the right moment. About his
4998 ordinary bearing there was a certain fling, a fearless expectation of
4999 success, a confidence in his own powers and integrity much fortified by
5000 contempt for petty obstacles or seductions of which he had had no
5001 experience. But this proud openness was made lovable by an expression
5002 of unaffected good-will. Mr. Bulstrode perhaps liked him the better for
5003 the difference between them in pitch and manners; he certainly liked
5004 him the better, as Rosamond did, for being a stranger in Middlemarch.
5005 One can begin so many things with a new person!--even begin to be a
5006 better man.
5007
5008 "I shall rejoice to furnish your zeal with fuller opportunities," Mr.
5009 Bulstrode answered; "I mean, by confiding to you the superintendence of
5010 my new hospital, should a maturer knowledge favor that issue, for I am
5011 determined that so great an object shall not be shackled by our two
5012 physicians. Indeed, I am encouraged to consider your advent to this
5013 town as a gracious indication that a more manifest blessing is now to
5014 be awarded to my efforts, which have hitherto been much with stood.
5015 With regard to the old infirmary, we have gained the initial point--I
5016 mean your election. And now I hope you will not shrink from incurring
5017 a certain amount of jealousy and dislike from your professional
5018 brethren by presenting yourself as a reformer."
5019
5020 "I will not profess bravery," said Lydgate, smiling, "but I acknowledge
5021 a good deal of pleasure in fighting, and I should not care for my
5022 profession, if I did not believe that better methods were to be found
5023 and enforced there as well as everywhere else."
5024
5025 "The standard of that profession is low in Middlemarch, my dear sir,"
5026 said the banker. "I mean in knowledge and skill; not in social status,
5027 for our medical men are most of them connected with respectable
5028 townspeople here. My own imperfect health has induced me to give some
5029 attention to those palliative resources which the divine mercy has
5030 placed within our reach. I have consulted eminent men in the
5031 metropolis, and I am painfully aware of the backwardness under which
5032 medical treatment labors in our provincial districts."
5033
5034 "Yes;--with our present medical rules and education, one must be
5035 satisfied now and then to meet with a fair practitioner. As to all the
5036 higher questions which determine the starting-point of a diagnosis--as
5037 to the philosophy of medical evidence--any glimmering of these can only
5038 come from a scientific culture of which country practitioners have
5039 usually no more notion than the man in the moon."
5040
5041 Mr. Bulstrode, bending and looking intently, found the form which
5042 Lydgate had given to his agreement not quite suited to his
5043 comprehension. Under such circumstances a judicious man changes the
5044 topic and enters on ground where his own gifts may be more useful.
5045
5046 "I am aware," he said, "that the peculiar bias of medical ability is
5047 towards material means. Nevertheless, Mr. Lydgate, I hope we shall not
5048 vary in sentiment as to a measure in which you are not likely to be
5049 actively concerned, but in which your sympathetic concurrence may be an
5050 aid to me. You recognize, I hope; the existence of spiritual interests
5051 in your patients?"
5052
5053 "Certainly I do. But those words are apt to cover different meanings
5054 to different minds."
5055
5056 "Precisely. And on such subjects wrong teaching is as fatal as no
5057 teaching. Now a point which I have much at heart to secure is a new
5058 regulation as to clerical attendance at the old infirmary. The
5059 building stands in Mr. Farebrother's parish. You know Mr. Farebrother?"
5060
5061 "I have seen him. He gave me his vote. I must call to thank him. He
5062 seems a very bright pleasant little fellow. And I understand he is a
5063 naturalist."
5064
5065 "Mr. Farebrother, my dear sir, is a man deeply painful to contemplate.
5066 I suppose there is not a clergyman in this country who has greater
5067 talents." Mr. Bulstrode paused and looked meditative.
5068
5069 "I have not yet been pained by finding any excessive talent in
5070 Middlemarch," said Lydgate, bluntly.
5071
5072 "What I desire," Mr. Bulstrode continued, looking still more serious,
5073 "is that Mr. Farebrother's attendance at the hospital should be
5074 superseded by the appointment of a chaplain--of Mr. Tyke, in fact--and
5075 that no other spiritual aid should be called in."
5076
5077 "As a medical man I could have no opinion on such a point unless I knew
5078 Mr. Tyke, and even then I should require to know the cases in which he
5079 was applied." Lydgate smiled, but he was bent on being circumspect.
5080
5081 "Of course you cannot enter fully into the merits of this measure at
5082 present. But"--here Mr. Bulstrode began to speak with a more chiselled
5083 emphasis--"the subject is likely to be referred to the medical board of
5084 the infirmary, and what I trust I may ask of you is, that in virtue of
5085 the cooperation between us which I now look forward to, you will not,
5086 so far as you are concerned, be influenced by my opponents in this
5087 matter."
5088
5089 "I hope I shall have nothing to do with clerical disputes," said
5090 Lydgate. "The path I have chosen is to work well in my own profession."
5091
5092 "My responsibility, Mr. Lydgate, is of a broader kind. With me,
5093 indeed, this question is one of sacred accountableness; whereas with my
5094 opponents, I have good reason to say that it is an occasion for
5095 gratifying a spirit of worldly opposition. But I shall not therefore
5096 drop one iota of my convictions, or cease to identify myself with that
5097 truth which an evil generation hates. I have devoted myself to this
5098 object of hospital-improvement, but I will boldly confess to you, Mr.
5099 Lydgate, that I should have no interest in hospitals if I believed that
5100 nothing more was concerned therein than the cure of mortal diseases. I
5101 have another ground of action, and in the face of persecution I will
5102 not conceal it."
5103
5104 Mr. Bulstrode's voice had become a loud and agitated whisper as he said
5105 the last words.
5106
5107 "There we certainly differ," said Lydgate. But he was not sorry that
5108 the door was now opened, and Mr. Vincy was announced. That florid
5109 sociable personage was become more interesting to him since he had seen
5110 Rosamond. Not that, like her, he had been weaving any future in which
5111 their lots were united; but a man naturally remembers a charming girl
5112 with pleasure, and is willing to dine where he may see her again.
5113 Before he took leave, Mr. Vincy had given that invitation which he had
5114 been "in no hurry about," for Rosamond at breakfast had mentioned that
5115 she thought her uncle Featherstone had taken the new doctor into great
5116 favor.
5117
5118 Mr. Bulstrode, alone with his brother-in-law, poured himself out a
5119 glass of water, and opened a sandwich-box.
5120
5121 "I cannot persuade you to adopt my regimen, Vincy?"
5122
5123 "No, no; I've no opinion of that system. Life wants padding," said Mr.
5124 Vincy, unable to omit his portable theory. "However," he went on,
5125 accenting the word, as if to dismiss all irrelevance, "what I came here
5126 to talk about was a little affair of my young scapegrace, Fred's."
5127
5128 "That is a subject on which you and I are likely to take quite as
5129 different views as on diet, Vincy."
5130
5131 "I hope not this time." (Mr. Vincy was resolved to be good-humored.)
5132 "The fact is, it's about a whim of old Featherstone's. Somebody has
5133 been cooking up a story out of spite, and telling it to the old man, to
5134 try to set him against Fred. He's very fond of Fred, and is likely to
5135 do something handsome for him; indeed he has as good as told Fred that
5136 he means to leave him his land, and that makes other people jealous."
5137
5138 "Vincy, I must repeat, that you will not get any concurrence from me as
5139 to the course you have pursued with your eldest son. It was entirely
5140 from worldly vanity that you destined him for the Church: with a family
5141 of three sons and four daughters, you were not warranted in devoting
5142 money to an expensive education which has succeeded in nothing but in
5143 giving him extravagant idle habits. You are now reaping the
5144 consequences."
5145
5146 To point out other people's errors was a duty that Mr. Bulstrode rarely
5147 shrank from, but Mr. Vincy was not equally prepared to be patient.
5148 When a man has the immediate prospect of being mayor, and is ready, in
5149 the interests of commerce, to take up a firm attitude on politics
5150 generally, he has naturally a sense of his importance to the framework
5151 of things which seems to throw questions of private conduct into the
5152 background. And this particular reproof irritated him more than any
5153 other. It was eminently superfluous to him to be told that he was
5154 reaping the consequences. But he felt his neck under Bulstrode's yoke;
5155 and though he usually enjoyed kicking, he was anxious to refrain from
5156 that relief.
5157
5158 "As to that, Bulstrode, it's no use going back. I'm not one of your
5159 pattern men, and I don't pretend to be. I couldn't foresee everything
5160 in the trade; there wasn't a finer business in Middlemarch than ours,
5161 and the lad was clever. My poor brother was in the Church, and would
5162 have done well--had got preferment already, but that stomach fever took
5163 him off: else he might have been a dean by this time. I think I was
5164 justified in what I tried to do for Fred. If you come to religion, it
5165 seems to me a man shouldn't want to carve out his meat to an ounce
5166 beforehand:--one must trust a little to Providence and be generous.
5167 It's a good British feeling to try and raise your family a little: in
5168 my opinion, it's a father's duty to give his sons a fine chance."
5169
5170 "I don't wish to act otherwise than as your best friend, Vincy, when I
5171 say that what you have been uttering just now is one mass of
5172 worldliness and inconsistent folly."
5173
5174 "Very well," said Mr. Vincy, kicking in spite of resolutions, "I never
5175 professed to be anything but worldly; and, what's more, I don't see
5176 anybody else who is not worldly. I suppose you don't conduct business
5177 on what you call unworldly principles. The only difference I see is
5178 that one worldliness is a little bit honester than another."
5179
5180 "This kind of discussion is unfruitful, Vincy," said Mr. Bulstrode,
5181 who, finishing his sandwich, had thrown himself back in his chair, and
5182 shaded his eyes as if weary. "You had some more particular business."
5183
5184 "Yes, yes. The long and short of it is, somebody has told old
5185 Featherstone, giving you as the authority, that Fred has been borrowing
5186 or trying to borrow money on the prospect of his land. Of course you
5187 never said any such nonsense. But the old fellow will insist on it
5188 that Fred should bring him a denial in your handwriting; that is, just
5189 a bit of a note saying you don't believe a word of such stuff, either
5190 of his having borrowed or tried to borrow in such a fool's way. I
5191 suppose you can have no objection to do that."
5192
5193 "Pardon me. I have an objection. I am by no means sure that your son,
5194 in his recklessness and ignorance--I will use no severer word--has not
5195 tried to raise money by holding out his future prospects, or even that
5196 some one may not have been foolish enough to supply him on so vague a
5197 presumption: there is plenty of such lax money-lending as of other
5198 folly in the world."
5199
5200 "But Fred gives me his honor that he has never borrowed money on the
5201 pretence of any understanding about his uncle's land. He is not a
5202 liar. I don't want to make him better than he is. I have blown him up
5203 well--nobody can say I wink at what he does. But he is not a liar.
5204 And I should have thought--but I may be wrong--that there was no
5205 religion to hinder a man from believing the best of a young fellow,
5206 when you don't know worse. It seems to me it would be a poor sort of
5207 religion to put a spoke in his wheel by refusing to say you don't
5208 believe such harm of him as you've got no good reason to believe."
5209
5210 "I am not at all sure that I should be befriending your son by
5211 smoothing his way to the future possession of Featherstone's property.
5212 I cannot regard wealth as a blessing to those who use it simply as a
5213 harvest for this world. You do not like to hear these things, Vincy,
5214 but on this occasion I feel called upon to tell you that I have no
5215 motive for furthering such a disposition of property as that which you
5216 refer to. I do not shrink from saying that it will not tend to your
5217 son's eternal welfare or to the glory of God. Why then should you
5218 expect me to pen this kind of affidavit, which has no object but to
5219 keep up a foolish partiality and secure a foolish bequest?"
5220
5221 "If you mean to hinder everybody from having money but saints and
5222 evangelists, you must give up some profitable partnerships, that's all
5223 I can say," Mr. Vincy burst out very bluntly. "It may be for the glory
5224 of God, but it is not for the glory of the Middlemarch trade, that
5225 Plymdale's house uses those blue and green dyes it gets from the
5226 Brassing manufactory; they rot the silk, that's all I know about it.
5227 Perhaps if other people knew so much of the profit went to the glory of
5228 God, they might like it better. But I don't mind so much about that--I
5229 could get up a pretty row, if I chose."
5230
5231 Mr. Bulstrode paused a little before he answered. "You pain me very
5232 much by speaking in this way, Vincy. I do not expect you to understand
5233 my grounds of action--it is not an easy thing even to thread a path for
5234 principles in the intricacies of the world--still less to make the
5235 thread clear for the careless and the scoffing. You must remember, if
5236 you please, that I stretch my tolerance towards you as my wife's
5237 brother, and that it little becomes you to complain of me as
5238 withholding material help towards the worldly position of your family.
5239 I must remind you that it is not your own prudence or judgment that has
5240 enabled you to keep your place in the trade."
5241
5242 "Very likely not; but you have been no loser by my trade yet," said Mr.
5243 Vincy, thoroughly nettled (a result which was seldom much retarded by
5244 previous resolutions). "And when you married Harriet, I don't see how
5245 you could expect that our families should not hang by the same nail.
5246 If you've changed your mind, and want my family to come down in the
5247 world, you'd better say so. I've never changed; I'm a plain Churchman
5248 now, just as I used to be before doctrines came up. I take the world
5249 as I find it, in trade and everything else. I'm contented to be no
5250 worse than my neighbors. But if you want us to come down in the world,
5251 say so. I shall know better what to do then."
5252
5253 "You talk unreasonably. Shall you come down in the world for want of
5254 this letter about your son?"
5255
5256 "Well, whether or not, I consider it very unhandsome of you to refuse
5257 it. Such doings may be lined with religion, but outside they have a
5258 nasty, dog-in-the-manger look. You might as well slander Fred: it
5259 comes pretty near to it when you refuse to say you didn't set a slander
5260 going. It's this sort of thing--this tyrannical spirit, wanting to
5261 play bishop and banker everywhere--it's this sort of thing makes a
5262 man's name stink."
5263
5264 "Vincy, if you insist on quarrelling with me, it will be exceedingly
5265 painful to Harriet as well as myself," said Mr. Bulstrode, with a
5266 trifle more eagerness and paleness than usual.
5267
5268 "I don't want to quarrel. It's for my interest--and perhaps for yours
5269 too--that we should be friends. I bear you no grudge; I think no worse
5270 of you than I do of other people. A man who half starves himself, and
5271 goes the length in family prayers, and so on, that you do, believes in
5272 his religion whatever it may be: you could turn over your capital just
5273 as fast with cursing and swearing:--plenty of fellows do. You like to
5274 be master, there's no denying that; you must be first chop in heaven,
5275 else you won't like it much. But you're my sister's husband, and we
5276 ought to stick together; and if I know Harriet, she'll consider it your
5277 fault if we quarrel because you strain at a gnat in this way, and
5278 refuse to do Fred a good turn. And I don't mean to say I shall bear it
5279 well. I consider it unhandsome."
5280
5281 Mr. Vincy rose, began to button his great-coat, and looked steadily at
5282 his brother-in-law, meaning to imply a demand for a decisive answer.
5283
5284 This was not the first time that Mr. Bulstrode had begun by admonishing
5285 Mr. Vincy, and had ended by seeing a very unsatisfactory reflection of
5286 himself in the coarse unflattering mirror which that manufacturer's
5287 mind presented to the subtler lights and shadows of his fellow-men; and
5288 perhaps his experience ought to have warned him how the scene would
5289 end. But a full-fed fountain will be generous with its waters even in
5290 the rain, when they are worse than useless; and a fine fount of
5291 admonition is apt to be equally irrepressible.
5292
5293 It was not in Mr. Bulstrode's nature to comply directly in consequence
5294 of uncomfortable suggestions. Before changing his course, he always
5295 needed to shape his motives and bring them into accordance with his
5296 habitual standard. He said, at last--
5297
5298 "I will reflect a little, Vincy. I will mention the subject to
5299 Harriet. I shall probably send you a letter."
5300
5301 "Very well. As soon as you can, please. I hope it will all be settled
5302 before I see you to-morrow."
5303
5304
5305
5306 CHAPTER XIV.
5307
5308 "Follows here the strict receipt
5309 For that sauce to dainty meat,
5310 Named Idleness, which many eat
5311 By preference, and call it sweet:
5312 First watch for morsels, like a hound
5313 Mix well with buffets, stir them round
5314 With good thick oil of flatteries,
5315 And froth with mean self-lauding lies.
5316 Serve warm: the vessels you must choose
5317 To keep it in are dead men's shoes."
5318
5319
5320 Mr. Bulstrode's consultation of Harriet seemed to have had the effect
5321 desired by Mr. Vincy, for early the next morning a letter came which
5322 Fred could carry to Mr. Featherstone as the required testimony.
5323
5324 The old gentleman was staying in bed on account of the cold weather,
5325 and as Mary Garth was not to be seen in the sitting-room, Fred went
5326 up-stairs immediately and presented the letter to his uncle, who,
5327 propped up comfortably on a bed-rest, was not less able than usual to
5328 enjoy his consciousness of wisdom in distrusting and frustrating
5329 mankind. He put on his spectacles to read the letter, pursing up his
5330 lips and drawing down their corners.
5331
5332 "Under the circumstances I will not decline to state my
5333 conviction--tchah! what fine words the fellow puts! He's as fine as an
5334 auctioneer--that your son Frederic has not obtained any advance of
5335 money on bequests promised by Mr. Featherstone--promised? who said I
5336 had ever promised? I promise nothing--I shall make codicils as long as
5337 I like--and that considering the nature of such a proceeding, it is
5338 unreasonable to presume that a young man of sense and character would
5339 attempt it--ah, but the gentleman doesn't say you are a young man of
5340 sense and character, mark you that, sir!--As to my own concern with any
5341 report of such a nature, I distinctly affirm that I never made any
5342 statement to the effect that your son had borrowed money on any
5343 property that might accrue to him on Mr. Featherstone's demise--bless
5344 my heart! 'property'--accrue--demise! Lawyer Standish is nothing to
5345 him. He couldn't speak finer if he wanted to borrow. Well," Mr.
5346 Featherstone here looked over his spectacles at Fred, while he handed
5347 back the letter to him with a contemptuous gesture, "you don't suppose
5348 I believe a thing because Bulstrode writes it out fine, eh?"
5349
5350 Fred colored. "You wished to have the letter, sir. I should think it
5351 very likely that Mr. Bulstrode's denial is as good as the authority
5352 which told you what he denies."
5353
5354 "Every bit. I never said I believed either one or the other. And now
5355 what d' you expect?" said Mr. Featherstone, curtly, keeping on his
5356 spectacles, but withdrawing his hands under his wraps.
5357
5358 "I expect nothing, sir." Fred with difficulty restrained himself from
5359 venting his irritation. "I came to bring you the letter. If you like
5360 I will bid you good morning."
5361
5362 "Not yet, not yet. Ring the bell; I want missy to come."
5363
5364 It was a servant who came in answer to the bell.
5365
5366 "Tell missy to come!" said Mr. Featherstone, impatiently. "What
5367 business had she to go away?" He spoke in the same tone when Mary came.
5368
5369 "Why couldn't you sit still here till I told you to go? I want my
5370 waistcoat now. I told you always to put it on the bed."
5371
5372 Mary's eyes looked rather red, as if she had been crying. It was clear
5373 that Mr. Featherstone was in one of his most snappish humors this
5374 morning, and though Fred had now the prospect of receiving the
5375 much-needed present of money, he would have preferred being free to
5376 turn round on the old tyrant and tell him that Mary Garth was too good
5377 to be at his beck. Though Fred had risen as she entered the room, she
5378 had barely noticed him, and looked as if her nerves were quivering with
5379 the expectation that something would be thrown at her. But she never
5380 had anything worse than words to dread. When she went to reach the
5381 waistcoat from a peg, Fred went up to her and said, "Allow me."
5382
5383 "Let it alone! You bring it, missy, and lay it down here," said Mr.
5384 Featherstone. "Now you go away again till I call you," he added, when
5385 the waistcoat was laid down by him. It was usual with him to season
5386 his pleasure in showing favor to one person by being especially
5387 disagreeable to another, and Mary was always at hand to furnish the
5388 condiment. When his own relatives came she was treated better. Slowly
5389 he took out a bunch of keys from the waistcoat pocket, and slowly he
5390 drew forth a tin box which was under the bed-clothes.
5391
5392 "You expect I am going to give you a little fortune, eh?" he said,
5393 looking above his spectacles and pausing in the act of opening the lid.
5394
5395 "Not at all, sir. You were good enough to speak of making me a present
5396 the other day, else, of course, I should not have thought of the
5397 matter." But Fred was of a hopeful disposition, and a vision had
5398 presented itself of a sum just large enough to deliver him from a
5399 certain anxiety. When Fred got into debt, it always seemed to him
5400 highly probable that something or other--he did not necessarily
5401 conceive what--would come to pass enabling him to pay in due time. And
5402 now that the providential occurrence was apparently close at hand, it
5403 would have been sheer absurdity to think that the supply would be short
5404 of the need: as absurd as a faith that believed in half a miracle for
5405 want of strength to believe in a whole one.
5406
5407 The deep-veined hands fingered many bank-notes-one after the other,
5408 laying them down flat again, while Fred leaned back in his chair,
5409 scorning to look eager. He held himself to be a gentleman at heart,
5410 and did not like courting an old fellow for his money. At last, Mr.
5411 Featherstone eyed him again over his spectacles and presented him with
5412 a little sheaf of notes: Fred could see distinctly that there were but
5413 five, as the less significant edges gaped towards him. But then, each
5414 might mean fifty pounds. He took them, saying--
5415
5416 "I am very much obliged to you, sir," and was going to roll them up
5417 without seeming to think of their value. But this did not suit Mr.
5418 Featherstone, who was eying him intently.
5419
5420 "Come, don't you think it worth your while to count 'em? You take
5421 money like a lord; I suppose you lose it like one."
5422
5423 "I thought I was not to look a gift-horse in the mouth, sir. But I
5424 shall be very happy to count them."
5425
5426 Fred was not so happy, however, after he had counted them. For they
5427 actually presented the absurdity of being less than his hopefulness had
5428 decided that they must be. What can the fitness of things mean, if not
5429 their fitness to a man's expectations? Failing this, absurdity and
5430 atheism gape behind him. The collapse for Fred was severe when he
5431 found that he held no more than five twenties, and his share in the
5432 higher education of this country did not seem to help him.
5433 Nevertheless he said, with rapid changes in his fair complexion--
5434
5435 "It is very handsome of you, sir."
5436
5437 "I should think it is," said Mr. Featherstone, locking his box and
5438 replacing it, then taking off his spectacles deliberately, and at
5439 length, as if his inward meditation had more deeply convinced him,
5440 repeating, "I should think it handsome."
5441
5442 "I assure you, sir, I am very grateful," said Fred, who had had time to
5443 recover his cheerful air.
5444
5445 "So you ought to be. You want to cut a figure in the world, and I
5446 reckon Peter Featherstone is the only one you've got to trust to." Here
5447 the old man's eyes gleamed with a curiously mingled satisfaction in the
5448 consciousness that this smart young fellow relied upon him, and that
5449 the smart young fellow was rather a fool for doing so.
5450
5451 "Yes, indeed: I was not born to very splendid chances. Few men have
5452 been more cramped than I have been," said Fred, with some sense of
5453 surprise at his own virtue, considering how hardly he was dealt with.
5454 "It really seems a little too bad to have to ride a broken-winded
5455 hunter, and see men, who, are not half such good judges as yourself,
5456 able to throw away any amount of money on buying bad bargains."
5457
5458 "Well, you can buy yourself a fine hunter now. Eighty pound is enough
5459 for that, I reckon--and you'll have twenty pound over to get yourself
5460 out of any little scrape," said Mr. Featherstone, chuckling slightly.
5461
5462 "You are very good, sir," said Fred, with a fine sense of contrast
5463 between the words and his feeling.
5464
5465 "Ay, rather a better uncle than your fine uncle Bulstrode. You won't
5466 get much out of his spekilations, I think. He's got a pretty strong
5467 string round your father's leg, by what I hear, eh?"
5468
5469 "My father never tells me anything about his affairs, sir."
5470
5471 "Well, he shows some sense there. But other people find 'em out
5472 without his telling. _He'll_ never have much to leave you: he'll
5473 most-like die without a will--he's the sort of man to do it--let 'em
5474 make him mayor of Middlemarch as much as they like. But you won't get
5475 much by his dying without a will, though you _are_ the eldest son."
5476
5477 Fred thought that Mr. Featherstone had never been so disagreeable
5478 before. True, he had never before given him quite so much money at
5479 once.
5480
5481 "Shall I destroy this letter of Mr. Bulstrode's, sir?" said Fred,
5482 rising with the letter as if he would put it in the fire.
5483
5484 "Ay, ay, I don't want it. It's worth no money to me."
5485
5486 Fred carried the letter to the fire, and thrust the poker through it
5487 with much zest. He longed to get out of the room, but he was a little
5488 ashamed before his inner self, as well as before his uncle, to run away
5489 immediately after pocketing the money. Presently, the farm-bailiff
5490 came up to give his master a report, and Fred, to his unspeakable
5491 relief, was dismissed with the injunction to come again soon.
5492
5493 He had longed not only to be set free from his uncle, but also to find
5494 Mary Garth. She was now in her usual place by the fire, with sewing in
5495 her hands and a book open on the little table by her side. Her eyelids
5496 had lost some of their redness now, and she had her usual air of
5497 self-command.
5498
5499 "Am I wanted up-stairs?" she said, half rising as Fred entered.
5500
5501 "No; I am only dismissed, because Simmons is gone up."
5502
5503 Mary sat down again, and resumed her work. She was certainly treating
5504 him with more indifference than usual: she did not know how
5505 affectionately indignant he had felt on her behalf up-stairs.
5506
5507 "May I stay here a little, Mary, or shall I bore you?"
5508
5509 "Pray sit down," said Mary; "you will not be so heavy a bore as Mr.
5510 John Waule, who was here yesterday, and he sat down without asking my
5511 leave."
5512
5513 "Poor fellow! I think he is in love with you."
5514
5515 "I am not aware of it. And to me it is one of the most odious things
5516 in a girl's life, that there must always be some supposition of falling
5517 in love coming between her and any man who is kind to her, and to whom
5518 she is grateful. I should have thought that I, at least, might have
5519 been safe from all that. I have no ground for the nonsensical vanity
5520 of fancying everybody who comes near me is in love with me."
5521
5522 Mary did not mean to betray any feeling, but in spite of herself she
5523 ended in a tremulous tone of vexation.
5524
5525 "Confound John Waule! I did not mean to make you angry. I didn't know
5526 you had any reason for being grateful to me. I forgot what a great
5527 service you think it if any one snuffs a candle for you." Fred also had
5528 his pride, and was not going to show that he knew what had called forth
5529 this outburst of Mary's.
5530
5531 "Oh, I am not angry, except with the ways of the world. I do like to
5532 be spoken to as if I had common-sense. I really often feel as if I
5533 could understand a little more than I ever hear even from young
5534 gentlemen who have been to college." Mary had recovered, and she spoke
5535 with a suppressed rippling under-current of laughter pleasant to hear.
5536
5537 "I don't care how merry you are at my expense this morning," said Fred,
5538 "I thought you looked so sad when you came up-stairs. It is a shame you
5539 should stay here to be bullied in that way."
5540
5541 "Oh, I have an easy life--by comparison. I have tried being a teacher,
5542 and I am not fit for that: my mind is too fond of wandering on its own
5543 way. I think any hardship is better than pretending to do what one is
5544 paid for, and never really doing it. Everything here I can do as well
5545 as any one else could; perhaps better than some--Rosy, for example.
5546 Though she is just the sort of beautiful creature that is imprisoned
5547 with ogres in fairy tales."
5548
5549 "_Rosy!_" cried Fred, in a tone of profound brotherly scepticism.
5550
5551 "Come, Fred!" said Mary, emphatically; "you have no right to be so
5552 critical."
5553
5554 "Do you mean anything particular--just now?"
5555
5556 "No, I mean something general--always."
5557
5558 "Oh, that I am idle and extravagant. Well, I am not fit to be a poor
5559 man. I should not have made a bad fellow if I had been rich."
5560
5561 "You would have done your duty in that state of life to which it has
5562 not pleased God to call you," said Mary, laughing.
5563
5564 "Well, I couldn't do my duty as a clergyman, any more than you could do
5565 yours as a governess. You ought to have a little fellow-feeling there,
5566 Mary."
5567
5568 "I never said you ought to be a clergyman. There are other sorts of
5569 work. It seems to me very miserable not to resolve on some course and
5570 act accordingly."
5571
5572 "So I could, if--" Fred broke off, and stood up, leaning against the
5573 mantel-piece.
5574
5575 "If you were sure you should not have a fortune?"
5576
5577 "I did not say that. You want to quarrel with me. It is too bad of
5578 you to be guided by what other people say about me."
5579
5580 "How can I want to quarrel with you? I should be quarrelling with all
5581 my new books," said Mary, lifting the volume on the table. "However
5582 naughty you may be to other people, you are good to me."
5583
5584 "Because I like you better than any one else. But I know you despise
5585 me."
5586
5587 "Yes, I do--a little," said Mary, nodding, with a smile.
5588
5589 "You would admire a stupendous fellow, who would have wise opinions
5590 about everything."
5591
5592 "Yes, I should." Mary was sewing swiftly, and seemed provokingly
5593 mistress of the situation. When a conversation has taken a wrong turn
5594 for us, we only get farther and farther into the swamp of awkwardness.
5595 This was what Fred Vincy felt.
5596
5597 "I suppose a woman is never in love with any one she has always
5598 known--ever since she can remember; as a man often is. It is always
5599 some new fellow who strikes a girl."
5600
5601 "Let me see," said Mary, the corners of her mouth curling archly; "I
5602 must go back on my experience. There is Juliet--she seems an example
5603 of what you say. But then Ophelia had probably known Hamlet a long
5604 while; and Brenda Troil--she had known Mordaunt Merton ever since they
5605 were children; but then he seems to have been an estimable young man;
5606 and Minna was still more deeply in love with Cleveland, who was a
5607 stranger. Waverley was new to Flora MacIvor; but then she did not fall
5608 in love with him. And there are Olivia and Sophia Primrose, and
5609 Corinne--they may be said to have fallen in love with new men.
5610 Altogether, my experience is rather mixed."
5611
5612 Mary looked up with some roguishness at Fred, and that look of hers was
5613 very dear to him, though the eyes were nothing more than clear windows
5614 where observation sat laughingly. He was certainly an affectionate
5615 fellow, and as he had grown from boy to man, he had grown in love with
5616 his old playmate, notwithstanding that share in the higher education of
5617 the country which had exalted his views of rank and income.
5618
5619 "When a man is not loved, it is no use for him to say that he could be
5620 a better fellow--could do anything--I mean, if he were sure of being
5621 loved in return."
5622
5623 "Not of the least use in the world for him to say he _could_ be better.
5624 Might, could, would--they are contemptible auxiliaries."
5625
5626 "I don't see how a man is to be good for much unless he has some one
5627 woman to love him dearly."
5628
5629 "I think the goodness should come before he expects that."
5630
5631 "You know better, Mary. Women don't love men for their goodness."
5632
5633 "Perhaps not. But if they love them, they never think them bad."
5634
5635 "It is hardly fair to say I am bad."
5636
5637 "I said nothing at all about you."
5638
5639 "I never shall be good for anything, Mary, if you will not say that you
5640 love me--if you will not promise to marry me--I mean, when I am able to
5641 marry."
5642
5643 "If I did love you, I would not marry you: I would certainly not
5644 promise ever to marry you."
5645
5646 "I think that is quite wicked, Mary. If you love me, you ought to
5647 promise to marry me."
5648
5649 "On the contrary, I think it would be wicked in me to marry you even if
5650 I did love you."
5651
5652 "You mean, just as I am, without any means of maintaining a wife. Of
5653 course: I am but three-and-twenty."
5654
5655 "In that last point you will alter. But I am not so sure of any other
5656 alteration. My father says an idle man ought not to exist, much less,
5657 be married."
5658
5659 "Then I am to blow my brains out?"
5660
5661 "No; on the whole I should think you would do better to pass your
5662 examination. I have heard Mr. Farebrother say it is disgracefully
5663 easy."
5664
5665 "That is all very fine. Anything is easy to him. Not that cleverness
5666 has anything to do with it. I am ten times cleverer than many men who
5667 pass."
5668
5669 "Dear me!" said Mary, unable to repress her sarcasm; "that accounts for
5670 the curates like Mr. Crowse. Divide your cleverness by ten, and the
5671 quotient--dear me!--is able to take a degree. But that only shows you
5672 are ten times more idle than the others."
5673
5674 "Well, if I did pass, you would not want me to go into the Church?"
5675
5676 "That is not the question--what I want you to do. You have a
5677 conscience of your own, I suppose. There! there is Mr. Lydgate. I
5678 must go and tell my uncle."
5679
5680 "Mary," said Fred, seizing her hand as she rose; "if you will not give
5681 me some encouragement, I shall get worse instead of better."
5682
5683 "I will not give you any encouragement," said Mary, reddening. "Your
5684 friends would dislike it, and so would mine. My father would think it
5685 a disgrace to me if I accepted a man who got into debt, and would not
5686 work!"
5687
5688 Fred was stung, and released her hand. She walked to the door, but
5689 there she turned and said: "Fred, you have always been so good, so
5690 generous to me. I am not ungrateful. But never speak to me in that
5691 way again."
5692
5693 "Very well," said Fred, sulkily, taking up his hat and whip. His
5694 complexion showed patches of pale pink and dead white. Like many a
5695 plucked idle young gentleman, he was thoroughly in love, and with a
5696 plain girl, who had no money! But having Mr. Featherstone's land in
5697 the background, and a persuasion that, let Mary say what she would, she
5698 really did care for him, Fred was not utterly in despair.
5699
5700 When he got home, he gave four of the twenties to his mother, asking
5701 her to keep them for him. "I don't want to spend that money, mother.
5702 I want it to pay a debt with. So keep it safe away from my fingers."
5703
5704 "Bless you, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy. She doted on her eldest son and
5705 her youngest girl (a child of six), whom others thought her two
5706 naughtiest children. The mother's eyes are not always deceived in
5707 their partiality: she at least can best judge who is the tender,
5708 filial-hearted child. And Fred was certainly very fond of his mother.
5709 Perhaps it was his fondness for another person also that made him
5710 particularly anxious to take some security against his own liability to
5711 spend the hundred pounds. For the creditor to whom he owed a hundred
5712 and sixty held a firmer security in the shape of a bill signed by
5713 Mary's father.
5714
5715
5716
5717 CHAPTER XV.
5718
5719 "Black eyes you have left, you say,
5720 Blue eyes fail to draw you;
5721 Yet you seem more rapt to-day,
5722 Than of old we saw you.
5723
5724 "Oh, I track the fairest fair
5725 Through new haunts of pleasure;
5726 Footprints here and echoes there
5727 Guide me to my treasure:
5728
5729 "Lo! she turns--immortal youth
5730 Wrought to mortal stature,
5731 Fresh as starlight's aged truth--
5732 Many-named Nature!"
5733
5734
5735 A great historian, as he insisted on calling himself, who had the
5736 happiness to be dead a hundred and twenty years ago, and so to take his
5737 place among the colossi whose huge legs our living pettiness is
5738 observed to walk under, glories in his copious remarks and digressions
5739 as the least imitable part of his work, and especially in those initial
5740 chapters to the successive books of his history, where he seems to
5741 bring his armchair to the proscenium and chat with us in all the lusty
5742 ease of his fine English. But Fielding lived when the days were longer
5743 (for time, like money, is measured by our needs), when summer
5744 afternoons were spacious, and the clock ticked slowly in the winter
5745 evenings. We belated historians must not linger after his example; and
5746 if we did so, it is probable that our chat would be thin and eager, as
5747 if delivered from a campstool in a parrot-house. I at least have so
5748 much to do in unraveling certain human lots, and seeing how they were
5749 woven and interwoven, that all the light I can command must be
5750 concentrated on this particular web, and not dispersed over that
5751 tempting range of relevancies called the universe.
5752
5753 At present I have to make the new settler Lydgate better known to any
5754 one interested in him than he could possibly be even to those who had
5755 seen the most of him since his arrival in Middlemarch. For surely all
5756 must admit that a man may be puffed and belauded, envied, ridiculed,
5757 counted upon as a tool and fallen in love with, or at least selected as
5758 a future husband, and yet remain virtually unknown--known merely as a
5759 cluster of signs for his neighbors' false suppositions. There was a
5760 general impression, however, that Lydgate was not altogether a common
5761 country doctor, and in Middlemarch at that time such an impression was
5762 significant of great things being expected from him. For everybody's
5763 family doctor was remarkably clever, and was understood to have
5764 immeasurable skill in the management and training of the most skittish
5765 or vicious diseases. The evidence of his cleverness was of the higher
5766 intuitive order, lying in his lady-patients' immovable conviction, and
5767 was unassailable by any objection except that their intuitions were
5768 opposed by others equally strong; each lady who saw medical truth in
5769 Wrench and "the strengthening treatment" regarding Toller and "the
5770 lowering system" as medical perdition. For the heroic times of copious
5771 bleeding and blistering had not yet departed, still less the times of
5772 thorough-going theory, when disease in general was called by some bad
5773 name, and treated accordingly without shilly-shally--as if, for
5774 example, it were to be called insurrection, which must not be fired on
5775 with blank-cartridge, but have its blood drawn at once. The
5776 strengtheners and the lowerers were all "clever" men in somebody's
5777 opinion, which is really as much as can be said for any living talents.
5778 Nobody's imagination had gone so far as to conjecture that Mr. Lydgate
5779 could know as much as Dr. Sprague and Dr. Minchin, the two physicians,
5780 who alone could offer any hope when danger was extreme, and when the
5781 smallest hope was worth a guinea. Still, I repeat, there was a general
5782 impression that Lydgate was something rather more uncommon than any
5783 general practitioner in Middlemarch. And this was true. He was but
5784 seven-and-twenty, an age at which many men are not quite common--at
5785 which they are hopeful of achievement, resolute in avoidance, thinking
5786 that Mammon shall never put a bit in their mouths and get astride their
5787 backs, but rather that Mammon, if they have anything to do with him,
5788 shall draw their chariot.
5789
5790 He had been left an orphan when he was fresh from a public school. His
5791 father, a military man, had made but little provision for three
5792 children, and when the boy Tertius asked to have a medical education,
5793 it seemed easier to his guardians to grant his request by apprenticing
5794 him to a country practitioner than to make any objections on the score
5795 of family dignity. He was one of the rarer lads who early get a
5796 decided bent and make up their minds that there is something particular
5797 in life which they would like to do for its own sake, and not because
5798 their fathers did it. Most of us who turn to any subject with love
5799 remember some morning or evening hour when we got on a high stool to
5800 reach down an untried volume, or sat with parted lips listening to a
5801 new talker, or for very lack of books began to listen to the voices
5802 within, as the first traceable beginning of our love. Something of
5803 that sort happened to Lydgate. He was a quick fellow, and when hot
5804 from play, would toss himself in a corner, and in five minutes be deep
5805 in any sort of book that he could lay his hands on: if it were Rasselas
5806 or Gulliver, so much the better, but Bailey's Dictionary would do, or
5807 the Bible with the Apocrypha in it. Something he must read, when he
5808 was not riding the pony, or running and hunting, or listening to the
5809 talk of men. All this was true of him at ten years of age; he had then
5810 read through "Chrysal, or the Adventures of a Guinea," which was
5811 neither milk for babes, nor any chalky mixture meant to pass for milk,
5812 and it had already occurred to him that books were stuff, and that life
5813 was stupid. His school studies had not much modified that opinion, for
5814 though he "did" his classics and mathematics, he was not pre-eminent in
5815 them. It was said of him, that Lydgate could do anything he liked, but
5816 he had certainly not yet liked to do anything remarkable. He was a
5817 vigorous animal with a ready understanding, but no spark had yet
5818 kindled in him an intellectual passion; knowledge seemed to him a very
5819 superficial affair, easily mastered: judging from the conversation of
5820 his elders, he had apparently got already more than was necessary for
5821 mature life. Probably this was not an exceptional result of expensive
5822 teaching at that period of short-waisted coats, and other fashions
5823 which have not yet recurred. But, one vacation, a wet day sent him to
5824 the small home library to hunt once more for a book which might have
5825 some freshness for him: in vain! unless, indeed, he took down a dusty
5826 row of volumes with gray-paper backs and dingy labels--the volumes of
5827 an old Cyclopaedia which he had never disturbed. It would at least be
5828 a novelty to disturb them. They were on the highest shelf, and he
5829 stood on a chair to get them down. But he opened the volume which he
5830 first took from the shelf: somehow, one is apt to read in a makeshift
5831 attitude, just where it might seem inconvenient to do so. The page he
5832 opened on was under the head of Anatomy, and the first passage that
5833 drew his eyes was on the valves of the heart. He was not much
5834 acquainted with valves of any sort, but he knew that valvae were
5835 folding-doors, and through this crevice came a sudden light startling
5836 him with his first vivid notion of finely adjusted mechanism in the
5837 human frame. A liberal education had of course left him free to read
5838 the indecent passages in the school classics, but beyond a general
5839 sense of secrecy and obscenity in connection with his internal
5840 structure, had left his imagination quite unbiassed, so that for
5841 anything he knew his brains lay in small bags at his temples, and he
5842 had no more thought of representing to himself how his blood circulated
5843 than how paper served instead of gold. But the moment of vocation had
5844 come, and before he got down from his chair, the world was made new to
5845 him by a presentiment of endless processes filling the vast spaces
5846 planked out of his sight by that wordy ignorance which he had supposed
5847 to be knowledge. From that hour Lydgate felt the growth of an
5848 intellectual passion.
5849
5850 We are not afraid of telling over and over again how a man comes to
5851 fall in love with a woman and be wedded to her, or else be fatally
5852 parted from her. Is it due to excess of poetry or of stupidity that we
5853 are never weary of describing what King James called a woman's "makdom
5854 and her fairnesse," never weary of listening to the twanging of the old
5855 Troubadour strings, and are comparatively uninterested in that other
5856 kind of "makdom and fairnesse" which must be wooed with industrious
5857 thought and patient renunciation of small desires? In the story of
5858 this passion, too, the development varies: sometimes it is the glorious
5859 marriage, sometimes frustration and final parting. And not seldom the
5860 catastrophe is bound up with the other passion, sung by the
5861 Troubadours. For in the multitude of middle-aged men who go about
5862 their vocations in a daily course determined for them much in the same
5863 way as the tie of their cravats, there is always a good number who once
5864 meant to shape their own deeds and alter the world a little. The story
5865 of their coming to be shapen after the average and fit to be packed by
5866 the gross, is hardly ever told even in their consciousness; for perhaps
5867 their ardor in generous unpaid toil cooled as imperceptibly as the
5868 ardor of other youthful loves, till one day their earlier self walked
5869 like a ghost in its old home and made the new furniture ghastly.
5870 Nothing in the world more subtle than the process of their gradual
5871 change! In the beginning they inhaled it unknowingly: you and I may
5872 have sent some of our breath towards infecting them, when we uttered
5873 our conforming falsities or drew our silly conclusions: or perhaps it
5874 came with the vibrations from a woman's glance.
5875
5876 Lydgate did not mean to be one of those failures, and there was the
5877 better hope of him because his scientific interest soon took the form
5878 of a professional enthusiasm: he had a youthful belief in his
5879 bread-winning work, not to be stifled by that initiation in makeshift
5880 called his 'prentice days; and he carried to his studies in London,
5881 Edinburgh, and Paris, the conviction that the medical profession as it
5882 might be was the finest in the world; presenting the most perfect
5883 interchange between science and art; offering the most direct alliance
5884 between intellectual conquest and the social good. Lydgate's nature
5885 demanded this combination: he was an emotional creature, with a
5886 flesh-and-blood sense of fellowship which withstood all the
5887 abstractions of special study. He cared not only for "cases," but for
5888 John and Elizabeth, especially Elizabeth.
5889
5890 There was another attraction in his profession: it wanted reform, and
5891 gave a man an opportunity for some indignant resolve to reject its
5892 venal decorations and other humbug, and to be the possessor of genuine
5893 though undemanded qualifications. He went to study in Paris with the
5894 determination that when he came home again he would settle in some
5895 provincial town as a general practitioner, and resist the
5896 irrational severance between medical and surgical knowledge in the
5897 interest of his own scientific pursuits, as well as of the general
5898 advance: he would keep away from the range of London intrigues,
5899 jealousies, and social truckling, and win celebrity, however slowly, as
5900 Jenner had done, by the independent value of his work. For it must be
5901 remembered that this was a dark period; and in spite of venerable
5902 colleges which used great efforts to secure purity of knowledge by
5903 making it scarce, and to exclude error by a rigid exclusiveness in
5904 relation to fees and appointments, it happened that very ignorant young
5905 gentlemen were promoted in town, and many more got a legal right to
5906 practise over large areas in the country. Also, the high standard held
5907 up to the public mind by the College of Physicians, which gave its peculiar
5908 sanction to the expensive and highly rarefied medical instruction
5909 obtained by graduates of Oxford and Cambridge, did not hinder quackery
5910 from having an excellent time of it; for since professional practice
5911 chiefly consisted in giving a great many drugs, the public inferred
5912 that it might be better off with more drugs still, if they could only
5913 be got cheaply, and hence swallowed large cubic measures of physic
5914 prescribed by unscrupulous ignorance which had taken no degrees.
5915 Considering that statistics had not yet embraced a calculation as to
5916 the number of ignorant or canting doctors which absolutely must exist
5917 in the teeth of all changes, it seemed to Lydgate that a change in the
5918 units was the most direct mode of changing the numbers. He meant to be
5919 a unit who would make a certain amount of difference towards that
5920 spreading change which would one day tell appreciably upon the
5921 averages, and in the mean time have the pleasure of making an
5922 advantageous difference to the viscera of his own patients. But he did
5923 not simply aim at a more genuine kind of practice than was common. He
5924 was ambitious of a wider effect: he was fired with the possibility that
5925 he might work out the proof of an anatomical conception and make a link
5926 in the chain of discovery.
5927
5928 Does it seem incongruous to you that a Middlemarch surgeon should dream
5929 of himself as a discoverer? Most of us, indeed, know little of the
5930 great originators until they have been lifted up among the
5931 constellations and already rule our fates. But that Herschel, for
5932 example, who "broke the barriers of the heavens"--did he not once play
5933 a provincial church-organ, and give music-lessons to stumbling
5934 pianists? Each of those Shining Ones had to walk on the earth among
5935 neighbors who perhaps thought much more of his gait and his garments
5936 than of anything which was to give him a title to everlasting fame:
5937 each of them had his little local personal history sprinkled with small
5938 temptations and sordid cares, which made the retarding friction of his
5939 course towards final companionship with the immortals. Lydgate was not
5940 blind to the dangers of such friction, but he had plenty of confidence
5941 in his resolution to avoid it as far as possible: being
5942 seven-and-twenty, he felt himself experienced. And he was not going to
5943 have his vanities provoked by contact with the showy worldly successes
5944 of the capital, but to live among people who could hold no rivalry with
5945 that pursuit of a great idea which was to be a twin object with the
5946 assiduous practice of his profession. There was fascination in the
5947 hope that the two purposes would illuminate each other: the careful
5948 observation and inference which was his daily work, the use of the lens
5949 to further his judgment in special cases, would further his thought as
5950 an instrument of larger inquiry. Was not this the typical pre-eminence
5951 of his profession? He would be a good Middlemarch doctor, and by that
5952 very means keep himself in the track of far-reaching investigation. On
5953 one point he may fairly claim approval at this particular stage of his
5954 career: he did not mean to imitate those philanthropic models who make
5955 a profit out of poisonous pickles to support themselves while they are
5956 exposing adulteration, or hold shares in a gambling-hell that they may
5957 have leisure to represent the cause of public morality. He intended to
5958 begin in his own case some particular reforms which were quite
5959 certainly within his reach, and much less of a problem than the
5960 demonstrating of an anatomical conception. One of these reforms was to
5961 act stoutly on the strength of a recent legal decision, and simply
5962 prescribe, without dispensing drugs or taking percentage from
5963 druggists. This was an innovation for one who had chosen to adopt the
5964 style of general practitioner in a country town, and would be felt as
5965 offensive criticism by his professional brethren. But Lydgate meant to
5966 innovate in his treatment also, and he was wise enough to see that the
5967 best security for his practising honestly according to his belief was
5968 to get rid of systematic temptations to the contrary.
5969
5970 Perhaps that was a more cheerful time for observers and theorizers than
5971 the present; we are apt to think it the finest era of the world when
5972 America was beginning to be discovered, when a bold sailor, even if he
5973 were wrecked, might alight on a new kingdom; and about 1829 the dark
5974 territories of Pathology were a fine America for a spirited young
5975 adventurer. Lydgate was ambitious above all to contribute towards
5976 enlarging the scientific, rational basis of his profession. The more
5977 he became interested in special questions of disease, such as the
5978 nature of fever or fevers, the more keenly he felt the need for that
5979 fundamental knowledge of structure which just at the beginning of the
5980 century had been illuminated by the brief and glorious career of
5981 Bichat, who died when he was only one-and-thirty, but, like another
5982 Alexander, left a realm large enough for many heirs. That great
5983 Frenchman first carried out the conception that living bodies,
5984 fundamentally considered, are not associations of organs which can be
5985 understood by studying them first apart, and then as it were federally;
5986 but must be regarded as consisting of certain primary webs or tissues,
5987 out of which the various organs--brain, heart, lungs, and so on--are
5988 compacted, as the various accommodations of a house are built up in
5989 various proportions of wood, iron, stone, brick, zinc, and the rest,
5990 each material having its peculiar composition and proportions. No man,
5991 one sees, can understand and estimate the entire structure or its
5992 parts--what are its frailties and what its repairs, without knowing the
5993 nature of the materials. And the conception wrought out by Bichat,
5994 with his detailed study of the different tissues, acted necessarily on
5995 medical questions as the turning of gas-light would act on a dim,
5996 oil-lit street, showing new connections and hitherto hidden facts of
5997 structure which must be taken into account in considering the symptoms
5998 of maladies and the action of medicaments. But results which depend on
5999 human conscience and intelligence work slowly, and now at the end of
6000 1829, most medical practice was still strutting or shambling along the
6001 old paths, and there was still scientific work to be done which might
6002 have seemed to be a direct sequence of Bichat's. This great seer did
6003 not go beyond the consideration of the tissues as ultimate facts in the
6004 living organism, marking the limit of anatomical analysis; but it was
6005 open to another mind to say, have not these structures some common
6006 basis from which they have all started, as your sarsnet, gauze, net,
6007 satin, and velvet from the raw cocoon? Here would be another light, as
6008 of oxy-hydrogen, showing the very grain of things, and revising all
6009 former explanations. Of this sequence to Bichat's work, already
6010 vibrating along many currents of the European mind, Lydgate was
6011 enamoured; he longed to demonstrate the more intimate relations of
6012 living structure, and help to define men's thought more accurately
6013 after the true order. The work had not yet been done, but only
6014 prepared for those who knew how to use the preparation. What was the
6015 primitive tissue? In that way Lydgate put the question--not quite in
6016 the way required by the awaiting answer; but such missing of the right
6017 word befalls many seekers. And he counted on quiet intervals to be
6018 watchfully seized, for taking up the threads of investigation--on many
6019 hints to be won from diligent application, not only of the scalpel, but
6020 of the microscope, which research had begun to use again with new
6021 enthusiasm of reliance. Such was Lydgate's plan of his future: to do
6022 good small work for Middlemarch, and great work for the world.
6023
6024 He was certainly a happy fellow at this time: to be seven-and-twenty,
6025 without any fixed vices, with a generous resolution that his action
6026 should be beneficent, and with ideas in his brain that made life
6027 interesting quite apart from the cultus of horseflesh and other mystic
6028 rites of costly observance, which the eight hundred pounds left him
6029 after buying his practice would certainly not have gone far in paying
6030 for. He was at a starting-point which makes many a man's career a fine
6031 subject for betting, if there were any gentlemen given to that
6032 amusement who could appreciate the complicated probabilities of an
6033 arduous purpose, with all the possible thwartings and furtherings of
6034 circumstance, all the niceties of inward balance, by which a man swims
6035 and makes his point or else is carried headlong. The risk would remain
6036 even with close knowledge of Lydgate's character; for character too is
6037 a process and an unfolding. The man was still in the making, as much
6038 as the Middlemarch doctor and immortal discoverer, and there were both
6039 virtues and faults capable of shrinking or expanding. The faults will
6040 not, I hope, be a reason for the withdrawal of your interest in him.
6041 Among our valued friends is there not some one or other who is a little
6042 too self-confident and disdainful; whose distinguished mind is a little
6043 spotted with commonness; who is a little pinched here and protuberant
6044 there with native prejudices; or whose better energies are liable to
6045 lapse down the wrong channel under the influence of transient
6046 solicitations? All these things might be alleged against Lydgate, but
6047 then, they are the periphrases of a polite preacher, who talks of Adam,
6048 and would not like to mention anything painful to the pew-renters. The
6049 particular faults from which these delicate generalities are distilled
6050 have distinguishable physiognomies, diction, accent, and grimaces;
6051 filling up parts in very various dramas. Our vanities differ as our
6052 noses do: all conceit is not the same conceit, but varies in
6053 correspondence with the minutiae of mental make in which one of us
6054 differs from another. Lydgate's conceit was of the arrogant sort,
6055 never simpering, never impertinent, but massive in its claims and
6056 benevolently contemptuous. He would do a great deal for noodles, being
6057 sorry for them, and feeling quite sure that they could have no power
6058 over him: he had thought of joining the Saint Simonians when he was in
6059 Paris, in order to turn them against some of their own doctrines. All
6060 his faults were marked by kindred traits, and were those of a man who
6061 had a fine baritone, whose clothes hung well upon him, and who even in
6062 his ordinary gestures had an air of inbred distinction. Where then lay
6063 the spots of commonness? says a young lady enamoured of that careless
6064 grace. How could there be any commonness in a man so well-bred, so
6065 ambitious of social distinction, so generous and unusual in his views
6066 of social duty? As easily as there may be stupidity in a man of genius
6067 if you take him unawares on the wrong subject, or as many a man who has
6068 the best will to advance the social millennium might be ill-inspired in
6069 imagining its lighter pleasures; unable to go beyond Offenbach's music,
6070 or the brilliant punning in the last burlesque. Lydgate's spots of
6071 commonness lay in the complexion of his prejudices, which, in spite of
6072 noble intention and sympathy, were half of them such as are found in
6073 ordinary men of the world: that distinction of mind which belonged to
6074 his intellectual ardor, did not penetrate his feeling and judgment
6075 about furniture, or women, or the desirability of its being known
6076 (without his telling) that he was better born than other country
6077 surgeons. He did not mean to think of furniture at present; but
6078 whenever he did so it was to be feared that neither biology nor schemes
6079 of reform would lift him above the vulgarity of feeling that there
6080 would be an incompatibility in his furniture not being of the best.
6081
6082 As to women, he had once already been drawn headlong by impetuous
6083 folly, which he meant to be final, since marriage at some distant
6084 period would of course not be impetuous. For those who want to be
6085 acquainted with Lydgate it will be good to know what was that case of
6086 impetuous folly, for it may stand as an example of the fitful swerving
6087 of passion to which he was prone, together with the chivalrous kindness
6088 which helped to make him morally lovable. The story can be told
6089 without many words. It happened when he was studying in Paris, and
6090 just at the time when, over and above his other work, he was occupied
6091 with some galvanic experiments. One evening, tired with his
6092 experimenting, and not being able to elicit the facts he needed, he
6093 left his frogs and rabbits to some repose under their trying and
6094 mysterious dispensation of unexplained shocks, and went to finish his
6095 evening at the theatre of the Porte Saint Martin, where there was a
6096 melodrama which he had already seen several times; attracted, not by
6097 the ingenious work of the collaborating authors, but by an actress
6098 whose part it was to stab her lover, mistaking him for the
6099 evil-designing duke of the piece. Lydgate was in love with this
6100 actress, as a man is in love with a woman whom he never expects to
6101 speak to. She was a Provencale, with dark eyes, a Greek profile, and
6102 rounded majestic form, having that sort of beauty which carries a sweet
6103 matronliness even in youth, and her voice was a soft cooing. She had
6104 but lately come to Paris, and bore a virtuous reputation, her husband
6105 acting with her as the unfortunate lover. It was her acting which was
6106 "no better than it should be," but the public was satisfied. Lydgate's
6107 only relaxation now was to go and look at this woman, just as he might
6108 have thrown himself under the breath of the sweet south on a bank of
6109 violets for a while, without prejudice to his galvanism, to which he
6110 would presently return. But this evening the old drama had a new
6111 catastrophe. At the moment when the heroine was to act the stabbing of
6112 her lover, and he was to fall gracefully, the wife veritably stabbed
6113 her husband, who fell as death willed. A wild shriek pierced the
6114 house, and the Provencale fell swooning: a shriek and a swoon were
6115 demanded by the play, but the swooning too was real this time. Lydgate
6116 leaped and climbed, he hardly knew how, on to the stage, and was active
6117 in help, making the acquaintance of his heroine by finding a contusion
6118 on her head and lifting her gently in his arms. Paris rang with the
6119 story of this death:--was it a murder? Some of the actress's warmest
6120 admirers were inclined to believe in her guilt, and liked her the
6121 better for it (such was the taste of those times); but Lydgate was not
6122 one of these. He vehemently contended for her innocence, and the
6123 remote impersonal passion for her beauty which he had felt before, had
6124 passed now into personal devotion, and tender thought of her lot. The
6125 notion of murder was absurd: no motive was discoverable, the young
6126 couple being understood to dote on each other; and it was not
6127 unprecedented that an accidental slip of the foot should have brought
6128 these grave consequences. The legal investigation ended in Madame
6129 Laure's release. Lydgate by this time had had many interviews with
6130 her, and found her more and more adorable. She talked little; but that
6131 was an additional charm. She was melancholy, and seemed grateful; her
6132 presence was enough, like that of the evening light. Lydgate was madly
6133 anxious about her affection, and jealous lest any other man than
6134 himself should win it and ask her to marry him. But instead of
6135 reopening her engagement at the Porte Saint Martin, where she would
6136 have been all the more popular for the fatal episode, she left Paris
6137 without warning, forsaking her little court of admirers. Perhaps no
6138 one carried inquiry far except Lydgate, who felt that all science had
6139 come to a stand-still while he imagined the unhappy Laure, stricken by
6140 ever-wandering sorrow, herself wandering, and finding no faithful
6141 comforter. Hidden actresses, however, are not so difficult to find as
6142 some other hidden facts, and it was not long before Lydgate gathered
6143 indications that Laure had taken the route to Lyons. He found her at
6144 last acting with great success at Avignon under the same name, looking
6145 more majestic than ever as a forsaken wife carrying her child in her
6146 arms. He spoke to her after the play, was received with the usual
6147 quietude which seemed to him beautiful as clear depths of water, and
6148 obtained leave to visit her the next day; when he was bent on telling
6149 her that he adored her, and on asking her to marry him. He knew that
6150 this was like the sudden impulse of a madman--incongruous even with his
6151 habitual foibles. No matter! It was the one thing which he was
6152 resolved to do. He had two selves within him apparently, and they must
6153 learn to accommodate each other and bear reciprocal impediments.
6154 Strange, that some of us, with quick alternate vision, see beyond our
6155 infatuations, and even while we rave on the heights, behold the wide
6156 plain where our persistent self pauses and awaits us.
6157
6158 To have approached Laure with any suit that was not reverentially
6159 tender would have been simply a contradiction of his whole feeling
6160 towards her.
6161
6162 "You have come all the way from Paris to find me?" she said to him the
6163 next day, sitting before him with folded arms, and looking at him with
6164 eyes that seemed to wonder as an untamed ruminating animal wonders.
6165 "Are all Englishmen like that?"
6166
6167 "I came because I could not live without trying to see you. You are
6168 lonely; I love you; I want you to consent to be my wife; I will wait,
6169 but I want you to promise that you will marry me--no one else."
6170
6171 Laure looked at him in silence with a melancholy radiance from under
6172 her grand eyelids, until he was full of rapturous certainty, and knelt
6173 close to her knees.
6174
6175 "I will tell you something," she said, in her cooing way, keeping her
6176 arms folded. "My foot really slipped."
6177
6178 "I know, I know," said Lydgate, deprecatingly. "It was a fatal
6179 accident--a dreadful stroke of calamity that bound me to you the more."
6180
6181 Again Laure paused a little and then said, slowly, "_I meant to do it._"
6182
6183 Lydgate, strong man as he was, turned pale and trembled: moments seemed
6184 to pass before he rose and stood at a distance from her.
6185
6186 "There was a secret, then," he said at last, even vehemently. "He was
6187 brutal to you: you hated him."
6188
6189 "No! he wearied me; he was too fond: he would live in Paris, and not in
6190 my country; that was not agreeable to me."
6191
6192 "Great God!" said Lydgate, in a groan of horror. "And you planned to
6193 murder him?"
6194
6195 "I did not plan: it came to me in the play--_I meant to do it._"
6196
6197 Lydgate stood mute, and unconsciously pressed his hat on while he
6198 looked at her. He saw this woman--the first to whom he had given his
6199 young adoration--amid the throng of stupid criminals.
6200
6201 "You are a good young man," she said. "But I do not like husbands. I
6202 will never have another."
6203
6204 Three days afterwards Lydgate was at his galvanism again in his Paris
6205 chambers, believing that illusions were at an end for him. He was
6206 saved from hardening effects by the abundant kindness of his heart and
6207 his belief that human life might be made better. But he had more
6208 reason than ever for trusting his judgment, now that it was so
6209 experienced; and henceforth he would take a strictly scientific view of
6210 woman, entertaining no expectations but such as were justified
6211 beforehand.
6212
6213 No one in Middlemarch was likely to have such a notion of Lydgate's
6214 past as has here been faintly shadowed, and indeed the respectable
6215 townsfolk there were not more given than mortals generally to any eager
6216 attempt at exactness in the representation to themselves of what did
6217 not come under their own senses. Not only young virgins of that town,
6218 but gray-bearded men also, were often in haste to conjecture how a new
6219 acquaintance might be wrought into their purposes, contented with very
6220 vague knowledge as to the way in which life had been shaping him for
6221 that instrumentality. Middlemarch, in fact, counted on swallowing
6222 Lydgate and assimilating him very comfortably.
6223
6224
6225
6226 CHAPTER XVI.
6227
6228 "All that in woman is adored
6229 In thy fair self I find--
6230 For the whole sex can but afford
6231 The handsome and the kind."
6232 --SIR CHARLES SEDLEY.
6233
6234
6235 The question whether Mr. Tyke should be appointed as salaried chaplain
6236 to the hospital was an exciting topic to the Middlemarchers; and
6237 Lydgate heard it discussed in a way that threw much light on the power
6238 exercised in the town by Mr. Bulstrode. The banker was evidently a
6239 ruler, but there was an opposition party, and even among his supporters
6240 there were some who allowed it to be seen that their support was a
6241 compromise, and who frankly stated their impression that the general
6242 scheme of things, and especially the casualties of trade, required you
6243 to hold a candle to the devil.
6244
6245 Mr. Bulstrode's power was not due simply to his being a country banker,
6246 who knew the financial secrets of most traders in the town and could
6247 touch the springs of their credit; it was fortified by a beneficence
6248 that was at once ready and severe--ready to confer obligations, and
6249 severe in watching the result. He had gathered, as an industrious man
6250 always at his post, a chief share in administering the town charities,
6251 and his private charities were both minute and abundant. He would take
6252 a great deal of pains about apprenticing Tegg the shoemaker's son, and
6253 he would watch over Tegg's church-going; he would defend Mrs. Strype
6254 the washerwoman against Stubbs's unjust exaction on the score of her
6255 drying-ground, and he would himself scrutinize a calumny against Mrs.
6256 Strype. His private minor loans were numerous, but he would inquire
6257 strictly into the circumstances both before and after. In this way a
6258 man gathers a domain in his neighbors' hope and fear as well as
6259 gratitude; and power, when once it has got into that subtle region,
6260 propagates itself, spreading out of all proportion to its external
6261 means. It was a principle with Mr. Bulstrode to gain as much power as
6262 possible, that he might use it for the glory of God. He went through a
6263 great deal of spiritual conflict and inward argument in order to adjust
6264 his motives, and make clear to himself what God's glory required. But,
6265 as we have seen, his motives were not always rightly appreciated.
6266 There were many crass minds in Middlemarch whose reflective scales
6267 could only weigh things in the lump; and they had a strong suspicion
6268 that since Mr. Bulstrode could not enjoy life in their fashion, eating
6269 and drinking so little as he did, and worreting himself about
6270 everything, he must have a sort of vampire's feast in the sense of
6271 mastery.
6272
6273 The subject of the chaplaincy came up at Mr. Vincy's table when Lydgate
6274 was dining there, and the family connection with Mr. Bulstrode did not,
6275 he observed, prevent some freedom of remark even on the part of the
6276 host himself, though his reasons against the proposed arrangement
6277 turned entirely on his objection to Mr. Tyke's sermons, which were all
6278 doctrine, and his preference for Mr. Farebrother, whose sermons were
6279 free from that taint. Mr. Vincy liked well enough the notion of the
6280 chaplain's having a salary, supposing it were given to Farebrother, who
6281 was as good a little fellow as ever breathed, and the best preacher
6282 anywhere, and companionable too.
6283
6284 "What line shall you take, then?" said Mr. Chichely, the coroner, a
6285 great coursing comrade of Mr. Vincy's.
6286
6287 "Oh, I'm precious glad I'm not one of the Directors now. I shall vote
6288 for referring the matter to the Directors and the Medical Board
6289 together. I shall roll some of my responsibility on your shoulders,
6290 Doctor," said Mr. Vincy, glancing first at Dr. Sprague, the senior
6291 physician of the town, and then at Lydgate who sat opposite. "You
6292 medical gentlemen must consult which sort of black draught you will
6293 prescribe, eh, Mr. Lydgate?"
6294
6295 "I know little of either," said Lydgate; "but in general, appointments
6296 are apt to be made too much a question of personal liking. The fittest
6297 man for a particular post is not always the best fellow or the most
6298 agreeable. Sometimes, if you wanted to get a reform, your only way
6299 would be to pension off the good fellows whom everybody is fond of, and
6300 put them out of the question."
6301
6302 Dr. Sprague, who was considered the physician of most "weight," though
6303 Dr. Minchin was usually said to have more "penetration," divested his
6304 large heavy face of all expression, and looked at his wine-glass while
6305 Lydgate was speaking. Whatever was not problematical and suspected
6306 about this young man--for example, a certain showiness as to foreign
6307 ideas, and a disposition to unsettle what had been settled and
6308 forgotten by his elders--was positively unwelcome to a physician whose
6309 standing had been fixed thirty years before by a treatise on
6310 Meningitis, of which at least one copy marked "own" was bound in calf.
6311 For my part I have some fellow-feeling with Dr. Sprague: one's
6312 self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very
6313 unpleasant to find deprecated.
6314
6315 Lydgate's remark, however, did not meet the sense of the company. Mr.
6316 Vincy said, that if he could have _his_ way, he would not put
6317 disagreeable fellows anywhere.
6318
6319 "Hang your reforms!" said Mr. Chichely. "There's no greater humbug in
6320 the world. You never hear of a reform, but it means some trick to put
6321 in new men. I hope you are not one of the 'Lancet's' men, Mr.
6322 Lydgate--wanting to take the coronership out of the hands of the legal
6323 profession: your words appear to point that way."
6324
6325 "I disapprove of Wakley," interposed Dr. Sprague, "no man more: he is
6326 an ill-intentioned fellow, who would sacrifice the respectability of
6327 the profession, which everybody knows depends on the London Colleges,
6328 for the sake of getting some notoriety for himself. There are men who
6329 don't mind about being kicked blue if they can only get talked about.
6330 But Wakley is right sometimes," the Doctor added, judicially. "I could
6331 mention one or two points in which Wakley is in the right."
6332
6333 "Oh, well," said Mr. Chichely, "I blame no man for standing up in favor
6334 of his own cloth; but, coming to argument, I should like to know how a
6335 coroner is to judge of evidence if he has not had a legal training?"
6336
6337 "In my opinion," said Lydgate, "legal training only makes a man more
6338 incompetent in questions that require knowledge a of another kind.
6339 People talk about evidence as if it could really be weighed in scales
6340 by a blind Justice. No man can judge what is good evidence on any
6341 particular subject, unless he knows that subject well. A lawyer is no
6342 better than an old woman at a post-mortem examination. How is he to
6343 know the action of a poison? You might as well say that scanning verse
6344 will teach you to scan the potato crops."
6345
6346 "You are aware, I suppose, that it is not the coroner's business to
6347 conduct the post-mortem, but only to take the evidence of the medical
6348 witness?" said Mr. Chichely, with some scorn.
6349
6350 "Who is often almost as ignorant as the coroner himself," said Lydgate.
6351 "Questions of medical jurisprudence ought not to be left to the chance
6352 of decent knowledge in a medical witness, and the coroner ought not to
6353 be a man who will believe that strychnine will destroy the coats of the
6354 stomach if an ignorant practitioner happens to tell him so."
6355
6356 Lydgate had really lost sight of the fact that Mr. Chichely was his
6357 Majesty's coroner, and ended innocently with the question, "Don't you
6358 agree with me, Dr. Sprague?"
6359
6360 "To a certain extent--with regard to populous districts, and in the
6361 metropolis," said the Doctor. "But I hope it will be long before this
6362 part of the country loses the services of my friend Chichely, even
6363 though it might get the best man in our profession to succeed him. I
6364 am sure Vincy will agree with me."
6365
6366 "Yes, yes, give me a coroner who is a good coursing man," said Mr.
6367 Vincy, jovially. "And in my opinion, you're safest with a lawyer.
6368 Nobody can know everything. Most things are 'visitation of God.' And as
6369 to poisoning, why, what you want to know is the law. Come, shall we
6370 join the ladies?"
6371
6372 Lydgate's private opinion was that Mr. Chichely might be the very
6373 coroner without bias as to the coats of the stomach, but he had not
6374 meant to be personal. This was one of the difficulties of moving in
6375 good Middlemarch society: it was dangerous to insist on knowledge as a
6376 qualification for any salaried office. Fred Vincy had called Lydgate a
6377 prig, and now Mr. Chichely was inclined to call him prick-eared;
6378 especially when, in the drawing-room, he seemed to be making himself
6379 eminently agreeable to Rosamond, whom he had easily monopolized in a
6380 tete-a-tete, since Mrs. Vincy herself sat at the tea-table. She
6381 resigned no domestic function to her daughter; and the matron's
6382 blooming good-natured face, with the two volatile pink strings floating
6383 from her fine throat, and her cheery manners to husband and children,
6384 was certainly among the great attractions of the Vincy
6385 house--attractions which made it all the easier to fall in love with
6386 the daughter. The tinge of unpretentious, inoffensive vulgarity in
6387 Mrs. Vincy gave more effect to Rosamond's refinement, which was beyond
6388 what Lydgate had expected.
6389
6390 Certainly, small feet and perfectly turned shoulders aid the impression
6391 of refined manners, and the right thing said seems quite astonishingly
6392 right when it is accompanied with exquisite curves of lip and eyelid.
6393 And Rosamond could say the right thing; for she was clever with that
6394 sort of cleverness which catches every tone except the humorous.
6395 Happily she never attempted to joke, and this perhaps was the most
6396 decisive mark of her cleverness.
6397
6398 She and Lydgate readily got into conversation. He regretted that he
6399 had not heard her sing the other day at Stone Court. The only pleasure
6400 he allowed himself during the latter part of his stay in Paris was to
6401 go and hear music.
6402
6403 "You have studied music, probably?" said Rosamond.
6404
6405 "No, I know the notes of many birds, and I know many melodies by ear;
6406 but the music that I don't know at all, and have no notion about,
6407 delights me--affects me. How stupid the world is that it does not make
6408 more use of such a pleasure within its reach!"
6409
6410 "Yes, and you will find Middlemarch very tuneless. There are hardly
6411 any good musicians. I only know two gentlemen who sing at all well."
6412
6413 "I suppose it is the fashion to sing comic songs in a rhythmic way,
6414 leaving you to fancy the tune--very much as if it were tapped on a
6415 drum?"
6416
6417 "Ah, you have heard Mr. Bowyer," said Rosamond, with one of her rare
6418 smiles. "But we are speaking very ill of our neighbors."
6419
6420 Lydgate was almost forgetting that he must carry on the conversation,
6421 in thinking how lovely this creature was, her garment seeming to be
6422 made out of the faintest blue sky, herself so immaculately blond, as if
6423 the petals of some gigantic flower had just opened and disclosed her;
6424 and yet with this infantine blondness showing so much ready,
6425 self-possessed grace. Since he had had the memory of Laure, Lydgate
6426 had lost all taste for large-eyed silence: the divine cow no longer
6427 attracted him, and Rosamond was her very opposite. But he recalled
6428 himself.
6429
6430 "You will let me hear some music to-night, I hope."
6431
6432 "I will let you hear my attempts, if you like," said Rosamond. "Papa
6433 is sure to insist on my singing. But I shall tremble before you, who
6434 have heard the best singers in Paris. I have heard very little: I have
6435 only once been to London. But our organist at St. Peter's is a good
6436 musician, and I go on studying with him."
6437
6438 "Tell me what you saw in London."
6439
6440 "Very little." (A more naive girl would have said, "Oh, everything!"
6441 But Rosamond knew better.) "A few of the ordinary sights, such as raw
6442 country girls are always taken to."
6443
6444 "Do you call yourself a raw country girl?" said Lydgate, looking at her
6445 with an involuntary emphasis of admiration, which made Rosamond blush
6446 with pleasure. But she remained simply serious, turned her long neck a
6447 little, and put up her hand to touch her wondrous hair-plaits--an
6448 habitual gesture with her as pretty as any movements of a kitten's paw.
6449 Not that Rosamond was in the least like a kitten: she was a sylph
6450 caught young and educated at Mrs. Lemon's.
6451
6452 "I assure you my mind is raw," she said immediately; "I pass at
6453 Middlemarch. I am not afraid of talking to our old neighbors. But I
6454 am really afraid of you."
6455
6456 "An accomplished woman almost always knows more than we men, though her
6457 knowledge is of a different sort. I am sure you could teach me a
6458 thousand things--as an exquisite bird could teach a bear if there were
6459 any common language between them. Happily, there is a common language
6460 between women and men, and so the bears can get taught."
6461
6462 "Ah, there is Fred beginning to strum! I must go and hinder him from
6463 jarring all your nerves," said Rosamond, moving to the other side of
6464 the room, where Fred having opened the piano, at his father's desire,
6465 that Rosamond might give them some music, was parenthetically
6466 performing "Cherry Ripe!" with one hand. Able men who have passed
6467 their examinations will do these things sometimes, not less than the
6468 plucked Fred.
6469
6470 "Fred, pray defer your practising till to-morrow; you will make Mr.
6471 Lydgate ill," said Rosamond. "He has an ear."
6472
6473 Fred laughed, and went on with his tune to the end.
6474
6475 Rosamond turned to Lydgate, smiling gently, and said, "You perceive,
6476 the bears will not always be taught."
6477
6478 "Now then, Rosy!" said Fred, springing from the stool and twisting it
6479 upward for her, with a hearty expectation of enjoyment. "Some good
6480 rousing tunes first."
6481
6482 Rosamond played admirably. Her master at Mrs. Lemon's school (close to
6483 a county town with a memorable history that had its relics in church
6484 and castle) was one of those excellent musicians here and there to be
6485 found in our provinces, worthy to compare with many a noted
6486 Kapellmeister in a country which offers more plentiful conditions of
6487 musical celebrity. Rosamond, with the executant's instinct, had seized
6488 his manner of playing, and gave forth his large rendering of noble
6489 music with the precision of an echo. It was almost startling, heard
6490 for the first time. A hidden soul seemed to be flowing forth from
6491 Rosamond's fingers; and so indeed it was, since souls live on in
6492 perpetual echoes, and to all fine expression there goes somewhere an
6493 originating activity, if it be only that of an interpreter. Lydgate
6494 was taken possession of, and began to believe in her as something
6495 exceptional. After all, he thought, one need not be surprised to find
6496 the rare conjunctions of nature under circumstances apparently
6497 unfavorable: come where they may, they always depend on conditions that
6498 are not obvious. He sat looking at her, and did not rise to pay her
6499 any compliments, leaving that to others, now that his admiration was
6500 deepened.
6501
6502 Her singing was less remarkable, but also well trained, and sweet to
6503 hear as a chime perfectly in tune. It is true she sang "Meet me by
6504 moonlight," and "I've been roaming"; for mortals must share the
6505 fashions of their time, and none but the ancients can be always
6506 classical. But Rosamond could also sing "Black-eyed Susan" with
6507 effect, or Haydn's canzonets, or "Voi, che sapete," or "Batti,
6508 batti"--she only wanted to know what her audience liked.
6509
6510 Her father looked round at the company, delighting in their admiration.
6511 Her mother sat, like a Niobe before her troubles, with her youngest
6512 little girl on her lap, softly beating the child's hand up and down in
6513 time to the music. And Fred, notwithstanding his general scepticism
6514 about Rosy, listened to her music with perfect allegiance, wishing he
6515 could do the same thing on his flute. It was the pleasantest family
6516 party that Lydgate had seen since he came to Middlemarch. The Vincys
6517 had the readiness to enjoy, the rejection of all anxiety, and the
6518 belief in life as a merry lot, which made a house exceptional in most
6519 county towns at that time, when Evangelicalism had cast a certain
6520 suspicion as of plague-infection over the few amusements which survived
6521 in the provinces. At the Vincys' there was always whist, and the
6522 card-tables stood ready now, making some of the company secretly
6523 impatient of the music. Before it ceased Mr. Farebrother came in--a
6524 handsome, broad-chested but otherwise small man, about forty, whose
6525 black was very threadbare: the brilliancy was all in his quick gray
6526 eyes. He came like a pleasant change in the light, arresting little
6527 Louisa with fatherly nonsense as she was being led out of the room by
6528 Miss Morgan, greeting everybody with some special word, and seeming to
6529 condense more talk into ten minutes than had been held all through the
6530 evening. He claimed from Lydgate the fulfilment of a promise to come
6531 and see him. "I can't let you off, you know, because I have some
6532 beetles to show you. We collectors feel an interest in every new man
6533 till he has seen all we have to show him."
6534
6535 But soon he swerved to the whist-table, rubbing his hands and saying,
6536 "Come now, let us be serious! Mr. Lydgate? not play? Ah! you are too
6537 young and light for this kind of thing."
6538
6539 Lydgate said to himself that the clergyman whose abilities were so
6540 painful to Mr. Bulstrode, appeared to have found an agreeable resort in
6541 this certainly not erudite household. He could half understand it: the
6542 good-humor, the good looks of elder and younger, and the provision for
6543 passing the time without any labor of intelligence, might make the
6544 house beguiling to people who had no particular use for their odd hours.
6545
6546 Everything looked blooming and joyous except Miss Morgan, who was
6547 brown, dull, and resigned, and altogether, as Mrs. Vincy often said,
6548 just the sort of person for a governess. Lydgate did not mean to pay
6549 many such visits himself. They were a wretched waste of the evenings;
6550 and now, when he had talked a little more to Rosamond, he meant to
6551 excuse himself and go.
6552
6553 "You will not like us at Middlemarch, I feel sure," she said, when the
6554 whist-players were settled. "We are very stupid, and you have been
6555 used to something quite different."
6556
6557 "I suppose all country towns are pretty much alike," said Lydgate.
6558 "But I have noticed that one always believes one's own town to be more
6559 stupid than any other. I have made up my mind to take Middlemarch as
6560 it comes, and shall be much obliged if the town will take me in the
6561 same way. I have certainly found some charms in it which are much
6562 greater than I had expected."
6563
6564 "You mean the rides towards Tipton and Lowick; every one is pleased
6565 with those," said Rosamond, with simplicity.
6566
6567 "No, I mean something much nearer to me."
6568
6569 Rosamond rose and reached her netting, and then said, "Do you care
6570 about dancing at all? I am not quite sure whether clever men ever
6571 dance."
6572
6573 "I would dance with you if you would allow me."
6574
6575 "Oh!" said Rosamond, with a slight deprecatory laugh. "I was only
6576 going to say that we sometimes have dancing, and I wanted to know
6577 whether you would feel insulted if you were asked to come."
6578
6579 "Not on the condition I mentioned."
6580
6581 After this chat Lydgate thought that he was going, but on moving
6582 towards the whist-tables, he got interested in watching Mr.
6583 Farebrother's play, which was masterly, and also his face, which was a
6584 striking mixture of the shrewd and the mild. At ten o'clock supper was
6585 brought in (such were the customs of Middlemarch) and there was
6586 punch-drinking; but Mr. Farebrother had only a glass of water. He was
6587 winning, but there seemed to be no reason why the renewal of rubbers
6588 should end, and Lydgate at last took his leave.
6589
6590 But as it was not eleven o'clock, he chose to walk in the brisk air
6591 towards the tower of St. Botolph's, Mr. Farebrother's church, which
6592 stood out dark, square, and massive against the starlight. It was the
6593 oldest church in Middlemarch; the living, however, was but a vicarage
6594 worth barely four hundred a-year. Lydgate had heard that, and he
6595 wondered now whether Mr. Farebrother cared about the money he won at
6596 cards; thinking, "He seems a very pleasant fellow, but Bulstrode may
6597 have his good reasons." Many things would be easier to Lydgate if it
6598 should turn out that Mr. Bulstrode was generally justifiable. "What is
6599 his religious doctrine to me, if he carries some good notions along
6600 with it? One must use such brains as are to be found."
6601
6602 These were actually Lydgate's first meditations as he walked away from
6603 Mr. Vincy's, and on this ground I fear that many ladies will consider
6604 him hardly worthy of their attention. He thought of Rosamond and her
6605 music only in the second place; and though, when her turn came, he
6606 dwelt on the image of her for the rest of his walk, he felt no
6607 agitation, and had no sense that any new current had set into his life.
6608 He could not marry yet; he wished not to marry for several years; and
6609 therefore he was not ready to entertain the notion of being in love
6610 with a girl whom he happened to admire. He did admire Rosamond
6611 exceedingly; but that madness which had once beset him about Laure was
6612 not, he thought, likely to recur in relation to any other woman.
6613 Certainly, if falling in love had been at all in question, it would
6614 have been quite safe with a creature like this Miss Vincy, who had just
6615 the kind of intelligence one would desire in a woman--polished,
6616 refined, docile, lending itself to finish in all the delicacies of
6617 life, and enshrined in a body which expressed this with a force of
6618 demonstration that excluded the need for other evidence. Lydgate felt
6619 sure that if ever he married, his wife would have that feminine
6620 radiance, that distinctive womanhood which must be classed with flowers
6621 and music, that sort of beauty which by its very nature was virtuous,
6622 being moulded only for pure and delicate joys.
6623
6624 But since he did not mean to marry for the next five years--his more
6625 pressing business was to look into Louis' new book on Fever, which he
6626 was specially interested in, because he had known Louis in Paris, and
6627 had followed many anatomical demonstrations in order to ascertain the
6628 specific differences of typhus and typhoid. He went home and read far
6629 into the smallest hour, bringing a much more testing vision of details
6630 and relations into this pathological study than he had ever thought it
6631 necessary to apply to the complexities of love and marriage, these
6632 being subjects on which he felt himself amply informed by literature,
6633 and that traditional wisdom which is handed down in the genial
6634 conversation of men. Whereas Fever had obscure conditions, and gave
6635 him that delightful labor of the imagination which is not mere
6636 arbitrariness, but the exercise of disciplined power--combining and
6637 constructing with the clearest eye for probabilities and the fullest
6638 obedience to knowledge; and then, in yet more energetic alliance with
6639 impartial Nature, standing aloof to invent tests by which to try its
6640 own work.
6641
6642 Many men have been praised as vividly imaginative on the strength of
6643 their profuseness in indifferent drawing or cheap narration:--reports
6644 of very poor talk going on in distant orbs; or portraits of Lucifer
6645 coming down on his bad errands as a large ugly man with bat's wings and
6646 spurts of phosphorescence; or exaggerations of wantonness that seem to
6647 reflect life in a diseased dream. But these kinds of inspiration
6648 Lydgate regarded as rather vulgar and vinous compared with the
6649 imagination that reveals subtle actions inaccessible by any sort of
6650 lens, but tracked in that outer darkness through long pathways of
6651 necessary sequence by the inward light which is the last refinement of
6652 Energy, capable of bathing even the ethereal atoms in its ideally
6653 illuminated space. He for his part had tossed away all cheap
6654 inventions where ignorance finds itself able and at ease: he was
6655 enamoured of that arduous invention which is the very eye of research,
6656 provisionally framing its object and correcting it to more and more
6657 exactness of relation; he wanted to pierce the obscurity of those
6658 minute processes which prepare human misery and joy, those invisible
6659 thoroughfares which are the first lurking-places of anguish, mania, and
6660 crime, that delicate poise and transition which determine the growth of
6661 happy or unhappy consciousness.
6662
6663 As he threw down his book, stretched his legs towards the embers in the
6664 grate, and clasped his hands at the back of his head, in that agreeable
6665 afterglow of excitement when thought lapses from examination of a
6666 specific object into a suffusive sense of its connections with all the
6667 rest of our existence--seems, as it were, to throw itself on its back
6668 after vigorous swimming and float with the repose of unexhausted
6669 strength--Lydgate felt a triumphant delight in his studies, and
6670 something like pity for those less lucky men who were not of his
6671 profession.
6672
6673 "If I had not taken that turn when I was a lad," he thought, "I might
6674 have got into some stupid draught-horse work or other, and lived always
6675 in blinkers. I should never have been happy in any profession that did
6676 not call forth the highest intellectual strain, and yet keep me in good
6677 warm contact with my neighbors. There is nothing like the medical
6678 profession for that: one can have the exclusive scientific life that
6679 touches the distance and befriend the old fogies in the parish too. It
6680 is rather harder for a clergyman: Farebrother seems to be an anomaly."
6681
6682 This last thought brought back the Vincys and all the pictures of the
6683 evening. They floated in his mind agreeably enough, and as he took up
6684 his bed-candle his lips were curled with that incipient smile which is
6685 apt to accompany agreeable recollections. He was an ardent fellow, but
6686 at present his ardor was absorbed in love of his work and in the
6687 ambition of making his life recognized as a factor in the better life
6688 of mankind--like other heroes of science who had nothing but an obscure
6689 country practice to begin with.
6690
6691 Poor Lydgate! or shall I say, Poor Rosamond! Each lived in a world of
6692 which the other knew nothing. It had not occurred to Lydgate that he
6693 had been a subject of eager meditation to Rosamond, who had neither any
6694 reason for throwing her marriage into distant perspective, nor any
6695 pathological studies to divert her mind from that ruminating habit,
6696 that inward repetition of looks, words, and phrases, which makes a
6697 large part in the lives of most girls. He had not meant to look at her
6698 or speak to her with more than the inevitable amount of admiration and
6699 compliment which a man must give to a beautiful girl; indeed, it seemed
6700 to him that his enjoyment of her music had remained almost silent, for
6701 he feared falling into the rudeness of telling her his great surprise
6702 at her possession of such accomplishment. But Rosamond had registered
6703 every look and word, and estimated them as the opening incidents of a
6704 preconceived romance--incidents which gather value from the foreseen
6705 development and climax. In Rosamond's romance it was not necessary to
6706 imagine much about the inward life of the hero, or of his serious
6707 business in the world: of course, he had a profession and was clever,
6708 as well as sufficiently handsome; but the piquant fact about Lydgate
6709 was his good birth, which distinguished him from all Middlemarch
6710 admirers, and presented marriage as a prospect of rising in rank and
6711 getting a little nearer to that celestial condition on earth in which
6712 she would have nothing to do with vulgar people, and perhaps at last
6713 associate with relatives quite equal to the county people who looked
6714 down on the Middlemarchers. It was part of Rosamond's cleverness to
6715 discern very subtly the faintest aroma of rank, and once when she had
6716 seen the Miss Brookes accompanying their uncle at the county assizes,
6717 and seated among the aristocracy, she had envied them, notwithstanding
6718 their plain dress.
6719
6720 If you think it incredible that to imagine Lydgate as a man of family
6721 could cause thrills of satisfaction which had anything to do with the
6722 sense that she was in love with him, I will ask you to use your power
6723 of comparison a little more effectively, and consider whether red cloth
6724 and epaulets have never had an influence of that sort. Our passions do
6725 not live apart in locked chambers, but, dressed in their small wardrobe
6726 of notions, bring their provisions to a common table and mess together,
6727 feeding out of the common store according to their appetite.
6728
6729 Rosamond, in fact, was entirely occupied not exactly with Tertius
6730 Lydgate as he was in himself, but with his relation to her; and it was
6731 excusable in a girl who was accustomed to hear that all young men
6732 might, could, would be, or actually were in love with her, to believe
6733 at once that Lydgate could be no exception. His looks and words meant
6734 more to her than other men's, because she cared more for them: she
6735 thought of them diligently, and diligently attended to that perfection
6736 of appearance, behavior, sentiments, and all other elegancies, which
6737 would find in Lydgate a more adequate admirer than she had yet been
6738 conscious of.
6739
6740 For Rosamond, though she would never do anything that was disagreeable
6741 to her, was industrious; and now more than ever she was active in
6742 sketching her landscapes and market-carts and portraits of friends, in
6743 practising her music, and in being from morning till night her own
6744 standard of a perfect lady, having always an audience in her own
6745 consciousness, with sometimes the not unwelcome addition of a more
6746 variable external audience in the numerous visitors of the house. She
6747 found time also to read the best novels, and even the second best, and
6748 she knew much poetry by heart. Her favorite poem was "Lalla Rookh."
6749
6750 "The best girl in the world! He will be a happy fellow who gets her!"
6751 was the sentiment of the elderly gentlemen who visited the Vincys; and
6752 the rejected young men thought of trying again, as is the fashion in
6753 country towns where the horizon is not thick with coming rivals. But
6754 Mrs. Plymdale thought that Rosamond had been educated to a ridiculous
6755 pitch, for what was the use of accomplishments which would be all laid
6756 aside as soon as she was married? While her aunt Bulstrode, who had a
6757 sisterly faithfulness towards her brother's family, had two sincere
6758 wishes for Rosamond--that she might show a more serious turn of mind,
6759 and that she might meet with a husband whose wealth corresponded to her
6760 habits.
6761
6762
6763
6764 CHAPTER XVII.
6765
6766 "The clerkly person smiled and said
6767 Promise was a pretty maid,
6768 But being poor she died unwed."
6769
6770
6771 The Rev. Camden Farebrother, whom Lydgate went to see the next evening,
6772 lived in an old parsonage, built of stone, venerable enough to match
6773 the church which it looked out upon. All the furniture too in the
6774 house was old, but with another grade of age--that of Mr. Farebrother's
6775 father and grandfather. There were painted white chairs, with gilding
6776 and wreaths on them, and some lingering red silk damask with slits in
6777 it. There were engraved portraits of Lord Chancellors and other
6778 celebrated lawyers of the last century; and there were old pier-glasses
6779 to reflect them, as well as the little satin-wood tables and the sofas
6780 resembling a prolongation of uneasy chairs, all standing in relief
6781 against the dark wainscot. This was the physiognomy of the drawing-room
6782 into which Lydgate was shown; and there were three ladies to receive
6783 him, who were also old-fashioned, and of a faded but genuine
6784 respectability: Mrs. Farebrother, the Vicar's white-haired mother,
6785 befrilled and kerchiefed with dainty cleanliness, upright, quick-eyed,
6786 and still under seventy; Miss Noble, her sister, a tiny old lady of
6787 meeker aspect, with frills and kerchief decidedly more worn and mended;
6788 and Miss Winifred Farebrother, the Vicar's elder sister, well-looking
6789 like himself, but nipped and subdued as single women are apt to be who
6790 spend their lives in uninterrupted subjection to their elders. Lydgate
6791 had not expected to see so quaint a group: knowing simply that Mr.
6792 Farebrother was a bachelor, he had thought of being ushered into a
6793 snuggery where the chief furniture would probably be books and
6794 collections of natural objects. The Vicar himself seemed to wear
6795 rather a changed aspect, as most men do when acquaintances made
6796 elsewhere see them for the first time in their own homes; some indeed
6797 showing like an actor of genial parts disadvantageously cast for the
6798 curmudgeon in a new piece. This was not the case with Mr. Farebrother:
6799 he seemed a trifle milder and more silent, the chief talker being his
6800 mother, while he only put in a good-humored moderating remark here and
6801 there. The old lady was evidently accustomed to tell her company what
6802 they ought to think, and to regard no subject as quite safe without her
6803 steering. She was afforded leisure for this function by having all her
6804 little wants attended to by Miss Winifred. Meanwhile tiny Miss Noble
6805 carried on her arm a small basket, into which she diverted a bit of
6806 sugar, which she had first dropped in her saucer as if by mistake;
6807 looking round furtively afterwards, and reverting to her teacup with a
6808 small innocent noise as of a tiny timid quadruped. Pray think no ill
6809 of Miss Noble. That basket held small savings from her more portable
6810 food, destined for the children of her poor friends among whom she
6811 trotted on fine mornings; fostering and petting all needy creatures
6812 being so spontaneous a delight to her, that she regarded it much as if
6813 it had been a pleasant vice that she was addicted to. Perhaps she was
6814 conscious of being tempted to steal from those who had much that she
6815 might give to those who had nothing, and carried in her conscience the
6816 guilt of that repressed desire. One must be poor to know the luxury of
6817 giving!
6818
6819 Mrs. Farebrother welcomed the guest with a lively formality and
6820 precision. She presently informed him that they were not often in want
6821 of medical aid in that house. She had brought up her children to wear
6822 flannel and not to over-eat themselves, which last habit she considered
6823 the chief reason why people needed doctors. Lydgate pleaded for those
6824 whose fathers and mothers had over-eaten themselves, but Mrs.
6825 Farebrother held that view of things dangerous: Nature was more just
6826 than that; it would be easy for any felon to say that his ancestors
6827 ought to have been hanged instead of him. If those who had bad fathers
6828 and mothers were bad themselves, they were hanged for that. There was
6829 no need to go back on what you couldn't see.
6830
6831 "My mother is like old George the Third," said the Vicar, "she objects
6832 to metaphysics."
6833
6834 "I object to what is wrong, Camden. I say, keep hold of a few plain
6835 truths, and make everything square with them. When I was young, Mr.
6836 Lydgate, there never was any question about right and wrong. We knew
6837 our catechism, and that was enough; we learned our creed and our duty.
6838 Every respectable Church person had the same opinions. But now, if you
6839 speak out of the Prayer-book itself, you are liable to be contradicted."
6840
6841 "That makes rather a pleasant time of it for those who like to maintain
6842 their own point," said Lydgate.
6843
6844 "But my mother always gives way," said the Vicar, slyly.
6845
6846 "No, no, Camden, you must not lead Mr. Lydgate into a mistake about
6847 _me_. I shall never show that disrespect to my parents, to give up what
6848 they taught me. Any one may see what comes of turning. If you change
6849 once, why not twenty times?"
6850
6851 "A man might see good arguments for changing once, and not see them for
6852 changing again," said Lydgate, amused with the decisive old lady.
6853
6854 "Excuse me there. If you go upon arguments, they are never wanting,
6855 when a man has no constancy of mind. My father never changed, and he
6856 preached plain moral sermons without arguments, and was a good man--few
6857 better. When you get me a good man made out of arguments, I will get
6858 you a good dinner with reading you the cookery-book. That's my opinion,
6859 and I think anybody's stomach will bear me out."
6860
6861 "About the dinner certainly, mother," said Mr. Farebrother.
6862
6863 "It is the same thing, the dinner or the man. I am nearly seventy, Mr.
6864 Lydgate, and I go upon experience. I am not likely to follow new
6865 lights, though there are plenty of them here as elsewhere. I say, they
6866 came in with the mixed stuffs that will neither wash nor wear. It was
6867 not so in my youth: a Churchman was a Churchman, and a clergyman, you
6868 might be pretty sure, was a gentleman, if nothing else. But now he may
6869 be no better than a Dissenter, and want to push aside my son on
6870 pretence of doctrine. But whoever may wish to push him aside, I am
6871 proud to say, Mr. Lydgate, that he will compare with any preacher in
6872 this kingdom, not to speak of this town, which is but a low standard to
6873 go by; at least, to my thinking, for I was born and bred at Exeter."
6874
6875 "A mother is never partial," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling. "What do
6876 you think Tyke's mother says about him?"
6877
6878 "Ah, poor creature! what indeed?" said Mrs. Farebrother, her sharpness
6879 blunted for the moment by her confidence in maternal judgments. "She
6880 says the truth to herself, depend upon it."
6881
6882 "And what is the truth?" said Lydgate. "I am curious to know."
6883
6884 "Oh, nothing bad at all," said Mr. Farebrother. "He is a zealous
6885 fellow: not very learned, and not very wise, I think--because I don't
6886 agree with him."
6887
6888 "Why, Camden!" said Miss Winifred, "Griffin and his wife told me only
6889 to-day, that Mr. Tyke said they should have no more coals if they came
6890 to hear you preach."
6891
6892 Mrs. Farebrother laid down her knitting, which she had resumed after
6893 her small allowance of tea and toast, and looked at her son as if to
6894 say "You hear that?" Miss Noble said, "Oh poor things! poor things!"
6895 in reference, probably, to the double loss of preaching and coal. But
6896 the Vicar answered quietly--
6897
6898 "That is because they are not my parishioners. And I don't think my
6899 sermons are worth a load of coals to them."
6900
6901 "Mr. Lydgate," said Mrs. Farebrother, who could not let this pass, "you
6902 don't know my son: he always undervalues himself. I tell him he is
6903 undervaluing the God who made him, and made him a most excellent
6904 preacher."
6905
6906 "That must be a hint for me to take Mr. Lydgate away to my study,
6907 mother," said the Vicar, laughing. "I promised to show you my
6908 collection," he added, turning to Lydgate; "shall we go?"
6909
6910 All three ladies remonstrated. Mr. Lydgate ought not to be hurried
6911 away without being allowed to accept another cup of tea: Miss Winifred
6912 had abundance of good tea in the pot. Why was Camden in such haste to
6913 take a visitor to his den? There was nothing but pickled vermin, and
6914 drawers full of blue-bottles and moths, with no carpet on the floor.
6915 Mr. Lydgate must excuse it. A game at cribbage would be far better.
6916 In short, it was plain that a vicar might be adored by his womankind as
6917 the king of men and preachers, and yet be held by them to stand in much
6918 need of their direction. Lydgate, with the usual shallowness of a
6919 young bachelor, wondered that Mr. Farebrother had not taught them
6920 better.
6921
6922 "My mother is not used to my having visitors who can take any interest
6923 in my hobbies," said the Vicar, as he opened the door of his study,
6924 which was indeed as bare of luxuries for the body as the ladies had
6925 implied, unless a short porcelain pipe and a tobacco-box were to be
6926 excepted.
6927
6928 "Men of your profession don't generally smoke," he said. Lydgate
6929 smiled and shook his head. "Nor of mine either, properly, I suppose.
6930 You will hear that pipe alleged against me by Bulstrode and Company.
6931 They don't know how pleased the devil would be if I gave it up."
6932
6933 "I understand. You are of an excitable temper and want a sedative. I
6934 am heavier, and should get idle with it. I should rush into idleness,
6935 and stagnate there with all my might."
6936
6937 "And you mean to give it all to your work. I am some ten or twelve
6938 years older than you, and have come to a compromise. I feed a weakness
6939 or two lest they should get clamorous. See," continued the Vicar,
6940 opening several small drawers, "I fancy I have made an exhaustive study
6941 of the entomology of this district. I am going on both with the fauna
6942 and flora; but I have at least done my insects well. We are singularly
6943 rich in orthoptera: I don't know whether--Ah! you have got hold of that
6944 glass jar--you are looking into that instead of my drawers. You don't
6945 really care about these things?"
6946
6947 "Not by the side of this lovely anencephalous monster. I have never
6948 had time to give myself much to natural history. I was early bitten
6949 with an interest in structure, and it is what lies most directly in my
6950 profession. I have no hobby besides. I have the sea to swim in there."
6951
6952 "Ah! you are a happy fellow," said Mr. Farebrother, turning on his heel
6953 and beginning to fill his pipe. "You don't know what it is to want
6954 spiritual tobacco--bad emendations of old texts, or small items about a
6955 variety of Aphis Brassicae, with the well-known signature of
6956 Philomicron, for the 'Twaddler's Magazine;' or a learned treatise on
6957 the entomology of the Pentateuch, including all the insects not
6958 mentioned, but probably met with by the Israelites in their passage
6959 through the desert; with a monograph on the Ant, as treated by Solomon,
6960 showing the harmony of the Book of Proverbs with the results of modern
6961 research. You don't mind my fumigating you?"
6962
6963 Lydgate was more surprised at the openness of this talk than at its
6964 implied meaning--that the Vicar felt himself not altogether in the
6965 right vocation. The neat fitting-up of drawers and shelves, and the
6966 bookcase filled with expensive illustrated books on Natural History,
6967 made him think again of the winnings at cards and their destination.
6968 But he was beginning to wish that the very best construction of
6969 everything that Mr. Farebrother did should be the true one. The
6970 Vicar's frankness seemed not of the repulsive sort that comes from an
6971 uneasy consciousness seeking to forestall the judgment of others, but
6972 simply the relief of a desire to do with as little pretence as
6973 possible. Apparently he was not without a sense that his freedom of
6974 speech might seem premature, for he presently said--
6975
6976 "I have not yet told you that I have the advantage of you, Mr. Lydgate,
6977 and know you better than you know me. You remember Trawley who shared
6978 your apartment at Paris for some time? I was a correspondent of his,
6979 and he told me a good deal about you. I was not quite sure when you
6980 first came that you were the same man. I was very glad when I found
6981 that you were. Only I don't forget that you have not had the like
6982 prologue about me."
6983
6984 Lydgate divined some delicacy of feeling here, but did not half
6985 understand it. "By the way," he said, "what has become of Trawley? I
6986 have quite lost sight of him. He was hot on the French social systems,
6987 and talked of going to the Backwoods to found a sort of Pythagorean
6988 community. Is he gone?"
6989
6990 "Not at all. He is practising at a German bath, and has married a rich
6991 patient."
6992
6993 "Then my notions wear the best, so far," said Lydgate, with a short
6994 scornful laugh. "He would have it, the medical profession was an
6995 inevitable system of humbug. I said, the fault was in the men--men who
6996 truckle to lies and folly. Instead of preaching against humbug outside
6997 the walls, it might be better to set up a disinfecting apparatus
6998 within. In short--I am reporting my own conversation--you may be sure
6999 I had all the good sense on my side."
7000
7001 "Your scheme is a good deal more difficult to carry out than the
7002 Pythagorean community, though. You have not only got the old Adam in
7003 yourself against you, but you have got all those descendants of the
7004 original Adam who form the society around you. You see, I have paid
7005 twelve or thirteen years more than you for my knowledge of
7006 difficulties. But"--Mr. Farebrother broke off a moment, and then
7007 added, "you are eying that glass vase again. Do you want to make an
7008 exchange? You shall not have it without a fair barter."
7009
7010 "I have some sea-mice--fine specimens--in spirits. And I will throw in
7011 Robert Brown's new thing--'Microscopic Observations on the Pollen of
7012 Plants'--if you don't happen to have it already."
7013
7014 "Why, seeing how you long for the monster, I might ask a higher price.
7015 Suppose I ask you to look through my drawers and agree with me about
7016 all my new species?" The Vicar, while he talked in this way,
7017 alternately moved about with his pipe in his mouth, and returned to
7018 hang rather fondly over his drawers. "That would be good discipline,
7019 you know, for a young doctor who has to please his patients in
7020 Middlemarch. You must learn to be bored, remember. However, you shall
7021 have the monster on your own terms."
7022
7023 "Don't you think men overrate the necessity for humoring everybody's
7024 nonsense, till they get despised by the very fools they humor?" said
7025 Lydgate, moving to Mr. Farebrother's side, and looking rather absently
7026 at the insects ranged in fine gradation, with names subscribed in
7027 exquisite writing. "The shortest way is to make your value felt, so
7028 that people must put up with you whether you flatter them or not."
7029
7030 "With all my heart. But then you must be sure of having the value, and
7031 you must keep yourself independent. Very few men can do that. Either
7032 you slip out of service altogether, and become good for nothing, or you
7033 wear the harness and draw a good deal where your yoke-fellows pull you.
7034 But do look at these delicate orthoptera!"
7035
7036 Lydgate had after all to give some scrutiny to each drawer, the Vicar
7037 laughing at himself, and yet persisting in the exhibition.
7038
7039 "Apropos of what you said about wearing harness," Lydgate began, after
7040 they had sat down, "I made up my mind some time ago to do with as
7041 little of it as possible. That was why I determined not to try anything
7042 in London, for a good many years at least. I didn't like what I saw
7043 when I was studying there--so much empty bigwiggism, and obstructive
7044 trickery. In the country, people have less pretension to knowledge,
7045 and are less of companions, but for that reason they affect one's
7046 amour-propre less: one makes less bad blood, and can follow one's own
7047 course more quietly."
7048
7049 "Yes--well--you have got a good start; you are in the right profession,
7050 the work you feel yourself most fit for. Some people miss that, and
7051 repent too late. But you must not be too sure of keeping your
7052 independence."
7053
7054 "You mean of family ties?" said Lydgate, conceiving that these might
7055 press rather tightly on Mr. Farebrother.
7056
7057 "Not altogether. Of course they make many things more difficult. But
7058 a good wife--a good unworldly woman--may really help a man, and keep
7059 him more independent. There's a parishioner of mine--a fine fellow,
7060 but who would hardly have pulled through as he has done without his
7061 wife. Do you know the Garths? I think they were not Peacock's
7062 patients."
7063
7064 "No; but there is a Miss Garth at old Featherstone's, at Lowick."
7065
7066 "Their daughter: an excellent girl."
7067
7068 "She is very quiet--I have hardly noticed her."
7069
7070 "She has taken notice of you, though, depend upon it."
7071
7072 "I don't understand," said Lydgate; he could hardly say "Of course."
7073
7074 "Oh, she gauges everybody. I prepared her for confirmation--she is a
7075 favorite of mine."
7076
7077 Mr. Farebrother puffed a few moments in silence, Lydgate not caring to
7078 know more about the Garths. At last the Vicar laid down his pipe,
7079 stretched out his legs, and turned his bright eyes with a smile towards
7080 Lydgate, saying--
7081
7082 "But we Middlemarchers are not so tame as you take us to be. We have
7083 our intrigues and our parties. I am a party man, for example, and
7084 Bulstrode is another. If you vote for me you will offend Bulstrode."
7085
7086 "What is there against Bulstrode?" said Lydgate, emphatically.
7087
7088 "I did not say there was anything against him except that. If you vote
7089 against him you will make him your enemy."
7090
7091 "I don't know that I need mind about that," said Lydgate, rather
7092 proudly; "but he seems to have good ideas about hospitals, and he
7093 spends large sums on useful public objects. He might help me a good
7094 deal in carrying out my ideas. As to his religious notions--why, as
7095 Voltaire said, incantations will destroy a flock of sheep if
7096 administered with a certain quantity of arsenic. I look for the man
7097 who will bring the arsenic, and don't mind about his incantations."
7098
7099 "Very good. But then you must not offend your arsenic-man. You will
7100 not offend me, you know," said Mr. Farebrother, quite unaffectedly. "I
7101 don't translate my own convenience into other people's duties. I am
7102 opposed to Bulstrode in many ways. I don't like the set he belongs to:
7103 they are a narrow ignorant set, and do more to make their neighbors
7104 uncomfortable than to make them better. Their system is a sort of
7105 worldly-spiritual cliqueism: they really look on the rest of mankind as
7106 a doomed carcass which is to nourish them for heaven. But," he added,
7107 smilingly, "I don't say that Bulstrode's new hospital is a bad thing;
7108 and as to his wanting to oust me from the old one--why, if he thinks me
7109 a mischievous fellow, he is only returning a compliment. And I am not
7110 a model clergyman--only a decent makeshift."
7111
7112 Lydgate was not at all sure that the Vicar maligned himself. A model
7113 clergyman, like a model doctor, ought to think his own profession the
7114 finest in the world, and take all knowledge as mere nourishment to his
7115 moral pathology and therapeutics. He only said, "What reason does
7116 Bulstrode give for superseding you?"
7117
7118 "That I don't teach his opinions--which he calls spiritual religion;
7119 and that I have no time to spare. Both statements are true. But then
7120 I could make time, and I should be glad of the forty pounds. That is
7121 the plain fact of the case. But let us dismiss it. I only wanted to
7122 tell you that if you vote for your arsenic-man, you are not to cut me
7123 in consequence. I can't spare you. You are a sort of circumnavigator
7124 come to settle among us, and will keep up my belief in the antipodes.
7125 Now tell me all about them in Paris."
7126
7127
7128
7129 CHAPTER XVIII.
7130
7131 "Oh, sir, the loftiest hopes on earth
7132 Draw lots with meaner hopes: heroic breasts,
7133 Breathing bad air, ran risk of pestilence;
7134 Or, lacking lime-juice when they cross the Line,
7135 May languish with the scurvy."
7136
7137
7138 Some weeks passed after this conversation before the question of the
7139 chaplaincy gathered any practical import for Lydgate, and without
7140 telling himself the reason, he deferred the predetermination on which
7141 side he should give his vote. It would really have been a matter of
7142 total indifference to him--that is to say, he would have taken the more
7143 convenient side, and given his vote for the appointment of Tyke without
7144 any hesitation--if he had not cared personally for Mr. Farebrother.
7145
7146 But his liking for the Vicar of St. Botolph's grew with growing
7147 acquaintanceship. That, entering into Lydgate's position as a
7148 new-comer who had his own professional objects to secure, Mr.
7149 Farebrother should have taken pains rather to warn off than to obtain
7150 his interest, showed an unusual delicacy and generosity, which
7151 Lydgate's nature was keenly alive to. It went along with other points
7152 of conduct in Mr. Farebrother which were exceptionally fine, and made
7153 his character resemble those southern landscapes which seem divided
7154 between natural grandeur and social slovenliness. Very few men could
7155 have been as filial and chivalrous as he was to the mother, aunt, and
7156 sister, whose dependence on him had in many ways shaped his life rather
7157 uneasily for himself; few men who feel the pressure of small needs are
7158 so nobly resolute not to dress up their inevitably self-interested
7159 desires in a pretext of better motives. In these matters he was
7160 conscious that his life would bear the closest scrutiny; and perhaps
7161 the consciousness encouraged a little defiance towards the critical
7162 strictness of persons whose celestial intimacies seemed not to improve
7163 their domestic manners, and whose lofty aims were not needed to account
7164 for their actions. Then, his preaching was ingenious and pithy, like
7165 the preaching of the English Church in its robust age, and his sermons
7166 were delivered without book. People outside his parish went to hear
7167 him; and, since to fill the church was always the most difficult part
7168 of a clergyman's function, here was another ground for a careless sense
7169 of superiority. Besides, he was a likable man: sweet-tempered,
7170 ready-witted, frank, without grins of suppressed bitterness or other
7171 conversational flavors which make half of us an affliction to our
7172 friends. Lydgate liked him heartily, and wished for his friendship.
7173
7174 With this feeling uppermost, he continued to waive the question of the
7175 chaplaincy, and to persuade himself that it was not only no proper
7176 business of his, but likely enough never to vex him with a demand for
7177 his vote. Lydgate, at Mr. Bulstrode's request, was laying down plans
7178 for the internal arrangements of the new hospital, and the two were
7179 often in consultation. The banker was always presupposing that he
7180 could count in general on Lydgate as a coadjutor, but made no special
7181 recurrence to the coming decision between Tyke and Farebrother. When
7182 the General Board of the Infirmary had met, however, and Lydgate had
7183 notice that the question of the chaplaincy was thrown on a council of
7184 the directors and medical men, to meet on the following Friday, he had
7185 a vexed sense that he must make up his mind on this trivial Middlemarch
7186 business. He could not help hearing within him the distinct
7187 declaration that Bulstrode was prime minister, and that the Tyke affair
7188 was a question of office or no office; and he could not help an equally
7189 pronounced dislike to giving up the prospect of office. For his
7190 observation was constantly confirming Mr. Farebrother's assurance that
7191 the banker would not overlook opposition. "Confound their petty
7192 politics!" was one of his thoughts for three mornings in the meditative
7193 process of shaving, when he had begun to feel that he must really hold
7194 a court of conscience on this matter. Certainly there were valid
7195 things to be said against the election of Mr. Farebrother: he had too
7196 much on his hands already, especially considering how much time he
7197 spent on non-clerical occupations. Then again it was a continually
7198 repeated shock, disturbing Lydgate's esteem, that the Vicar should
7199 obviously play for the sake of money, liking the play indeed, but
7200 evidently liking some end which it served. Mr. Farebrother contended
7201 on theory for the desirability of all games, and said that Englishmen's
7202 wit was stagnant for want of them; but Lydgate felt certain that he
7203 would have played very much less but for the money. There was a
7204 billiard-room at the Green Dragon, which some anxious mothers and wives
7205 regarded as the chief temptation in Middlemarch. The Vicar was a
7206 first-rate billiard-player, and though he did not frequent the Green
7207 Dragon, there were reports that he had sometimes been there in the
7208 daytime and had won money. And as to the chaplaincy, he did not
7209 pretend that he cared for it, except for the sake of the forty pounds.
7210 Lydgate was no Puritan, but he did not care for play, and winning money
7211 at it had always seemed a meanness to him; besides, he had an ideal of
7212 life which made this subservience of conduct to the gaining of small
7213 sums thoroughly hateful to him. Hitherto in his own life his wants had
7214 been supplied without any trouble to himself, and his first impulse was
7215 always to be liberal with half-crowns as matters of no importance to a
7216 gentleman; it had never occurred to him to devise a plan for getting
7217 half-crowns. He had always known in a general way that he was not
7218 rich, but he had never felt poor, and he had no power of imagining the
7219 part which the want of money plays in determining the actions of men.
7220 Money had never been a motive to him. Hence he was not ready to frame
7221 excuses for this deliberate pursuit of small gains. It was altogether
7222 repulsive to him, and he never entered into any calculation of the
7223 ratio between the Vicar's income and his more or less necessary
7224 expenditure. It was possible that he would not have made such a
7225 calculation in his own case.
7226
7227 And now, when the question of voting had come, this repulsive fact told
7228 more strongly against Mr. Farebrother than it had done before. One
7229 would know much better what to do if men's characters were more
7230 consistent, and especially if one's friends were invariably fit for any
7231 function they desired to undertake! Lydgate was convinced that if
7232 there had been no valid objection to Mr. Farebrother, he would have
7233 voted for him, whatever Bulstrode might have felt on the subject: he
7234 did not intend to be a vassal of Bulstrode's. On the other hand, there
7235 was Tyke, a man entirely given to his clerical office, who was simply
7236 curate at a chapel of ease in St. Peter's parish, and had time for
7237 extra duty. Nobody had anything to say against Mr. Tyke, except that
7238 they could not bear him, and suspected him of cant. Really, from his
7239 point of view, Bulstrode was thoroughly justified.
7240
7241 But whichever way Lydgate began to incline, there was something to make
7242 him wince; and being a proud man, he was a little exasperated at being
7243 obliged to wince. He did not like frustrating his own best purposes by
7244 getting on bad terms with Bulstrode; he did not like voting against
7245 Farebrother, and helping to deprive him of function and salary; and the
7246 question occurred whether the additional forty pounds might not leave
7247 the Vicar free from that ignoble care about winning at cards.
7248 Moreover, Lydgate did not like the consciousness that in voting for
7249 Tyke he should be voting on the side obviously convenient for himself.
7250 But would the end really be his own convenience? Other people would
7251 say so, and would allege that he was currying favor with Bulstrode for
7252 the sake of making himself important and getting on in the world. What
7253 then? He for his own part knew that if his personal prospects simply
7254 had been concerned, he would not have cared a rotten nut for the
7255 banker's friendship or enmity. What he really cared for was a medium
7256 for his work, a vehicle for his ideas; and after all, was he not bound
7257 to prefer the object of getting a good hospital, where he could
7258 demonstrate the specific distinctions of fever and test therapeutic
7259 results, before anything else connected with this chaplaincy? For the
7260 first time Lydgate was feeling the hampering threadlike pressure of
7261 small social conditions, and their frustrating complexity. At the end
7262 of his inward debate, when he set out for the hospital, his hope was
7263 really in the chance that discussion might somehow give a new aspect to
7264 the question, and make the scale dip so as to exclude the necessity for
7265 voting. I think he trusted a little also to the energy which is
7266 begotten by circumstances--some feeling rushing warmly and making
7267 resolve easy, while debate in cool blood had only made it more
7268 difficult. However it was, he did not distinctly say to himself on
7269 which side he would vote; and all the while he was inwardly resenting
7270 the subjection which had been forced upon him. It would have seemed
7271 beforehand like a ridiculous piece of bad logic that he, with his
7272 unmixed resolutions of independence and his select purposes, would find
7273 himself at the very outset in the grasp of petty alternatives, each of
7274 which was repugnant to him. In his student's chambers, he had
7275 prearranged his social action quite differently.
7276
7277 Lydgate was late in setting out, but Dr. Sprague, the two other
7278 surgeons, and several of the directors had arrived early; Mr.
7279 Bulstrode, treasurer and chairman, being among those who were still
7280 absent. The conversation seemed to imply that the issue was
7281 problematical, and that a majority for Tyke was not so certain as had
7282 been generally supposed. The two physicians, for a wonder, turned out
7283 to be unanimous, or rather, though of different minds, they concurred
7284 in action. Dr. Sprague, the rugged and weighty, was, as every one had
7285 foreseen, an adherent of Mr. Farebrother. The Doctor was more than
7286 suspected of having no religion, but somehow Middlemarch tolerated this
7287 deficiency in him as if he had been a Lord Chancellor; indeed it is
7288 probable that his professional weight was the more believed in, the
7289 world-old association of cleverness with the evil principle being still
7290 potent in the minds even of lady-patients who had the strictest ideas
7291 of frilling and sentiment. It was perhaps this negation in the Doctor
7292 which made his neighbors call him hard-headed and dry-witted;
7293 conditions of texture which were also held favorable to the storing of
7294 judgments connected with drugs. At all events, it is certain that if
7295 any medical man had come to Middlemarch with the reputation of having
7296 very definite religious views, of being given to prayer, and of
7297 otherwise showing an active piety, there would have been a general
7298 presumption against his medical skill.
7299
7300 On this ground it was (professionally speaking) fortunate for Dr.
7301 Minchin that his religious sympathies were of a general kind, and such
7302 as gave a distant medical sanction to all serious sentiment, whether of
7303 Church or Dissent, rather than any adhesion to particular tenets. If
7304 Mr. Bulstrode insisted, as he was apt to do, on the Lutheran doctrine
7305 of justification, as that by which a Church must stand or fall, Dr.
7306 Minchin in return was quite sure that man was not a mere machine or a
7307 fortuitous conjunction of atoms; if Mrs. Wimple insisted on a
7308 particular providence in relation to her stomach complaint, Dr. Minchin
7309 for his part liked to keep the mental windows open and objected to
7310 fixed limits; if the Unitarian brewer jested about the Athanasian
7311 Creed, Dr. Minchin quoted Pope's "Essay on Man." He objected to the
7312 rather free style of anecdote in which Dr. Sprague indulged, preferring
7313 well-sanctioned quotations, and liking refinement of all kinds: it was
7314 generally known that he had some kinship to a bishop, and sometimes
7315 spent his holidays at "the palace."
7316
7317 Dr. Minchin was soft-handed, pale-complexioned, and of rounded outline,
7318 not to be distinguished from a mild clergyman in appearance: whereas
7319 Dr. Sprague was superfluously tall; his trousers got creased at the
7320 knees, and showed an excess of boot at a time when straps seemed
7321 necessary to any dignity of bearing; you heard him go in and out, and
7322 up and down, as if he had come to see after the roofing. In short, he
7323 had weight, and might be expected to grapple with a disease and throw
7324 it; while Dr. Minchin might be better able to detect it lurking and to
7325 circumvent it. They enjoyed about equally the mysterious privilege of
7326 medical reputation, and concealed with much etiquette their contempt
7327 for each other's skill. Regarding themselves as Middlemarch
7328 institutions, they were ready to combine against all innovators, and
7329 against non-professionals given to interference. On this ground they
7330 were both in their hearts equally averse to Mr. Bulstrode, though Dr.
7331 Minchin had never been in open hostility with him, and never differed
7332 from him without elaborate explanation to Mrs. Bulstrode, who had found
7333 that Dr. Minchin alone understood her constitution. A layman who pried
7334 into the professional conduct of medical men, and was always obtruding
7335 his reforms,--though he was less directly embarrassing to the two
7336 physicians than to the surgeon-apothecaries who attended paupers by
7337 contract, was nevertheless offensive to the professional nostril as
7338 such; and Dr. Minchin shared fully in the new pique against Bulstrode,
7339 excited by his apparent determination to patronize Lydgate. The
7340 long-established practitioners, Mr. Wrench and Mr. Toller; were just
7341 now standing apart and having a friendly colloquy, in which they agreed
7342 that Lydgate was a jackanapes, just made to serve Bulstrode's purpose.
7343 To non-medical friends they had already concurred in praising the other
7344 young practitioner, who had come into the town on Mr. Peacock's
7345 retirement without further recommendation than his own merits and such
7346 argument for solid professional acquirement as might be gathered from
7347 his having apparently wasted no time on other branches of knowledge.
7348 It was clear that Lydgate, by not dispensing drugs, intended to cast
7349 imputations on his equals, and also to obscure the limit between his
7350 own rank as a general practitioner and that of the physicians, who, in
7351 the interest of the profession, felt bound to maintain its various
7352 grades,--especially against a man who had not been to either of the
7353 English universities and enjoyed the absence of anatomical and bedside
7354 study there, but came with a libellous pretension to experience in
7355 Edinburgh and Paris, where observation might be abundant indeed, but
7356 hardly sound.
7357
7358 Thus it happened that on this occasion Bulstrode became identified with
7359 Lydgate, and Lydgate with Tyke; and owing to this variety of
7360 interchangeable names for the chaplaincy question, diverse minds were
7361 enabled to form the same judgment concerning it.
7362
7363 Dr. Sprague said at once bluntly to the group assembled when he
7364 entered, "I go for Farebrother. A salary, with all my heart. But why
7365 take it from the Vicar? He has none too much--has to insure his life,
7366 besides keeping house, and doing a vicar's charities. Put forty pounds
7367 in his pocket and you'll do no harm. He's a good fellow, is
7368 Farebrother, with as little of the parson about him as will serve to
7369 carry orders."
7370
7371 "Ho, ho! Doctor," said old Mr. Powderell, a retired iron-monger of
7372 some standing--his interjection being something between a laugh and a
7373 Parliamentary disapproval; "we must let you have your say. But what we
7374 have to consider is not anybody's income--it's the souls of the poor
7375 sick people"--here Mr. Powderell's voice and face had a sincere pathos
7376 in them. "He is a real Gospel preacher, is Mr. Tyke. I should vote
7377 against my conscience if I voted against Mr. Tyke--I should indeed."
7378
7379 "Mr. Tyke's opponents have not asked any one to vote against his
7380 conscience, I believe," said Mr. Hackbutt, a rich tanner of fluent
7381 speech, whose glittering spectacles and erect hair were turned with
7382 some severity towards innocent Mr. Powderell. "But in my judgment it
7383 behoves us, as Directors, to consider whether we will regard it as our
7384 whole business to carry out propositions emanating from a single
7385 quarter. Will any member of the committee aver that he would have
7386 entertained the idea of displacing the gentleman who has always
7387 discharged the function of chaplain here, if it had not been suggested
7388 to him by parties whose disposition it is to regard every institution
7389 of this town as a machinery for carrying out their own views? I tax no
7390 man's motives: let them lie between himself and a higher Power; but I
7391 do say, that there are influences at work here which are incompatible
7392 with genuine independence, and that a crawling servility is usually
7393 dictated by circumstances which gentlemen so conducting themselves
7394 could not afford either morally or financially to avow. I myself am a
7395 layman, but I have given no inconsiderable attention to the divisions
7396 in the Church and--"
7397
7398 "Oh, damn the divisions!" burst in Mr. Frank Hawley, lawyer and
7399 town-clerk, who rarely presented himself at the board, but now looked
7400 in hurriedly, whip in hand. "We have nothing to do with them here.
7401 Farebrother has been doing the work--what there was--without pay, and
7402 if pay is to be given, it should be given to him. I call it a
7403 confounded job to take the thing away from Farebrother."
7404
7405 "I think it would be as well for gentlemen not to give their remarks a
7406 personal bearing," said Mr. Plymdale. "I shall vote for the
7407 appointment of Mr. Tyke, but I should not have known, if Mr. Hackbutt
7408 hadn't hinted it, that I was a Servile Crawler."
7409
7410 "I disclaim any personalities. I expressly said, if I may be allowed
7411 to repeat, or even to conclude what I was about to say--"
7412
7413 "Ah, here's Minchin!" said Mr. Frank Hawley; at which everybody turned
7414 away from Mr. Hackbutt, leaving him to feel the uselessness of superior
7415 gifts in Middlemarch. "Come, Doctor, I must have you on the right
7416 side, eh?"
7417
7418 "I hope so," said Dr. Minchin, nodding and shaking hands here and
7419 there; "at whatever cost to my feelings."
7420
7421 "If there's any feeling here, it should be feeling for the man who is
7422 turned out, I think," said Mr. Frank Hawley.
7423
7424 "I confess I have feelings on the other side also. I have a divided
7425 esteem," said Dr. Minchin, rubbing his hands. "I consider Mr. Tyke an
7426 exemplary man--none more so--and I believe him to be proposed from
7427 unimpeachable motives. I, for my part, wish that I could give him my
7428 vote. But I am constrained to take a view of the case which gives the
7429 preponderance to Mr. Farebrother's claims. He is an amiable man, an
7430 able preacher, and has been longer among us."
7431
7432 Old Mr. Powderell looked on, sad and silent. Mr. Plymdale settled his
7433 cravat, uneasily.
7434
7435 "You don't set up Farebrother as a pattern of what a clergyman ought to
7436 be, I hope," said Mr. Larcher, the eminent carrier, who had just come
7437 in. "I have no ill-will towards him, but I think we owe something to
7438 the public, not to speak of anything higher, in these appointments. In
7439 my opinion Farebrother is too lax for a clergyman. I don't wish to
7440 bring up particulars against him; but he will make a little attendance
7441 here go as far as he can."
7442
7443 "And a devilish deal better than too much," said Mr. Hawley, whose bad
7444 language was notorious in that part of the county. "Sick people can't
7445 bear so much praying and preaching. And that methodistical sort of
7446 religion is bad for the spirits--bad for the inside, eh?" he added,
7447 turning quickly round to the four medical men who were assembled.
7448
7449 But any answer was dispensed with by the entrance of three gentlemen,
7450 with whom there were greetings more or less cordial. These were the
7451 Reverend Edward Thesiger, Rector of St. Peter's, Mr. Bulstrode, and our
7452 friend Mr. Brooke of Tipton, who had lately allowed himself to be put
7453 on the board of directors in his turn, but had never before attended,
7454 his attendance now being due to Mr. Bulstrode's exertions. Lydgate was
7455 the only person still expected.
7456
7457 Every one now sat down, Mr. Bulstrode presiding, pale and
7458 self-restrained as usual. Mr. Thesiger, a moderate evangelical, wished
7459 for the appointment of his friend Mr. Tyke, a zealous able man, who,
7460 officiating at a chapel of ease, had not a cure of souls too extensive
7461 to leave him ample time for the new duty. It was desirable that
7462 chaplaincies of this kind should be entered on with a fervent
7463 intention: they were peculiar opportunities for spiritual influence;
7464 and while it was good that a salary should be allotted, there was the
7465 more need for scrupulous watching lest the office should be perverted
7466 into a mere question of salary. Mr. Thesiger's manner had so much
7467 quiet propriety that objectors could only simmer in silence.
7468
7469 Mr. Brooke believed that everybody meant well in the matter. He had
7470 not himself attended to the affairs of the Infirmary, though he had a
7471 strong interest in whatever was for the benefit of Middlemarch, and was
7472 most happy to meet the gentlemen present on any public question--"any
7473 public question, you know," Mr. Brooke repeated, with his nod of
7474 perfect understanding. "I am a good deal occupied as a magistrate, and
7475 in the collection of documentary evidence, but I regard my time as
7476 being at the disposal of the public--and, in short, my friends have
7477 convinced me that a chaplain with a salary--a salary, you know--is a
7478 very good thing, and I am happy to be able to come here and vote for
7479 the appointment of Mr. Tyke, who, I understand, is an unexceptionable
7480 man, apostolic and eloquent and everything of that kind--and I am the
7481 last man to withhold my vote--under the circumstances, you know."
7482
7483 "It seems to me that you have been crammed with one side of the
7484 question, Mr. Brooke," said Mr. Frank Hawley, who was afraid of nobody,
7485 and was a Tory suspicious of electioneering intentions. "You don't
7486 seem to know that one of the worthiest men we have has been doing duty
7487 as chaplain here for years without pay, and that Mr. Tyke is proposed
7488 to supersede him."
7489
7490 "Excuse me, Mr. Hawley," said Mr. Bulstrode. "Mr. Brooke has been
7491 fully informed of Mr. Farebrother's character and position."
7492
7493 "By his enemies," flashed out Mr. Hawley.
7494
7495 "I trust there is no personal hostility concerned here," said Mr.
7496 Thesiger.
7497
7498 "I'll swear there is, though," retorted Mr. Hawley.
7499
7500 "Gentlemen," said Mr. Bulstrode, in a subdued tone, "the merits of the
7501 question may be very briefly stated, and if any one present doubts that
7502 every gentleman who is about to give his vote has not been fully
7503 informed, I can now recapitulate the considerations that should weigh
7504 on either side."
7505
7506 "I don't see the good of that," said Mr. Hawley. "I suppose we all
7507 know whom we mean to vote for. Any man who wants to do justice does
7508 not wait till the last minute to hear both sides of the question. I
7509 have no time to lose, and I propose that the matter be put to the vote
7510 at once."
7511
7512 A brief but still hot discussion followed before each person wrote
7513 "Tyke" or "Farebrother" on a piece of paper and slipped it into a glass
7514 tumbler; and in the mean time Mr. Bulstrode saw Lydgate enter.
7515
7516 "I perceive that the votes are equally divided at present," said Mr.
7517 Bulstrode, in a clear biting voice. Then, looking up at Lydgate--
7518
7519 "There is a casting-vote still to be given. It is yours, Mr. Lydgate:
7520 will you be good enough to write?"
7521
7522 "The thing is settled now," said Mr. Wrench, rising. "We all know how
7523 Mr. Lydgate will vote."
7524
7525 "You seem to speak with some peculiar meaning, sir," said Lydgate,
7526 rather defiantly, and keeping his pencil suspended.
7527
7528 "I merely mean that you are expected to vote with Mr. Bulstrode. Do
7529 you regard that meaning as offensive?"
7530
7531 "It may be offensive to others. But I shall not desist from voting
7532 with him on that account." Lydgate immediately wrote down "Tyke."
7533
7534 So the Rev. Walter Tyke became chaplain to the Infirmary, and Lydgate
7535 continued to work with Mr. Bulstrode. He was really uncertain whether
7536 Tyke were not the more suitable candidate, and yet his consciousness
7537 told him that if he had been quite free from indirect bias he should
7538 have voted for Mr. Farebrother. The affair of the chaplaincy remained
7539 a sore point in his memory as a case in which this petty medium of
7540 Middlemarch had been too strong for him. How could a man be satisfied
7541 with a decision between such alternatives and under such circumstances?
7542 No more than he can be satisfied with his hat, which he has chosen from
7543 among such shapes as the resources of the age offer him, wearing it at
7544 best with a resignation which is chiefly supported by comparison.
7545
7546 But Mr. Farebrother met him with the same friendliness as before. The
7547 character of the publican and sinner is not always practically
7548 incompatible with that of the modern Pharisee, for the majority of us
7549 scarcely see more distinctly the faultiness of our own conduct than the
7550 faultiness of our own arguments, or the dulness of our own jokes. But
7551 the Vicar of St. Botolph's had certainly escaped the slightest tincture
7552 of the Pharisee, and by dint of admitting to himself that he was too
7553 much as other men were, he had become remarkably unlike them in
7554 this--that he could excuse others for thinking slightly of him, and
7555 could judge impartially of their conduct even when it told against him.
7556
7557 "The world has been too strong for _me_, I know," he said one day to
7558 Lydgate. "But then I am not a mighty man--I shall never be a man of
7559 renown. The choice of Hercules is a pretty fable; but Prodicus makes
7560 it easy work for the hero, as if the first resolves were enough.
7561 Another story says that he came to hold the distaff, and at last wore
7562 the Nessus shirt. I suppose one good resolve might keep a man right if
7563 everybody else's resolve helped him."
7564
7565 The Vicar's talk was not always inspiriting: he had escaped being a
7566 Pharisee, but he had not escaped that low estimate of possibilities
7567 which we rather hastily arrive at as an inference from our own failure.
7568 Lydgate thought that there was a pitiable infirmity of will in Mr.
7569 Farebrother.
7570
7571
7572
7573 CHAPTER XIX.
7574
7575 "L' altra vedete ch'ha fatto alla guancia
7576 Della sua palma, sospirando, letto."
7577 --Purgatorio, vii.
7578
7579
7580 When George the Fourth was still reigning over the privacies of
7581 Windsor, when the Duke of Wellington was Prime Minister, and Mr. Vincy
7582 was mayor of the old corporation in Middlemarch, Mrs. Casaubon, born
7583 Dorothea Brooke, had taken her wedding journey to Rome. In those days
7584 the world in general was more ignorant of good and evil by forty years
7585 than it is at present. Travellers did not often carry full information
7586 on Christian art either in their heads or their pockets; and even the
7587 most brilliant English critic of the day mistook the flower-flushed
7588 tomb of the ascended Virgin for an ornamental vase due to the painter's
7589 fancy. Romanticism, which has helped to fill some dull blanks with
7590 love and knowledge, had not yet penetrated the times with its leaven
7591 and entered into everybody's food; it was fermenting still as a
7592 distinguishable vigorous enthusiasm in certain long-haired German
7593 artists at Rome, and the youth of other nations who worked or idled
7594 near them were sometimes caught in the spreading movement.
7595
7596 One fine morning a young man whose hair was not immoderately long, but
7597 abundant and curly, and who was otherwise English in his equipment, had
7598 just turned his back on the Belvedere Torso in the Vatican and was
7599 looking out on the magnificent view of the mountains from the adjoining
7600 round vestibule. He was sufficiently absorbed not to notice the
7601 approach of a dark-eyed, animated German who came up to him and placing
7602 a hand on his shoulder, said with a strong accent, "Come here, quick!
7603 else she will have changed her pose."
7604
7605 Quickness was ready at the call, and the two figures passed lightly
7606 along by the Meleager, towards the hall where the reclining Ariadne,
7607 then called the Cleopatra, lies in the marble voluptuousness of her
7608 beauty, the drapery folding around her with a petal-like ease and
7609 tenderness. They were just in time to see another figure standing
7610 against a pedestal near the reclining marble: a breathing blooming
7611 girl, whose form, not shamed by the Ariadne, was clad in Quakerish gray
7612 drapery; her long cloak, fastened at the neck, was thrown backward from
7613 her arms, and one beautiful ungloved hand pillowed her cheek, pushing
7614 somewhat backward the white beaver bonnet which made a sort of halo to
7615 her face around the simply braided dark-brown hair. She was not
7616 looking at the sculpture, probably not thinking of it: her large eyes
7617 were fixed dreamily on a streak of sunlight which fell across the
7618 floor. But she became conscious of the two strangers who suddenly
7619 paused as if to contemplate the Cleopatra, and, without looking at
7620 them, immediately turned away to join a maid-servant and courier who
7621 were loitering along the hall at a little distance off.
7622
7623 "What do you think of that for a fine bit of antithesis?" said the
7624 German, searching in his friend's face for responding admiration, but
7625 going on volubly without waiting for any other answer. "There lies
7626 antique beauty, not corpse-like even in death, but arrested in the
7627 complete contentment of its sensuous perfection: and here stands beauty
7628 in its breathing life, with the consciousness of Christian centuries in
7629 its bosom. But she should be dressed as a nun; I think she looks
7630 almost what you call a Quaker; I would dress her as a nun in my
7631 picture. However, she is married; I saw her wedding-ring on that
7632 wonderful left hand, otherwise I should have thought the sallow
7633 Geistlicher was her father. I saw him parting from her a good while
7634 ago, and just now I found her in that magnificent pose. Only think! he
7635 is perhaps rich, and would like to have her portrait taken. Ah! it is
7636 no use looking after her--there she goes! Let us follow her home!"
7637
7638 "No, no," said his companion, with a little frown.
7639
7640 "You are singular, Ladislaw. You look struck together. Do you know
7641 her?"
7642
7643 "I know that she is married to my cousin," said Will Ladislaw,
7644 sauntering down the hall with a preoccupied air, while his German
7645 friend kept at his side and watched him eagerly.
7646
7647 "What! the Geistlicher? He looks more like an uncle--a more useful sort
7648 of relation."
7649
7650 "He is not my uncle. I tell you he is my second cousin," said
7651 Ladislaw, with some irritation.
7652
7653 "Schon, schon. Don't be snappish. You are not angry with me for
7654 thinking Mrs. Second-Cousin the most perfect young Madonna I ever saw?"
7655
7656 "Angry? nonsense. I have only seen her once before, for a couple of
7657 minutes, when my cousin introduced her to me, just before I left
7658 England. They were not married then. I didn't know they were coming
7659 to Rome."
7660
7661 "But you will go to see them now--you will find out what they have for
7662 an address--since you know the name. Shall we go to the post? And you
7663 could speak about the portrait."
7664
7665 "Confound you, Naumann! I don't know what I shall do. I am not so
7666 brazen as you."
7667
7668 "Bah! that is because you are dilettantish and amateurish. If you were
7669 an artist, you would think of Mistress Second-Cousin as antique form
7670 animated by Christian sentiment--a sort of Christian Antigone--sensuous
7671 force controlled by spiritual passion."
7672
7673 "Yes, and that your painting her was the chief outcome of her
7674 existence--the divinity passing into higher completeness and all but
7675 exhausted in the act of covering your bit of canvas. I am amateurish
7676 if you like: I do _not_ think that all the universe is straining
7677 towards the obscure significance of your pictures."
7678
7679 "But it is, my dear!--so far as it is straining through me, Adolf
7680 Naumann: that stands firm," said the good-natured painter, putting a
7681 hand on Ladislaw's shoulder, and not in the least disturbed by the
7682 unaccountable touch of ill-humor in his tone. "See now! My existence
7683 presupposes the existence of the whole universe--does it _not?_ and my
7684 function is to paint--and as a painter I have a conception which is
7685 altogether genialisch, of your great-aunt or second grandmother as a
7686 subject for a picture; therefore, the universe is straining towards
7687 that picture through that particular hook or claw which it puts forth
7688 in the shape of me--not true?"
7689
7690 "But how if another claw in the shape of me is straining to thwart
7691 it?--the case is a little less simple then."
7692
7693 "Not at all: the result of the struggle is the same thing--picture or
7694 no picture--logically."
7695
7696 Will could not resist this imperturbable temper, and the cloud in his
7697 face broke into sunshiny laughter.
7698
7699 "Come now, my friend--you will help?" said Naumann, in a hopeful tone.
7700
7701 "No; nonsense, Naumann! English ladies are not at everybody's service
7702 as models. And you want to express too much with your painting. You
7703 would only have made a better or worse portrait with a background which
7704 every connoisseur would give a different reason for or against. And
7705 what is a portrait of a woman? Your painting and Plastik are poor
7706 stuff after all. They perturb and dull conceptions instead of raising
7707 them. Language is a finer medium."
7708
7709 "Yes, for those who can't paint," said Naumann. "There you have
7710 perfect right. I did not recommend you to paint, my friend."
7711
7712 The amiable artist carried his sting, but Ladislaw did not choose to
7713 appear stung. He went on as if he had not heard.
7714
7715 "Language gives a fuller image, which is all the better for beings
7716 vague. After all, the true seeing is within; and painting stares at
7717 you with an insistent imperfection. I feel that especially about
7718 representations of women. As if a woman were a mere colored
7719 superficies! You must wait for movement and tone. There is a
7720 difference in their very breathing: they change from moment to
7721 moment.--This woman whom you have just seen, for example: how would you
7722 paint her voice, pray? But her voice is much diviner than anything you
7723 have seen of her."
7724
7725 "I see, I see. You are jealous. No man must presume to think that he
7726 can paint your ideal. This is serious, my friend! Your great-aunt!
7727 'Der Neffe als Onkel' in a tragic sense--ungeheuer!"
7728
7729 "You and I shall quarrel, Naumann, if you call that lady my aunt again."
7730
7731 "How is she to be called then?"
7732
7733 "Mrs. Casaubon."
7734
7735 "Good. Suppose I get acquainted with her in spite of you, and find
7736 that she very much wishes to be painted?"
7737
7738 "Yes, suppose!" said Will Ladislaw, in a contemptuous undertone,
7739 intended to dismiss the subject. He was conscious of being irritated
7740 by ridiculously small causes, which were half of his own creation. Why
7741 was he making any fuss about Mrs. Casaubon? And yet he felt as if
7742 something had happened to him with regard to her. There are characters
7743 which are continually creating collisions and nodes for themselves in
7744 dramas which nobody is prepared to act with them. Their
7745 susceptibilities will clash against objects that remain innocently
7746 quiet.
7747
7748
7749
7750 CHAPTER XX.
7751
7752 "A child forsaken, waking suddenly,
7753 Whose gaze afeard on all things round doth rove,
7754 And seeth only that it cannot see
7755 The meeting eyes of love."
7756
7757
7758 Two hours later, Dorothea was seated in an inner room or boudoir of a
7759 handsome apartment in the Via Sistina.
7760
7761 I am sorry to add that she was sobbing bitterly, with such abandonment
7762 to this relief of an oppressed heart as a woman habitually controlled
7763 by pride on her own account and thoughtfulness for others will
7764 sometimes allow herself when she feels securely alone. And Mr.
7765 Casaubon was certain to remain away for some time at the Vatican.
7766
7767 Yet Dorothea had no distinctly shapen grievance that she could state
7768 even to herself; and in the midst of her confused thought and passion,
7769 the mental act that was struggling forth into clearness was a
7770 self-accusing cry that her feeling of desolation was the fault of her
7771 own spiritual poverty. She had married the man of her choice, and with
7772 the advantage over most girls that she had contemplated her marriage
7773 chiefly as the beginning of new duties: from the very first she had
7774 thought of Mr. Casaubon as having a mind so much above her own, that he
7775 must often be claimed by studies which she could not entirely share;
7776 moreover, after the brief narrow experience of her girlhood she was
7777 beholding Rome, the city of visible history, where the past of a whole
7778 hemisphere seems moving in funeral procession with strange ancestral
7779 images and trophies gathered from afar.
7780
7781 But this stupendous fragmentariness heightened the dreamlike
7782 strangeness of her bridal life. Dorothea had now been five weeks in
7783 Rome, and in the kindly mornings when autumn and winter seemed to go
7784 hand in hand like a happy aged couple one of whom would presently
7785 survive in chiller loneliness, she had driven about at first with Mr.
7786 Casaubon, but of late chiefly with Tantripp and their experienced
7787 courier. She had been led through the best galleries, had been taken
7788 to the chief points of view, had been shown the grandest ruins and the
7789 most glorious churches, and she had ended by oftenest choosing to drive
7790 out to the Campagna where she could feel alone with the earth and sky,
7791 away-from the oppressive masquerade of ages, in which her own life too
7792 seemed to become a masque with enigmatical costumes.
7793
7794 To those who have looked at Rome with the quickening power of a
7795 knowledge which breathes a growing soul into all historic shapes, and
7796 traces out the suppressed transitions which unite all contrasts, Rome
7797 may still be the spiritual centre and interpreter of the world. But
7798 let them conceive one more historical contrast: the gigantic broken
7799 revelations of that Imperial and Papal city thrust abruptly on the
7800 notions of a girl who had been brought up in English and Swiss
7801 Puritanism, fed on meagre Protestant histories and on art chiefly of
7802 the hand-screen sort; a girl whose ardent nature turned all her small
7803 allowance of knowledge into principles, fusing her actions into their
7804 mould, and whose quick emotions gave the most abstract things the
7805 quality of a pleasure or a pain; a girl who had lately become a wife,
7806 and from the enthusiastic acceptance of untried duty found herself
7807 plunged in tumultuous preoccupation with her personal lot. The weight
7808 of unintelligible Rome might lie easily on bright nymphs to whom it
7809 formed a background for the brilliant picnic of Anglo-foreign society;
7810 but Dorothea had no such defence against deep impressions. Ruins and
7811 basilicas, palaces and colossi, set in the midst of a sordid present,
7812 where all that was living and warm-blooded seemed sunk in the deep
7813 degeneracy of a superstition divorced from reverence; the dimmer but
7814 yet eager Titanic life gazing and struggling on walls and ceilings; the
7815 long vistas of white forms whose marble eyes seemed to hold the
7816 monotonous light of an alien world: all this vast wreck of ambitious
7817 ideals, sensuous and spiritual, mixed confusedly with the signs of
7818 breathing forgetfulness and degradation, at first jarred her as with an
7819 electric shock, and then urged themselves on her with that ache
7820 belonging to a glut of confused ideas which check the flow of emotion.
7821 Forms both pale and glowing took possession of her young sense, and
7822 fixed themselves in her memory even when she was not thinking of them,
7823 preparing strange associations which remained through her after-years.
7824 Our moods are apt to bring with them images which succeed each other
7825 like the magic-lantern pictures of a doze; and in certain states of
7826 dull forlornness Dorothea all her life continued to see the vastness of
7827 St. Peter's, the huge bronze canopy, the excited intention in the
7828 attitudes and garments of the prophets and evangelists in the mosaics
7829 above, and the red drapery which was being hung for Christmas spreading
7830 itself everywhere like a disease of the retina.
7831
7832 Not that this inward amazement of Dorothea's was anything very
7833 exceptional: many souls in their young nudity are tumbled out among
7834 incongruities and left to "find their feet" among them, while their
7835 elders go about their business. Nor can I suppose that when Mrs.
7836 Casaubon is discovered in a fit of weeping six weeks after her wedding,
7837 the situation will be regarded as tragic. Some discouragement, some
7838 faintness of heart at the new real future which replaces the imaginary,
7839 is not unusual, and we do not expect people to be deeply moved by what
7840 is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of
7841 frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotion of
7842 mankind; and perhaps our frames could hardly bear much of it. If we
7843 had a keen vision and feeling of all ordinary human life, it would be
7844 like hearing the grass grow and the squirrel's heart beat, and we
7845 should die of that roar which lies on the other side of silence. As it
7846 is, the quickest of us walk about well wadded with stupidity.
7847
7848 However, Dorothea was crying, and if she had been required to state the
7849 cause, she could only have done so in some such general words as I have
7850 already used: to have been driven to be more particular would have been
7851 like trying to give a history of the lights and shadows, for that new
7852 real future which was replacing the imaginary drew its material from
7853 the endless minutiae by which her view of Mr. Casaubon and her wifely
7854 relation, now that she was married to him, was gradually changing with
7855 the secret motion of a watch-hand from what it had been in her maiden
7856 dream. It was too early yet for her fully to recognize or at least
7857 admit the change, still more for her to have readjusted that
7858 devotedness which was so necessary a part of her mental life that she
7859 was almost sure sooner or later to recover it. Permanent rebellion,
7860 the disorder of a life without some loving reverent resolve, was not
7861 possible to her; but she was now in an interval when the very force of
7862 her nature heightened its confusion. In this way, the early months of
7863 marriage often are times of critical tumult--whether that of a
7864 shrimp-pool or of deeper waters--which afterwards subsides into
7865 cheerful peace.
7866
7867 But was not Mr. Casaubon just as learned as before? Had his forms of
7868 expression changed, or his sentiments become less laudable? Oh
7869 waywardness of womanhood! did his chronology fail him, or his ability
7870 to state not only a theory but the names of those who held it; or his
7871 provision for giving the heads of any subject on demand? And was not
7872 Rome the place in all the world to give free play to such
7873 accomplishments? Besides, had not Dorothea's enthusiasm especially
7874 dwelt on the prospect of relieving the weight and perhaps the sadness
7875 with which great tasks lie on him who has to achieve them?-- And that
7876 such weight pressed on Mr. Casaubon was only plainer than before.
7877
7878 All these are crushing questions; but whatever else remained the same,
7879 the light had changed, and you cannot find the pearly dawn at noonday.
7880 The fact is unalterable, that a fellow-mortal with whose nature you are
7881 acquainted solely through the brief entrances and exits of a few
7882 imaginative weeks called courtship, may, when seen in the continuity of
7883 married companionship, be disclosed as something better or worse than
7884 what you have preconceived, but will certainly not appear altogether
7885 the same. And it would be astonishing to find how soon the change is
7886 felt if we had no kindred changes to compare with it. To share
7887 lodgings with a brilliant dinner-companion, or to see your favorite
7888 politician in the Ministry, may bring about changes quite as rapid: in
7889 these cases too we begin by knowing little and believing much, and we
7890 sometimes end by inverting the quantities.
7891
7892 Still, such comparisons might mislead, for no man was more incapable of
7893 flashy make-believe than Mr. Casaubon: he was as genuine a character as
7894 any ruminant animal, and he had not actively assisted in creating any
7895 illusions about himself. How was it that in the weeks since her
7896 marriage, Dorothea had not distinctly observed but felt with a stifling
7897 depression, that the large vistas and wide fresh air which she had
7898 dreamed of finding in her husband's mind were replaced by anterooms and
7899 winding passages which seemed to lead nowhither? I suppose it was that
7900 in courtship everything is regarded as provisional and preliminary, and
7901 the smallest sample of virtue or accomplishment is taken to guarantee
7902 delightful stores which the broad leisure of marriage will reveal. But
7903 the door-sill of marriage once crossed, expectation is concentrated on
7904 the present. Having once embarked on your marital voyage, it is
7905 impossible not to be aware that you make no way and that the sea is not
7906 within sight--that, in fact, you are exploring an enclosed basin.
7907
7908 In their conversation before marriage, Mr. Casaubon had often dwelt on
7909 some explanation or questionable detail of which Dorothea did not see
7910 the bearing; but such imperfect coherence seemed due to the brokenness
7911 of their intercourse, and, supported by her faith in their future, she
7912 had listened with fervid patience to a recitation of possible arguments
7913 to be brought against Mr. Casaubon's entirely new view of the
7914 Philistine god Dagon and other fish-deities, thinking that hereafter
7915 she should see this subject which touched him so nearly from the same
7916 high ground whence doubtless it had become so important to him. Again,
7917 the matter-of-course statement and tone of dismissal with which he
7918 treated what to her were the most stirring thoughts, was easily
7919 accounted for as belonging to the sense of haste and preoccupation in
7920 which she herself shared during their engagement. But now, since they
7921 had been in Rome, with all the depths of her emotion roused to
7922 tumultuous activity, and with life made a new problem by new elements,
7923 she had been becoming more and more aware, with a certain terror, that
7924 her mind was continually sliding into inward fits of anger and
7925 repulsion, or else into forlorn weariness. How far the judicious
7926 Hooker or any other hero of erudition would have been the same at Mr.
7927 Casaubon's time of life, she had no means of knowing, so that he could
7928 not have the advantage of comparison; but her husband's way of
7929 commenting on the strangely impressive objects around them had begun to
7930 affect her with a sort of mental shiver: he had perhaps the best
7931 intention of acquitting himself worthily, but only of acquitting
7932 himself. What was fresh to her mind was worn out to his; and such
7933 capacity of thought and feeling as had ever been stimulated in him by
7934 the general life of mankind had long shrunk to a sort of dried
7935 preparation, a lifeless embalmment of knowledge.
7936
7937 When he said, "Does this interest you, Dorothea? Shall we stay a
7938 little longer? I am ready to stay if you wish it,"--it seemed to her
7939 as if going or staying were alike dreary. Or, "Should you like to go
7940 to the Farnesina, Dorothea? It contains celebrated frescos designed or
7941 painted by Raphael, which most persons think it worth while to visit."
7942
7943 "But do you care about them?" was always Dorothea's question.
7944
7945 "They are, I believe, highly esteemed. Some of them represent the
7946 fable of Cupid and Psyche, which is probably the romantic invention of
7947 a literary period, and cannot, I think, be reckoned as a genuine
7948 mythical product. But if you like these wall-paintings we can easily
7949 drive thither; and you will then, I think, have seen the chief works of
7950 Raphael, any of which it were a pity to omit in a visit to Rome. He is
7951 the painter who has been held to combine the most complete grace of
7952 form with sublimity of expression. Such at least I have gathered to be
7953 the opinion of cognoscenti."
7954
7955 This kind of answer given in a measured official tone, as of a
7956 clergyman reading according to the rubric, did not help to justify the
7957 glories of the Eternal City, or to give her the hope that if she knew
7958 more about them the world would be joyously illuminated for her. There
7959 is hardly any contact more depressing to a young ardent creature than
7960 that of a mind in which years full of knowledge seem to have issued in
7961 a blank absence of interest or sympathy.
7962
7963 On other subjects indeed Mr. Casaubon showed a tenacity of occupation
7964 and an eagerness which are usually regarded as the effect of
7965 enthusiasm, and Dorothea was anxious to follow this spontaneous
7966 direction of his thoughts, instead of being made to feel that she
7967 dragged him away from it. But she was gradually ceasing to expect with
7968 her former delightful confidence that she should see any wide opening
7969 where she followed him. Poor Mr. Casaubon himself was lost among small
7970 closets and winding stairs, and in an agitated dimness about the
7971 Cabeiri, or in an exposure of other mythologists' ill-considered
7972 parallels, easily lost sight of any purpose which had prompted him to
7973 these labors. With his taper stuck before him he forgot the absence of
7974 windows, and in bitter manuscript remarks on other men's notions about
7975 the solar deities, he had become indifferent to the sunlight.
7976
7977 These characteristics, fixed and unchangeable as bone in Mr. Casaubon,
7978 might have remained longer unfelt by Dorothea if she had been
7979 encouraged to pour forth her girlish and womanly feeling--if he would
7980 have held her hands between his and listened with the delight of
7981 tenderness and understanding to all the little histories which made up
7982 her experience, and would have given her the same sort of intimacy in
7983 return, so that the past life of each could be included in their mutual
7984 knowledge and affection--or if she could have fed her affection with
7985 those childlike caresses which are the bent of every sweet woman, who
7986 has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll,
7987 creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the wealth of her own
7988 love. That was Dorothea's bent. With all her yearning to know what
7989 was afar from her and to be widely benignant, she had ardor enough for
7990 what was near, to have kissed Mr. Casaubon's coat-sleeve, or to have
7991 caressed his shoe-latchet, if he would have made any other sign of
7992 acceptance than pronouncing her, with his unfailing propriety, to be of
7993 a most affectionate and truly feminine nature, indicating at the same
7994 time by politely reaching a chair for her that he regarded these
7995 manifestations as rather crude and startling. Having made his clerical
7996 toilet with due care in the morning, he was prepared only for those
7997 amenities of life which were suited to the well-adjusted stiff cravat
7998 of the period, and to a mind weighted with unpublished matter.
7999
8000 And by a sad contradiction Dorothea's ideas and resolves seemed like
8001 melting ice floating and lost in the warm flood of which they had been
8002 but another form. She was humiliated to find herself a mere victim of
8003 feeling, as if she could know nothing except through that medium: all
8004 her strength was scattered in fits of agitation, of struggle, of
8005 despondency, and then again in visions of more complete renunciation,
8006 transforming all hard conditions into duty. Poor Dorothea! she was
8007 certainly troublesome--to herself chiefly; but this morning for the
8008 first time she had been troublesome to Mr. Casaubon.
8009
8010 She had begun, while they were taking coffee, with a determination to
8011 shake off what she inwardly called her selfishness, and turned a face
8012 all cheerful attention to her husband when he said, "My dear Dorothea,
8013 we must now think of all that is yet left undone, as a preliminary to
8014 our departure. I would fain have returned home earlier that we might
8015 have been at Lowick for the Christmas; but my inquiries here have been
8016 protracted beyond their anticipated period. I trust, however, that the
8017 time here has not been passed unpleasantly to you. Among the sights of
8018 Europe, that of Rome has ever been held one of the most striking and in
8019 some respects edifying. I well remember that I considered it an epoch
8020 in my life when I visited it for the first time; after the fall of
8021 Napoleon, an event which opened the Continent to travellers. Indeed I
8022 think it is one among several cities to which an extreme hyperbole has
8023 been applied--'See Rome and die:' but in your case I would propose an
8024 emendation and say, See Rome as a bride, and live henceforth as a happy
8025 wife."
8026
8027 Mr. Casaubon pronounced this little speech with the most conscientious
8028 intention, blinking a little and swaying his head up and down, and
8029 concluding with a smile. He had not found marriage a rapturous state,
8030 but he had no idea of being anything else than an irreproachable
8031 husband, who would make a charming young woman as happy as she deserved
8032 to be.
8033
8034 "I hope you are thoroughly satisfied with our stay--I mean, with the
8035 result so far as your studies are concerned," said Dorothea, trying to
8036 keep her mind fixed on what most affected her husband.
8037
8038 "Yes," said Mr. Casaubon, with that peculiar pitch of voice which makes
8039 the word half a negative. "I have been led farther than I had
8040 foreseen, and various subjects for annotation have presented themselves
8041 which, though I have no direct need of them, I could not pretermit.
8042 The task, notwithstanding the assistance of my amanuensis, has been a
8043 somewhat laborious one, but your society has happily prevented me from
8044 that too continuous prosecution of thought beyond the hours of study
8045 which has been the snare of my solitary life."
8046
8047 "I am very glad that my presence has made any difference to you," said
8048 Dorothea, who had a vivid memory of evenings in which she had supposed
8049 that Mr. Casaubon's mind had gone too deep during the day to be able to
8050 get to the surface again. I fear there was a little temper in her
8051 reply. "I hope when we get to Lowick, I shall be more useful to you,
8052 and be able to enter a little more into what interests you."
8053
8054 "Doubtless, my dear," said Mr. Casaubon, with a slight bow. "The notes
8055 I have here made will want sifting, and you can, if you please, extract
8056 them under my direction."
8057
8058 "And all your notes," said Dorothea, whose heart had already burned
8059 within her on this subject, so that now she could not help speaking
8060 with her tongue. "All those rows of volumes--will you not now do what
8061 you used to speak of?--will you not make up your mind what part of them
8062 you will use, and begin to write the book which will make your vast
8063 knowledge useful to the world? I will write to your dictation, or I
8064 will copy and extract what you tell me: I can be of no other use."
8065 Dorothea, in a most unaccountable, darkly feminine manner, ended with a
8066 slight sob and eyes full of tears.
8067
8068 The excessive feeling manifested would alone have been highly
8069 disturbing to Mr. Casaubon, but there were other reasons why Dorothea's
8070 words were among the most cutting and irritating to him that she could
8071 have been impelled to use. She was as blind to his inward troubles as
8072 he to hers: she had not yet learned those hidden conflicts in her
8073 husband which claim our pity. She had not yet listened patiently to
8074 his heartbeats, but only felt that her own was beating violently. In
8075 Mr. Casaubon's ear, Dorothea's voice gave loud emphatic iteration to
8076 those muffled suggestions of consciousness which it was possible to
8077 explain as mere fancy, the illusion of exaggerated sensitiveness:
8078 always when such suggestions are unmistakably repeated from without,
8079 they are resisted as cruel and unjust. We are angered even by the full
8080 acceptance of our humiliating confessions--how much more by hearing in
8081 hard distinct syllables from the lips of a near observer, those
8082 confused murmurs which we try to call morbid, and strive against as if
8083 they were the oncoming of numbness! And this cruel outward accuser was
8084 there in the shape of a wife--nay, of a young bride, who, instead of
8085 observing his abundant pen-scratches and amplitude of paper with the
8086 uncritical awe of an elegant-minded canary-bird, seemed to present
8087 herself as a spy watching everything with a malign power of inference.
8088 Here, towards this particular point of the compass, Mr. Casaubon had a
8089 sensitiveness to match Dorothea's, and an equal quickness to imagine
8090 more than the fact. He had formerly observed with approbation her
8091 capacity for worshipping the right object; he now foresaw with sudden
8092 terror that this capacity might be replaced by presumption, this
8093 worship by the most exasperating of all criticism,--that which sees
8094 vaguely a great many fine ends, and has not the least notion what it
8095 costs to reach them.
8096
8097 For the first time since Dorothea had known him, Mr. Casaubon's face
8098 had a quick angry flush upon it.
8099
8100 "My love," he said, with irritation reined in by propriety, "you may
8101 rely upon me for knowing the times and the seasons, adapted to the
8102 different stages of a work which is not to be measured by the facile
8103 conjectures of ignorant onlookers. It had been easy for me to gain a
8104 temporary effect by a mirage of baseless opinion; but it is ever the
8105 trial of the scrupulous explorer to be saluted with the impatient scorn
8106 of chatterers who attempt only the smallest achievements, being indeed
8107 equipped for no other. And it were well if all such could be
8108 admonished to discriminate judgments of which the true subject-matter
8109 lies entirely beyond their reach, from those of which the elements may
8110 be compassed by a narrow and superficial survey."
8111
8112 This speech was delivered with an energy and readiness quite unusual
8113 with Mr. Casaubon. It was not indeed entirely an improvisation, but
8114 had taken shape in inward colloquy, and rushed out like the round
8115 grains from a fruit when sudden heat cracks it. Dorothea was not only
8116 his wife: she was a personification of that shallow world which
8117 surrounds the appreciated or desponding author.
8118
8119 Dorothea was indignant in her turn. Had she not been repressing
8120 everything in herself except the desire to enter into some fellowship
8121 with her husband's chief interests?
8122
8123 "My judgment _was_ a very superficial one--such as I am capable of
8124 forming," she answered, with a prompt resentment, that needed no
8125 rehearsal. "You showed me the rows of notebooks--you have often spoken
8126 of them--you have often said that they wanted digesting. But I never
8127 heard you speak of the writing that is to be published. Those were
8128 very simple facts, and my judgment went no farther. I only begged you
8129 to let me be of some good to you."
8130
8131 Dorothea rose to leave the table and Mr. Casaubon made no reply, taking
8132 up a letter which lay beside him as if to reperuse it. Both were
8133 shocked at their mutual situation--that each should have betrayed anger
8134 towards the other. If they had been at home, settled at Lowick in
8135 ordinary life among their neighbors, the clash would have been less
8136 embarrassing: but on a wedding journey, the express object of which is
8137 to isolate two people on the ground that they are all the world to each
8138 other, the sense of disagreement is, to say the least, confounding and
8139 stultifying. To have changed your longitude extensively and placed
8140 yourselves in a moral solitude in order to have small explosions, to
8141 find conversation difficult and to hand a glass of water without
8142 looking, can hardly be regarded as satisfactory fulfilment even to the
8143 toughest minds. To Dorothea's inexperienced sensitiveness, it seemed
8144 like a catastrophe, changing all prospects; and to Mr. Casaubon it was
8145 a new pain, he never having been on a wedding journey before, or found
8146 himself in that close union which was more of a subjection than he had
8147 been able to imagine, since this charming young bride not only obliged
8148 him to much consideration on her behalf (which he had sedulously
8149 given), but turned out to be capable of agitating him cruelly just
8150 where he most needed soothing. Instead of getting a soft fence against
8151 the cold, shadowy, unapplausive audience of his life, had he only given
8152 it a more substantial presence?
8153
8154 Neither of them felt it possible to speak again at present. To have
8155 reversed a previous arrangement and declined to go out would have been
8156 a show of persistent anger which Dorothea's conscience shrank from,
8157 seeing that she already began to feel herself guilty. However just her
8158 indignation might be, her ideal was not to claim justice, but to give
8159 tenderness. So when the carriage came to the door, she drove with Mr.
8160 Casaubon to the Vatican, walked with him through the stony avenue of
8161 inscriptions, and when she parted with him at the entrance to the
8162 Library, went on through the Museum out of mere listlessness as to what
8163 was around her. She had not spirit to turn round and say that she
8164 would drive anywhere. It was when Mr. Casaubon was quitting her that
8165 Naumann had first seen her, and he had entered the long gallery of
8166 sculpture at the same time with her; but here Naumann had to await
8167 Ladislaw with whom he was to settle a bet of champagne about an
8168 enigmatical mediaeval-looking figure there. After they had examined
8169 the figure, and had walked on finishing their dispute, they had parted,
8170 Ladislaw lingering behind while Naumann had gone into the Hall of
8171 Statues where he again saw Dorothea, and saw her in that brooding
8172 abstraction which made her pose remarkable. She did not really see the
8173 streak of sunlight on the floor more than she saw the statues: she was
8174 inwardly seeing the light of years to come in her own home and over the
8175 English fields and elms and hedge-bordered highroads; and feeling that
8176 the way in which they might be filled with joyful devotedness was not
8177 so clear to her as it had been. But in Dorothea's mind there was a
8178 current into which all thought and feeling were apt sooner or later to
8179 flow--the reaching forward of the whole consciousness towards the
8180 fullest truth, the least partial good. There was clearly something
8181 better than anger and despondency.
8182
8183
8184
8185 CHAPTER XXI.
8186
8187 "Hire facounde eke full womanly and plain,
8188 No contrefeted termes had she
8189 To semen wise."
8190 --CHAUCER.
8191
8192
8193 It was in that way Dorothea came to be sobbing as soon as she was
8194 securely alone. But she was presently roused by a knock at the door,
8195 which made her hastily dry her eyes before saying, "Come in." Tantripp
8196 had brought a card, and said that there was a gentleman waiting in the
8197 lobby. The courier had told him that only Mrs. Casaubon was at home,
8198 but he said he was a relation of Mr. Casaubon's: would she see him?
8199
8200 "Yes," said Dorothea, without pause; "show him into the salon." Her
8201 chief impressions about young Ladislaw were that when she had seen him
8202 at Lowick she had been made aware of Mr. Casaubon's generosity towards
8203 him, and also that she had been interested in his own hesitation about
8204 his career. She was alive to anything that gave her an opportunity for
8205 active sympathy, and at this moment it seemed as if the visit had come
8206 to shake her out of her self-absorbed discontent--to remind her of her
8207 husband's goodness, and make her feel that she had now the right to be
8208 his helpmate in all kind deeds. She waited a minute or two, but when
8209 she passed into the next room there were just signs enough that she had
8210 been crying to make her open face look more youthful and appealing than
8211 usual. She met Ladislaw with that exquisite smile of good-will which
8212 is unmixed with vanity, and held out her hand to him. He was the elder
8213 by several years, but at that moment he looked much the younger, for
8214 his transparent complexion flushed suddenly, and he spoke with a
8215 shyness extremely unlike the ready indifference of his manner with his
8216 male companion, while Dorothea became all the calmer with a wondering
8217 desire to put him at ease.
8218
8219 "I was not aware that you and Mr. Casaubon were in Rome, until this
8220 morning, when I saw you in the Vatican Museum," he said. "I knew you
8221 at once--but--I mean, that I concluded Mr. Casaubon's address would be
8222 found at the Poste Restante, and I was anxious to pay my respects to
8223 him and you as early as possible."
8224
8225 "Pray sit down. He is not here now, but he will be glad to hear of
8226 you, I am sure," said Dorothea, seating herself unthinkingly between
8227 the fire and the light of the tall window, and pointing to a chair
8228 opposite, with the quietude of a benignant matron. The signs of
8229 girlish sorrow in her face were only the more striking. "Mr. Casaubon
8230 is much engaged; but you will leave your address--will you not?--and
8231 he will write to you."
8232
8233 "You are very good," said Ladislaw, beginning to lose his diffidence in
8234 the interest with which he was observing the signs of weeping which had
8235 altered her face. "My address is on my card. But if you will allow me
8236 I will call again to-morrow at an hour when Mr. Casaubon is likely to
8237 be at home."
8238
8239 "He goes to read in the Library of the Vatican every day, and you can
8240 hardly see him except by an appointment. Especially now. We are about
8241 to leave Rome, and he is very busy. He is usually away almost from
8242 breakfast till dinner. But I am sure he will wish you to dine with us."
8243
8244 Will Ladislaw was struck mute for a few moments. He had never been
8245 fond of Mr. Casaubon, and if it had not been for the sense of
8246 obligation, would have laughed at him as a Bat of erudition. But the
8247 idea of this dried-up pedant, this elaborator of small explanations
8248 about as important as the surplus stock of false antiquities kept in a
8249 vendor's back chamber, having first got this adorable young creature to
8250 marry him, and then passing his honeymoon away from her, groping after
8251 his mouldy futilities (Will was given to hyperbole)--this sudden
8252 picture stirred him with a sort of comic disgust: he was divided
8253 between the impulse to laugh aloud and the equally unseasonable impulse
8254 to burst into scornful invective.
8255
8256 For an instant he felt that the struggle, was causing a queer
8257 contortion of his mobile features, but with a good effort he resolved
8258 it into nothing more offensive than a merry smile.
8259
8260 Dorothea wondered; but the smile was irresistible, and shone back from
8261 her face too. Will Ladislaw's smile was delightful, unless you were
8262 angry with him beforehand: it was a gush of inward light illuminating
8263 the transparent skin as well as the eyes, and playing about every curve
8264 and line as if some Ariel were touching them with a new charm, and
8265 banishing forever the traces of moodiness. The reflection of that
8266 smile could not but have a little merriment in it too, even under dark
8267 eyelashes still moist, as Dorothea said inquiringly, "Something amuses
8268 you?"
8269
8270 "Yes," said Will, quick in finding resources. "I am thinking of the
8271 sort of figure I cut the first time I saw you, when you annihilated my
8272 poor sketch with your criticism."
8273
8274 "My criticism?" said Dorothea, wondering still more. "Surely not. I
8275 always feel particularly ignorant about painting."
8276
8277 "I suspected you of knowing so much, that you knew how to say just what
8278 was most cutting. You said--I dare say you don't remember it as I
8279 do--that the relation of my sketch to nature was quite hidden from you.
8280 At least, you implied that." Will could laugh now as well as smile.
8281
8282 "That was really my ignorance," said Dorothea, admiring
8283 Will's good-humor. "I must have said so only because I never could see
8284 any beauty in the pictures which my uncle told me all judges thought
8285 very fine. And I have gone about with just the same ignorance in Rome.
8286 There are comparatively few paintings that I can really enjoy. At
8287 first when I enter a room where the walls are covered with frescos, or
8288 with rare pictures, I feel a kind of awe--like a child present at great
8289 ceremonies where there are grand robes and processions; I feel myself
8290 in the presence of some higher life than my own. But when I begin to
8291 examine the pictures one by one the life goes out of them, or else is
8292 something violent and strange to me. It must be my own dulness. I am
8293 seeing so much all at once, and not understanding half of it. That
8294 always makes one feel stupid. It is painful to be told that anything
8295 is very fine and not be able to feel that it is fine--something like
8296 being blind, while people talk of the sky."
8297
8298 "Oh, there is a great deal in the feeling for art which must be
8299 acquired," said Will. (It was impossible now to doubt the directness
8300 of Dorothea's confession.) "Art is an old language with a great many
8301 artificial affected styles, and sometimes the chief pleasure one gets
8302 out of knowing them is the mere sense of knowing. I enjoy the art of
8303 all sorts here immensely; but I suppose if I could pick my enjoyment to
8304 pieces I should find it made up of many different threads. There is
8305 something in daubing a little one's self, and having an idea of the
8306 process."
8307
8308 "You mean perhaps to be a painter?" said Dorothea, with a new direction
8309 of interest. "You mean to make painting your profession? Mr. Casaubon
8310 will like to hear that you have chosen a profession."
8311
8312 "No, oh no," said Will, with some coldness. "I have quite made up my
8313 mind against it. It is too one-sided a life. I have been seeing a
8314 great deal of the German artists here: I travelled from Frankfort with
8315 one of them. Some are fine, even brilliant fellows--but I should not
8316 like to get into their way of looking at the world entirely from the
8317 studio point of view."
8318
8319 "That I can understand," said Dorothea, cordially. "And in Rome it
8320 seems as if there were so many things which are more wanted in the
8321 world than pictures. But if you have a genius for painting, would it
8322 not be right to take that as a guide? Perhaps you might do better
8323 things than these--or different, so that there might not be so many
8324 pictures almost all alike in the same place."
8325
8326 There was no mistaking this simplicity, and Will was won by it into
8327 frankness. "A man must have a very rare genius to make changes of that
8328 sort. I am afraid mine would not carry me even to the pitch of doing
8329 well what has been done already, at least not so well as to make it
8330 worth while. And I should never succeed in anything by dint of
8331 drudgery. If things don't come easily to me I never get them."
8332
8333 "I have heard Mr. Casaubon say that he regrets your want of patience,"
8334 said Dorothea, gently. She was rather shocked at this mode of taking
8335 all life as a holiday.
8336
8337 "Yes, I know Mr. Casaubon's opinion. He and I differ."
8338
8339 The slight streak of contempt in this hasty reply offended Dorothea.
8340 She was all the more susceptible about Mr. Casaubon because of her
8341 morning's trouble.
8342
8343 "Certainly you differ," she said, rather proudly. "I did not think of
8344 comparing you: such power of persevering devoted labor as Mr.
8345 Casaubon's is not common."
8346
8347 Will saw that she was offended, but this only gave an additional
8348 impulse to the new irritation of his latent dislike towards Mr.
8349 Casaubon. It was too intolerable that Dorothea should be worshipping
8350 this husband: such weakness in a woman is pleasant to no man but the
8351 husband in question. Mortals are easily tempted to pinch the life out
8352 of their neighbor's buzzing glory, and think that such killing is no
8353 murder.
8354
8355 "No, indeed," he answered, promptly. "And therefore it is a pity that
8356 it should be thrown away, as so much English scholarship is, for want
8357 of knowing what is being done by the rest of the world. If Mr.
8358 Casaubon read German he would save himself a great deal of trouble."
8359
8360 "I do not understand you," said Dorothea, startled and anxious.
8361
8362 "I merely mean," said Will, in an offhand way, "that the Germans have
8363 taken the lead in historical inquiries, and they laugh at results which
8364 are got by groping about in woods with a pocket-compass while they have
8365 made good roads. When I was with Mr. Casaubon I saw that he deafened
8366 himself in that direction: it was almost against his will that he read
8367 a Latin treatise written by a German. I was very sorry."
8368
8369 Will only thought of giving a good pinch that would annihilate that
8370 vaunted laboriousness, and was unable to imagine the mode in which
8371 Dorothea would be wounded. Young Mr. Ladislaw was not at all deep
8372 himself in German writers; but very little achievement is required in
8373 order to pity another man's shortcomings.
8374
8375 Poor Dorothea felt a pang at the thought that the labor of her
8376 husband's life might be void, which left her no energy to spare for the
8377 question whether this young relative who was so much obliged to him
8378 ought not to have repressed his observation. She did not even speak,
8379 but sat looking at her hands, absorbed in the piteousness of that
8380 thought.
8381
8382 Will, however, having given that annihilating pinch, was rather
8383 ashamed, imagining from Dorothea's silence that he had offended her
8384 still more; and having also a conscience about plucking the
8385 tail-feathers from a benefactor.
8386
8387 "I regretted it especially," he resumed, taking the usual course from
8388 detraction to insincere eulogy, "because of my gratitude and respect
8389 towards my cousin. It would not signify so much in a man whose talents
8390 and character were less distinguished."
8391
8392 Dorothea raised her eyes, brighter than usual with excited feeling, and
8393 said in her saddest recitative, "How I wish I had learned German when I
8394 was at Lausanne! There were plenty of German teachers. But now I can
8395 be of no use."
8396
8397 There was a new light, but still a mysterious light, for Will in
8398 Dorothea's last words. The question how she had come to accept Mr.
8399 Casaubon--which he had dismissed when he first saw her by saying that
8400 she must be disagreeable in spite of appearances--was not now to be
8401 answered on any such short and easy method. Whatever else she might
8402 be, she was not disagreeable. She was not coldly clever and indirectly
8403 satirical, but adorably simple and full of feeling. She was an angel
8404 beguiled. It would be a unique delight to wait and watch for the
8405 melodious fragments in which her heart and soul came forth so directly
8406 and ingenuously. The Aeolian harp again came into his mind.
8407
8408 She must have made some original romance for herself in this marriage.
8409 And if Mr. Casaubon had been a dragon who had carried her off to his
8410 lair with his talons simply and without legal forms, it would have been
8411 an unavoidable feat of heroism to release her and fall at her feet.
8412 But he was something more unmanageable than a dragon: he was a
8413 benefactor with collective society at his back, and he was at that
8414 moment entering the room in all the unimpeachable correctness of his
8415 demeanor, while Dorothea was looking animated with a newly roused alarm
8416 and regret, and Will was looking animated with his admiring speculation
8417 about her feelings.
8418
8419 Mr. Casaubon felt a surprise which was quite unmixed with pleasure, but
8420 he did not swerve from his usual politeness of greeting, when Will rose
8421 and explained his presence. Mr. Casaubon was less happy than usual,
8422 and this perhaps made him look all the dimmer and more faded; else, the
8423 effect might easily have been produced by the contrast of his young
8424 cousin's appearance. The first impression on seeing Will was one of
8425 sunny brightness, which added to the uncertainty of his changing
8426 expression. Surely, his very features changed their form, his jaw
8427 looked sometimes large and sometimes small; and the little ripple in
8428 his nose was a preparation for metamorphosis. When he turned his head
8429 quickly his hair seemed to shake out light, and some persons thought
8430 they saw decided genius in this coruscation. Mr. Casaubon, on the
8431 contrary, stood rayless.
8432
8433 As Dorothea's eyes were turned anxiously on her husband she was perhaps
8434 not insensible to the contrast, but it was only mingled with other
8435 causes in making her more conscious of that new alarm on his behalf
8436 which was the first stirring of a pitying tenderness fed by the
8437 realities of his lot and not by her own dreams. Yet it was a source of
8438 greater freedom to her that Will was there; his young equality was
8439 agreeable, and also perhaps his openness to conviction. She felt an
8440 immense need of some one to speak to, and she had never before seen any
8441 one who seemed so quick and pliable, so likely to understand everything.
8442
8443 Mr. Casaubon gravely hoped that Will was passing his time profitably as
8444 well as pleasantly in Rome--had thought his intention was to remain in
8445 South Germany--but begged him to come and dine to-morrow, when he could
8446 converse more at large: at present he was somewhat weary. Ladislaw
8447 understood, and accepting the invitation immediately took his leave.
8448
8449 Dorothea's eyes followed her husband anxiously, while he sank down
8450 wearily at the end of a sofa, and resting his elbow supported his head
8451 and looked on the floor. A little flushed, and with bright eyes, she
8452 seated herself beside him, and said--
8453
8454 "Forgive me for speaking so hastily to you this morning. I was wrong.
8455 I fear I hurt you and made the day more burdensome."
8456
8457 "I am glad that you feel that, my dear," said Mr. Casaubon. He spoke
8458 quietly and bowed his head a little, but there was still an uneasy
8459 feeling in his eyes as he looked at her.
8460
8461 "But you do forgive me?" said Dorothea, with a quick sob. In her need
8462 for some manifestation of feeling she was ready to exaggerate her own
8463 fault. Would not love see returning penitence afar off, and fall on
8464 its neck and kiss it?
8465
8466 "My dear Dorothea--'who with repentance is not satisfied, is not of
8467 heaven nor earth:'--you do not think me worthy to be banished by that
8468 severe sentence," said Mr. Casaubon, exerting himself to make a strong
8469 statement, and also to smile faintly.
8470
8471 Dorothea was silent, but a tear which had come up with the sob would
8472 insist on falling.
8473
8474 "You are excited, my dear. And I also am feeling some unpleasant
8475 consequences of too much mental disturbance," said Mr. Casaubon. In
8476 fact, he had it in his thought to tell her that she ought not to have
8477 received young Ladislaw in his absence: but he abstained, partly from
8478 the sense that it would be ungracious to bring a new complaint in the
8479 moment of her penitent acknowledgment, partly because he wanted to
8480 avoid further agitation of himself by speech, and partly because he was
8481 too proud to betray that jealousy of disposition which was not so
8482 exhausted on his scholarly compeers that there was none to spare in
8483 other directions. There is a sort of jealousy which needs very little
8484 fire: it is hardly a passion, but a blight bred in the cloudy, damp
8485 despondency of uneasy egoism.
8486
8487 "I think it is time for us to dress," he added, looking at his watch.
8488 They both rose, and there was never any further allusion between them
8489 to what had passed on this day.
8490
8491 But Dorothea remembered it to the last with the vividness with which we
8492 all remember epochs in our experience when some dear expectation dies,
8493 or some new motive is born. Today she had begun to see that she had
8494 been under a wild illusion in expecting a response to her feeling from
8495 Mr. Casaubon, and she had felt the waking of a presentiment that there
8496 might be a sad consciousness in his life which made as great a need on
8497 his side as on her own.
8498
8499 We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder
8500 to feed our supreme selves: Dorothea had early begun to emerge from
8501 that stupidity, but yet it had been easier to her to imagine how she
8502 would devote herself to Mr. Casaubon, and become wise and strong in his
8503 strength and wisdom, than to conceive with that distinctness which is
8504 no longer reflection but feeling--an idea wrought back to the
8505 directness of sense, like the solidity of objects--that he had an
8506 equivalent centre of self, whence the lights and shadows must always
8507 fall with a certain difference.
8508
8509
8510
8511 CHAPTER XXII.
8512
8513 "Nous câusames longtemps; elle était simple et bonne.
8514 Ne sachant pas le mal, elle faisait le bien;
8515 Des richesses du coeur elle me fit l'aumône,
8516 Et tout en écoutant comme le coeur se donne,
8517 Sans oser y penser je lui donnai le mien;
8518 Elle emporta ma vie, et n'en sut jamais rien."
8519 --ALFRED DE MUSSET.
8520
8521
8522 Will Ladislaw was delightfully agreeable at dinner the next day, and
8523 gave no opportunity for Mr. Casaubon to show disapprobation. On the
8524 contrary it seemed to Dorothea that Will had a happier way of drawing
8525 her husband into conversation and of deferentially listening to him
8526 than she had ever observed in any one before. To be sure, the
8527 listeners about Tipton were not highly gifted! Will talked a good deal
8528 himself, but what he said was thrown in with such rapidity, and with
8529 such an unimportant air of saying something by the way, that it seemed
8530 a gay little chime after the great bell. If Will was not always
8531 perfect, this was certainly one of his good days. He described touches
8532 of incident among the poor people in Rome, only to be seen by one who
8533 could move about freely; he found himself in agreement with Mr.
8534 Casaubon as to the unsound opinions of Middleton concerning the
8535 relations of Judaism and Catholicism; and passed easily to a
8536 half-enthusiastic half-playful picture of the enjoyment he got out of
8537 the very miscellaneousness of Rome, which made the mind flexible with
8538 constant comparison, and saved you from seeing the world's ages as a
8539 set of box-like partitions without vital connection. Mr. Casaubon's
8540 studies, Will observed, had always been of too broad a kind for that,
8541 and he had perhaps never felt any such sudden effect, but for himself
8542 he confessed that Rome had given him quite a new sense of history as a
8543 whole: the fragments stimulated his imagination and made him
8544 constructive. Then occasionally, but not too often, he appealed to
8545 Dorothea, and discussed what she said, as if her sentiment were an item
8546 to be considered in the final judgment even of the Madonna di Foligno
8547 or the Laocoon. A sense of contributing to form the world's opinion
8548 makes conversation particularly cheerful; and Mr. Casaubon too was not
8549 without his pride in his young wife, who spoke better than most women,
8550 as indeed he had perceived in choosing her.
8551
8552 Since things were going on so pleasantly, Mr. Casaubon's statement that
8553 his labors in the Library would be suspended for a couple of days, and
8554 that after a brief renewal he should have no further reason for staying
8555 in Rome, encouraged Will to urge that Mrs. Casaubon should not go away
8556 without seeing a studio or two. Would not Mr. Casaubon take her? That
8557 sort of thing ought not to be missed: it was quite special: it was a
8558 form of life that grew like a small fresh vegetation with its
8559 population of insects on huge fossils. Will would be happy to conduct
8560 them--not to anything wearisome, only to a few examples.
8561
8562 Mr. Casaubon, seeing Dorothea look earnestly towards him, could not but
8563 ask her if she would be interested in such visits: he was now at her
8564 service during the whole day; and it was agreed that Will should come
8565 on the morrow and drive with them.
8566
8567 Will could not omit Thorwaldsen, a living celebrity about whom even Mr.
8568 Casaubon inquired, but before the day was far advanced he led the way
8569 to the studio of his friend Adolf Naumann, whom he mentioned as one of
8570 the chief renovators of Christian art, one of those who had not only
8571 revived but expanded that grand conception of supreme events as
8572 mysteries at which the successive ages were spectators, and in relation
8573 to which the great souls of all periods became as it were
8574 contemporaries. Will added that he had made himself Naumann's pupil
8575 for the nonce.
8576
8577 "I have been making some oil-sketches under him," said Will. "I hate
8578 copying. I must put something of my own in. Naumann has been painting
8579 the Saints drawing the Car of the Church, and I have been making a
8580 sketch of Marlowe's Tamburlaine Driving the Conquered Kings in his
8581 Chariot. I am not so ecclesiastical as Naumann, and I sometimes twit
8582 him with his excess of meaning. But this time I mean to outdo him in
8583 breadth of intention. I take Tamburlaine in his chariot for the
8584 tremendous course of the world's physical history lashing on the
8585 harnessed dynasties. In my opinion, that is a good mythical
8586 interpretation." Will here looked at Mr. Casaubon, who received this
8587 offhand treatment of symbolism very uneasily, and bowed with a neutral
8588 air.
8589
8590 "The sketch must be very grand, if it conveys so much," said Dorothea.
8591 "I should need some explanation even of the meaning you give. Do you
8592 intend Tamburlaine to represent earthquakes and volcanoes?"
8593
8594 "Oh yes," said Will, laughing, "and migrations of races and clearings
8595 of forests--and America and the steam-engine. Everything you can
8596 imagine!"
8597
8598 "What a difficult kind of shorthand!" said Dorothea, smiling towards
8599 her husband. "It would require all your knowledge to be able to read
8600 it."
8601
8602 Mr. Casaubon blinked furtively at Will. He had a suspicion that he was
8603 being laughed at. But it was not possible to include Dorothea in the
8604 suspicion.
8605
8606 They found Naumann painting industriously, but no model was present;
8607 his pictures were advantageously arranged, and his own plain vivacious
8608 person set off by a dove-colored blouse and a maroon velvet cap, so
8609 that everything was as fortunate as if he had expected the beautiful
8610 young English lady exactly at that time.
8611
8612 The painter in his confident English gave little dissertations on his
8613 finished and unfinished subjects, seeming to observe Mr. Casaubon as
8614 much as he did Dorothea. Will burst in here and there with ardent
8615 words of praise, marking out particular merits in his friend's work;
8616 and Dorothea felt that she was getting quite new notions as to the
8617 significance of Madonnas seated under inexplicable canopied thrones
8618 with the simple country as a background, and of saints with
8619 architectural models in their hands, or knives accidentally wedged in
8620 their skulls. Some things which had seemed monstrous to her were
8621 gathering intelligibility and even a natural meaning: but all this was
8622 apparently a branch of knowledge in which Mr. Casaubon had not
8623 interested himself.
8624
8625 "I think I would rather feel that painting is beautiful than have to
8626 read it as an enigma; but I should learn to understand these pictures
8627 sooner than yours with the very wide meaning," said Dorothea, speaking
8628 to Will.
8629
8630 "Don't speak of my painting before Naumann," said Will. "He will tell
8631 you, it is all pfuscherei, which is his most opprobrious word!"
8632
8633 "Is that true?" said Dorothea, turning her sincere eyes on Naumann, who
8634 made a slight grimace and said--
8635
8636 "Oh, he does not mean it seriously with painting. His walk must be
8637 belles-lettres. That is wi-ide."
8638
8639 Naumann's pronunciation of the vowel seemed to stretch the word
8640 satirically. Will did not half like it, but managed to laugh: and Mr.
8641 Casaubon, while he felt some disgust at the artist's German accent,
8642 began to entertain a little respect for his judicious severity.
8643
8644 The respect was not diminished when Naumann, after drawing Will aside
8645 for a moment and looking, first at a large canvas, then at Mr.
8646 Casaubon, came forward again and said--
8647
8648 "My friend Ladislaw thinks you will pardon me, sir, if I say that a
8649 sketch of your head would be invaluable to me for the St. Thomas
8650 Aquinas in my picture there. It is too much to ask; but I so seldom
8651 see just what I want--the idealistic in the real."
8652
8653 "You astonish me greatly, sir," said Mr. Casaubon, his looks improved
8654 with a glow of delight; "but if my poor physiognomy, which I have been
8655 accustomed to regard as of the commonest order, can be of any use to
8656 you in furnishing some traits for the angelical doctor, I shall feel
8657 honored. That is to say, if the operation will not be a lengthy one;
8658 and if Mrs. Casaubon will not object to the delay."
8659
8660 As for Dorothea, nothing could have pleased her more, unless it had
8661 been a miraculous voice pronouncing Mr. Casaubon the wisest and
8662 worthiest among the sons of men. In that case her tottering faith
8663 would have become firm again.
8664
8665 Naumann's apparatus was at hand in wonderful completeness, and the
8666 sketch went on at once as well as the conversation. Dorothea sat down
8667 and subsided into calm silence, feeling happier than she had done for a
8668 long while before. Every one about her seemed good, and she said to
8669 herself that Rome, if she had only been less ignorant, would have been
8670 full of beauty: its sadness would have been winged with hope. No nature
8671 could be less suspicious than hers: when she was a child she believed
8672 in the gratitude of wasps and the honorable susceptibility of sparrows,
8673 and was proportionately indignant when their baseness was made manifest.
8674
8675 The adroit artist was asking Mr. Casaubon questions about English
8676 polities, which brought long answers, and, Will meanwhile had perched
8677 himself on some steps in the background overlooking all.
8678
8679 Presently Naumann said--"Now if I could lay this by for half an hour
8680 and take it up again--come and look, Ladislaw--I think it is perfect so
8681 far."
8682
8683 Will vented those adjuring interjections which imply that admiration is
8684 too strong for syntax; and Naumann said in a tone of piteous regret--
8685
8686 "Ah--now--if I could but have had more--but you have other
8687 engagements--I could not ask it--or even to come again to-morrow."
8688
8689 "Oh, let us stay!" said Dorothea. "We have nothing to do to-day except
8690 go about, have we?" she added, looking entreatingly at Mr. Casaubon.
8691 "It would be a pity not to make the head as good as possible."
8692
8693 "I am at your service, sir, in the matter," said Mr. Casaubon, with
8694 polite condescension. "Having given up the interior of my head to
8695 idleness, it is as well that the exterior should work in this way."
8696
8697 "You are unspeakably good--now I am happy!" said Naumann, and then went
8698 on in German to Will, pointing here and there to the sketch as if he
8699 were considering that. Putting it aside for a moment, he looked round
8700 vaguely, as if seeking some occupation for his visitors, and afterwards
8701 turning to Mr. Casaubon, said--
8702
8703 "Perhaps the beautiful bride, the gracious lady, would not be unwilling
8704 to let me fill up the time by trying to make a slight sketch of
8705 her--not, of course, as you see, for that picture--only as a single
8706 study."
8707
8708 Mr. Casaubon, bowing, doubted not that Mrs. Casaubon would oblige him,
8709 and Dorothea said, at once, "Where shall I put myself?"
8710
8711 Naumann was all apologies in asking her to stand, and allow him to
8712 adjust her attitude, to which she submitted without any of the affected
8713 airs and laughs frequently thought necessary on such occasions, when
8714 the painter said, "It is as Santa Clara that I want you to
8715 stand--leaning so, with your cheek against your hand--so--looking at
8716 that stool, please, so!"
8717
8718 Will was divided between the inclination to fall at the Saint's feet
8719 and kiss her robe, and the temptation to knock Naumann down while he
8720 was adjusting her arm. All this was impudence and desecration, and he
8721 repented that he had brought her.
8722
8723 The artist was diligent, and Will recovering himself moved about and
8724 occupied Mr. Casaubon as ingeniously as he could; but he did not in the
8725 end prevent the time from seeming long to that gentleman, as was clear
8726 from his expressing a fear that Mrs. Casaubon would be tired. Naumann
8727 took the hint and said--
8728
8729 "Now, sir, if you can oblige me again; I will release the lady-wife."
8730
8731 So Mr. Casaubon's patience held out further, and when after all it
8732 turned out that the head of Saint Thomas Aquinas would be more perfect
8733 if another sitting could be had, it was granted for the morrow. On the
8734 morrow Santa Clara too was retouched more than once. The result of all
8735 was so far from displeasing to Mr. Casaubon, that he arranged for the
8736 purchase of the picture in which Saint Thomas Aquinas sat among the
8737 doctors of the Church in a disputation too abstract to be represented,
8738 but listened to with more or less attention by an audience above. The
8739 Santa Clara, which was spoken of in the second place, Naumann declared
8740 himself to be dissatisfied with--he could not, in conscience, engage
8741 to make a worthy picture of it; so about the Santa Clara the
8742 arrangement was conditional.
8743
8744 I will not dwell on Naumann's jokes at the expense of Mr. Casaubon that
8745 evening, or on his dithyrambs about Dorothea's charm, in all which Will
8746 joined, but with a difference. No sooner did Naumann mention any
8747 detail of Dorothea's beauty, than Will got exasperated at his
8748 presumption: there was grossness in his choice of the most ordinary
8749 words, and what business had he to talk of her lips? She was not a
8750 woman to be spoken of as other women were. Will could not say just
8751 what he thought, but he became irritable. And yet, when after some
8752 resistance he had consented to take the Casaubons to his friend's
8753 studio, he had been allured by the gratification of his pride in being
8754 the person who could grant Naumann such an opportunity of studying her
8755 loveliness--or rather her divineness, for the ordinary phrases which
8756 might apply to mere bodily prettiness were not applicable to her.
8757 (Certainly all Tipton and its neighborhood, as well as Dorothea
8758 herself, would have been surprised at her beauty being made so much of.
8759 In that part of the world Miss Brooke had been only a "fine young
8760 woman.")
8761
8762 "Oblige me by letting the subject drop, Naumann. Mrs. Casaubon is not
8763 to be talked of as if she were a model," said Will. Naumann stared at
8764 him.
8765
8766 "Schon! I will talk of my Aquinas. The head is not a bad type, after
8767 all. I dare say the great scholastic himself would have been flattered
8768 to have his portrait asked for. Nothing like these starchy doctors for
8769 vanity! It was as I thought: he cared much less for her portrait than
8770 his own."
8771
8772 "He's a cursed white-blooded pedantic coxcomb," said Will, with
8773 gnashing impetuosity. His obligations to Mr. Casaubon were not known
8774 to his hearer, but Will himself was thinking of them, and wishing that
8775 he could discharge them all by a check.
8776
8777 Naumann gave a shrug and said, "It is good they go away soon, my dear.
8778 They are spoiling your fine temper."
8779
8780 All Will's hope and contrivance were now concentrated on seeing
8781 Dorothea when she was alone. He only wanted her to take more emphatic
8782 notice of him; he only wanted to be something more special in her
8783 remembrance than he could yet believe himself likely to be. He was
8784 rather impatient under that open ardent good-will, which he saw was her
8785 usual state of feeling. The remote worship of a woman throned out of
8786 their reach plays a great part in men's lives, but in most cases the
8787 worshipper longs for some queenly recognition, some approving sign by
8788 which his soul's sovereign may cheer him without descending from her
8789 high place. That was precisely what Will wanted. But there were
8790 plenty of contradictions in his imaginative demands. It was beautiful
8791 to see how Dorothea's eyes turned with wifely anxiety and beseeching to
8792 Mr. Casaubon: she would have lost some of her halo if she had been
8793 without that duteous preoccupation; and yet at the next moment the
8794 husband's sandy absorption of such nectar was too intolerable; and
8795 Will's longing to say damaging things about him was perhaps not the
8796 less tormenting because he felt the strongest reasons for restraining
8797 it.
8798
8799 Will had not been invited to dine the next day. Hence he persuaded
8800 himself that he was bound to call, and that the only eligible time was
8801 the middle of the day, when Mr. Casaubon would not be at home.
8802
8803 Dorothea, who had not been made aware that her former reception of Will
8804 had displeased her husband, had no hesitation about seeing him,
8805 especially as he might be come to pay a farewell visit. When he
8806 entered she was looking at some cameos which she had been buying for
8807 Celia. She greeted Will as if his visit were quite a matter of course,
8808 and said at once, having a cameo bracelet in her hand--
8809
8810 "I am so glad you are come. Perhaps you understand all about cameos,
8811 and can tell me if these are really good. I wished to have you with us
8812 in choosing them, but Mr. Casaubon objected: he thought there was not
8813 time. He will finish his work to-morrow, and we shall go away in three
8814 days. I have been uneasy about these cameos. Pray sit down and look
8815 at them."
8816
8817 "I am not particularly knowing, but there can be no great mistake about
8818 these little Homeric bits: they are exquisitely neat. And the color is
8819 fine: it will just suit you."
8820
8821 "Oh, they are for my sister, who has quite a different complexion. You
8822 saw her with me at Lowick: she is light-haired and very pretty--at
8823 least I think so. We were never so long away from each other in our
8824 lives before. She is a great pet and never was naughty in her life. I
8825 found out before I came away that she wanted me to buy her some cameos,
8826 and I should be sorry for them not to be good--after their kind."
8827 Dorothea added the last words with a smile.
8828
8829 "You seem not to care about cameos," said Will, seating himself at some
8830 distance from her, and observing her while she closed the cases.
8831
8832 "No, frankly, I don't think them a great object in life," said Dorothea
8833
8834 "I fear you are a heretic about art generally. How is that? I should
8835 have expected you to be very sensitive to the beautiful everywhere."
8836
8837 "I suppose I am dull about many things," said Dorothea, simply. "I
8838 should like to make life beautiful--I mean everybody's life. And then
8839 all this immense expense of art, that seems somehow to lie outside life
8840 and make it no better for the world, pains one. It spoils my enjoyment
8841 of anything when I am made to think that most people are shut out from
8842 it."
8843
8844 "I call that the fanaticism of sympathy," said Will, impetuously. "You
8845 might say the same of landscape, of poetry, of all refinement. If you
8846 carried it out you ought to be miserable in your own goodness, and turn
8847 evil that you might have no advantage over others. The best piety is
8848 to enjoy--when you can. You are doing the most then to save the
8849 earth's character as an agreeable planet. And enjoyment radiates. It
8850 is of no use to try and take care of all the world; that is being taken
8851 care of when you feel delight--in art or in anything else. Would you
8852 turn all the youth of the world into a tragic chorus, wailing and
8853 moralizing over misery? I suspect that you have some false belief in
8854 the virtues of misery, and want to make your life a martyrdom." Will
8855 had gone further than he intended, and checked himself. But Dorothea's
8856 thought was not taking just the same direction as his own, and she
8857 answered without any special emotion--
8858
8859 "Indeed you mistake me. I am not a sad, melancholy creature. I am
8860 never unhappy long together. I am angry and naughty--not like Celia: I
8861 have a great outburst, and then all seems glorious again. I cannot
8862 help believing in glorious things in a blind sort of way. I should be
8863 quite willing to enjoy the art here, but there is so much that I don't
8864 know the reason of--so much that seems to me a consecration of ugliness
8865 rather than beauty. The painting and sculpture may be wonderful, but
8866 the feeling is often low and brutal, and sometimes even ridiculous.
8867 Here and there I see what takes me at once as noble--something that I
8868 might compare with the Alban Mountains or the sunset from the Pincian
8869 Hill; but that makes it the greater pity that there is so little of the
8870 best kind among all that mass of things over which men have toiled so."
8871
8872 "Of course there is always a great deal of poor work: the rarer things
8873 want that soil to grow in."
8874
8875 "Oh dear," said Dorothea, taking up that thought into the chief current
8876 of her anxiety; "I see it must be very difficult to do anything good.
8877 I have often felt since I have been in Rome that most of our lives
8878 would look much uglier and more bungling than the pictures, if they
8879 could be put on the wall."
8880
8881 Dorothea parted her lips again as if she were going to say more, but
8882 changed her mind and paused.
8883
8884 "You are too young--it is an anachronism for you to have such
8885 thoughts," said Will, energetically, with a quick shake of the head
8886 habitual to him. "You talk as if you had never known any youth. It is
8887 monstrous--as if you had had a vision of Hades in your childhood, like
8888 the boy in the legend. You have been brought up in some of those
8889 horrible notions that choose the sweetest women to devour--like
8890 Minotaurs. And now you will go and be shut up in that stone prison at
8891 Lowick: you will be buried alive. It makes me savage to think of it!
8892 I would rather never have seen you than think of you with such a
8893 prospect."
8894
8895 Will again feared that he had gone too far; but the meaning we attach
8896 to words depends on our feeling, and his tone of angry regret had so
8897 much kindness in it for Dorothea's heart, which had always been giving
8898 out ardor and had never been fed with much from the living beings
8899 around her, that she felt a new sense of gratitude and answered with a
8900 gentle smile--
8901
8902 "It is very good of you to be anxious about me. It is because you did
8903 not like Lowick yourself: you had set your heart on another kind of
8904 life. But Lowick is my chosen home."
8905
8906 The last sentence was spoken with an almost solemn cadence, and Will
8907 did not know what to say, since it would not be useful for him to
8908 embrace her slippers, and tell her that he would die for her: it was
8909 clear that she required nothing of the sort; and they were both silent
8910 for a moment or two, when Dorothea began again with an air of saying at
8911 last what had been in her mind beforehand.
8912
8913 "I wanted to ask you again about something you said the other day.
8914 Perhaps it was half of it your lively way of speaking: I notice that
8915 you like to put things strongly; I myself often exaggerate when I speak
8916 hastily."
8917
8918 "What was it?" said Will, observing that she spoke with a timidity
8919 quite new in her. "I have a hyperbolical tongue: it catches fire as it
8920 goes. I dare say I shall have to retract."
8921
8922 "I mean what you said about the necessity of knowing German--I mean,
8923 for the subjects that Mr. Casaubon is engaged in. I have been thinking
8924 about it; and it seems to me that with Mr. Casaubon's learning he must
8925 have before him the same materials as German scholars--has he not?"
8926 Dorothea's timidity was due to an indistinct consciousness that she was
8927 in the strange situation of consulting a third person about the
8928 adequacy of Mr. Casaubon's learning.
8929
8930 "Not exactly the same materials," said Will, thinking that he would be
8931 duly reserved. "He is not an Orientalist, you know. He does not
8932 profess to have more than second-hand knowledge there."
8933
8934 "But there are very valuable books about antiquities which were written
8935 a long while ago by scholars who knew nothing about these modern
8936 things; and they are still used. Why should Mr. Casaubon's not be
8937 valuable, like theirs?" said Dorothea, with more remonstrant energy.
8938 She was impelled to have the argument aloud, which she had been having
8939 in her own mind.
8940
8941 "That depends on the line of study taken," said Will, also getting a
8942 tone of rejoinder. "The subject Mr. Casaubon has chosen is as changing
8943 as chemistry: new discoveries are constantly making new points of view.
8944 Who wants a system on the basis of the four elements, or a book to
8945 refute Paracelsus? Do you not see that it is no use now to be crawling
8946 a little way after men of the last century--men like Bryant--and
8947 correcting their mistakes?--living in a lumber-room and furbishing up
8948 broken-legged theories about Chus and Mizraim?"
8949
8950 "How can you bear to speak so lightly?" said Dorothea, with a look
8951 between sorrow and anger. "If it were as you say, what could be sadder
8952 than so much ardent labor all in vain? I wonder it does not affect you
8953 more painfully, if you really think that a man like Mr. Casaubon, of so
8954 much goodness, power, and learning, should in any way fail in what has
8955 been the labor of his best years." She was beginning to be shocked that
8956 she had got to such a point of supposition, and indignant with Will for
8957 having led her to it.
8958
8959 "You questioned me about the matter of fact, not of feeling," said
8960 Will. "But if you wish to punish me for the fact, I submit. I am not
8961 in a position to express my feeling toward Mr. Casaubon: it would be at
8962 best a pensioner's eulogy."
8963
8964 "Pray excuse me," said Dorothea, coloring deeply. "I am aware, as you
8965 say, that I am in fault in having introduced the subject. Indeed, I am
8966 wrong altogether. Failure after long perseverance is much grander than
8967 never to have a striving good enough to be called a failure."
8968
8969 "I quite agree with you," said Will, determined to change the
8970 situation--"so much so that I have made up my mind not to run that
8971 risk of never attaining a failure. Mr. Casaubon's generosity has
8972 perhaps been dangerous to me, and I mean to renounce the liberty it has
8973 given me. I mean to go back to England shortly and work my own
8974 way--depend on nobody else than myself."
8975
8976 "That is fine--I respect that feeling," said Dorothea, with returning
8977 kindness. "But Mr. Casaubon, I am sure, has never thought of anything
8978 in the matter except what was most for your welfare."
8979
8980 "She has obstinacy and pride enough to serve instead of love, now she
8981 has married him," said Will to himself. Aloud he said, rising--
8982
8983 "I shall not see you again."
8984
8985 "Oh, stay till Mr. Casaubon comes," said Dorothea, earnestly. "I am so
8986 glad we met in Rome. I wanted to know you."
8987
8988 "And I have made you angry," said Will. "I have made you think ill of
8989 me."
8990
8991 "Oh no. My sister tells me I am always angry with people who do not
8992 say just what I like. But I hope I am not given to think ill of them.
8993 In the end I am usually obliged to think ill of myself for being so
8994 impatient."
8995
8996 "Still, you don't like me; I have made myself an unpleasant thought to
8997 you."
8998
8999 "Not at all," said Dorothea, with the most open kindness. "I like you
9000 very much."
9001
9002 Will was not quite contented, thinking that he would apparently have
9003 been of more importance if he had been disliked. He said nothing, but
9004 looked dull, not to say sulky.
9005
9006 "And I am quite interested to see what you will do," Dorothea went on
9007 cheerfully. "I believe devoutly in a natural difference of vocation.
9008 If it were not for that belief, I suppose I should be very narrow--there
9009 are so many things, besides painting, that I am quite ignorant
9010 of. You would hardly believe how little I have taken in of music and
9011 literature, which you know so much of. I wonder what your vocation
9012 will turn out to be: perhaps you will be a poet?"
9013
9014 "That depends. To be a poet is to have a soul so quick to discern that
9015 no shade of quality escapes it, and so quick to feel, that discernment
9016 is but a hand playing with finely ordered variety on the chords of
9017 emotion--a soul in which knowledge passes instantaneously into feeling,
9018 and feeling flashes back as a new organ of knowledge. One may have
9019 that condition by fits only."
9020
9021 "But you leave out the poems," said Dorothea. "I think they are wanted
9022 to complete the poet. I understand what you mean about knowledge
9023 passing into feeling, for that seems to be just what I experience. But
9024 I am sure I could never produce a poem."
9025
9026 "You _are_ a poem--and that is to be the best part of a poet--what
9027 makes up the poet's consciousness in his best moods," said Will,
9028 showing such originality as we all share with the morning and the
9029 spring-time and other endless renewals.
9030
9031 "I am very glad to hear it," said Dorothea, laughing out her words in a
9032 bird-like modulation, and looking at Will with playful gratitude in her
9033 eyes. "What very kind things you say to me!"
9034
9035 "I wish I could ever do anything that would be what you call kind--that
9036 I could ever be of the slightest service to you. I fear I shall never
9037 have the opportunity." Will spoke with fervor.
9038
9039 "Oh yes," said Dorothea, cordially. "It will come; and I shall
9040 remember how well you wish me. I quite hoped that we should be friends
9041 when I first saw you--because of your relationship to Mr. Casaubon."
9042 There was a certain liquid brightness in her eyes, and Will was
9043 conscious that his own were obeying a law of nature and filling too.
9044 The allusion to Mr. Casaubon would have spoiled all if anything at that
9045 moment could have spoiled the subduing power, the sweet dignity, of her
9046 noble unsuspicious inexperience.
9047
9048 "And there is one thing even now that you can do," said Dorothea,
9049 rising and walking a little way under the strength of a recurring
9050 impulse. "Promise me that you will not again, to any one, speak of
9051 that subject--I mean about Mr. Casaubon's writings--I mean in that
9052 kind of way. It was I who led to it. It was my fault. But promise
9053 me."
9054
9055 She had returned from her brief pacing and stood opposite Will, looking
9056 gravely at him.
9057
9058 "Certainly, I will promise you," said Will, reddening however. If he
9059 never said a cutting word about Mr. Casaubon again and left off
9060 receiving favors from him, it would clearly be permissible to hate him
9061 the more. The poet must know how to hate, says Goethe; and Will was at
9062 least ready with that accomplishment. He said that he must go now
9063 without waiting for Mr. Casaubon, whom he would come to take leave of
9064 at the last moment. Dorothea gave him her hand, and they exchanged a
9065 simple "Good-by."
9066
9067 But going out of the porte cochere he met Mr. Casaubon, and that
9068 gentleman, expressing the best wishes for his cousin, politely waived
9069 the pleasure of any further leave-taking on the morrow, which would be
9070 sufficiently crowded with the preparations for departure.
9071
9072 "I have something to tell you about our cousin Mr. Ladislaw, which I
9073 think will heighten your opinion of him," said Dorothea to her husband
9074 in the coarse of the evening. She had mentioned immediately on his
9075 entering that Will had just gone away, and would come again, but Mr.
9076 Casaubon had said, "I met him outside, and we made our final adieux, I
9077 believe," saying this with the air and tone by which we imply that any
9078 subject, whether private or public, does not interest us enough to wish
9079 for a further remark upon it. So Dorothea had waited.
9080
9081 "What is that, my love?" said Mr Casaubon (he always said "my love"
9082 when his manner was the coldest).
9083
9084 "He has made up his mind to leave off wandering at once, and to give up
9085 his dependence on your generosity. He means soon to go back to
9086 England, and work his own way. I thought you would consider that a
9087 good sign," said Dorothea, with an appealing look into her husband's
9088 neutral face.
9089
9090 "Did he mention the precise order of occupation to which he would
9091 addict himself?"
9092
9093 "No. But he said that he felt the danger which lay for him in your
9094 generosity. Of course he will write to you about it. Do you not think
9095 better of him for his resolve?"
9096
9097 "I shall await his communication on the subject," said Mr. Casaubon.
9098
9099 "I told him I was sure that the thing you considered in all you did for
9100 him was his own welfare. I remembered your goodness in what you said
9101 about him when I first saw him at Lowick," said Dorothea, putting her
9102 hand on her husband's.
9103
9104 "I had a duty towards him," said Mr. Casaubon, laying his other hand on
9105 Dorothea's in conscientious acceptance of her caress, but with a glance
9106 which he could not hinder from being uneasy. "The young man, I
9107 confess, is not otherwise an object of interest to me, nor need we, I
9108 think, discuss his future course, which it is not ours to determine
9109 beyond the limits which I have sufficiently indicated." Dorothea did
9110 not mention Will again.
9111
9112
9113
9114
9115
9116 BOOK III.
9117
9118
9119
9120
9121
9122 WAITING FOR DEATH.
9123
9124
9125
9126 CHAPTER XXIII.
9127
9128 "Your horses of the Sun," he said,
9129 "And first-rate whip Apollo!
9130 Whate'er they be, I'll eat my head,
9131 But I will beat them hollow."
9132
9133
9134 Fred Vincy, we have seen, had a debt on his mind, and though no such
9135 immaterial burthen could depress that buoyant-hearted young gentleman
9136 for many hours together, there were circumstances connected with this
9137 debt which made the thought of it unusually importunate. The creditor
9138 was Mr. Bambridge a horse-dealer of the neighborhood, whose company was
9139 much sought in Middlemarch by young men understood to be "addicted to
9140 pleasure." During the vacations Fred had naturally required more
9141 amusements than he had ready money for, and Mr. Bambridge had been
9142 accommodating enough not only to trust him for the hire of horses and
9143 the accidental expense of ruining a fine hunter, but also to make a
9144 small advance by which he might be able to meet some losses at
9145 billiards. The total debt was a hundred and sixty pounds. Bambridge
9146 was in no alarm about his money, being sure that young Vincy had
9147 backers; but he had required something to show for it, and Fred had at
9148 first given a bill with his own signature. Three months later he had
9149 renewed this bill with the signature of Caleb Garth. On both occasions
9150 Fred had felt confident that he should meet the bill himself, having
9151 ample funds at disposal in his own hopefulness. You will hardly demand
9152 that his confidence should have a basis in external facts; such
9153 confidence, we know, is something less coarse and materialistic: it is
9154 a comfortable disposition leading us to expect that the wisdom of
9155 providence or the folly of our friends, the mysteries of luck or the
9156 still greater mystery of our high individual value in the universe,
9157 will bring about agreeable issues, such as are consistent with our good
9158 taste in costume, and our general preference for the best style of
9159 thing. Fred felt sure that he should have a present from his uncle,
9160 that he should have a run of luck, that by dint of "swapping" he should
9161 gradually metamorphose a horse worth forty pounds into a horse that
9162 would fetch a hundred at any moment--"judgment" being always equivalent
9163 to an unspecified sum in hard cash. And in any case, even supposing
9164 negations which only a morbid distrust could imagine, Fred had always
9165 (at that time) his father's pocket as a last resource, so that his
9166 assets of hopefulness had a sort of gorgeous superfluity about them.
9167 Of what might be the capacity of his father's pocket, Fred had only a
9168 vague notion: was not trade elastic? And would not the deficiencies of
9169 one year be made up for by the surplus of another? The Vincys lived in
9170 an easy profuse way, not with any new ostentation, but according to the
9171 family habits and traditions, so that the children had no standard of
9172 economy, and the elder ones retained some of their infantine notion
9173 that their father might pay for anything if he would. Mr. Vincy
9174 himself had expensive Middlemarch habits--spent money on coursing, on
9175 his cellar, and on dinner-giving, while mamma had those running
9176 accounts with tradespeople, which give a cheerful sense of getting
9177 everything one wants without any question of payment. But it was in
9178 the nature of fathers, Fred knew, to bully one about expenses: there
9179 was always a little storm over his extravagance if he had to disclose a
9180 debt, and Fred disliked bad weather within doors. He was too filial to
9181 be disrespectful to his father, and he bore the thunder with the
9182 certainty that it was transient; but in the mean time it was
9183 disagreeable to see his mother cry, and also to be obliged to look
9184 sulky instead of having fun; for Fred was so good-tempered that if he
9185 looked glum under scolding, it was chiefly for propriety's sake. The
9186 easier course plainly, was to renew the bill with a friend's signature.
9187 Why not? With the superfluous securities of hope at his command, there
9188 was no reason why he should not have increased other people's
9189 liabilities to any extent, but for the fact that men whose names were
9190 good for anything were usually pessimists, indisposed to believe that
9191 the universal order of things would necessarily be agreeable to an
9192 agreeable young gentleman.
9193
9194 With a favor to ask we review our list of friends, do justice to their
9195 more amiable qualities, forgive their little offenses, and concerning
9196 each in turn, try to arrive at the conclusion that he will be eager to
9197 oblige us, our own eagerness to be obliged being as communicable as
9198 other warmth. Still there is always a certain number who are dismissed
9199 as but moderately eager until the others have refused; and it happened
9200 that Fred checked off all his friends but one, on the ground that
9201 applying to them would be disagreeable; being implicitly convinced that
9202 he at least (whatever might be maintained about mankind generally) had
9203 a right to be free from anything disagreeable. That he should ever
9204 fall into a thoroughly unpleasant position--wear trousers shrunk with
9205 washing, eat cold mutton, have to walk for want of a horse, or to "duck
9206 under" in any sort of way--was an absurdity irreconcilable with those
9207 cheerful intuitions implanted in him by nature. And Fred winced under
9208 the idea of being looked down upon as wanting funds for small debts.
9209 Thus it came to pass that the friend whom he chose to apply to was at
9210 once the poorest and the kindest--namely, Caleb Garth.
9211
9212 The Garths were very fond of Fred, as he was of them; for when he and
9213 Rosamond were little ones, and the Garths were better off, the slight
9214 connection between the two families through Mr. Featherstone's double
9215 marriage (the first to Mr. Garth's sister, and the second to Mrs.
9216 Vincy's) had led to an acquaintance which was carried on between the
9217 children rather than the parents: the children drank tea together out
9218 of their toy teacups, and spent whole days together in play. Mary was
9219 a little hoyden, and Fred at six years old thought her the nicest girl
9220 in the world, making her his wife with a brass ring which he had cut
9221 from an umbrella. Through all the stages of his education he had kept
9222 his affection for the Garths, and his habit of going to their house as
9223 a second home, though any intercourse between them and the elders of
9224 his family had long ceased. Even when Caleb Garth was prosperous, the
9225 Vincys were on condescending terms with him and his wife, for there
9226 were nice distinctions of rank in Middlemarch; and though old
9227 manufacturers could not any more than dukes be connected with none but
9228 equals, they were conscious of an inherent social superiority which was
9229 defined with great nicety in practice, though hardly expressible
9230 theoretically. Since then Mr. Garth had failed in the building
9231 business, which he had unfortunately added to his other avocations of
9232 surveyor, valuer, and agent, had conducted that business for a time
9233 entirely for the benefit of his assignees, and had been living
9234 narrowly, exerting himself to the utmost that he might after all pay
9235 twenty shillings in the pound. He had now achieved this, and from all
9236 who did not think it a bad precedent, his honorable exertions had won
9237 him due esteem; but in no part of the world is genteel visiting founded
9238 on esteem, in the absence of suitable furniture and complete
9239 dinner-service. Mrs. Vincy had never been at her ease with Mrs. Garth,
9240 and frequently spoke of her as a woman who had had to work for her
9241 bread--meaning that Mrs. Garth had been a teacher before her marriage;
9242 in which case an intimacy with Lindley Murray and Mangnall's Questions
9243 was something like a draper's discrimination of calico trademarks, or a
9244 courier's acquaintance with foreign countries: no woman who was better
9245 off needed that sort of thing. And since Mary had been keeping Mr.
9246 Featherstone's house, Mrs. Vincy's want of liking for the Garths had
9247 been converted into something more positive, by alarm lest Fred should
9248 engage himself to this plain girl, whose parents "lived in such a small
9249 way." Fred, being aware of this, never spoke at home of his visits to
9250 Mrs. Garth, which had of late become more frequent, the increasing
9251 ardor of his affection for Mary inclining him the more towards those
9252 who belonged to her.
9253
9254 Mr. Garth had a small office in the town, and to this Fred went with
9255 his request. He obtained it without much difficulty, for a large
9256 amount of painful experience had not sufficed to make Caleb Garth
9257 cautious about his own affairs, or distrustful of his fellow-men when
9258 they had not proved themselves untrustworthy; and he had the highest
9259 opinion of Fred, was "sure the lad would turn out well--an open
9260 affectionate fellow, with a good bottom to his character--you might
9261 trust him for anything." Such was Caleb's psychological argument. He
9262 was one of those rare men who are rigid to themselves and indulgent to
9263 others. He had a certain shame about his neighbors' errors, and never
9264 spoke of them willingly; hence he was not likely to divert his mind
9265 from the best mode of hardening timber and other ingenious devices in
9266 order to preconceive those errors. If he had to blame any one, it was
9267 necessary for him to move all the papers within his reach, or describe
9268 various diagrams with his stick, or make calculations with the odd
9269 money in his pocket, before he could begin; and he would rather do
9270 other men's work than find fault with their doing. I fear he was a bad
9271 disciplinarian.
9272
9273 When Fred stated the circumstances of his debt, his wish to meet it
9274 without troubling his father, and the certainty that the money would be
9275 forthcoming so as to cause no one any inconvenience, Caleb pushed his
9276 spectacles upward, listened, looked into his favorite's clear young
9277 eyes, and believed him, not distinguishing confidence about the future
9278 from veracity about the past; but he felt that it was an occasion for a
9279 friendly hint as to conduct, and that before giving his signature he
9280 must give a rather strong admonition. Accordingly, he took the paper
9281 and lowered his spectacles, measured the space at his command, reached
9282 his pen and examined it, dipped it in the ink and examined it again,
9283 then pushed the paper a little way from him, lifted up his spectacles
9284 again, showed a deepened depression in the outer angle of his bushy
9285 eyebrows, which gave his face a peculiar mildness (pardon these details
9286 for once--you would have learned to love them if you had known Caleb
9287 Garth), and said in a comfortable tone--
9288
9289 "It was a misfortune, eh, that breaking the horse's knees? And then,
9290 these exchanges, they don't answer when you have 'cute jockeys to deal
9291 with. You'll be wiser another time, my boy."
9292
9293 Whereupon Caleb drew down his spectacles, and proceeded to write his
9294 signature with the care which he always gave to that performance; for
9295 whatever he did in the way of business he did well. He contemplated
9296 the large well-proportioned letters and final flourish, with his head a
9297 trifle on one side for an instant, then handed it to Fred, said
9298 "Good-by," and returned forthwith to his absorption in a plan for Sir
9299 James Chettam's new farm-buildings.
9300
9301 Either because his interest in this work thrust the incident of the
9302 signature from his memory, or for some reason of which Caleb was more
9303 conscious, Mrs. Garth remained ignorant of the affair.
9304
9305 Since it occurred, a change had come over Fred's sky, which altered his
9306 view of the distance, and was the reason why his uncle Featherstone's
9307 present of money was of importance enough to make his color come and
9308 go, first with a too definite expectation, and afterwards with a
9309 proportionate disappointment. His failure in passing his examination,
9310 had made his accumulation of college debts the more unpardonable by his
9311 father, and there had been an unprecedented storm at home. Mr. Vincy
9312 had sworn that if he had anything more of that sort to put up with,
9313 Fred should turn out and get his living how he could; and he had never
9314 yet quite recovered his good-humored tone to his son, who had
9315 especially enraged him by saying at this stage of things that he did
9316 not want to be a clergyman, and would rather not "go on with that."
9317 Fred was conscious that he would have been yet more severely dealt with
9318 if his family as well as himself had not secretly regarded him as Mr.
9319 Featherstone's heir; that old gentleman's pride in him, and apparent
9320 fondness for him, serving in the stead of more exemplary conduct--just
9321 as when a youthful nobleman steals jewellery we call the act
9322 kleptomania, speak of it with a philosophical smile, and never think of
9323 his being sent to the house of correction as if he were a ragged boy
9324 who had stolen turnips. In fact, tacit expectations of what would be
9325 done for him by uncle Featherstone determined the angle at which most
9326 people viewed Fred Vincy in Middlemarch; and in his own consciousness,
9327 what uncle Featherstone would do for him in an emergency, or what he
9328 would do simply as an incorporated luck, formed always an immeasurable
9329 depth of aerial perspective. But that present of bank-notes, once
9330 made, was measurable, and being applied to the amount of the debt,
9331 showed a deficit which had still to be filled up either by Fred's
9332 "judgment" or by luck in some other shape. For that little episode of
9333 the alleged borrowing, in which he had made his father the agent in
9334 getting the Bulstrode certificate, was a new reason against going to
9335 his father for money towards meeting his actual debt. Fred was keen
9336 enough to foresee that anger would confuse distinctions, and that his
9337 denial of having borrowed expressly on the strength of his uncle's will
9338 would be taken as a falsehood. He had gone to his father and told him
9339 one vexatious affair, and he had left another untold: in such cases the
9340 complete revelation always produces the impression of a previous
9341 duplicity. Now Fred piqued himself on keeping clear of lies, and even
9342 fibs; he often shrugged his shoulders and made a significant grimace at
9343 what he called Rosamond's fibs (it is only brothers who can associate
9344 such ideas with a lovely girl); and rather than incur the accusation of
9345 falsehood he would even incur some trouble and self-restraint. It was
9346 under strong inward pressure of this kind that Fred had taken the wise
9347 step of depositing the eighty pounds with his mother. It was a pity
9348 that he had not at once given them to Mr. Garth; but he meant to make
9349 the sum complete with another sixty, and with a view to this, he had
9350 kept twenty pounds in his own pocket as a sort of seed-corn, which,
9351 planted by judgment, and watered by luck, might yield more than
9352 threefold--a very poor rate of multiplication when the field is a young
9353 gentleman's infinite soul, with all the numerals at command.
9354
9355 Fred was not a gambler: he had not that specific disease in which the
9356 suspension of the whole nervous energy on a chance or risk becomes as
9357 necessary as the dram to the drunkard; he had only the tendency to that
9358 diffusive form of gambling which has no alcoholic intensity, but is
9359 carried on with the healthiest chyle-fed blood, keeping up a joyous
9360 imaginative activity which fashions events according to desire, and
9361 having no fears about its own weather, only sees the advantage there
9362 must be to others in going aboard with it. Hopefulness has a pleasure
9363 in making a throw of any kind, because the prospect of success is
9364 certain; and only a more generous pleasure in offering as many as
9365 possible a share in the stake. Fred liked play, especially billiards,
9366 as he liked hunting or riding a steeple-chase; and he only liked it the
9367 better because he wanted money and hoped to win. But the twenty
9368 pounds' worth of seed-corn had been planted in vain in the seductive
9369 green plot--all of it at least which had not been dispersed by the
9370 roadside--and Fred found himself close upon the term of payment with no
9371 money at command beyond the eighty pounds which he had deposited with
9372 his mother. The broken-winded horse which he rode represented a
9373 present which had been made to him a long while ago by his uncle
9374 Featherstone: his father always allowed him to keep a horse, Mr.
9375 Vincy's own habits making him regard this as a reasonable demand even
9376 for a son who was rather exasperating. This horse, then, was Fred's
9377 property, and in his anxiety to meet the imminent bill he determined to
9378 sacrifice a possession without which life would certainly be worth
9379 little. He made the resolution with a sense of heroism--heroism forced
9380 on him by the dread of breaking his word to Mr. Garth, by his love for
9381 Mary and awe of her opinion. He would start for Houndsley horse-fair
9382 which was to be held the next morning, and--simply sell his horse,
9383 bringing back the money by coach?--Well, the horse would hardly fetch
9384 more than thirty pounds, and there was no knowing what might happen; it
9385 would be folly to balk himself of luck beforehand. It was a hundred to
9386 one that some good chance would fall in his way; the longer he thought
9387 of it, the less possible it seemed that he should not have a good
9388 chance, and the less reasonable that he should not equip himself with
9389 the powder and shot for bringing it down. He would ride to Houndsley
9390 with Bambridge and with Horrock "the vet," and without asking them
9391 anything expressly, he should virtually get the benefit of their
9392 opinion. Before he set out, Fred got the eighty pounds from his mother.
9393
9394 Most of those who saw Fred riding out of Middlemarch in company with
9395 Bambridge and Horrock, on his way of course to Houndsley horse-fair,
9396 thought that young Vincy was pleasure-seeking as usual; and but for an
9397 unwonted consciousness of grave matters on hand, he himself would have
9398 had a sense of dissipation, and of doing what might be expected of a
9399 gay young fellow. Considering that Fred was not at all coarse, that he
9400 rather looked down on the manners and speech of young men who had not
9401 been to the university, and that he had written stanzas as pastoral and
9402 unvoluptuous as his flute-playing, his attraction towards Bambridge and
9403 Horrock was an interesting fact which even the love of horse-flesh
9404 would not wholly account for without that mysterious influence of
9405 Naming which determinates so much of mortal choice. Under any other
9406 name than "pleasure" the society of Messieurs Bambridge and Horrock
9407 must certainly have been regarded as monotonous; and to arrive with
9408 them at Houndsley on a drizzling afternoon, to get down at the Red Lion
9409 in a street shaded with coal-dust, and dine in a room furnished with a
9410 dirt-enamelled map of the county, a bad portrait of an anonymous horse
9411 in a stable, His Majesty George the Fourth with legs and cravat, and
9412 various leaden spittoons, might have seemed a hard business, but for
9413 the sustaining power of nomenclature which determined that the pursuit
9414 of these things was "gay."
9415
9416 In Mr. Horrock there was certainly an apparent unfathomableness which
9417 offered play to the imagination. Costume, at a glance, gave him a
9418 thrilling association with horses (enough to specify the hat-brim which
9419 took the slightest upward angle just to escape the suspicion of bending
9420 downwards), and nature had given him a face which by dint of Mongolian
9421 eyes, and a nose, mouth, and chin seeming to follow his hat-brim in a
9422 moderate inclination upwards, gave the effect of a subdued unchangeable
9423 sceptical smile, of all expressions the most tyrannous over a
9424 susceptible mind, and, when accompanied by adequate silence, likely to
9425 create the reputation of an invincible understanding, an infinite fund
9426 of humor--too dry to flow, and probably in a state of immovable
9427 crust,--and a critical judgment which, if you could ever be fortunate
9428 enough to know it, would be _the_ thing and no other. It is a
9429 physiognomy seen in all vocations, but perhaps it has never been more
9430 powerful over the youth of England than in a judge of horses.
9431
9432 Mr. Horrock, at a question from Fred about his horse's fetlock, turned
9433 sideways in his saddle, and watched the horse's action for the space of
9434 three minutes, then turned forward, twitched his own bridle, and
9435 remained silent with a profile neither more nor less sceptical than it
9436 had been.
9437
9438 The part thus played in dialogue by Mr. Horrock was terribly effective.
9439 A mixture of passions was excited in Fred--a mad desire to thrash
9440 Horrock's opinion into utterance, restrained by anxiety to retain the
9441 advantage of his friendship. There was always the chance that Horrock
9442 might say something quite invaluable at the right moment.
9443
9444 Mr. Bambridge had more open manners, and appeared to give forth his
9445 ideas without economy. He was loud, robust, and was sometimes spoken
9446 of as being "given to indulgence"--chiefly in swearing, drinking, and
9447 beating his wife. Some people who had lost by him called him a vicious
9448 man; but he regarded horse-dealing as the finest of the arts, and might
9449 have argued plausibly that it had nothing to do with morality. He was
9450 undeniably a prosperous man, bore his drinking better than others bore
9451 their moderation, and, on the whole, flourished like the green
9452 bay-tree. But his range of conversation was limited, and like the fine
9453 old tune, "Drops of brandy," gave you after a while a sense of
9454 returning upon itself in a way that might make weak heads dizzy. But a
9455 slight infusion of Mr. Bambridge was felt to give tone and character to
9456 several circles in Middlemarch; and he was a distinguished figure in
9457 the bar and billiard-room at the Green Dragon. He knew some anecdotes
9458 about the heroes of the turf, and various clever tricks of Marquesses
9459 and Viscounts which seemed to prove that blood asserted its
9460 pre-eminence even among black-legs; but the minute retentiveness of his
9461 memory was chiefly shown about the horses he had himself bought and
9462 sold; the number of miles they would trot you in no time without
9463 turning a hair being, after the lapse of years, still a subject of
9464 passionate asseveration, in which he would assist the imagination of
9465 his hearers by solemnly swearing that they never saw anything like it.
9466 In short, Mr. Bambridge was a man of pleasure and a gay companion.
9467
9468 Fred was subtle, and did not tell his friends that he was going to
9469 Houndsley bent on selling his horse: he wished to get indirectly at
9470 their genuine opinion of its value, not being aware that a genuine
9471 opinion was the last thing likely to be extracted from such eminent
9472 critics. It was not Mr. Bambridge's weakness to be a gratuitous
9473 flatterer. He had never before been so much struck with the fact that
9474 this unfortunate bay was a roarer to a degree which required the
9475 roundest word for perdition to give you any idea of it.
9476
9477 "You made a bad hand at swapping when you went to anybody but me,
9478 Vincy! Why, you never threw your leg across a finer horse than that
9479 chestnut, and you gave him for this brute. If you set him cantering,
9480 he goes on like twenty sawyers. I never heard but one worse roarer in
9481 my life, and that was a roan: it belonged to Pegwell, the corn-factor;
9482 he used to drive him in his gig seven years ago, and he wanted me to
9483 take him, but I said, 'Thank you, Peg, I don't deal in
9484 wind-instruments.' That was what I said. It went the round of the
9485 country, that joke did. But, what the hell! the horse was a penny
9486 trumpet to that roarer of yours."
9487
9488 "Why, you said just now his was worse than mine," said Fred, more
9489 irritable than usual.
9490
9491 "I said a lie, then," said Mr. Bambridge, emphatically. "There wasn't
9492 a penny to choose between 'em."
9493
9494 Fred spurred his horse, and they trotted on a little way. When they
9495 slackened again, Mr. Bambridge said--
9496
9497 "Not but what the roan was a better trotter than yours."
9498
9499 "I'm quite satisfied with his paces, I know," said Fred, who required
9500 all the consciousness of being in gay company to support him; "I say
9501 his trot is an uncommonly clean one, eh, Horrock?"
9502
9503 Mr. Horrock looked before him with as complete a neutrality as if he
9504 had been a portrait by a great master.
9505
9506 Fred gave up the fallacious hope of getting a genuine opinion; but on
9507 reflection he saw that Bambridge's depreciation and Horrock's silence
9508 were both virtually encouraging, and indicated that they thought better
9509 of the horse than they chose to say.
9510
9511 That very evening, indeed, before the fair had set in, Fred thought he
9512 saw a favorable opening for disposing advantageously of his horse, but
9513 an opening which made him congratulate himself on his foresight in
9514 bringing with him his eighty pounds. A young farmer, acquainted with
9515 Mr. Bambridge, came into the Red Lion, and entered into conversation
9516 about parting with a hunter, which he introduced at once as Diamond,
9517 implying that it was a public character. For himself he only wanted a
9518 useful hack, which would draw upon occasion; being about to marry and
9519 to give up hunting. The hunter was in a friend's stable at some little
9520 distance; there was still time for gentlemen to see it before dark.
9521 The friend's stable had to be reached through a back street where you
9522 might as easily have been poisoned without expense of drugs as in any
9523 grim street of that unsanitary period. Fred was not fortified against
9524 disgust by brandy, as his companions were, but the hope of having at
9525 last seen the horse that would enable him to make money was
9526 exhilarating enough to lead him over the same ground again the first
9527 thing in the morning. He felt sure that if he did not come to a
9528 bargain with the farmer, Bambridge would; for the stress of
9529 circumstances, Fred felt, was sharpening his acuteness and endowing him
9530 with all the constructive power of suspicion. Bambridge had run down
9531 Diamond in a way that he never would have done (the horse being a
9532 friend's) if he had not thought of buying it; every one who looked at
9533 the animal--even Horrock--was evidently impressed with its merit. To
9534 get all the advantage of being with men of this sort, you must know how
9535 to draw your inferences, and not be a spoon who takes things literally.
9536 The color of the horse was a dappled gray, and Fred happened to know
9537 that Lord Medlicote's man was on the look-out for just such a horse.
9538 After all his running down, Bambridge let it out in the course of the
9539 evening, when the farmer was absent, that he had seen worse horses go
9540 for eighty pounds. Of course he contradicted himself twenty times
9541 over, but when you know what is likely to be true you can test a man's
9542 admissions. And Fred could not but reckon his own judgment of a horse
9543 as worth something. The farmer had paused over Fred's respectable
9544 though broken-winded steed long enough to show that he thought it worth
9545 consideration, and it seemed probable that he would take it, with
9546 five-and-twenty pounds in addition, as the equivalent of Diamond. In
9547 that case Fred, when he had parted with his new horse for at least
9548 eighty pounds, would be fifty-five pounds in pocket by the transaction,
9549 and would have a hundred and thirty-five pounds towards meeting the
9550 bill; so that the deficit temporarily thrown on Mr. Garth would at the
9551 utmost be twenty-five pounds. By the time he was hurrying on his
9552 clothes in the morning, he saw so clearly the importance of not losing
9553 this rare chance, that if Bambridge and Horrock had both dissuaded him,
9554 he would not have been deluded into a direct interpretation of their
9555 purpose: he would have been aware that those deep hands held something
9556 else than a young fellow's interest. With regard to horses, distrust
9557 was your only clew. But scepticism, as we know, can never be
9558 thoroughly applied, else life would come to a standstill: something we
9559 must believe in and do, and whatever that something may be called, it
9560 is virtually our own judgment, even when it seems like the most slavish
9561 reliance on another. Fred believed in the excellence of his bargain,
9562 and even before the fair had well set in, had got possession of the
9563 dappled gray, at the price of his old horse and thirty pounds in
9564 addition--only five pounds more than he had expected to give.
9565
9566 But he felt a little worried and wearied, perhaps with mental debate,
9567 and without waiting for the further gayeties of the horse-fair, he set
9568 out alone on his fourteen miles' journey, meaning to take it very
9569 quietly and keep his horse fresh.
9570
9571
9572
9573 CHAPTER XXIV.
9574
9575 "The offender's sorrow brings but small relief
9576 To him who wears the strong offence's cross."
9577 --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets.
9578
9579
9580 I am sorry to say that only the third day after the propitious events
9581 at Houndsley Fred Vincy had fallen into worse spirits than he had known
9582 in his life before. Not that he had been disappointed as to the
9583 possible market for his horse, but that before the bargain could be
9584 concluded with Lord Medlicote's man, this Diamond, in which hope to the
9585 amount of eighty pounds had been invested, had without the slightest
9586 warning exhibited in the stable a most vicious energy in kicking, had
9587 just missed killing the groom, and had ended in laming himself severely
9588 by catching his leg in a rope that overhung the stable-board. There was
9589 no more redress for this than for the discovery of bad temper after
9590 marriage--which of course old companions were aware of before the
9591 ceremony. For some reason or other, Fred had none of his usual
9592 elasticity under this stroke of ill-fortune: he was simply aware that
9593 he had only fifty pounds, that there was no chance of his getting any
9594 more at present, and that the bill for a hundred and sixty would be
9595 presented in five days. Even if he had applied to his father on the
9596 plea that Mr. Garth should be saved from loss, Fred felt smartingly
9597 that his father would angrily refuse to rescue Mr. Garth from the
9598 consequence of what he would call encouraging extravagance and deceit.
9599 He was so utterly downcast that he could frame no other project than to
9600 go straight to Mr. Garth and tell him the sad truth, carrying with him
9601 the fifty pounds, and getting that sum at least safely out of his own
9602 hands. His father, being at the warehouse, did not yet know of the
9603 accident: when he did, he would storm about the vicious brute being
9604 brought into his stable; and before meeting that lesser annoyance Fred
9605 wanted to get away with all his courage to face the greater. He took
9606 his father's nag, for he had made up his mind that when he had told Mr.
9607 Garth, he would ride to Stone Court and confess all to Mary. In fact,
9608 it is probable that but for Mary's existence and Fred's love for her,
9609 his conscience would have been much less active both in previously
9610 urging the debt on his thought and impelling him not to spare himself
9611 after his usual fashion by deferring an unpleasant task, but to act as
9612 directly and simply as he could. Even much stronger mortals than Fred
9613 Vincy hold half their rectitude in the mind of the being they love
9614 best. "The theatre of all my actions is fallen," said an antique
9615 personage when his chief friend was dead; and they are fortunate who
9616 get a theatre where the audience demands their best. Certainly it
9617 would have made a considerable difference to Fred at that time if Mary
9618 Garth had had no decided notions as to what was admirable in character.
9619
9620 Mr. Garth was not at the office, and Fred rode on to his house, which
9621 was a little way outside the town--a homely place with an orchard in
9622 front of it, a rambling, old-fashioned, half-timbered building, which
9623 before the town had spread had been a farm-house, but was now
9624 surrounded with the private gardens of the townsmen. We get the fonder
9625 of our houses if they have a physiognomy of their own, as our friends
9626 have. The Garth family, which was rather a large one, for Mary had
9627 four brothers and one sister, were very fond of their old house, from
9628 which all the best furniture had long been sold. Fred liked it too,
9629 knowing it by heart even to the attic which smelt deliciously of apples
9630 and quinces, and until to-day he had never come to it without pleasant
9631 expectations; but his heart beat uneasily now with the sense that he
9632 should probably have to make his confession before Mrs. Garth, of whom
9633 he was rather more in awe than of her husband. Not that she was
9634 inclined to sarcasm and to impulsive sallies, as Mary was. In her
9635 present matronly age at least, Mrs. Garth never committed herself by
9636 over-hasty speech; having, as she said, borne the yoke in her youth,
9637 and learned self-control. She had that rare sense which discerns what
9638 is unalterable, and submits to it without murmuring. Adoring her
9639 husband's virtues, she had very early made up her mind to his
9640 incapacity of minding his own interests, and had met the consequences
9641 cheerfully. She had been magnanimous enough to renounce all pride in
9642 teapots or children's frilling, and had never poured any pathetic
9643 confidences into the ears of her feminine neighbors concerning Mr.
9644 Garth's want of prudence and the sums he might have had if he had been
9645 like other men. Hence these fair neighbors thought her either proud or
9646 eccentric, and sometimes spoke of her to their husbands as "your fine
9647 Mrs. Garth." She was not without her criticism of them in return, being
9648 more accurately instructed than most matrons in Middlemarch, and--where
9649 is the blameless woman?--apt to be a little severe towards her own sex,
9650 which in her opinion was framed to be entirely subordinate. On the
9651 other hand, she was disproportionately indulgent towards the failings
9652 of men, and was often heard to say that these were natural. Also, it
9653 must be admitted that Mrs. Garth was a trifle too emphatic in her
9654 resistance to what she held to be follies: the passage from governess
9655 into housewife had wrought itself a little too strongly into her
9656 consciousness, and she rarely forgot that while her grammar and accent
9657 were above the town standard, she wore a plain cap, cooked the family
9658 dinner, and darned all the stockings. She had sometimes taken pupils
9659 in a peripatetic fashion, making them follow her about in the kitchen
9660 with their book or slate. She thought it good for them to see that she
9661 could make an excellent lather while she corrected their blunders
9662 "without looking,"--that a woman with her sleeves tucked up above her
9663 elbows might know all about the Subjunctive Mood or the Torrid
9664 Zone--that, in short, she might possess "education" and other good
9665 things ending in "tion," and worthy to be pronounced emphatically,
9666 without being a useless doll. When she made remarks to this edifying
9667 effect, she had a firm little frown on her brow, which yet did not
9668 hinder her face from looking benevolent, and her words which came forth
9669 like a procession were uttered in a fervid agreeable contralto.
9670 Certainly, the exemplary Mrs. Garth had her droll aspects, but her
9671 character sustained her oddities, as a very fine wine sustains a flavor
9672 of skin.
9673
9674 Towards Fred Vincy she had a motherly feeling, and had always been
9675 disposed to excuse his errors, though she would probably not have
9676 excused Mary for engaging herself to him, her daughter being included
9677 in that more rigorous judgment which she applied to her own sex. But
9678 this very fact of her exceptional indulgence towards him made it the
9679 harder to Fred that he must now inevitably sink in her opinion. And
9680 the circumstances of his visit turned out to be still more unpleasant
9681 than he had expected; for Caleb Garth had gone out early to look at
9682 some repairs not far off. Mrs. Garth at certain hours was always in
9683 the kitchen, and this morning she was carrying on several occupations
9684 at once there--making her pies at the well-scoured deal table on one
9685 side of that airy room, observing Sally's movements at the oven and
9686 dough-tub through an open door, and giving lessons to her youngest boy
9687 and girl, who were standing opposite to her at the table with their
9688 books and slates before them. A tub and a clothes-horse at the other
9689 end of the kitchen indicated an intermittent wash of small things also
9690 going on.
9691
9692 Mrs. Garth, with her sleeves turned above her elbows, deftly handling
9693 her pastry--applying her rolling-pin and giving ornamental pinches,
9694 while she expounded with grammatical fervor what were the right views
9695 about the concord of verbs and pronouns with "nouns of multitude or
9696 signifying many," was a sight agreeably amusing. She was of the same
9697 curly-haired, square-faced type as Mary, but handsomer, with more
9698 delicacy of feature, a pale skin, a solid matronly figure, and a
9699 remarkable firmness of glance. In her snowy-frilled cap she reminded
9700 one of that delightful Frenchwoman whom we have all seen marketing,
9701 basket on arm. Looking at the mother, you might hope that the daughter
9702 would become like her, which is a prospective advantage equal to a
9703 dowry--the mother too often standing behind the daughter like a
9704 malignant prophecy--"Such as I am, she will shortly be."
9705
9706 "Now let us go through that once more," said Mrs. Garth, pinching an
9707 apple-puff which seemed to distract Ben, an energetic young male with a
9708 heavy brow, from due attention to the lesson. "'Not without regard to
9709 the import of the word as conveying unity or plurality of idea'--tell
9710 me again what that means, Ben."
9711
9712 (Mrs. Garth, like more celebrated educators, had her favorite ancient
9713 paths, and in a general wreck of society would have tried to hold her
9714 "Lindley Murray" above the waves.)
9715
9716 "Oh--it means--you must think what you mean," said Ben, rather
9717 peevishly. "I hate grammar. What's the use of it?"
9718
9719 "To teach you to speak and write correctly, so that you can be
9720 understood," said Mrs. Garth, with severe precision. "Should you like
9721 to speak as old Job does?"
9722
9723 "Yes," said Ben, stoutly; "it's funnier. He says, 'Yo goo'--that's
9724 just as good as 'You go.'"
9725
9726 "But he says, 'A ship's in the garden,' instead of 'a sheep,'" said
9727 Letty, with an air of superiority. "You might think he meant a ship
9728 off the sea."
9729
9730 "No, you mightn't, if you weren't silly," said Ben. "How could a ship
9731 off the sea come there?"
9732
9733 "These things belong only to pronunciation, which is the least part of
9734 grammar," said Mrs. Garth. "That apple-peel is to be eaten by the
9735 pigs, Ben; if you eat it, I must give them your piece of pasty. Job
9736 has only to speak about very plain things. How do you think you would
9737 write or speak about anything more difficult, if you knew no more of
9738 grammar than he does? You would use wrong words, and put words in the
9739 wrong places, and instead of making people understand you, they would
9740 turn away from you as a tiresome person. What would you do then?"
9741
9742 "I shouldn't care, I should leave off," said Ben, with a sense that
9743 this was an agreeable issue where grammar was concerned.
9744
9745 "I see you are getting tired and stupid, Ben," said Mrs. Garth,
9746 accustomed to these obstructive arguments from her male offspring.
9747 Having finished her pies, she moved towards the clothes-horse, and
9748 said, "Come here and tell me the story I told you on Wednesday, about
9749 Cincinnatus."
9750
9751 "I know! he was a farmer," said Ben.
9752
9753 "Now, Ben, he was a Roman--let _me_ tell," said Letty, using her elbow
9754 contentiously.
9755
9756 "You silly thing, he was a Roman farmer, and he was ploughing."
9757
9758 "Yes, but before that--that didn't come first--people wanted him," said
9759 Letty.
9760
9761 "Well, but you must say what sort of a man he was first," insisted Ben.
9762 "He was a wise man, like my father, and that made the people want his
9763 advice. And he was a brave man, and could fight. And so could my
9764 father--couldn't he, mother?"
9765
9766 "Now, Ben, let me tell the story straight on, as mother told it us,"
9767 said Letty, frowning. "Please, mother, tell Ben not to speak."
9768
9769 "Letty, I am ashamed of you," said her mother, wringing out the caps
9770 from the tub. "When your brother began, you ought to have waited to
9771 see if he could not tell the story. How rude you look, pushing and
9772 frowning, as if you wanted to conquer with your elbows! Cincinnatus, I
9773 am sure, would have been sorry to see his daughter behave so." (Mrs.
9774 Garth delivered this awful sentence with much majesty of enunciation,
9775 and Letty felt that between repressed volubility and general disesteem,
9776 that of the Romans inclusive, life was already a painful affair.) "Now,
9777 Ben."
9778
9779 "Well--oh--well--why, there was a great deal of fighting, and they were
9780 all blockheads, and--I can't tell it just how you told it--but they
9781 wanted a man to be captain and king and everything--"
9782
9783 "Dictator, now," said Letty, with injured looks, and not without a wish
9784 to make her mother repent.
9785
9786 "Very well, dictator!" said Ben, contemptuously. "But that isn't a
9787 good word: he didn't tell them to write on slates."
9788
9789 "Come, come, Ben, you are not so ignorant as that," said Mrs. Garth,
9790 carefully serious. "Hark, there is a knock at the door! Run, Letty,
9791 and open it."
9792
9793 The knock was Fred's; and when Letty said that her father was not in
9794 yet, but that her mother was in the kitchen, Fred had no alternative.
9795 He could not depart from his usual practice of going to see Mrs. Garth
9796 in the kitchen if she happened to be at work there. He put his arm
9797 round Letty's neck silently, and led her into the kitchen without his
9798 usual jokes and caresses.
9799
9800 Mrs. Garth was surprised to see Fred at this hour, but surprise was not
9801 a feeling that she was given to express, and she only said, quietly
9802 continuing her work--
9803
9804 "You, Fred, so early in the day? You look quite pale. Has anything
9805 happened?"
9806
9807 "I want to speak to Mr. Garth," said Fred, not yet ready to say
9808 more--"and to you also," he added, after a little pause, for he had no
9809 doubt that Mrs. Garth knew everything about the bill, and he must in the
9810 end speak of it before her, if not to her solely.
9811
9812 "Caleb will be in again in a few minutes," said Mrs. Garth, who
9813 imagined some trouble between Fred and his father. "He is sure not to
9814 be long, because he has some work at his desk that must be done this
9815 morning. Do you mind staying with me, while I finish my matters here?"
9816
9817 "But we needn't go on about Cincinnatus, need we?" said Ben, who had
9818 taken Fred's whip out of his hand, and was trying its efficiency on the
9819 cat.
9820
9821 "No, go out now. But put that whip down. How very mean of you to whip
9822 poor old Tortoise! Pray take the whip from him, Fred."
9823
9824 "Come, old boy, give it me," said Fred, putting out his hand.
9825
9826 "Will you let me ride on your horse to-day?" said Ben, rendering up the
9827 whip, with an air of not being obliged to do it.
9828
9829 "Not to-day--another time. I am not riding my own horse."
9830
9831 "Shall you see Mary to-day?"
9832
9833 "Yes, I think so," said Fred, with an unpleasant twinge.
9834
9835 "Tell her to come home soon, and play at forfeits, and make fun."
9836
9837 "Enough, enough, Ben! run away," said Mrs. Garth, seeing that Fred was
9838 teased. . .
9839
9840 "Are Letty and Ben your only pupils now, Mrs. Garth?" said Fred, when
9841 the children were gone and it was needful to say something that would
9842 pass the time. He was not yet sure whether he should wait for Mr.
9843 Garth, or use any good opportunity in conversation to confess to Mrs.
9844 Garth herself, give her the money and ride away.
9845
9846 "One--only one. Fanny Hackbutt comes at half past eleven. I am not
9847 getting a great income now," said Mrs. Garth, smiling. "I am at a low
9848 ebb with pupils. But I have saved my little purse for Alfred's
9849 premium: I have ninety-two pounds. He can go to Mr. Hanmer's now; he
9850 is just at the right age."
9851
9852 This did not lead well towards the news that Mr. Garth was on the brink
9853 of losing ninety-two pounds and more. Fred was silent. "Young
9854 gentlemen who go to college are rather more costly than that," Mrs.
9855 Garth innocently continued, pulling out the edging on a cap-border.
9856 "And Caleb thinks that Alfred will turn out a distinguished engineer:
9857 he wants to give the boy a good chance. There he is! I hear him
9858 coming in. We will go to him in the parlor, shall we?"
9859
9860 When they entered the parlor Caleb had thrown down his hat and was
9861 seated at his desk.
9862
9863 "What! Fred, my boy!" he said, in a tone of mild surprise, holding his
9864 pen still undipped; "you are here betimes." But missing the usual
9865 expression of cheerful greeting in Fred's face, he immediately added,
9866 "Is there anything up at home?--anything the matter?"
9867
9868 "Yes, Mr. Garth, I am come to tell something that I am afraid will give
9869 you a bad opinion of me. I am come to tell you and Mrs. Garth that I
9870 can't keep my word. I can't find the money to meet the bill after all.
9871 I have been unfortunate; I have only got these fifty pounds towards the
9872 hundred and sixty."
9873
9874 While Fred was speaking, he had taken out the notes and laid them on
9875 the desk before Mr. Garth. He had burst forth at once with the plain
9876 fact, feeling boyishly miserable and without verbal resources. Mrs.
9877 Garth was mutely astonished, and looked at her husband for an
9878 explanation. Caleb blushed, and after a little pause said--
9879
9880 "Oh, I didn't tell you, Susan: I put my name to a bill for Fred; it was
9881 for a hundred and sixty pounds. He made sure he could meet it himself."
9882
9883 There was an evident change in Mrs. Garth's face, but it was like a
9884 change below the surface of water which remains smooth. She fixed her
9885 eyes on Fred, saying--
9886
9887 "I suppose you have asked your father for the rest of the money and he
9888 has refused you."
9889
9890 "No," said Fred, biting his lip, and speaking with more difficulty;
9891 "but I know it will be of no use to ask him; and unless it were of use,
9892 I should not like to mention Mr. Garth's name in the matter."
9893
9894 "It has come at an unfortunate time," said Caleb, in his hesitating
9895 way, looking down at the notes and nervously fingering the paper,
9896 "Christmas upon us--I'm rather hard up just now. You see, I have to
9897 cut out everything like a tailor with short measure. What can we do,
9898 Susan? I shall want every farthing we have in the bank. It's a
9899 hundred and ten pounds, the deuce take it!"
9900
9901 "I must give you the ninety-two pounds that I have put by for Alfred's
9902 premium," said Mrs. Garth, gravely and decisively, though a nice ear
9903 might have discerned a slight tremor in some of the words. "And I have
9904 no doubt that Mary has twenty pounds saved from her salary by this
9905 time. She will advance it."
9906
9907 Mrs. Garth had not again looked at Fred, and was not in the least
9908 calculating what words she should use to cut him the most effectively.
9909 Like the eccentric woman she was, she was at present absorbed in
9910 considering what was to be done, and did not fancy that the end could
9911 be better achieved by bitter remarks or explosions. But she had made
9912 Fred feel for the first time something like the tooth of remorse.
9913 Curiously enough, his pain in the affair beforehand had consisted
9914 almost entirely in the sense that he must seem dishonorable, and sink
9915 in the opinion of the Garths: he had not occupied himself with the
9916 inconvenience and possible injury that his breach might occasion them,
9917 for this exercise of the imagination on other people's needs is not
9918 common with hopeful young gentlemen. Indeed we are most of us brought
9919 up in the notion that the highest motive for not doing a wrong is
9920 something irrespective of the beings who would suffer the wrong. But
9921 at this moment he suddenly saw himself as a pitiful rascal who was
9922 robbing two women of their savings.
9923
9924 "I shall certainly pay it all, Mrs. Garth--ultimately," he stammered
9925 out.
9926
9927 "Yes, ultimately," said Mrs. Garth, who having a special dislike to
9928 fine words on ugly occasions, could not now repress an epigram. "But
9929 boys cannot well be apprenticed ultimately: they should be apprenticed
9930 at fifteen." She had never been so little inclined to make excuses for
9931 Fred.
9932
9933 "I was the most in the wrong, Susan," said Caleb. "Fred made sure of
9934 finding the money. But I'd no business to be fingering bills. I
9935 suppose you have looked all round and tried all honest means?" he
9936 added, fixing his merciful gray eyes on Fred. Caleb was too delicate,
9937 to specify Mr. Featherstone.
9938
9939 "Yes, I have tried everything--I really have. I should have had a
9940 hundred and thirty pounds ready but for a misfortune with a horse which
9941 I was about to sell. My uncle had given me eighty pounds, and I paid
9942 away thirty with my old horse in order to get another which I was going
9943 to sell for eighty or more--I meant to go without a horse--but now it
9944 has turned out vicious and lamed itself. I wish I and the horses too
9945 had been at the devil, before I had brought this on you. There's no
9946 one else I care so much for: you and Mrs. Garth have always been so
9947 kind to me. However, it's no use saying that. You will always think
9948 me a rascal now."
9949
9950 Fred turned round and hurried out of the room, conscious that he was
9951 getting rather womanish, and feeling confusedly that his being sorry
9952 was not of much use to the Garths. They could see him mount, and
9953 quickly pass through the gate.
9954
9955 "I am disappointed in Fred Vincy," said Mrs. Garth. "I would not have
9956 believed beforehand that he would have drawn you into his debts. I
9957 knew he was extravagant, but I did not think that he would be so mean
9958 as to hang his risks on his oldest friend, who could the least afford
9959 to lose."
9960
9961 "I was a fool, Susan:"
9962
9963 "That you were," said the wife, nodding and smiling. "But I should not
9964 have gone to publish it in the market-place. Why should you keep such
9965 things from me? It is just so with your buttons: you let them burst
9966 off without telling me, and go out with your wristband hanging. If I
9967 had only known I might have been ready with some better plan."
9968
9969 "You are sadly cut up, I know, Susan," said Caleb, looking feelingly at
9970 her. "I can't abide your losing the money you've scraped together for
9971 Alfred."
9972
9973 "It is very well that I _had_ scraped it together; and it is you who
9974 will have to suffer, for you must teach the boy yourself. You must
9975 give up your bad habits. Some men take to drinking, and you have taken
9976 to working without pay. You must indulge yourself a little less in
9977 that. And you must ride over to Mary, and ask the child what money she
9978 has."
9979
9980 Caleb had pushed his chair back, and was leaning forward, shaking his
9981 head slowly, and fitting his finger-tips together with much nicety.
9982
9983 "Poor Mary!" he said. "Susan," he went on in a lowered tone, "I'm
9984 afraid she may be fond of Fred."
9985
9986 "Oh no! She always laughs at him; and he is not likely to think of her
9987 in any other than a brotherly way."
9988
9989 Caleb made no rejoinder, but presently lowered his spectacles, drew up
9990 his chair to the desk, and said, "Deuce take the bill--I wish it was
9991 at Hanover! These things are a sad interruption to business!"
9992
9993 The first part of this speech comprised his whole store of maledictory
9994 expression, and was uttered with a slight snarl easy to imagine. But
9995 it would be difficult to convey to those who never heard him utter the
9996 word "business," the peculiar tone of fervid veneration, of religious
9997 regard, in which he wrapped it, as a consecrated symbol is wrapped in
9998 its gold-fringed linen.
9999
10000 Caleb Garth often shook his head in meditation on the value, the
10001 indispensable might of that myriad-headed, myriad-handed labor by which
10002 the social body is fed, clothed, and housed. It had laid hold of his
10003 imagination in boyhood. The echoes of the great hammer where roof or
10004 keel were a-making, the signal-shouts of the workmen, the roar of the
10005 furnace, the thunder and plash of the engine, were a sublime music to
10006 him; the felling and lading of timber, and the huge trunk vibrating
10007 star-like in the distance along the highway, the crane at work on the
10008 wharf, the piled-up produce in warehouses, the precision and variety of
10009 muscular effort wherever exact work had to be turned out,--all these
10010 sights of his youth had acted on him as poetry without the aid of the
10011 poets, had made a philosophy for him without the aid of philosophers,
10012 a religion without the aid of theology. His early ambition had been to
10013 have as effective a share as possible in this sublime labor, which was
10014 peculiarly dignified by him with the name of "business;" and though he
10015 had only been a short time under a surveyor, and had been chiefly his
10016 own teacher, he knew more of land, building, and mining than most of
10017 the special men in the county.
10018
10019 His classification of human employments was rather crude, and, like the
10020 categories of more celebrated men, would not be acceptable in these
10021 advanced times. He divided them into "business, politics, preaching,
10022 learning, and amusement." He had nothing to say against the last four;
10023 but he regarded them as a reverential pagan regarded other gods than
10024 his own. In the same way, he thought very well of all ranks, but he
10025 would not himself have liked to be of any rank in which he had not such
10026 close contact with "business" as to get often honorably decorated with
10027 marks of dust and mortar, the damp of the engine, or the sweet soil of
10028 the woods and fields. Though he had never regarded himself as other
10029 than an orthodox Christian, and would argue on prevenient grace if the
10030 subject were proposed to him, I think his virtual divinities were good
10031 practical schemes, accurate work, and the faithful completion of
10032 undertakings: his prince of darkness was a slack workman. But there
10033 was no spirit of denial in Caleb, and the world seemed so wondrous to
10034 him that he was ready to accept any number of systems, like any number
10035 of firmaments, if they did not obviously interfere with the best
10036 land-drainage, solid building, correct measuring, and judicious boring
10037 (for coal). In fact, he had a reverential soul with a strong practical
10038 intelligence. But he could not manage finance: he knew values well,
10039 but he had no keenness of imagination for monetary results in the shape
10040 of profit and loss: and having ascertained this to his cost, he
10041 determined to give up all forms of his beloved "business" which
10042 required that talent. He gave himself up entirely to the many kinds of
10043 work which he could do without handling capital, and was one of those
10044 precious men within his own district whom everybody would choose to
10045 work for them, because he did his work well, charged very little, and
10046 often declined to charge at all. It is no wonder, then, that the
10047 Garths were poor, and "lived in a small way." However, they did not
10048 mind it.
10049
10050
10051
10052 CHAPTER XXV.
10053
10054 "Love seeketh not itself to please,
10055 Nor for itself hath any care
10056 But for another gives its ease
10057 And builds a heaven in hell's despair.
10058 . . . . . . .
10059 Love seeketh only self to please,
10060 To bind another to its delight,
10061 Joys in another's loss of ease,
10062 And builds a hell in heaven's despite."
10063 --W. BLAKE: Songs of Experience
10064
10065
10066 Fred Vincy wanted to arrive at Stone Court when Mary could not expect
10067 him, and when his uncle was not down-stairs in that case she might be
10068 sitting alone in the wainscoted parlor. He left his horse in the yard
10069 to avoid making a noise on the gravel in front, and entered the parlor
10070 without other notice than the noise of the door-handle. Mary was in her
10071 usual corner, laughing over Mrs. Piozzi's recollections of Johnson, and
10072 looked up with the fun still in her face. It gradually faded as she
10073 saw Fred approach her without speaking, and stand before her with his
10074 elbow on the mantel-piece, looking ill. She too was silent, only
10075 raising her eyes to him inquiringly.
10076
10077 "Mary," he began, "I am a good-for-nothing blackguard."
10078
10079 "I should think one of those epithets would do at a time," said Mary,
10080 trying to smile, but feeling alarmed.
10081
10082 "I know you will never think well of me any more. You will think me a
10083 liar. You will think me dishonest. You will think I didn't care for
10084 you, or your father and mother. You always do make the worst of me, I
10085 know."
10086
10087 "I cannot deny that I shall think all that of you, Fred, if you give me
10088 good reasons. But please to tell me at once what you have done. I
10089 would rather know the painful truth than imagine it."
10090
10091 "I owed money--a hundred and sixty pounds. I asked your father to put
10092 his name to a bill. I thought it would not signify to him. I made
10093 sure of paying the money myself, and I have tried as hard as I could.
10094 And now, I have been so unlucky--a horse has turned out badly--I can
10095 only pay fifty pounds. And I can't ask my father for the money: he
10096 would not give me a farthing. And my uncle gave me a hundred a little
10097 while ago. So what can I do? And now your father has no ready money
10098 to spare, and your mother will have to pay away her ninety-two pounds
10099 that she has saved, and she says your savings must go too. You see
10100 what a--"
10101
10102 "Oh, poor mother, poor father!" said Mary, her eyes filling with tears,
10103 and a little sob rising which she tried to repress. She looked
10104 straight before her and took no notice of Fred, all the consequences at
10105 home becoming present to her. He too remained silent for some moments,
10106 feeling more miserable than ever. "I wouldn't have hurt you for the
10107 world, Mary," he said at last. "You can never forgive me."
10108
10109 "What does it matter whether I forgive you?" said Mary, passionately.
10110 "Would that make it any better for my mother to lose the money she has
10111 been earning by lessons for four years, that she might send Alfred to
10112 Mr. Hanmer's? Should you think all that pleasant enough if I forgave
10113 you?"
10114
10115 "Say what you like, Mary. I deserve it all."
10116
10117 "I don't want to say anything," said Mary, more quietly, "and my anger
10118 is of no use." She dried her eyes, threw aside her book, rose and
10119 fetched her sewing.
10120
10121 Fred followed her with his eyes, hoping that they would meet hers, and
10122 in that way find access for his imploring penitence. But no! Mary
10123 could easily avoid looking upward.
10124
10125 "I do care about your mother's money going," he said, when she was
10126 seated again and sewing quickly. "I wanted to ask you, Mary--don't
10127 you think that Mr. Featherstone--if you were to tell him--tell him, I
10128 mean, about apprenticing Alfred--would advance the money?"
10129
10130 "My family is not fond of begging, Fred. We would rather work for our
10131 money. Besides, you say that Mr. Featherstone has lately given you a
10132 hundred pounds. He rarely makes presents; he has never made presents
10133 to us. I am sure my father will not ask him for anything; and even if
10134 I chose to beg of him, it would be of no use."
10135
10136 "I am so miserable, Mary--if you knew how miserable I am, you would be
10137 sorry for me."
10138
10139 "There are other things to be more sorry for than that. But selfish
10140 people always think their own discomfort of more importance than
10141 anything else in the world. I see enough of that every day."
10142
10143 "It is hardly fair to call me selfish. If you knew what things other
10144 young men do, you would think me a good way off the worst."
10145
10146 "I know that people who spend a great deal of money on themselves
10147 without knowing how they shall pay, must be selfish. They are always
10148 thinking of what they can get for themselves, and not of what other
10149 people may lose."
10150
10151 "Any man may be unfortunate, Mary, and find himself unable to pay when
10152 he meant it. There is not a better man in the world than your father,
10153 and yet he got into trouble."
10154
10155 "How dare you make any comparison between my father and you, Fred?"
10156 said Mary, in a deep tone of indignation. "He never got into trouble
10157 by thinking of his own idle pleasures, but because he was always
10158 thinking of the work he was doing for other people. And he has fared
10159 hard, and worked hard to make good everybody's loss."
10160
10161 "And you think that I shall never try to make good anything, Mary. It
10162 is not generous to believe the worst of a man. When you have got any
10163 power over him, I think you might try and use it to make him better;
10164 but that is what you never do. However, I'm going," Fred ended,
10165 languidly. "I shall never speak to you about anything again. I'm very
10166 sorry for all the trouble I've caused--that's all."
10167
10168 Mary had dropped her work out of her hand and looked up. There is
10169 often something maternal even in a girlish love, and Mary's hard
10170 experience had wrought her nature to an impressibility very different
10171 from that hard slight thing which we call girlishness. At Fred's last
10172 words she felt an instantaneous pang, something like what a mother
10173 feels at the imagined sobs or cries of her naughty truant child, which
10174 may lose itself and get harm. And when, looking up, her eyes met his
10175 dull despairing glance, her pity for him surmounted her anger and all
10176 her other anxieties.
10177
10178 "Oh, Fred, how ill you look! Sit down a moment. Don't go yet. Let me
10179 tell uncle that you are here. He has been wondering that he has not
10180 seen you for a whole week." Mary spoke hurriedly, saying the words
10181 that came first without knowing very well what they were, but saying
10182 them in a half-soothing half-beseeching tone, and rising as if to go
10183 away to Mr. Featherstone. Of course Fred felt as if the clouds had
10184 parted and a gleam had come: he moved and stood in her way.
10185
10186 "Say one word, Mary, and I will do anything. Say you will not think
10187 the worst of me--will not give me up altogether."
10188
10189 "As if it were any pleasure to me to think ill of you," said Mary, in a
10190 mournful tone. "As if it were not very painful to me to see you an
10191 idle frivolous creature. How can you bear to be so contemptible, when
10192 others are working and striving, and there are so many things to be
10193 done--how can you bear to be fit for nothing in the world that is
10194 useful? And with so much good in your disposition, Fred,--you might
10195 be worth a great deal."
10196
10197 "I will try to be anything you like, Mary, if you will say that you
10198 love me."
10199
10200 "I should be ashamed to say that I loved a man who must always be
10201 hanging on others, and reckoning on what they would do for him. What
10202 will you be when you are forty? Like Mr. Bowyer, I suppose--just as
10203 idle, living in Mrs. Beck's front parlor--fat and shabby, hoping
10204 somebody will invite you to dinner--spending your morning in learning a
10205 comic song--oh no! learning a tune on the flute."
10206
10207 Mary's lips had begun to curl with a smile as soon as she had asked
10208 that question about Fred's future (young souls are mobile), and before
10209 she ended, her face had its full illumination of fun. To him it was
10210 like the cessation of an ache that Mary could laugh at him, and with a
10211 passive sort of smile he tried to reach her hand; but she slipped away
10212 quickly towards the door and said, "I shall tell uncle. You _must_ see
10213 him for a moment or two."
10214
10215 Fred secretly felt that his future was guaranteed against the
10216 fulfilment of Mary's sarcastic prophecies, apart from that "anything"
10217 which he was ready to do if she would define it. He never dared in
10218 Mary's presence to approach the subject of his expectations from Mr.
10219 Featherstone, and she always ignored them, as if everything depended on
10220 himself. But if ever he actually came into the property, she must
10221 recognize the change in his position. All this passed through his mind
10222 somewhat languidly, before he went up to see his uncle. He stayed but
10223 a little while, excusing himself on the ground that he had a cold; and
10224 Mary did not reappear before he left the house. But as he rode home,
10225 he began to be more conscious of being ill, than of being melancholy.
10226
10227 When Caleb Garth arrived at Stone Court soon after dusk, Mary was not
10228 surprised, although he seldom had leisure for paying her a visit, and
10229 was not at all fond of having to talk with Mr. Featherstone. The old
10230 man, on the other hand, felt himself ill at ease with a brother-in-law
10231 whom he could not annoy, who did not mind about being considered poor,
10232 had nothing to ask of him, and understood all kinds of farming and
10233 mining business better than he did. But Mary had felt sure that her
10234 parents would want to see her, and if her father had not come, she
10235 would have obtained leave to go home for an hour or two the next day.
10236 After discussing prices during tea with Mr. Featherstone Caleb rose to
10237 bid him good-by, and said, "I want to speak to you, Mary."
10238
10239 She took a candle into another large parlor, where there was no fire,
10240 and setting down the feeble light on the dark mahogany table, turned
10241 round to her father, and putting her arms round his neck kissed him
10242 with childish kisses which he delighted in,--the expression of his
10243 large brows softening as the expression of a great beautiful dog
10244 softens when it is caressed. Mary was his favorite child, and whatever
10245 Susan might say, and right as she was on all other subjects, Caleb
10246 thought it natural that Fred or any one else should think Mary more
10247 lovable than other girls.
10248
10249 "I've got something to tell you, my dear," said Caleb in his hesitating
10250 way. "No very good news; but then it might be worse."
10251
10252 "About money, father? I think I know what it is."
10253
10254 "Ay? how can that be? You see, I've been a bit of a fool again, and
10255 put my name to a bill, and now it comes to paying; and your mother has
10256 got to part with her savings, that's the worst of it, and even they
10257 won't quite make things even. We wanted a hundred and ten pounds: your
10258 mother has ninety-two, and I have none to spare in the bank; and she
10259 thinks that you have some savings."
10260
10261 "Oh yes; I have more than four-and-twenty pounds. I thought you would
10262 come, father, so I put it in my bag. See! beautiful white notes and
10263 gold."
10264
10265 Mary took out the folded money from her reticule and put it into her
10266 father's hand.
10267
10268 "Well, but how--we only want eighteen--here, put the rest back,
10269 child,--but how did you know about it?" said Caleb, who, in his
10270 unconquerable indifference to money, was beginning to be chiefly
10271 concerned about the relation the affair might have to Mary's affections.
10272
10273 "Fred told me this morning."
10274
10275 "Ah! Did he come on purpose?"
10276
10277 "Yes, I think so. He was a good deal distressed."
10278
10279 "I'm afraid Fred is not to be trusted, Mary," said the father, with
10280 hesitating tenderness. "He means better than he acts, perhaps. But I
10281 should think it a pity for any body's happiness to be wrapped up in
10282 him, and so would your mother."
10283
10284 "And so should I, father," said Mary, not looking up, but putting the
10285 back of her father's hand against her cheek.
10286
10287 "I don't want to pry, my dear. But I was afraid there might be
10288 something between you and Fred, and I wanted to caution you. You see,
10289 Mary"--here Caleb's voice became more tender; he had been pushing his
10290 hat about on the table and looking at it, but finally he turned his
10291 eyes on his daughter--"a woman, let her be as good as she may, has got
10292 to put up with the life her husband makes for her. Your mother has had
10293 to put up with a good deal because of me."
10294
10295 Mary turned the back of her father's hand to her lips and smiled at him.
10296
10297 "Well, well, nobody's perfect, but"--here Mr. Garth shook his head to
10298 help out the inadequacy of words--"what I am thinking of is--what it
10299 must be for a wife when she's never sure of her husband, when he hasn't
10300 got a principle in him to make him more afraid of doing the wrong thing
10301 by others than of getting his own toes pinched. That's the long and
10302 the short of it, Mary. Young folks may get fond of each other before
10303 they know what life is, and they may think it all holiday if they can
10304 only get together; but it soon turns into working day, my dear.
10305 However, you have more sense than most, and you haven't been kept in
10306 cotton-wool: there may be no occasion for me to say this, but a father
10307 trembles for his daughter, and you are all by yourself here."
10308
10309 "Don't fear for me, father," said Mary, gravely meeting her father's
10310 eyes; "Fred has always been very good to me; he is kind-hearted and
10311 affectionate, and not false, I think, with all his self-indulgence. But
10312 I will never engage myself to one who has no manly independence, and
10313 who goes on loitering away his time on the chance that others will
10314 provide for him. You and my mother have taught me too much pride for
10315 that."
10316
10317 "That's right--that's right. Then I am easy," said Mr. Garth, taking
10318 up his hat. "But it's hard to run away with your earnings, eh child."
10319
10320 "Father!" said Mary, in her deepest tone of remonstrance. "Take
10321 pocketfuls of love besides to them all at home," was her last word
10322 before he closed the outer door on himself.
10323
10324 "I suppose your father wanted your earnings," said old Mr.
10325 Featherstone, with his usual power of unpleasant surmise, when Mary
10326 returned to him. "He makes but a tight fit, I reckon. You're of age
10327 now; you ought to be saving for yourself."
10328
10329 "I consider my father and mother the best part of myself, sir," said
10330 Mary, coldly.
10331
10332 Mr. Featherstone grunted: he could not deny that an ordinary sort of
10333 girl like her might be expected to be useful, so he thought of another
10334 rejoinder, disagreeable enough to be always apropos. "If Fred Vincy
10335 comes to-morrow, now, don't you keep him chattering: let him come up to
10336 me."
10337
10338
10339
10340 CHAPTER XXVI.
10341
10342 "He beats me and I rail at him: O worthy satisfaction!
10343 would it were otherwise--that I could beat him while
10344 he railed at me.--"
10345 --Troilus and Cressida.
10346
10347
10348 But Fred did not go to Stone Court the next day, for reasons that were
10349 quite peremptory. From those visits to unsanitary Houndsley streets in
10350 search of Diamond, he had brought back not only a bad bargain in
10351 horse-flesh, but the further misfortune of some ailment which for a day
10352 or two had deemed mere depression and headache, but which got so much
10353 worse when he returned from his visit to Stone Court that, going into
10354 the dining-room, he threw himself on the sofa, and in answer to his
10355 mother's anxious question, said, "I feel very ill: I think you must
10356 send for Wrench."
10357
10358 Wrench came, but did not apprehend anything serious, spoke of a "slight
10359 derangement," and did not speak of coming again on the morrow. He had
10360 a due value for the Vincys' house, but the wariest men are apt to be
10361 dulled by routine, and on worried mornings will sometimes go through
10362 their business with the zest of the daily bell-ringer. Mr. Wrench was
10363 a small, neat, bilious man, with a well-dressed wig: he had a laborious
10364 practice, an irascible temper, a lymphatic wife and seven children; and
10365 he was already rather late before setting out on a four-miles drive to
10366 meet Dr. Minchin on the other side of Tipton, the decease of Hicks, a
10367 rural practitioner, having increased Middlemarch practice in that
10368 direction. Great statesmen err, and why not small medical men? Mr.
10369 Wrench did not neglect sending the usual white parcels, which this time
10370 had black and drastic contents. Their effect was not alleviating to
10371 poor Fred, who, however, unwilling as he said to believe that he was
10372 "in for an illness," rose at his usual easy hour the next morning and
10373 went down-stairs meaning to breakfast, but succeeded in nothing but in
10374 sitting and shivering by the fire. Mr. Wrench was again sent for, but
10375 was gone on his rounds, and Mrs. Vincy seeing her darling's changed
10376 looks and general misery, began to cry and said she would send for Dr.
10377 Sprague.
10378
10379 "Oh, nonsense, mother! It's nothing," said Fred, putting out his hot
10380 dry hand to her, "I shall soon be all right. I must have taken cold in
10381 that nasty damp ride."
10382
10383 "Mamma!" said Rosamond, who was seated near the window (the dining-room
10384 windows looked on that highly respectable street called Lowick Gate),
10385 "there is Mr. Lydgate, stopping to speak to some one. If I were you I
10386 would call him in. He has cured Ellen Bulstrode. They say he cures
10387 every one."
10388
10389 Mrs. Vincy sprang to the window and opened it in an instant, thinking
10390 only of Fred and not of medical etiquette. Lydgate was only two yards
10391 off on the other side of some iron palisading, and turned round at the
10392 sudden sound of the sash, before she called to him. In two minutes he
10393 was in the room, and Rosamond went out, after waiting just long enough
10394 to show a pretty anxiety conflicting with her sense of what was
10395 becoming.
10396
10397 Lydgate had to hear a narrative in which Mrs. Vincy's mind insisted
10398 with remarkable instinct on every point of minor importance, especially
10399 on what Mr. Wrench had said and had not said about coming again. That
10400 there might be an awkward affair with Wrench, Lydgate saw at once; but
10401 the case was serious enough to make him dismiss that consideration: he
10402 was convinced that Fred was in the pink-skinned stage of typhoid fever,
10403 and that he had taken just the wrong medicines. He must go to bed
10404 immediately, must have a regular nurse, and various appliances and
10405 precautions must be used, about which Lydgate was particular. Poor
10406 Mrs. Vincy's terror at these indications of danger found vent in such
10407 words as came most easily. She thought it "very ill usage on the part
10408 of Mr. Wrench, who had attended their house so many years in preference
10409 to Mr. Peacock, though Mr. Peacock was equally a friend. Why Mr.
10410 Wrench should neglect her children more than others, she could not for
10411 the life of her understand. He had not neglected Mrs. Larcher's when
10412 they had the measles, nor indeed would Mrs. Vincy have wished that he
10413 should. And if anything should happen--"
10414
10415 Here poor Mrs. Vincy's spirit quite broke down, and her Niobe throat
10416 and good-humored face were sadly convulsed. This was in the hall out
10417 of Fred's hearing, but Rosamond had opened the drawing-room door, and
10418 now came forward anxiously. Lydgate apologized for Mr. Wrench, said
10419 that the symptoms yesterday might have been disguising, and that this
10420 form of fever was very equivocal in its beginnings: he would go
10421 immediately to the druggist's and have a prescription made up in order
10422 to lose no time, but he would write to Mr. Wrench and tell him what had
10423 been done.
10424
10425 "But you must come again--you must go on attending Fred. I can't have
10426 my boy left to anybody who may come or not. I bear nobody ill-will,
10427 thank God, and Mr. Wrench saved me in the pleurisy, but he'd better
10428 have let me die--if--if--"
10429
10430 "I will meet Mr. Wrench here, then, shall I?" said Lydgate, really
10431 believing that Wrench was not well prepared to deal wisely with a case
10432 of this kind.
10433
10434 "Pray make that arrangement, Mr. Lydgate," said Rosamond, coming to her
10435 mother's aid, and supporting her arm to lead her away.
10436
10437 When Mr. Vincy came home he was very angry with Wrench, and did not
10438 care if he never came into his house again. Lydgate should go on now,
10439 whether Wrench liked it or not. It was no joke to have fever in the
10440 house. Everybody must be sent to now, not to come to dinner on
10441 Thursday. And Pritchard needn't get up any wine: brandy was the best
10442 thing against infection. "I shall drink brandy," added Mr. Vincy,
10443 emphatically--as much as to say, this was not an occasion for firing
10444 with blank-cartridges. "He's an uncommonly unfortunate lad, is Fred.
10445 He'd need have--some luck by-and-by to make up for all this--else I
10446 don't know who'd have an eldest son."
10447
10448 "Don't say so, Vincy," said the mother, with a quivering lip, "if you
10449 don't want him to be taken from me."
10450
10451 "It will worret you to death, Lucy; _that_ I can see," said Mr. Vincy,
10452 more mildly. "However, Wrench shall know what I think of the matter."
10453 (What Mr. Vincy thought confusedly was, that the fever might somehow
10454 have been hindered if Wrench had shown the proper solicitude about
10455 his--the Mayor's--family.) "I'm the last man to give in to the cry
10456 about new doctors, or new parsons either--whether they're Bulstrode's
10457 men or not. But Wrench shall know what I think, take it as he will."
10458
10459 Wrench did not take it at all well. Lydgate was as polite as he could
10460 be in his offhand way, but politeness in a man who has placed you at a
10461 disadvantage is only an additional exasperation, especially if he
10462 happens to have been an object of dislike beforehand. Country
10463 practitioners used to be an irritable species, susceptible on the point
10464 of honor; and Mr. Wrench was one of the most irritable among them. He
10465 did not refuse to meet Lydgate in the evening, but his temper was
10466 somewhat tried on the occasion. He had to hear Mrs. Vincy say--
10467
10468 "Oh, Mr. Wrench, what have I ever done that you should use me so?-- To
10469 go away, and never to come again! And my boy might have been stretched
10470 a corpse!"
10471
10472 Mr. Vincy, who had been keeping up a sharp fire on the enemy Infection,
10473 and was a good deal heated in consequence, started up when he heard
10474 Wrench come in, and went into the hall to let him know what he thought.
10475
10476 "I'll tell you what, Wrench, this is beyond a joke," said the Mayor,
10477 who of late had had to rebuke offenders with an official air, and how
10478 broadened himself by putting his thumbs in his armholes.-- "To let
10479 fever get unawares into a house like this. There are some things that
10480 ought to be actionable, and are not so-- that's my opinion."
10481
10482 But irrational reproaches were easier to bear than the sense of being
10483 instructed, or rather the sense that a younger man, like Lydgate,
10484 inwardly considered him in need of instruction, for "in point of fact,"
10485 Mr. Wrench afterwards said, Lydgate paraded flighty, foreign notions,
10486 which would not wear. He swallowed his ire for the moment, but he
10487 afterwards wrote to decline further attendance in the case. The house
10488 might be a good one, but Mr. Wrench was not going to truckle to anybody
10489 on a professional matter. He reflected, with much probability on his
10490 side, that Lydgate would by-and-by be caught tripping too, and that his
10491 ungentlemanly attempts to discredit the sale of drugs by his
10492 professional brethren, would by-and-by recoil on himself. He threw out
10493 biting remarks on Lydgate's tricks, worthy only of a quack, to get
10494 himself a factitious reputation with credulous people. That cant about
10495 cures was never got up by sound practitioners.
10496
10497 This was a point on which Lydgate smarted as much as Wrench could
10498 desire. To be puffed by ignorance was not only humiliating, but
10499 perilous, and not more enviable than the reputation of the
10500 weather-prophet. He was impatient of the foolish expectations amidst
10501 which all work must be carried on, and likely enough to damage himself
10502 as much as Mr. Wrench could wish, by an unprofessional openness.
10503
10504 However, Lydgate was installed as medical attendant on the Vincys, and
10505 the event was a subject of general conversation in Middlemarch. Some
10506 said, that the Vincys had behaved scandalously, that Mr. Vincy had
10507 threatened Wrench, and that Mrs. Vincy had accused him of poisoning her
10508 son. Others were of opinion that Mr. Lydgate's passing by was
10509 providential, that he was wonderfully clever in fevers, and that
10510 Bulstrode was in the right to bring him forward. Many people believed
10511 that Lydgate's coming to the town at all was really due to Bulstrode;
10512 and Mrs. Taft, who was always counting stitches and gathered her
10513 information in misleading fragments caught between the rows of her
10514 knitting, had got it into her head that Mr. Lydgate was a natural son
10515 of Bulstrode's, a fact which seemed to justify her suspicions of
10516 evangelical laymen.
10517
10518 She one day communicated this piece of knowledge to Mrs. Farebrother,
10519 who did not fail to tell her son of it, observing--
10520
10521 "I should not be surprised at anything in Bulstrode, but I should be
10522 sorry to think it of Mr. Lydgate."
10523
10524 "Why, mother," said Mr. Farebrother, after an explosive laugh, "you
10525 know very well that Lydgate is of a good family in the North. He never
10526 heard of Bulstrode before he came here."
10527
10528 "That is satisfactory so far as Mr. Lydgate is concerned, Camden," said
10529 the old lady, with an air of precision.--"But as to Bulstrode--the
10530 report may be true of some other son."
10531
10532
10533
10534 CHAPTER XXVII.
10535
10536 Let the high Muse chant loves Olympian:
10537 We are but mortals, and must sing of man.
10538
10539
10540 An eminent philosopher among my friends, who can dignify even your ugly
10541 furniture by lifting it into the serene light of science, has shown me
10542 this pregnant little fact. Your pier-glass or extensive surface of
10543 polished steel made to be rubbed by a housemaid, will be minutely and
10544 multitudinously scratched in all directions; but place now against it a
10545 lighted candle as a centre of illumination, and lo! the scratches will
10546 seem to arrange themselves in a fine series of concentric circles round
10547 that little sun. It is demonstrable that the scratches are going
10548 everywhere impartially and it is only your candle which produces the
10549 flattering illusion of a concentric arrangement, its light falling with
10550 an exclusive optical selection. These things are a parable. The
10551 scratches are events, and the candle is the egoism of any person now
10552 absent--of Miss Vincy, for example. Rosamond had a Providence of her
10553 own who had kindly made her more charming than other girls, and who
10554 seemed to have arranged Fred's illness and Mr. Wrench's mistake in
10555 order to bring her and Lydgate within effective proximity. It would
10556 have been to contravene these arrangements if Rosamond had consented to
10557 go away to Stone Court or elsewhere, as her parents wished her to do,
10558 especially since Mr. Lydgate thought the precaution needless.
10559 Therefore, while Miss Morgan and the children were sent away to a
10560 farmhouse the morning after Fred's illness had declared itself,
10561 Rosamond refused to leave papa and mamma.
10562
10563 Poor mamma indeed was an object to touch any creature born of woman;
10564 and Mr. Vincy, who doted on his wife, was more alarmed on her account
10565 than on Fred's. But for his insistence she would have taken no rest:
10566 her brightness was all bedimmed; unconscious of her costume which had
10567 always been so fresh and gay, she was like a sick bird with languid eye
10568 and plumage ruffled, her senses dulled to the sights and sounds that
10569 used most to interest her. Fred's delirium, in which he seemed to be
10570 wandering out of her reach, tore her heart. After her first outburst
10571 against Mr. Wrench she went about very quietly: her one low cry was to
10572 Lydgate. She would follow him out of the room and put her hand on his
10573 arm moaning out, "Save my boy." Once she pleaded, "He has always been
10574 good to me, Mr. Lydgate: he never had a hard word for his mother,"--as
10575 if poor Fred's suffering were an accusation against him. All the
10576 deepest fibres of the mother's memory were stirred, and the young man
10577 whose voice took a gentler tone when he spoke to her, was one with the
10578 babe whom she had loved, with a love new to her, before he was born.
10579
10580 "I have good hope, Mrs. Vincy," Lydgate would say. "Come down with me
10581 and let us talk about the food." In that way he led her to the parlor
10582 where Rosamond was, and made a change for her, surprising her into
10583 taking some tea or broth which had been prepared for her. There was a
10584 constant understanding between him and Rosamond on these matters. He
10585 almost always saw her before going to the sickroom, and she appealed to
10586 him as to what she could do for mamma. Her presence of mind and
10587 adroitness in carrying out his hints were admirable, and it is not
10588 wonderful that the idea of seeing Rosamond began to mingle itself with
10589 his interest in the case. Especially when the critical stage was
10590 passed, and he began to feel confident of Fred's recovery. In the more
10591 doubtful time, he had advised calling in Dr. Sprague (who, if he could,
10592 would rather have remained neutral on Wrench's account); but after two
10593 consultations, the conduct of the case was left to Lydgate, and there
10594 was every reason to make him assiduous. Morning and evening he was at
10595 Mr. Vincy's, and gradually the visits became cheerful as Fred became
10596 simply feeble, and lay not only in need of the utmost petting but
10597 conscious of it, so that Mrs. Vincy felt as if, after all, the illness
10598 had made a festival for her tenderness.
10599
10600 Both father and mother held it an added reason for good spirits, when
10601 old Mr. Featherstone sent messages by Lydgate, saying that Fred must
10602 make haste and get well, as he, Peter Featherstone, could not do
10603 without him, and missed his visits sadly. The old man himself was
10604 getting bedridden. Mrs. Vincy told these messages to Fred when he
10605 could listen, and he turned towards her his delicate, pinched face,
10606 from which all the thick blond hair had been cut away, and in which the
10607 eyes seemed to have got larger, yearning for some word about
10608 Mary--wondering what she felt about his illness. No word passed his
10609 lips; but "to hear with eyes belongs to love's rare wit," and the
10610 mother in the fulness of her heart not only divined Fred's longing, but
10611 felt ready for any sacrifice in order to satisfy him.
10612
10613 "If I can only see my boy strong again," she said, in her loving folly;
10614 "and who knows?--perhaps master of Stone Court! and he can marry
10615 anybody he likes then."
10616
10617 "Not if they won't have me, mother," said Fred. The illness had made
10618 him childish, and tears came as he spoke.
10619
10620 "Oh, take a bit of jelly, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, secretly
10621 incredulous of any such refusal.
10622
10623 She never left Fred's side when her husband was not in the house, and
10624 thus Rosamond was in the unusual position of being much alone.
10625 Lydgate, naturally, never thought of staying long with her, yet it
10626 seemed that the brief impersonal conversations they had together were
10627 creating that peculiar intimacy which consists in shyness. They were
10628 obliged to look at each other in speaking, and somehow the looking
10629 could not be carried through as the matter of course which it really
10630 was. Lydgate began to feel this sort of consciousness unpleasant and
10631 one day looked down, or anywhere, like an ill-worked puppet. But this
10632 turned out badly: the next day, Rosamond looked down, and the
10633 consequence was that when their eyes met again, both were more
10634 conscious than before. There was no help for this in science, and as
10635 Lydgate did not want to flirt, there seemed to be no help for it in
10636 folly. It was therefore a relief when neighbors no longer considered
10637 the house in quarantine, and when the chances of seeing Rosamond alone
10638 were very much reduced.
10639
10640 But that intimacy of mutual embarrassment, in which each feels that the
10641 other is feeling something, having once existed, its effect is not to
10642 be done away with. Talk about the weather and other well-bred topics
10643 is apt to seem a hollow device, and behavior can hardly become easy
10644 unless it frankly recognizes a mutual fascination--which of course need
10645 not mean anything deep or serious. This was the way in which Rosamond
10646 and Lydgate slid gracefully into ease, and made their intercourse
10647 lively again. Visitors came and went as usual, there was once more
10648 music in the drawing-room, and all the extra hospitality of Mr. Vincy's
10649 mayoralty returned. Lydgate, whenever he could, took his seat by
10650 Rosamond's side, and lingered to hear her music, calling himself her
10651 captive--meaning, all the while, not to be her captive. The
10652 preposterousness of the notion that he could at once set up a
10653 satisfactory establishment as a married man was a sufficient guarantee
10654 against danger. This play at being a little in love was agreeable, and
10655 did not interfere with graver pursuits. Flirtation, after all, was not
10656 necessarily a singeing process. Rosamond, for her part, had never
10657 enjoyed the days so much in her life before: she was sure of being
10658 admired by some one worth captivating, and she did not distinguish
10659 flirtation from love, either in herself or in another. She seemed to
10660 be sailing with a fair wind just whither she would go, and her thoughts
10661 were much occupied with a handsome house in Lowick Gate which she hoped
10662 would by-and-by be vacant. She was quite determined, when she was
10663 married, to rid herself adroitly of all the visitors who were not
10664 agreeable to her at her father's; and she imagined the drawing-room in
10665 her favorite house with various styles of furniture.
10666
10667 Certainly her thoughts were much occupied with Lydgate himself; he
10668 seemed to her almost perfect: if he had known his notes so that his
10669 enchantment under her music had been less like an emotional elephant's,
10670 and if he had been able to discriminate better the refinements of her
10671 taste in dress, she could hardly have mentioned a deficiency in him.
10672 How different he was from young Plymdale or Mr. Caius Larcher! Those
10673 young men had not a notion of French, and could speak on no subject
10674 with striking knowledge, except perhaps the dyeing and carrying trades,
10675 which of course they were ashamed to mention; they were Middlemarch
10676 gentry, elated with their silver-headed whips and satin stocks, but
10677 embarrassed in their manners, and timidly jocose: even Fred was above
10678 them, having at least the accent and manner of a university man.
10679 Whereas Lydgate was always listened to, bore himself with the careless
10680 politeness of conscious superiority, and seemed to have the right
10681 clothes on by a certain natural affinity, without ever having to think
10682 about them. Rosamond was proud when he entered the room, and when he
10683 approached her with a distinguishing smile, she had a delicious sense
10684 that she was the object of enviable homage. If Lydgate had been aware
10685 of all the pride he excited in that delicate bosom, he might have been
10686 just as well pleased as any other man, even the most densely ignorant
10687 of humoral pathology or fibrous tissue: he held it one of the prettiest
10688 attitudes of the feminine mind to adore a man's pre-eminence without
10689 too precise a knowledge of what it consisted in. But Rosamond was not
10690 one of those helpless girls who betray themselves unawares, and whose
10691 behavior is awkwardly driven by their impulses, instead of being
10692 steered by wary grace and propriety. Do you imagine that her rapid
10693 forecast and rumination concerning house-furniture and society were
10694 ever discernible in her conversation, even with her mamma? On the
10695 contrary, she would have expressed the prettiest surprise and
10696 disapprobation if she had heard that another young lady had been
10697 detected in that immodest prematureness--indeed, would probably have
10698 disbelieved in its possibility. For Rosamond never showed any
10699 unbecoming knowledge, and was always that combination of correct
10700 sentiments, music, dancing, drawing, elegant note-writing, private
10701 album for extracted verse, and perfect blond loveliness, which made the
10702 irresistible woman for the doomed man of that date. Think no unfair
10703 evil of her, pray: she had no wicked plots, nothing sordid or
10704 mercenary; in fact, she never thought of money except as something
10705 necessary which other people would always provide. She was not in the
10706 habit of devising falsehoods, and if her statements were no direct clew
10707 to fact, why, they were not intended in that light--they were among
10708 her elegant accomplishments, intended to please. Nature had inspired
10709 many arts in finishing Mrs. Lemon's favorite pupil, who by general
10710 consent (Fred's excepted) was a rare compound of beauty, cleverness,
10711 and amiability.
10712
10713 Lydgate found it more and more agreeable to be with her, and there was
10714 no constraint now, there was a delightful interchange of influence in
10715 their eyes, and what they said had that superfluity of meaning for
10716 them, which is observable with some sense of flatness by a third
10717 person; still they had no interviews or asides from which a third
10718 person need have been excluded. In fact, they flirted; and Lydgate was
10719 secure in the belief that they did nothing else. If a man could not
10720 love and be wise, surely he could flirt and be wise at the same time?
10721 Really, the men in Middlemarch, except Mr. Farebrother, were great
10722 bores, and Lydgate did not care about commercial politics or cards:
10723 what was he to do for relaxation? He was often invited to the
10724 Bulstrodes'; but the girls there were hardly out of the schoolroom; and
10725 Mrs. Bulstrode's _naive_ way of conciliating piety and worldliness, the
10726 nothingness of this life and the desirability of cut glass, the
10727 consciousness at once of filthy rags and the best damask, was not a
10728 sufficient relief from the weight of her husband's invariable
10729 seriousness. The Vincys' house, with all its faults, was the
10730 pleasanter by contrast; besides, it nourished Rosamond--sweet to look
10731 at as a half-opened blush-rose, and adorned with accomplishments for
10732 the refined amusement of man.
10733
10734 But he made some enemies, other than medical, by his success with Miss
10735 Vincy. One evening he came into the drawing-room rather late, when
10736 several other visitors were there. The card-table had drawn off the
10737 elders, and Mr. Ned Plymdale (one of the good matches in Middlemarch,
10738 though not one of its leading minds) was in tete-a-tete with Rosamond.
10739 He had brought the last "Keepsake," the gorgeous watered-silk
10740 publication which marked modern progress at that time; and he
10741 considered himself very fortunate that he could be the first to look
10742 over it with her, dwelling on the ladies and gentlemen with shiny
10743 copper-plate cheeks and copper-plate smiles, and pointing to comic
10744 verses as capital and sentimental stories as interesting. Rosamond was
10745 gracious, and Mr. Ned was satisfied that he had the very best thing in
10746 art and literature as a medium for "paying addresses"--the very thing
10747 to please a nice girl. He had also reasons, deep rather than
10748 ostensible, for being satisfied with his own appearance. To
10749 superficial observers his chin had too vanishing an aspect, looking as
10750 if it were being gradually reabsorbed. And it did indeed cause him
10751 some difficulty about the fit of his satin stocks, for which chins were
10752 at that time useful.
10753
10754 "I think the Honorable Mrs. S. is something like you," said Mr. Ned.
10755 He kept the book open at the bewitching portrait, and looked at it
10756 rather languishingly.
10757
10758 "Her back is very large; she seems to have sat for that," said
10759 Rosamond, not meaning any satire, but thinking how red young Plymdale's
10760 hands were, and wondering why Lydgate did not come. She went on with
10761 her tatting all the while.
10762
10763 "I did not say she was as beautiful as you are," said Mr. Ned,
10764 venturing to look from the portrait to its rival.
10765
10766 "I suspect you of being an adroit flatterer," said Rosamond, feeling
10767 sure that she should have to reject this young gentleman a second time.
10768
10769 But now Lydgate came in; the book was closed before he reached
10770 Rosamond's corner, and as he took his seat with easy confidence on the
10771 other side of her, young Plymdale's jaw fell like a barometer towards
10772 the cheerless side of change. Rosamond enjoyed not only Lydgate's
10773 presence but its effect: she liked to excite jealousy.
10774
10775 "What a late comer you are!" she said, as they shook hands. "Mamma had
10776 given you up a little while ago. How do you find Fred?"
10777
10778 "As usual; going on well, but slowly. I want him to go away--to Stone
10779 Court, for example. But your mamma seems to have some objection."
10780
10781 "Poor fellow!" said Rosamond, prettily. "You will see Fred so
10782 changed," she added, turning to the other suitor; "we have looked to
10783 Mr. Lydgate as our guardian angel during this illness."
10784
10785 Mr. Ned smiled nervously, while Lydgate, drawing the "Keepsake" towards
10786 him and opening it, gave a short scornful laugh and tossed up his
10787 chin, as if in wonderment at human folly.
10788
10789 "What are you laughing at so profanely?" said Rosamond, with bland
10790 neutrality.
10791
10792 "I wonder which would turn out to be the silliest--the engravings or
10793 the writing here," said Lydgate, in his most convinced tone, while he
10794 turned over the pages quickly, seeming to see all through the book in
10795 no time, and showing his large white hands to much advantage, as
10796 Rosamond thought. "Do look at this bridegroom coming out of church:
10797 did you ever see such a 'sugared invention'--as the Elizabethans used
10798 to say? Did any haberdasher ever look so smirking? Yet I will answer
10799 for it the story makes him one of the first gentlemen in the land."
10800
10801 "You are so severe, I am frightened at you," said Rosamond, keeping her
10802 amusement duly moderate. Poor young Plymdale had lingered with
10803 admiration over this very engraving, and his spirit was stirred.
10804
10805 "There are a great many celebrated people writing in the 'Keepsake,' at
10806 all events," he said, in a tone at once piqued and timid. "This is the
10807 first time I have heard it called silly."
10808
10809 "I think I shall turn round on you and accuse you of being a Goth,"
10810 said Rosamond, looking at Lydgate with a smile. "I suspect you know
10811 nothing about Lady Blessington and L. E. L." Rosamond herself was not
10812 without relish for these writers, but she did not readily commit
10813 herself by admiration, and was alive to the slightest hint that
10814 anything was not, according to Lydgate, in the very highest taste.
10815
10816 "But Sir Walter Scott--I suppose Mr. Lydgate knows him," said young
10817 Plymdale, a little cheered by this advantage.
10818
10819 "Oh, I read no literature now," said Lydgate, shutting the book, and
10820 pushing it away. "I read so much when I was a lad, that I suppose it
10821 will last me all my life. I used to know Scott's poems by heart."
10822
10823 "I should like to know when you left off," said Rosamond, "because then
10824 I might be sure that I knew something which you did not know."
10825
10826 "Mr. Lydgate would say that was not worth knowing," said Mr. Ned,
10827 purposely caustic.
10828
10829 "On the contrary," said Lydgate, showing no smart; but smiling with
10830 exasperating confidence at Rosamond. "It would be worth knowing by the
10831 fact that Miss Vincy could tell it me."
10832
10833 Young Plymdale soon went to look at the whist-playing, thinking that
10834 Lydgate was one of the most conceited, unpleasant fellows it had ever
10835 been his ill-fortune to meet.
10836
10837 "How rash you are!" said Rosamond, inwardly delighted. "Do you see
10838 that you have given offence?"
10839
10840 "What! is it Mr. Plymdale's book? I am sorry. I didn't think about
10841 it."
10842
10843 "I shall begin to admit what you said of yourself when you first came
10844 here--that you are a bear, and want teaching by the birds."
10845
10846 "Well, there is a bird who can teach me what she will. Don't I listen
10847 to her willingly?"
10848
10849 To Rosamond it seemed as if she and Lydgate were as good as engaged.
10850 That they were some time to be engaged had long been an idea in her
10851 mind; and ideas, we know, tend to a more solid kind of existence, the
10852 necessary materials being at hand. It is true, Lydgate had the
10853 counter-idea of remaining unengaged; but this was a mere negative, a
10854 shadow cast by other resolves which themselves were capable of
10855 shrinking. Circumstance was almost sure to be on the side of
10856 Rosamond's idea, which had a shaping activity and looked through
10857 watchful blue eyes, whereas Lydgate's lay blind and unconcerned as a
10858 jelly-fish which gets melted without knowing it.
10859
10860 That evening when he went home, he looked at his phials to see how a
10861 process of maceration was going on, with undisturbed interest; and he
10862 wrote out his daily notes with as much precision as usual. The
10863 reveries from which it was difficult for him to detach himself were
10864 ideal constructions of something else than Rosamond's virtues, and the
10865 primitive tissue was still his fair unknown. Moreover, he was
10866 beginning to feel some zest for the growing though half-suppressed feud
10867 between him and the other medical men, which was likely to become more
10868 manifest, now that Bulstrode's method of managing the new hospital was
10869 about to be declared; and there were various inspiriting signs that his
10870 non-acceptance by some of Peacock's patients might be counterbalanced
10871 by the impression he had produced in other quarters. Only a few days
10872 later, when he had happened to overtake Rosamond on the Lowick road and
10873 had got down from his horse to walk by her side until he had quite
10874 protected her from a passing drove, he had been stopped by a servant on
10875 horseback with a message calling him in to a house of some importance
10876 where Peacock had never attended; and it was the second instance of
10877 this kind. The servant was Sir James Chettam's, and the house was
10878 Lowick Manor.
10879
10880
10881
10882 CHAPTER XXVIII.
10883
10884 1st Gent. All times are good to seek your wedded home
10885 Bringing a mutual delight.
10886
10887 2d Gent. Why, true.
10888 The calendar hath not an evil day
10889 For souls made one by love, and even death
10890 Were sweetness, if it came like rolling waves
10891 While they two clasped each other, and foresaw
10892 No life apart.
10893
10894
10895 Mr. and Mrs. Casaubon, returning from their wedding journey, arrived at
10896 Lowick Manor in the middle of January. A light snow was falling as
10897 they descended at the door, and in the morning, when Dorothea passed
10898 from her dressing-room avenue the blue-green boudoir that we know of,
10899 she saw the long avenue of limes lifting their trunks from a white
10900 earth, and spreading white branches against the dun and motionless sky.
10901 The distant flat shrank in uniform whiteness and low-hanging uniformity
10902 of cloud. The very furniture in the room seemed to have shrunk since
10903 she saw it before: the stag in the tapestry looked more like a ghost in
10904 his ghostly blue-green world; the volumes of polite literature in the
10905 bookcase looked more like immovable imitations of books. The bright
10906 fire of dry oak-boughs burning on the logs seemed an incongruous
10907 renewal of life and glow--like the figure of Dorothea herself as she
10908 entered carrying the red-leather cases containing the cameos for Celia.
10909
10910 She was glowing from her morning toilet as only healthful youth can
10911 glow: there was gem-like brightness on her coiled hair and in her hazel
10912 eyes; there was warm red life in her lips; her throat had a breathing
10913 whiteness above the differing white of the fur which itself seemed to
10914 wind about her neck and cling down her blue-gray pelisse with a
10915 tenderness gathered from her own, a sentient commingled innocence which
10916 kept its loveliness against the crystalline purity of the outdoor snow.
10917 As she laid the cameo-cases on the table in the bow-window, she
10918 unconsciously kept her hands on them, immediately absorbed in looking
10919 out on the still, white enclosure which made her visible world.
10920
10921 Mr. Casaubon, who had risen early complaining of palpitation, was in
10922 the library giving audience to his curate Mr. Tucker. By-and-by Celia
10923 would come in her quality of bridesmaid as well as sister, and through
10924 the next weeks there would be wedding visits received and given; all in
10925 continuance of that transitional life understood to correspond with the
10926 excitement of bridal felicity, and keeping up the sense of busy
10927 ineffectiveness, as of a dream which the dreamer begins to suspect.
10928 The duties of her married life, contemplated as so great beforehand,
10929 seemed to be shrinking with the furniture and the white vapor-walled
10930 landscape. The clear heights where she expected to walk in full
10931 communion had become difficult to see even in her imagination; the
10932 delicious repose of the soul on a complete superior had been shaken
10933 into uneasy effort and alarmed with dim presentiment. When would the
10934 days begin of that active wifely devotion which was to strengthen her
10935 husband's life and exalt her own? Never perhaps, as she had
10936 preconceived them; but somehow--still somehow. In this solemnly
10937 pledged union of her life, duty would present itself in some new form
10938 of inspiration and give a new meaning to wifely love.
10939
10940 Meanwhile there was the snow and the low arch of dun vapor--there was
10941 the stifling oppression of that gentlewoman's world, where everything
10942 was done for her and none asked for her aid--where the sense of
10943 connection with a manifold pregnant existence had to be kept up
10944 painfully as an inward vision, instead of coming from without in claims
10945 that would have shaped her energies.-- "What shall I do?" "Whatever you
10946 please, my dear:" that had been her brief history since she had left
10947 off learning morning lessons and practising silly rhythms on the hated
10948 piano. Marriage, which was to bring guidance into worthy and
10949 imperative occupation, had not yet freed her from the gentlewoman's
10950 oppressive liberty: it had not even filled her leisure with the
10951 ruminant joy of unchecked tenderness. Her blooming full-pulsed youth
10952 stood there in a moral imprisonment which made itself one with the
10953 chill, colorless, narrowed landscape, with the shrunken furniture, the
10954 never-read books, and the ghostly stag in a pale fantastic world that
10955 seemed to be vanishing from the daylight.
10956
10957 In the first minutes when Dorothea looked out she felt nothing but the
10958 dreary oppression; then came a keen remembrance, and turning away from
10959 the window she walked round the room. The ideas and hopes which were
10960 living in her mind when she first saw this room nearly three months
10961 before were present now only as memories: she judged them as we judge
10962 transient and departed things. All existence seemed to beat with a
10963 lower pulse than her own, and her religious faith was a solitary cry,
10964 the struggle out of a nightmare in which every object was withering and
10965 shrinking away from her. Each remembered thing in the room was
10966 disenchanted, was deadened as an unlit transparency, till her wandering
10967 gaze came to the group of miniatures, and there at last she saw
10968 something which had gathered new breath and meaning: it was the
10969 miniature of Mr. Casaubon's aunt Julia, who had made the unfortunate
10970 marriage--of Will Ladislaw's grandmother. Dorothea could fancy that
10971 it was alive now--the delicate woman's face which yet had a headstrong
10972 look, a peculiarity difficult to interpret. Was it only her friends
10973 who thought her marriage unfortunate? or did she herself find it out to
10974 be a mistake, and taste the salt bitterness of her tears in the
10975 merciful silence of the night? What breadths of experience Dorothea
10976 seemed to have passed over since she first looked at this miniature!
10977 She felt a new companionship with it, as if it had an ear for her and
10978 could see how she was looking at it. Here was a woman who had known
10979 some difficulty about marriage. Nay, the colors deepened, the lips and
10980 chin seemed to get larger, the hair and eyes seemed to be sending out
10981 light, the face was masculine and beamed on her with that full gaze
10982 which tells her on whom it falls that she is too interesting for the
10983 slightest movement of her eyelid to pass unnoticed and uninterpreted.
10984 The vivid presentation came like a pleasant glow to Dorothea: she felt
10985 herself smiling, and turning from the miniature sat down and looked up
10986 as if she were again talking to a figure in front of her. But the
10987 smile disappeared as she went on meditating, and at last she said
10988 aloud--
10989
10990 "Oh, it was cruel to speak so! How sad--how dreadful!"
10991
10992 She rose quickly and went out of the room, hurrying along the corridor,
10993 with the irresistible impulse to go and see her husband and inquire if
10994 she could do anything for him. Perhaps Mr. Tucker was gone and Mr.
10995 Casaubon was alone in the library. She felt as if all her morning's
10996 gloom would vanish if she could see her husband glad because of her
10997 presence.
10998
10999 But when she reached the head of the dark oak there was Celia coming
11000 up, and below there was Mr. Brooke, exchanging welcomes and
11001 congratulations with Mr. Casaubon.
11002
11003 "Dodo!" said Celia, in her quiet staccato; then kissed her sister,
11004 whose arms encircled her, and said no more. I think they both cried a
11005 little in a furtive manner, while Dorothea ran down-stairs to greet her
11006 uncle.
11007
11008 "I need not ask how you are, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, after kissing
11009 her forehead. "Rome has agreed with you, I see--happiness, frescos,
11010 the antique--that sort of thing. Well, it's very pleasant to have you
11011 back again, and you understand all about art now, eh? But Casaubon is
11012 a little pale, I tell him--a little pale, you know. Studying hard in
11013 his holidays is carrying it rather too far. I overdid it at one
11014 time"--Mr. Brooke still held Dorothea's hand, but had turned his face
11015 to Mr. Casaubon--"about topography, ruins, temples--I thought I had a
11016 clew, but I saw it would carry me too far, and nothing might come of
11017 it. You may go any length in that sort of thing, and nothing may come
11018 of it, you know."
11019
11020 Dorothea's eyes also were turned up to her husband's face with some
11021 anxiety at the idea that those who saw him afresh after absence might
11022 be aware of signs which she had not noticed.
11023
11024 "Nothing to alarm you, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, observing her
11025 expression. "A little English beef and mutton will soon make a
11026 difference. It was all very well to look pale, sitting for the
11027 portrait of Aquinas, you know--we got your letter just in time. But
11028 Aquinas, now--he was a little too subtle, wasn't he? Does anybody read
11029 Aquinas?"
11030
11031 "He is not indeed an author adapted to superficial minds," said Mr.
11032 Casaubon, meeting these timely questions with dignified patience.
11033
11034 "You would like coffee in your own room, uncle?" said Dorothea, coming
11035 to the rescue.
11036
11037 "Yes; and you must go to Celia: she has great news to tell you, you
11038 know. I leave it all to her."
11039
11040 The blue-green boudoir looked much more cheerful when Celia was seated
11041 there in a pelisse exactly like her sister's, surveying the cameos with
11042 a placid satisfaction, while the conversation passed on to other topics.
11043
11044 "Do you think it nice to go to Rome on a wedding journey?" said Celia,
11045 with her ready delicate blush which Dorothea was used to on the
11046 smallest occasions.
11047
11048 "It would not suit all--not you, dear, for example," said Dorothea,
11049 quietly. No one would ever know what she thought of a wedding journey
11050 to Rome.
11051
11052 "Mrs. Cadwallader says it is nonsense, people going a long journey when
11053 they are married. She says they get tired to death of each other, and
11054 can't quarrel comfortably, as they would at home. And Lady Chettam
11055 says she went to Bath." Celia's color changed again and again--seemed
11056
11057 "To come and go with tidings from the heart,
11058 As it a running messenger had been."
11059
11060 It must mean more than Celia's blushing usually did.
11061
11062 "Celia! has something happened?" said Dorothea, in a tone full of
11063 sisterly feeling. "Have you really any great news to tell me?"
11064
11065 "It was because you went away, Dodo. Then there was nobody but me for
11066 Sir James to talk to," said Celia, with a certain roguishness in her
11067 eyes.
11068
11069 "I understand. It is as I used to hope and believe," said Dorothea,
11070 taking her sister's face between her hands, and looking at her half
11071 anxiously. Celia's marriage seemed more serious than it used to do.
11072
11073 "It was only three days ago," said Celia. "And Lady Chettam is very
11074 kind."
11075
11076 "And you are very happy?"
11077
11078 "Yes. We are not going to be married yet. Because every thing is to
11079 be got ready. And I don't want to be married so very soon, because I
11080 think it is nice to be engaged. And we shall be married all our lives
11081 after."
11082
11083 "I do believe you could not marry better, Kitty. Sir James is a good,
11084 honorable man," said Dorothea, warmly.
11085
11086 "He has gone on with the cottages, Dodo. He will tell you about them
11087 when he comes. Shall you be glad to see him?"
11088
11089 "Of course I shall. How can you ask me?"
11090
11091 "Only I was afraid you would be getting so learned," said Celia,
11092 regarding Mr. Casaubon's learning as a kind of damp which might in due
11093 time saturate a neighboring body.
11094
11095
11096
11097 CHAPTER XXIX.
11098
11099 "I found that no genius in another could please me. My
11100 unfortunate paradoxes had entirely dried up that source of
11101 comfort."--GOLDSMITH.
11102
11103
11104 One morning, some weeks after her arrival at Lowick, Dorothea--but why
11105 always Dorothea? Was her point of view the only possible one with
11106 regard to this marriage? I protest against all our interest, all our
11107 effort at understanding being given to the young skins that look
11108 blooming in spite of trouble; for these too will get faded, and will
11109 know the older and more eating griefs which we are helping to neglect.
11110 In spite of the blinking eyes and white moles objectionable to Celia,
11111 and the want of muscular curve which was morally painful to Sir James,
11112 Mr. Casaubon had an intense consciousness within him, and was
11113 spiritually a-hungered like the rest of us. He had done nothing
11114 exceptional in marrying--nothing but what society sanctions, and
11115 considers an occasion for wreaths and bouquets. It had occurred to him
11116 that he must not any longer defer his intention of matrimony, and he
11117 had reflected that in taking a wife, a man of good position should
11118 expect and carefully choose a blooming young lady--the younger the
11119 better, because more educable and submissive--of a rank equal to his
11120 own, of religious principles, virtuous disposition, and good
11121 understanding. On such a young lady he would make handsome
11122 settlements, and he would neglect no arrangement for her happiness: in
11123 return, he should receive family pleasures and leave behind him that
11124 copy of himself which seemed so urgently required of a man--to the
11125 sonneteers of the sixteenth century. Times had altered since then, and
11126 no sonneteer had insisted on Mr. Casaubon's leaving a copy of himself;
11127 moreover, he had not yet succeeded in issuing copies of his
11128 mythological key; but he had always intended to acquit himself by
11129 marriage, and the sense that he was fast leaving the years behind him,
11130 that the world was getting dimmer and that he felt lonely, was a reason
11131 to him for losing no more time in overtaking domestic delights before
11132 they too were left behind by the years.
11133
11134 And when he had seen Dorothea he believed that he had found even more
11135 than he demanded: she might really be such a helpmate to him as would
11136 enable him to dispense with a hired secretary, an aid which Mr.
11137 Casaubon had never yet employed and had a suspicious dread of. (Mr.
11138 Casaubon was nervously conscious that he was expected to manifest a
11139 powerful mind.) Providence, in its kindness, had supplied him with the
11140 wife he needed. A wife, a modest young lady, with the purely
11141 appreciative, unambitious abilities of her sex, is sure to think her
11142 husband's mind powerful. Whether Providence had taken equal care of
11143 Miss Brooke in presenting her with Mr. Casaubon was an idea which could
11144 hardly occur to him. Society never made the preposterous demand that a
11145 man should think as much about his own qualifications for making a
11146 charming girl happy as he thinks of hers for making himself happy. As
11147 if a man could choose not only his wife but his wife's husband! Or as
11148 if he were bound to provide charms for his posterity in his own
11149 person!-- When Dorothea accepted him with effusion, that was only
11150 natural; and Mr. Casaubon believed that his happiness was going to
11151 begin.
11152
11153 He had not had much foretaste of happiness in his previous life. To
11154 know intense joy without a strong bodily frame, one must have an
11155 enthusiastic soul. Mr. Casaubon had never had a strong bodily frame,
11156 and his soul was sensitive without being enthusiastic: it was too
11157 languid to thrill out of self-consciousness into passionate delight; it
11158 went on fluttering in the swampy ground where it was hatched, thinking
11159 of its wings and never flying. His experience was of that pitiable
11160 kind which shrinks from pity, and fears most of all that it should be
11161 known: it was that proud narrow sensitiveness which has not mass enough
11162 to spare for transformation into sympathy, and quivers thread-like in
11163 small currents of self-preoccupation or at best of an egoistic
11164 scrupulosity. And Mr. Casaubon had many scruples: he was capable of a
11165 severe self-restraint; he was resolute in being a man of honor
11166 according to the code; he would be unimpeachable by any recognized
11167 opinion. In conduct these ends had been attained; but the difficulty
11168 of making his Key to all Mythologies unimpeachable weighed like lead
11169 upon his mind; and the pamphlets--or "Parerga" as he called them--by
11170 which he tested his public and deposited small monumental records of
11171 his march, were far from having been seen in all their significance.
11172 He suspected the Archdeacon of not having read them; he was in painful
11173 doubt as to what was really thought of them by the leading minds of
11174 Brasenose, and bitterly convinced that his old acquaintance Carp had
11175 been the writer of that depreciatory recension which was kept locked in
11176 a small drawer of Mr. Casaubon's desk, and also in a dark closet of his
11177 verbal memory. These were heavy impressions to struggle against, and
11178 brought that melancholy embitterment which is the consequence of all
11179 excessive claim: even his religious faith wavered with his wavering
11180 trust in his own authorship, and the consolations of the Christian hope
11181 in immortality seemed to lean on the immortality of the still unwritten
11182 Key to all Mythologies. For my part I am very sorry for him. It is an
11183 uneasy lot at best, to be what we call highly taught and yet not to
11184 enjoy: to be present at this great spectacle of life and never to be
11185 liberated from a small hungry shivering self--never to be fully
11186 possessed by the glory we behold, never to have our consciousness
11187 rapturously transformed into the vividness of a thought, the ardor of a
11188 passion, the energy of an action, but always to be scholarly and
11189 uninspired, ambitious and timid, scrupulous and dim-sighted. Becoming a
11190 dean or even a bishop would make little difference, I fear, to Mr.
11191 Casaubon's uneasiness. Doubtless some ancient Greek has observed that
11192 behind the big mask and the speaking-trumpet, there must always be our
11193 poor little eyes peeping as usual and our timorous lips more or less
11194 under anxious control.
11195
11196 To this mental estate mapped out a quarter of a century before, to
11197 sensibilities thus fenced in, Mr. Casaubon had thought of annexing
11198 happiness with a lovely young bride; but even before marriage, as we
11199 have seen, he found himself under a new depression in the consciousness
11200 that the new bliss was not blissful to him. Inclination yearned back
11201 to its old, easier custom. And the deeper he went in domesticity the
11202 more did the sense of acquitting himself and acting with propriety
11203 predominate over any other satisfaction. Marriage, like religion and
11204 erudition, nay, like authorship itself, was fated to become an outward
11205 requirement, and Edward Casaubon was bent on fulfilling unimpeachably
11206 all requirements. Even drawing Dorothea into use in his study,
11207 according to his own intention before marriage, was an effort which he
11208 was always tempted to defer, and but for her pleading insistence it
11209 might never have begun. But she had succeeded in making it a matter of
11210 course that she should take her place at an early hour in the library
11211 and have work either of reading aloud or copying assigned her. The
11212 work had been easier to define because Mr. Casaubon had adopted an
11213 immediate intention: there was to be a new Parergon, a small monograph
11214 on some lately traced indications concerning the Egyptian mysteries
11215 whereby certain assertions of Warburton's could be corrected.
11216 References were extensive even here, but not altogether shoreless; and
11217 sentences were actually to be written in the shape wherein they would
11218 be scanned by Brasenose and a less formidable posterity. These minor
11219 monumental productions were always exciting to Mr. Casaubon; digestion
11220 was made difficult by the interference of citations, or by the rivalry
11221 of dialectical phrases ringing against each other in his brain. And
11222 from the first there was to be a Latin dedication about which
11223 everything was uncertain except that it was not to be addressed to
11224 Carp: it was a poisonous regret to Mr. Casaubon that he had once
11225 addressed a dedication to Carp in which he had numbered that member of
11226 the animal kingdom among the viros nullo aevo perituros, a mistake
11227 which would infallibly lay the dedicator open to ridicule in the next
11228 age, and might even be chuckled over by Pike and Tench in the present.
11229
11230 Thus Mr. Casaubon was in one of his busiest epochs, and as I began to
11231 say a little while ago, Dorothea joined him early in the library where
11232 he had breakfasted alone. Celia at this time was on a second visit to
11233 Lowick, probably the last before her marriage, and was in the
11234 drawing-room expecting Sir James.
11235
11236 Dorothea had learned to read the signs of her husband's mood, and she
11237 saw that the morning had become more foggy there during the last hour.
11238 She was going silently to her desk when he said, in that distant tone
11239 which implied that he was discharging a disagreeable duty--
11240
11241 "Dorothea, here is a letter for you, which was enclosed in one
11242 addressed to me."
11243
11244 It was a letter of two pages, and she immediately looked at the
11245 signature.
11246
11247 "Mr. Ladislaw! What can he have to say to me?" she exclaimed, in a
11248 tone of pleased surprise. "But," she added, looking at Mr. Casaubon,
11249 "I can imagine what he has written to you about."
11250
11251 "You can, if you please, read the letter," said Mr. Casaubon, severely
11252 pointing to it with his pen, and not looking at her. "But I may as
11253 well say beforehand, that I must decline the proposal it contains to
11254 pay a visit here. I trust I may be excused for desiring an interval of
11255 complete freedom from such distractions as have been hitherto
11256 inevitable, and especially from guests whose desultory vivacity makes
11257 their presence a fatigue."
11258
11259 There had been no clashing of temper between Dorothea and her husband
11260 since that little explosion in Rome, which had left such strong traces
11261 in her mind that it had been easier ever since to quell emotion than to
11262 incur the consequence of venting it. But this ill-tempered
11263 anticipation that she could desire visits which might be disagreeable
11264 to her husband, this gratuitous defence of himself against selfish
11265 complaint on her part, was too sharp a sting to be meditated on until
11266 after it had been resented. Dorothea had thought that she could have
11267 been patient with John Milton, but she had never imagined him behaving
11268 in this way; and for a moment Mr. Casaubon seemed to be stupidly
11269 undiscerning and odiously unjust. Pity, that "new-born babe" which was
11270 by-and-by to rule many a storm within her, did not "stride the blast"
11271 on this occasion. With her first words, uttered in a tone that shook
11272 him, she startled Mr. Casaubon into looking at her, and meeting the
11273 flash of her eyes.
11274
11275 "Why do you attribute to me a wish for anything that would annoy you?
11276 You speak to me as if I were something you had to contend against.
11277 Wait at least till I appear to consult my own pleasure apart from
11278 yours."
11279
11280 "Dorothea, you are hasty," answered Mr. Casaubon, nervously.
11281
11282 Decidedly, this woman was too young to be on the formidable level of
11283 wifehood--unless she had been pale and featureless and taken
11284 everything for granted.
11285
11286 "I think it was you who were first hasty in your false suppositions
11287 about my feeling," said Dorothea, in the same tone. The fire was not
11288 dissipated yet, and she thought it was ignoble in her husband not to
11289 apologize to her.
11290
11291 "We will, if you please, say no more on this subject, Dorothea. I have
11292 neither leisure nor energy for this kind of debate."
11293
11294 Here Mr. Casaubon dipped his pen and made as if he would return to his
11295 writing, though his hand trembled so much that the words seemed to be
11296 written in an unknown character. There are answers which, in turning
11297 away wrath, only send it to the other end of the room, and to have a
11298 discussion coolly waived when you feel that justice is all on your own
11299 side is even more exasperating in marriage than in philosophy.
11300
11301 Dorothea left Ladislaw's two letters unread on her husband's
11302 writing-table and went to her own place, the scorn and indignation
11303 within her rejecting the reading of these letters, just as we hurl away
11304 any trash towards which we seem to have been suspected of mean
11305 cupidity. She did not in the least divine the subtle sources of her
11306 husband's bad temper about these letters: she only knew that they had
11307 caused him to offend her. She began to work at once, and her hand did
11308 not tremble; on the contrary, in writing out the quotations which had
11309 been given to her the day before, she felt that she was forming her
11310 letters beautifully, and it seemed to her that she saw the construction
11311 of the Latin she was copying, and which she was beginning to
11312 understand, more clearly than usual. In her indignation there was a
11313 sense of superiority, but it went out for the present in firmness of
11314 stroke, and did not compress itself into an inward articulate voice
11315 pronouncing the once "affable archangel" a poor creature.
11316
11317 There had been this apparent quiet for half an hour, and Dorothea had
11318 not looked away from her own table, when she heard the loud bang of a
11319 book on the floor, and turning quickly saw Mr. Casaubon on the library
11320 steps clinging forward as if he were in some bodily distress. She
11321 started up and bounded towards him in an instant: he was evidently in
11322 great straits for breath. Jumping on a stool she got close to his
11323 elbow and said with her whole soul melted into tender alarm--
11324
11325 "Can you lean on me, dear?"
11326
11327 He was still for two or three minutes, which seemed endless to her,
11328 unable to speak or move, gasping for breath. When at last he descended
11329 the three steps and fell backward in the large chair which Dorothea had
11330 drawn close to the foot of the ladder, he no longer gasped but seemed
11331 helpless and about to faint. Dorothea rang the bell violently, and
11332 presently Mr. Casaubon was helped to the couch: he did not faint, and
11333 was gradually reviving, when Sir James Chettam came in, having been met
11334 in the hall with the news that Mr. Casaubon had "had a fit in the
11335 library."
11336
11337 "Good God! this is just what might have been expected," was his
11338 immediate thought. If his prophetic soul had been urged to
11339 particularize, it seemed to him that "fits" would have been the
11340 definite expression alighted upon. He asked his informant, the butler,
11341 whether the doctor had been sent for. The butler never knew his master
11342 to want the doctor before; but would it not be right to send for a
11343 physician?
11344
11345 When Sir James entered the library, however, Mr. Casaubon could make
11346 some signs of his usual politeness, and Dorothea, who in the reaction
11347 from her first terror had been kneeling and sobbing by his side now
11348 rose and herself proposed that some one should ride off for a medical
11349 man.
11350
11351 "I recommend you to send for Lydgate," said Sir James. "My mother has
11352 called him in, and she has found him uncommonly clever. She has had a
11353 poor opinion of the physicians since my father's death."
11354
11355 Dorothea appealed to her husband, and he made a silent sign of
11356 approval. So Mr. Lydgate was sent for and he came wonderfully soon,
11357 for the messenger, who was Sir James Chettam's man and knew Mr.
11358 Lydgate, met him leading his horse along the Lowick road and giving his
11359 arm to Miss Vincy.
11360
11361 Celia, in the drawing-room, had known nothing of the trouble till Sir
11362 James told her of it. After Dorothea's account, he no longer
11363 considered the illness a fit, but still something "of that nature."
11364
11365 "Poor dear Dodo--how dreadful!" said Celia, feeling as much grieved as
11366 her own perfect happiness would allow. Her little hands were clasped,
11367 and enclosed by Sir James's as a bud is enfolded by a liberal calyx.
11368 "It is very shocking that Mr. Casaubon should be ill; but I never did
11369 like him. And I think he is not half fond enough of Dorothea; and he
11370 ought to be, for I am sure no one else would have had him--do you
11371 think they would?"
11372
11373 "I always thought it a horrible sacrifice of your sister," said Sir
11374 James.
11375
11376 "Yes. But poor Dodo never did do what other people do, and I think she
11377 never will."
11378
11379 "She is a noble creature," said the loyal-hearted Sir James. He had
11380 just had a fresh impression of this kind, as he had seen Dorothea
11381 stretching her tender arm under her husband's neck and looking at him
11382 with unspeakable sorrow. He did not know how much penitence there was
11383 in the sorrow.
11384
11385 "Yes," said Celia, thinking it was very well for Sir James to say so,
11386 but _he_ would not have been comfortable with Dodo. "Shall I go to
11387 her? Could I help her, do you think?"
11388
11389 "I think it would be well for you just to go and see her before Lydgate
11390 comes," said Sir James, magnanimously. "Only don't stay long."
11391
11392 While Celia was gone he walked up and down remembering what he had
11393 originally felt about Dorothea's engagement, and feeling a revival of
11394 his disgust at Mr. Brooke's indifference. If Cadwallader--if every
11395 one else had regarded the affair as he, Sir James, had done, the
11396 marriage might have been hindered. It was wicked to let a young girl
11397 blindly decide her fate in that way, without any effort to save her.
11398 Sir James had long ceased to have any regrets on his own account: his
11399 heart was satisfied with his engagement to Celia. But he had a
11400 chivalrous nature (was not the disinterested service of woman among the
11401 ideal glories of old chivalry?): his disregarded love had not turned to
11402 bitterness; its death had made sweet odors--floating memories that
11403 clung with a consecrating effect to Dorothea. He could remain her
11404 brotherly friend, interpreting her actions with generous trustfulness.
11405
11406
11407
11408 CHAPTER XXX.
11409
11410 "Qui veut delasser hors de propos, lasse."--PASCAL.
11411
11412
11413 Mr. Casaubon had no second attack of equal severity with the first, and
11414 in a few days began to recover his usual condition. But Lydgate seemed
11415 to think the case worth a great deal of attention. He not only used
11416 his stethoscope (which had not become a matter of course in practice at
11417 that time), but sat quietly by his patient and watched him. To Mr.
11418 Casaubon's questions about himself, he replied that the source of the
11419 illness was the common error of intellectual men--a too eager and
11420 monotonous application: the remedy was, to be satisfied with moderate
11421 work, and to seek variety of relaxation. Mr. Brooke, who sat by on one
11422 occasion, suggested that Mr. Casaubon should go fishing, as Cadwallader
11423 did, and have a turning-room, make toys, table-legs, and that kind of
11424 thing.
11425
11426 "In short, you recommend me to anticipate the arrival of my second
11427 childhood," said poor Mr. Casaubon, with some bitterness. "These
11428 things," he added, looking at Lydgate, "would be to me such relaxation
11429 as tow-picking is to prisoners in a house of correction."
11430
11431 "I confess," said Lydgate, smiling, "amusement is rather an
11432 unsatisfactory prescription. It is something like telling people to
11433 keep up their spirits. Perhaps I had better say, that you must submit
11434 to be mildly bored rather than to go on working."
11435
11436 "Yes, yes," said Mr. Brooke. "Get Dorothea to play backgammon with you
11437 in the evenings. And shuttlecock, now--I don't know a finer game than
11438 shuttlecock for the daytime. I remember it all the fashion. To be
11439 sure, your eyes might not stand that, Casaubon. But you must unbend,
11440 you know. Why, you might take to some light study: conchology, now: I
11441 always think that must be a light study. Or get Dorothea to read you
11442 light things, Smollett--'Roderick Random,' 'Humphrey Clinker:' they
11443 are a little broad, but she may read anything now she's married, you
11444 know. I remember they made me laugh uncommonly--there's a droll bit
11445 about a postilion's breeches. We have no such humor now. I have gone
11446 through all these things, but they might be rather new to you."
11447
11448 "As new as eating thistles," would have been an answer to represent Mr.
11449 Casaubon's feelings. But he only bowed resignedly, with due respect to
11450 his wife's uncle, and observed that doubtless the works he mentioned
11451 had "served as a resource to a certain order of minds."
11452
11453 "You see," said the able magistrate to Lydgate, when they were outside
11454 the door, "Casaubon has been a little narrow: it leaves him rather at a
11455 loss when you forbid him his particular work, which I believe is
11456 something very deep indeed--in the line of research, you know. I would
11457 never give way to that; I was always versatile. But a clergyman is
11458 tied a little tight. If they would make him a bishop, now!--he did a
11459 very good pamphlet for Peel. He would have more movement then, more
11460 show; he might get a little flesh. But I recommend you to talk to Mrs.
11461 Casaubon. She is clever enough for anything, is my niece. Tell her,
11462 her husband wants liveliness, diversion: put her on amusing tactics."
11463
11464 Without Mr. Brooke's advice, Lydgate had determined on speaking to
11465 Dorothea. She had not been present while her uncle was throwing out
11466 his pleasant suggestions as to the mode in which life at Lowick might
11467 be enlivened, but she was usually by her husband's side, and the
11468 unaffected signs of intense anxiety in her face and voice about
11469 whatever touched his mind or health, made a drama which Lydgate was
11470 inclined to watch. He said to himself that he was only doing right in
11471 telling her the truth about her husband's probable future, but he
11472 certainly thought also that it would be interesting to talk
11473 confidentially with her. A medical man likes to make psychological
11474 observations, and sometimes in the pursuit of such studies is too
11475 easily tempted into momentous prophecy which life and death easily set
11476 at nought. Lydgate had often been satirical on this gratuitous
11477 prediction, and he meant now to be guarded.
11478
11479 He asked for Mrs. Casaubon, but being told that she was out walking, he
11480 was going away, when Dorothea and Celia appeared, both glowing from
11481 their struggle with the March wind. When Lydgate begged to speak with
11482 her alone, Dorothea opened the library door which happened to be the
11483 nearest, thinking of nothing at the moment but what he might have to
11484 say about Mr. Casaubon. It was the first time she had entered this
11485 room since her husband had been taken ill, and the servant had chosen
11486 not to open the shutters. But there was light enough to read by from
11487 the narrow upper panes of the windows.
11488
11489 "You will not mind this sombre light," said Dorothea, standing in the
11490 middle of the room. "Since you forbade books, the library has been out
11491 of the question. But Mr. Casaubon will soon be here again, I hope. Is
11492 he not making progress?"
11493
11494 "Yes, much more rapid progress than I at first expected. Indeed, he is
11495 already nearly in his usual state of health."
11496
11497 "You do not fear that the illness will return?" said Dorothea, whose
11498 quick ear had detected some significance in Lydgate's tone.
11499
11500 "Such cases are peculiarly difficult to pronounce upon," said Lydgate.
11501 "The only point on which I can be confident is that it will be
11502 desirable to be very watchful on Mr. Casaubon's account, lest he should
11503 in any way strain his nervous power."
11504
11505 "I beseech you to speak quite plainly," said Dorothea, in an imploring
11506 tone. "I cannot bear to think that there might be something which I
11507 did not know, and which, if I had known it, would have made me act
11508 differently." The words came out like a cry: it was evident that they
11509 were the voice of some mental experience which lay not very far off.
11510
11511 "Sit down," she added, placing herself on the nearest chair, and
11512 throwing off her bonnet and gloves, with an instinctive discarding of
11513 formality where a great question of destiny was concerned.
11514
11515 "What you say now justifies my own view," said Lydgate. "I think it is
11516 one's function as a medical man to hinder regrets of that sort as far
11517 as possible. But I beg you to observe that Mr. Casaubon's case is
11518 precisely of the kind in which the issue is most difficult to pronounce
11519 upon. He may possibly live for fifteen years or more, without much
11520 worse health than he has had hitherto."
11521
11522 Dorothea had turned very pale, and when Lydgate paused she said in a
11523 low voice, "You mean if we are very careful."
11524
11525 "Yes--careful against mental agitation of all kinds, and against
11526 excessive application."
11527
11528 "He would be miserable, if he had to give up his work," said Dorothea,
11529 with a quick prevision of that wretchedness.
11530
11531 "I am aware of that. The only course is to try by all means, direct
11532 and indirect, to moderate and vary his occupations. With a happy
11533 concurrence of circumstances, there is, as I said, no immediate danger
11534 from that affection of the heart, which I believe to have been the
11535 cause of his late attack. On the other hand, it is possible that the
11536 disease may develop itself more rapidly: it is one of those cases in
11537 which death is sometimes sudden. Nothing should be neglected which
11538 might be affected by such an issue."
11539
11540 There was silence for a few moments, while Dorothea sat as if she had
11541 been turned to marble, though the life within her was so intense that
11542 her mind had never before swept in brief time over an equal range of
11543 scenes and motives.
11544
11545 "Help me, pray," she said, at last, in the same low voice as before.
11546 "Tell me what I can do."
11547
11548 "What do you think of foreign travel? You have been lately in Rome, I
11549 think."
11550
11551 The memories which made this resource utterly hopeless were a new
11552 current that shook Dorothea out of her pallid immobility.
11553
11554 "Oh, that would not do--that would be worse than anything," she said
11555 with a more childlike despondency, while the tears rolled down.
11556 "Nothing will be of any use that he does not enjoy."
11557
11558 "I wish that I could have spared you this pain," said Lydgate, deeply
11559 touched, yet wondering about her marriage. Women just like Dorothea
11560 had not entered into his traditions.
11561
11562 "It was right of you to tell me. I thank you for telling me the truth."
11563
11564 "I wish you to understand that I shall not say anything to enlighten
11565 Mr. Casaubon himself. I think it desirable for him to know nothing
11566 more than that he must not overwork himself, and must observe certain
11567 rules. Anxiety of any kind would be precisely the most unfavorable
11568 condition for him."
11569
11570 Lydgate rose, and Dorothea mechanically rose at the same time,
11571 unclasping her cloak and throwing it off as if it stifled her. He was
11572 bowing and quitting her, when an impulse which if she had been alone
11573 would have turned into a prayer, made her say with a sob in her voice--
11574
11575 "Oh, you are a wise man, are you not? You know all about life and
11576 death. Advise me. Think what I can do. He has been laboring all his
11577 life and looking forward. He minds about nothing else.-- And I mind
11578 about nothing else--"
11579
11580 For years after Lydgate remembered the impression produced in him by
11581 this involuntary appeal--this cry from soul to soul, without other
11582 consciousness than their moving with kindred natures in the same
11583 embroiled medium, the same troublous fitfully illuminated life. But
11584 what could he say now except that he should see Mr. Casaubon again
11585 to-morrow?
11586
11587 When he was gone, Dorothea's tears gushed forth, and relieved her
11588 stifling oppression. Then she dried her eyes, reminded that her
11589 distress must not be betrayed to her husband; and looked round the room
11590 thinking that she must order the servant to attend to it as usual,
11591 since Mr. Casaubon might now at any moment wish to enter. On his
11592 writing-table there were letters which had lain untouched since the
11593 morning when he was taken ill, and among them, as Dorothea well
11594 remembered, there were young Ladislaw's letters, the one addressed to
11595 her still unopened. The associations of these letters had been made
11596 the more painful by that sudden attack of illness which she felt that
11597 the agitation caused by her anger might have helped to bring on: it
11598 would be time enough to read them when they were again thrust upon her,
11599 and she had had no inclination to fetch them from the library. But now
11600 it occurred to her that they should be put out of her husband's sight:
11601 whatever might have been the sources of his annoyance about them, he
11602 must, if possible, not be annoyed again; and she ran her eyes first
11603 over the letter addressed to him to assure herself whether or not it
11604 would be necessary to write in order to hinder the offensive visit.
11605
11606 Will wrote from Rome, and began by saying that his obligations to Mr.
11607 Casaubon were too deep for all thanks not to seem impertinent. It was
11608 plain that if he were not grateful, he must be the poorest-spirited
11609 rascal who had ever found a generous friend. To expand in wordy thanks
11610 would be like saying, "I am honest." But Will had come to perceive that
11611 his defects--defects which Mr. Casaubon had himself often pointed
11612 to--needed for their correction that more strenuous position which his
11613 relative's generosity had hitherto prevented from being inevitable. He
11614 trusted that he should make the best return, if return were possible,
11615 by showing the effectiveness of the education for which he was
11616 indebted, and by ceasing in future to need any diversion towards
11617 himself of funds on which others might have a better claim. He was
11618 coming to England, to try his fortune, as many other young men were
11619 obliged to do whose only capital was in their brains. His friend
11620 Naumann had desired him to take charge of the "Dispute"--the picture
11621 painted for Mr. Casaubon, with whose permission, and Mrs. Casaubon's,
11622 Will would convey it to Lowick in person. A letter addressed to the
11623 Poste Restante in Paris within the fortnight would hinder him, if
11624 necessary, from arriving at an inconvenient moment. He enclosed a
11625 letter to Mrs. Casaubon in which he continued a discussion about art,
11626 begun with her in Rome.
11627
11628 Opening her own letter Dorothea saw that it was a lively continuation
11629 of his remonstrance with her fanatical sympathy and her want of sturdy
11630 neutral delight in things as they were--an outpouring of his young
11631 vivacity which it was impossible to read just now. She had immediately
11632 to consider what was to be done about the other letter: there was still
11633 time perhaps to prevent Will from coming to Lowick. Dorothea ended by
11634 giving the letter to her uncle, who was still in the house, and begging
11635 him to let Will know that Mr. Casaubon had been ill, and that his
11636 health would not allow the reception of any visitors.
11637
11638 No one more ready than Mr. Brooke to write a letter: his only
11639 difficulty was to write a short one, and his ideas in this case
11640 expanded over the three large pages and the inward foldings. He had
11641 simply said to Dorothea--
11642
11643 "To be sure, I will write, my dear. He's a very clever young
11644 fellow--this young Ladislaw--I dare say will be a rising young man.
11645 It's a good letter--marks his sense of things, you know. However, I
11646 will tell him about Casaubon."
11647
11648 But the end of Mr. Brooke's pen was a thinking organ, evolving
11649 sentences, especially of a benevolent kind, before the rest of his mind
11650 could well overtake them. It expressed regrets and proposed remedies,
11651 which, when Mr. Brooke read them, seemed felicitously
11652 worded--surprisingly the right thing, and determined a sequel which he
11653 had never before thought of. In this case, his pen found it such a pity
11654 young Ladislaw should not have come into the neighborhood just at
11655 that time, in order that Mr. Brooke might make his acquaintance more
11656 fully, and that they might go over the long-neglected Italian drawings
11657 together--it also felt such an interest in a young man who was starting
11658 in life with a stock of ideas--that by the end of the second page it
11659 had persuaded Mr. Brooke to invite young Ladislaw, since he could not
11660 be received at Lowick, to come to Tipton Grange. Why not? They could
11661 find a great many things to do together, and this was a period of
11662 peculiar growth--the political horizon was expanding, and--in short,
11663 Mr. Brooke's pen went off into a little speech which it had lately
11664 reported for that imperfectly edited organ the "Middlemarch Pioneer."
11665 While Mr. Brooke was sealing this letter, he felt elated with an influx
11666 of dim projects:--a young man capable of putting ideas into form, the
11667 "Pioneer" purchased to clear the pathway for a new candidate, documents
11668 utilized--who knew what might come of it all? Since Celia was going to
11669 marry immediately, it would be very pleasant to have a young fellow at
11670 table with him, at least for a time.
11671
11672 But he went away without telling Dorothea what he had put into the
11673 letter, for she was engaged with her husband, and--in fact, these
11674 things were of no importance to her.
11675
11676
11677
11678 CHAPTER XXXI.
11679
11680 How will you know the pitch of that great bell
11681 Too large for you to stir? Let but a flute
11682 Play 'neath the fine-mixed metal listen close
11683 Till the right note flows forth, a silvery rill.
11684 Then shall the huge bell tremble--then the mass
11685 With myriad waves concurrent shall respond
11686 In low soft unison.
11687
11688
11689 Lydgate that evening spoke to Miss Vincy of Mrs. Casaubon, and laid
11690 some emphasis on the strong feeling she appeared to have for that
11691 formal studious man thirty years older than herself.
11692
11693 "Of course she is devoted to her husband," said Rosamond, implying a
11694 notion of necessary sequence which the scientific man regarded as the
11695 prettiest possible for a woman; but she was thinking at the same time
11696 that it was not so very melancholy to be mistress of Lowick Manor with
11697 a husband likely to die soon. "Do you think her very handsome?"
11698
11699 "She certainly is handsome, but I have not thought about it," said
11700 Lydgate.
11701
11702 "I suppose it would be unprofessional," said Rosamond, dimpling. "But
11703 how your practice is spreading! You were called in before to the
11704 Chettams, I think; and now, the Casaubons."
11705
11706 "Yes," said Lydgate, in a tone of compulsory admission. "But I don't
11707 really like attending such people so well as the poor. The cases are
11708 more monotonous, and one has to go through more fuss and listen more
11709 deferentially to nonsense."
11710
11711 "Not more than in Middlemarch," said Rosamond. "And at least you go
11712 through wide corridors and have the scent of rose-leaves everywhere."
11713
11714 "That is true, Mademoiselle de Montmorenci," said Lydgate, just bending
11715 his head to the table and lifting with his fourth finger her delicate
11716 handkerchief which lay at the mouth of her reticule, as if to enjoy its
11717 scent, while he looked at her with a smile.
11718
11719 But this agreeable holiday freedom with which Lydgate hovered about the
11720 flower of Middlemarch, could not continue indefinitely. It was not
11721 more possible to find social isolation in that town than elsewhere, and
11722 two people persistently flirting could by no means escape from "the
11723 various entanglements, weights, blows, clashings, motions, by which
11724 things severally go on." Whatever Miss Vincy did must be remarked, and
11725 she was perhaps the more conspicuous to admirers and critics because
11726 just now Mrs. Vincy, after some struggle, had gone with Fred to stay a
11727 little while at Stone Court, there being no other way of at once
11728 gratifying old Featherstone and keeping watch against Mary Garth, who
11729 appeared a less tolerable daughter-in-law in proportion as Fred's
11730 illness disappeared.
11731
11732 Aunt Bulstrode, for example, came a little oftener into Lowick Gate to
11733 see Rosamond, now she was alone. For Mrs. Bulstrode had a true
11734 sisterly feeling for her brother; always thinking that he might have
11735 married better, but wishing well to the children. Now Mrs. Bulstrode
11736 had a long-standing intimacy with Mrs. Plymdale. They had nearly the
11737 same preferences in silks, patterns for underclothing, china-ware, and
11738 clergymen; they confided their little troubles of health and household
11739 management to each other, and various little points of superiority on
11740 Mrs. Bulstrode's side, namely, more decided seriousness, more
11741 admiration for mind, and a house outside the town, sometimes served to
11742 give color to their conversation without dividing them--well-meaning
11743 women both, knowing very little of their own motives.
11744
11745 Mrs. Bulstrode, paying a morning visit to Mrs. Plymdale, happened to
11746 say that she could not stay longer, because she was going to see poor
11747 Rosamond.
11748
11749 "Why do you say 'poor Rosamond'?" said Mrs. Plymdale, a round-eyed
11750 sharp little woman, like a tamed falcon.
11751
11752 "She is so pretty, and has been brought up in such thoughtlessness.
11753 The mother, you know, had always that levity about her, which makes me
11754 anxious for the children."
11755
11756 "Well, Harriet, if I am to speak my mind," said Mrs. Plymdale, with
11757 emphasis, "I must say, anybody would suppose you and Mr. Bulstrode
11758 would be delighted with what has happened, for you have done everything
11759 to put Mr. Lydgate forward."
11760
11761 "Selina, what do you mean?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, in genuine surprise.
11762
11763 "Not but what I am truly thankful for Ned's sake," said Mrs. Plymdale.
11764 "He could certainly better afford to keep such a wife than some people
11765 can; but I should wish him to look elsewhere. Still a mother has
11766 anxieties, and some young men would take to a bad life in consequence.
11767 Besides, if I was obliged to speak, I should say I was not fond of
11768 strangers coming into a town."
11769
11770 "I don't know, Selina," said Mrs. Bulstrode, with a little emphasis in
11771 her turn. "Mr. Bulstrode was a stranger here at one time. Abraham and
11772 Moses were strangers in the land, and we are told to entertain
11773 strangers. And especially," she added, after a slight pause, "when
11774 they are unexceptionable."
11775
11776 "I was not speaking in a religious sense, Harriet. I spoke as a
11777 mother."
11778
11779 "Selina, I am sure you have never heard me say anything against a niece
11780 of mine marrying your son."
11781
11782 "Oh, it is pride in Miss Vincy--I am sure it is nothing else," said
11783 Mrs. Plymdale, who had never before given all her confidence to
11784 "Harriet" on this subject. "No young man in Middlemarch was good
11785 enough for her: I have heard her mother say as much. That is not a
11786 Christian spirit, I think. But now, from all I hear, she has found a
11787 man as proud as herself."
11788
11789 "You don't mean that there is anything between Rosamond and Mr.
11790 Lydgate?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, rather mortified at finding out her own
11791 ignorance.
11792
11793 "Is it possible you don't know, Harriet?"
11794
11795 "Oh, I go about so little; and I am not fond of gossip; I really never
11796 hear any. You see so many people that I don't see. Your circle is
11797 rather different from ours."
11798
11799 "Well, but your own niece and Mr. Bulstrode's great favorite--and
11800 yours too, I am sure, Harriet! I thought, at one time, you meant him
11801 for Kate, when she is a little older."
11802
11803 "I don't believe there can be anything serious at present," said Mrs.
11804 Bulstrode. "My brother would certainly have told me."
11805
11806 "Well, people have different ways, but I understand that nobody can see
11807 Miss Vincy and Mr. Lydgate together without taking them to be engaged.
11808 However, it is not my business. Shall I put up the pattern of mittens?"
11809
11810 After this Mrs. Bulstrode drove to her niece with a mind newly
11811 weighted. She was herself handsomely dressed, but she noticed with a
11812 little more regret than usual that Rosamond, who was just come in and
11813 met her in walking-dress, was almost as expensively equipped. Mrs.
11814 Bulstrode was a feminine smaller edition of her brother, and had none
11815 of her husband's low-toned pallor. She had a good honest glance and
11816 used no circumlocution.
11817
11818 "You are alone, I see, my dear," she said, as they entered the
11819 drawing-room together, looking round gravely. Rosamond felt sure that
11820 her aunt had something particular to say, and they sat down near each
11821 other. Nevertheless, the quilling inside Rosamond's bonnet was so
11822 charming that it was impossible not to desire the same kind of thing
11823 for Kate, and Mrs. Bulstrode's eyes, which were rather fine, rolled
11824 round that ample quilled circuit, while she spoke.
11825
11826 "I have just heard something about you that has surprised me very much,
11827 Rosamond."
11828
11829 "What is that, aunt?" Rosamond's eyes also were roaming over her
11830 aunt's large embroidered collar.
11831
11832 "I can hardly believe it--that you should be engaged without my knowing
11833 it--without your father's telling me." Here Mrs. Bulstrode's eyes
11834 finally rested on Rosamond's, who blushed deeply, and said--
11835
11836 "I am not engaged, aunt."
11837
11838 "How is it that every one says so, then--that it is the town's talk?"
11839
11840 "The town's talk is of very little consequence, I think," said
11841 Rosamond, inwardly gratified.
11842
11843 "Oh, my dear, be more thoughtful; don't despise your neighbors so.
11844 Remember you are turned twenty-two now, and you will have no fortune:
11845 your father, I am sure, will not be able to spare you anything. Mr.
11846 Lydgate is very intellectual and clever; I know there is an attraction
11847 in that. I like talking to such men myself; and your uncle finds him
11848 very useful. But the profession is a poor one here. To be sure, this
11849 life is not everything; but it is seldom a medical man has true
11850 religious views--there is too much pride of intellect. And you are not
11851 fit to marry a poor man.
11852
11853 "Mr. Lydgate is not a poor man, aunt. He has very high connections."
11854
11855 "He told me himself he was poor."
11856
11857 "That is because he is used to people who have a high style of living."
11858
11859 "My dear Rosamond, _you_ must not think of living in high style."
11860
11861 Rosamond looked down and played with her reticule. She was not a fiery
11862 young lady and had no sharp answers, but she meant to live as she
11863 pleased.
11864
11865 "Then it is really true?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, looking very earnestly
11866 at her niece. "You are thinking of Mr. Lydgate--there is some
11867 understanding between you, though your father doesn't know. Be open,
11868 my dear Rosamond: Mr. Lydgate has really made you an offer?"
11869
11870 Poor Rosamond's feelings were very unpleasant. She had been quite easy
11871 as to Lydgate's feeling and intention, but now when her aunt put this
11872 question she did not like being unable to say Yes. Her pride was hurt,
11873 but her habitual control of manner helped her.
11874
11875 "Pray excuse me, aunt. I would rather not speak on the subject."
11876
11877 "You would not give your heart to a man without a decided prospect, I
11878 trust, my dear. And think of the two excellent offers I know of that
11879 you have refused!--and one still within your reach, if you will not
11880 throw it away. I knew a very great beauty who married badly at last,
11881 by doing so. Mr. Ned Plymdale is a nice young man--some might think
11882 good-looking; and an only son; and a large business of that kind is
11883 better than a profession. Not that marrying is everything. I would
11884 have you seek first the kingdom of God. But a girl should keep her
11885 heart within her own power."
11886
11887 "I should never give it to Mr. Ned Plymdale, if it were. I have
11888 already refused him. If I loved, I should love at once and without
11889 change," said Rosamond, with a great sense of being a romantic heroine,
11890 and playing the part prettily.
11891
11892 "I see how it is, my dear," said Mrs. Bulstrode, in a melancholy voice,
11893 rising to go. "You have allowed your affections to be engaged without
11894 return."
11895
11896 "No, indeed, aunt," said Rosamond, with emphasis.
11897
11898 "Then you are quite confident that Mr. Lydgate has a serious attachment
11899 to you?"
11900
11901 Rosamond's cheeks by this time were persistently burning, and she felt
11902 much mortification. She chose to be silent, and her aunt went away all
11903 the more convinced.
11904
11905 Mr. Bulstrode in things worldly and indifferent was disposed to do what
11906 his wife bade him, and she now, without telling her reasons, desired
11907 him on the next opportunity to find out in conversation with Mr.
11908 Lydgate whether he had any intention of marrying soon. The result was
11909 a decided negative. Mr. Bulstrode, on being cross-questioned, showed
11910 that Lydgate had spoken as no man would who had any attachment that
11911 could issue in matrimony. Mrs. Bulstrode now felt that she had a
11912 serious duty before her, and she soon managed to arrange a tete-a-tete
11913 with Lydgate, in which she passed from inquiries about Fred Vincy's
11914 health, and expressions of her sincere anxiety for her brother's large
11915 family, to general remarks on the dangers which lay before young people
11916 with regard to their settlement in life. Young men were often wild and
11917 disappointing, making little return for the money spent on them, and a
11918 girl was exposed to many circumstances which might interfere with her
11919 prospects.
11920
11921 "Especially when she has great attractions, and her parents see much
11922 company," said Mrs. Bulstrode "Gentlemen pay her attention, and engross
11923 her all to themselves, for the mere pleasure of the moment, and that
11924 drives off others. I think it is a heavy responsibility, Mr. Lydgate,
11925 to interfere with the prospects of any girl." Here Mrs. Bulstrode fixed
11926 her eyes on him, with an unmistakable purpose of warning, if not of
11927 rebuke.
11928
11929 "Clearly," said Lydgate, looking at her--perhaps even staring a little
11930 in return. "On the other hand, a man must be a great coxcomb to go
11931 about with a notion that he must not pay attention to a young lady lest
11932 she should fall in love with him, or lest others should think she must."
11933
11934 "Oh, Mr. Lydgate, you know well what your advantages are. You know
11935 that our young men here cannot cope with you. Where you frequent a
11936 house it may militate very much against a girl's making a desirable
11937 settlement in life, and prevent her from accepting offers even if they
11938 are made."
11939
11940 Lydgate was less flattered by his advantage over the Middlemarch
11941 Orlandos than he was annoyed by the perception of Mrs. Bulstrode's
11942 meaning. She felt that she had spoken as impressively as it was
11943 necessary to do, and that in using the superior word "militate" she had
11944 thrown a noble drapery over a mass of particulars which were still
11945 evident enough.
11946
11947 Lydgate was fuming a little, pushed his hair back with one hand, felt
11948 curiously in his waistcoat-pocket with the other, and then stooped to
11949 beckon the tiny black spaniel, which had the insight to decline his
11950 hollow caresses. It would not have been decent to go away, because he
11951 had been dining with other guests, and had just taken tea. But Mrs.
11952 Bulstrode, having no doubt that she had been understood, turned the
11953 conversation.
11954
11955 Solomon's Proverbs, I think, have omitted to say, that as the sore
11956 palate findeth grit, so an uneasy consciousness heareth innuendoes.
11957 The next day Mr. Farebrother, parting from Lydgate in the street,
11958 supposed that they should meet at Vincy's in the evening. Lydgate
11959 answered curtly, no--he had work to do--he must give up going out in
11960 the evening.
11961
11962 "What! you are going to get lashed to the mast, eh, and are stopping
11963 your ears?" said the Vicar. "Well, if you don't mean to be won by the
11964 sirens, you are right to take precautions in time."
11965
11966 A few days before, Lydgate would have taken no notice of these words as
11967 anything more than the Vicar's usual way of putting things. They
11968 seemed now to convey an innuendo which confirmed the impression that he
11969 had been making a fool of himself and behaving so as to be
11970 misunderstood: not, he believed, by Rosamond herself; she, he felt
11971 sure, took everything as lightly as he intended it. She had an
11972 exquisite tact and insight in relation to all points of manners; but
11973 the people she lived among were blunderers and busybodies. However,
11974 the mistake should go no farther. He resolved--and kept his
11975 resolution--that he would not go to Mr. Vincy's except on business.
11976
11977 Rosamond became very unhappy. The uneasiness first stirred by her
11978 aunt's questions grew and grew till at the end of ten days that she had
11979 not seen Lydgate, it grew into terror at the blank that might possibly
11980 come--into foreboding of that ready, fatal sponge which so cheaply
11981 wipes out the hopes of mortals. The world would have a new dreariness
11982 for her, as a wilderness that a magician's spells had turned for a
11983 little while into a garden. She felt that she was beginning to know
11984 the pang of disappointed love, and that no other man could be the
11985 occasion of such delightful aerial building as she had been enjoying
11986 for the last six months. Poor Rosamond lost her appetite and felt as
11987 forlorn as Ariadne--as a charming stage Ariadne left behind with all
11988 her boxes full of costumes and no hope of a coach.
11989
11990 There are many wonderful mixtures in the world which are all alike
11991 called love, and claim the privileges of a sublime rage which is an
11992 apology for everything (in literature and the drama). Happily Rosamond
11993 did not think of committing any desperate act: she plaited her fair
11994 hair as beautifully as usual, and kept herself proudly calm. Her most
11995 cheerful supposition was that her aunt Bulstrode had interfered in some
11996 way to hinder Lydgate's visits: everything was better than a
11997 spontaneous indifference in him. Any one who imagines ten days too
11998 short a time--not for falling into leanness, lightness, or other
11999 measurable effects of passion, but--for the whole spiritual circuit of
12000 alarmed conjecture and disappointment, is ignorant of what can go on in
12001 the elegant leisure of a young lady's mind.
12002
12003 On the eleventh day, however, Lydgate when leaving Stone Court was
12004 requested by Mrs. Vincy to let her husband know that there was a marked
12005 change in Mr. Featherstone's health, and that she wished him to come to
12006 Stone Court on that day. Now Lydgate might have called at the
12007 warehouse, or might have written a message on a leaf of his pocket-book
12008 and left it at the door. Yet these simple devices apparently did not
12009 occur to him, from which we may conclude that he had no strong
12010 objection to calling at the house at an hour when Mr. Vincy was not at
12011 home, and leaving the message with Miss Vincy. A man may, from various
12012 motives, decline to give his company, but perhaps not even a sage would
12013 be gratified that nobody missed him. It would be a graceful, easy way
12014 of piecing on the new habits to the old, to have a few playful words
12015 with Rosamond about his resistance to dissipation, and his firm resolve
12016 to take long fasts even from sweet sounds. It must be confessed, also,
12017 that momentary speculations as to all the possible grounds for Mrs.
12018 Bulstrode's hints had managed to get woven like slight clinging hairs
12019 into the more substantial web of his thoughts.
12020
12021 Miss Vincy was alone, and blushed so deeply when Lydgate came in that
12022 he felt a corresponding embarrassment, and instead of any playfulness,
12023 he began at once to speak of his reason for calling, and to beg her,
12024 almost formally, to deliver the message to her father. Rosamond, who
12025 at the first moment felt as if her happiness were returning, was keenly
12026 hurt by Lydgate's manner; her blush had departed, and she assented
12027 coldly, without adding an unnecessary word, some trivial chain-work
12028 which she had in her hands enabling her to avoid looking at Lydgate
12029 higher than his chin. In all failures, the beginning is certainly the
12030 half of the whole. After sitting two long moments while he moved his
12031 whip and could say nothing, Lydgate rose to go, and Rosamond, made
12032 nervous by her struggle between mortification and the wish not to
12033 betray it, dropped her chain as if startled, and rose too,
12034 mechanically. Lydgate instantaneously stooped to pick up the chain.
12035 When he rose he was very near to a lovely little face set on a fair
12036 long neck which he had been used to see turning about under the most
12037 perfect management of self-contented grace. But as he raised his eyes
12038 now he saw a certain helpless quivering which touched him quite newly,
12039 and made him look at Rosamond with a questioning flash. At this moment
12040 she was as natural as she had ever been when she was five years old:
12041 she felt that her tears had risen, and it was no use to try to do
12042 anything else than let them stay like water on a blue flower or let
12043 them fall over her cheeks, even as they would.
12044
12045 That moment of naturalness was the crystallizing feather-touch: it
12046 shook flirtation into love. Remember that the ambitious man who was
12047 looking at those Forget-me-nots under the water was very warm-hearted
12048 and rash. He did not know where the chain went; an idea had thrilled
12049 through the recesses within him which had a miraculous effect in
12050 raising the power of passionate love lying buried there in no sealed
12051 sepulchre, but under the lightest, easily pierced mould. His words
12052 were quite abrupt and awkward; but the tone made them sound like an
12053 ardent, appealing avowal.
12054
12055 "What is the matter? you are distressed. Tell me, pray."
12056
12057 Rosamond had never been spoken to in such tones before. I am not sure
12058 that she knew what the words were: but she looked at Lydgate and the
12059 tears fell over her cheeks. There could have been no more complete
12060 answer than that silence, and Lydgate, forgetting everything else,
12061 completely mastered by the outrush of tenderness at the sudden belief
12062 that this sweet young creature depended on him for her joy, actually
12063 put his arms round her, folding her gently and protectingly--he was
12064 used to being gentle with the weak and suffering--and kissed each of
12065 the two large tears. This was a strange way of arriving at an
12066 understanding, but it was a short way. Rosamond was not angry, but she
12067 moved backward a little in timid happiness, and Lydgate could now sit
12068 near her and speak less incompletely. Rosamond had to make her little
12069 confession, and he poured out words of gratitude and tenderness with
12070 impulsive lavishment. In half an hour he left the house an engaged
12071 man, whose soul was not his own, but the woman's to whom he had bound
12072 himself.
12073
12074 He came again in the evening to speak with Mr. Vincy, who, just
12075 returned from Stone Court, was feeling sure that it would not be long
12076 before he heard of Mr. Featherstone's demise. The felicitous word
12077 "demise," which had seasonably occurred to him, had raised his spirits
12078 even above their usual evening pitch. The right word is always a
12079 power, and communicates its definiteness to our action. Considered as
12080 a demise, old Featherstone's death assumed a merely legal aspect, so
12081 that Mr. Vincy could tap his snuff-box over it and be jovial, without
12082 even an intermittent affectation of solemnity; and Mr. Vincy hated both
12083 solemnity and affectation. Who was ever awe struck about a testator,
12084 or sang a hymn on the title to real property? Mr. Vincy was inclined
12085 to take a jovial view of all things that evening: he even observed to
12086 Lydgate that Fred had got the family constitution after all, and would
12087 soon be as fine a fellow as ever again; and when his approbation of
12088 Rosamond's engagement was asked for, he gave it with astonishing
12089 facility, passing at once to general remarks on the desirableness of
12090 matrimony for young men and maidens, and apparently deducing from the
12091 whole the appropriateness of a little more punch.
12092
12093
12094
12095 CHAPTER XXXII.
12096
12097 "They'll take suggestion as a cat laps milk."
12098 --SHAKESPEARE: Tempest.
12099
12100
12101 The triumphant confidence of the Mayor founded on Mr. Featherstone's
12102 insistent demand that Fred and his mother should not leave him, was a
12103 feeble emotion compared with all that was agitating the breasts of the
12104 old man's blood-relations, who naturally manifested more their sense of
12105 the family tie and were more visibly numerous now that he had become
12106 bedridden. Naturally: for when "poor Peter" had occupied his arm-chair
12107 in the wainscoted parlor, no assiduous beetles for whom the cook
12108 prepares boiling water could have been less welcome on a hearth which
12109 they had reasons for preferring, than those persons whose Featherstone
12110 blood was ill-nourished, not from penuriousness on their part, but from
12111 poverty. Brother Solomon and Sister Jane were rich, and the family
12112 candor and total abstinence from false politeness with which they were
12113 always received seemed to them no argument that their brother in the
12114 solemn act of making his will would overlook the superior claims of
12115 wealth. Themselves at least he had never been unnatural enough to
12116 banish from his house, and it seemed hardly eccentric that he should
12117 have kept away Brother Jonah, Sister Martha, and the rest, who had no
12118 shadow of such claims. They knew Peter's maxim, that money was a good
12119 egg, and should be laid in a warm nest.
12120
12121 But Brother Jonah, Sister Martha, and all the needy exiles, held a
12122 different point of view. Probabilities are as various as the faces to
12123 be seen at will in fretwork or paper-hangings: every form is there,
12124 from Jupiter to Judy, if you only look with creative inclination. To
12125 the poorer and least favored it seemed likely that since Peter had done
12126 nothing for them in his life, he would remember them at the last.
12127 Jonah argued that men liked to make a surprise of their wills, while
12128 Martha said that nobody need be surprised if he left the best part of
12129 his money to those who least expected it. Also it was not to be
12130 thought but that an own brother "lying there" with dropsy in his legs
12131 must come to feel that blood was thicker than water, and if he didn't
12132 alter his will, he might have money by him. At any rate some
12133 blood-relations should be on the premises and on the watch against
12134 those who were hardly relations at all. Such things had been known as
12135 forged wills and disputed wills, which seemed to have the golden-hazy
12136 advantage of somehow enabling non-legatees to live out of them. Again,
12137 those who were no blood-relations might be caught making away with
12138 things--and poor Peter "lying there" helpless! Somebody should be on
12139 the watch. But in this conclusion they were at one with Solomon and
12140 Jane; also, some nephews, nieces, and cousins, arguing with still
12141 greater subtilty as to what might be done by a man able to "will away"
12142 his property and give himself large treats of oddity, felt in a
12143 handsome sort of way that there was a family interest to be attended
12144 to, and thought of Stone Court as a place which it would be nothing but
12145 right for them to visit. Sister Martha, otherwise Mrs. Cranch, living
12146 with some wheeziness in the Chalky Flats, could not undertake the
12147 journey; but her son, as being poor Peter's own nephew, could represent
12148 her advantageously, and watch lest his uncle Jonah should make an
12149 unfair use of the improbable things which seemed likely to happen. In
12150 fact there was a general sense running in the Featherstone blood that
12151 everybody must watch everybody else, and that it would be well for
12152 everybody else to reflect that the Almighty was watching him.
12153
12154 Thus Stone Court continually saw one or other blood-relation alighting
12155 or departing, and Mary Garth had the unpleasant task of carrying their
12156 messages to Mr. Featherstone, who would see none of them, and sent her
12157 down with the still more unpleasant task of telling them so. As
12158 manager of the household she felt bound to ask them in good provincial
12159 fashion to stay and eat; but she chose to consult Mrs. Vincy on the
12160 point of extra down-stairs consumption now that Mr. Featherstone was
12161 laid up.
12162
12163 "Oh, my dear, you must do things handsomely where there's last illness
12164 and a property. God knows, I don't grudge them every ham in the
12165 house--only, save the best for the funeral. Have some stuffed veal
12166 always, and a fine cheese in cut. You must expect to keep open house
12167 in these last illnesses," said liberal Mrs. Vincy, once more of
12168 cheerful note and bright plumage.
12169
12170 But some of the visitors alighted and did not depart after the handsome
12171 treating to veal and ham. Brother Jonah, for example (there are such
12172 unpleasant people in most families; perhaps even in the highest
12173 aristocracy there are Brobdingnag specimens, gigantically in debt and
12174 bloated at greater expense)--Brother Jonah, I say, having come down in
12175 the world, was mainly supported by a calling which he was modest enough
12176 not to boast of, though it was much better than swindling either on
12177 exchange or turf, but which did not require his presence at Brassing so
12178 long as he had a good corner to sit in and a supply of food. He chose
12179 the kitchen-corner, partly because he liked it best, and partly because
12180 he did not want to sit with Solomon, concerning whom he had a strong
12181 brotherly opinion. Seated in a famous arm-chair and in his best suit,
12182 constantly within sight of good cheer, he had a comfortable
12183 consciousness of being on the premises, mingled with fleeting
12184 suggestions of Sunday and the bar at the Green Man; and he informed
12185 Mary Garth that he should not go out of reach of his brother Peter
12186 while that poor fellow was above ground. The troublesome ones in a
12187 family are usually either the wits or the idiots. Jonah was the wit
12188 among the Featherstones, and joked with the maid-servants when they
12189 came about the hearth, but seemed to consider Miss Garth a suspicious
12190 character, and followed her with cold eyes.
12191
12192 Mary would have borne this one pair of eyes with comparative ease, but
12193 unfortunately there was young Cranch, who, having come all the way from
12194 the Chalky Flats to represent his mother and watch his uncle Jonah,
12195 also felt it his duty to stay and to sit chiefly in the kitchen to give
12196 his uncle company. Young Cranch was not exactly the balancing point
12197 between the wit and the idiot,--verging slightly towards the latter
12198 type, and squinting so as to leave everything in doubt about his
12199 sentiments except that they were not of a forcible character. When
12200 Mary Garth entered the kitchen and Mr. Jonah Featherstone began to
12201 follow her with his cold detective eyes, young Cranch turning his head
12202 in the same direction seemed to insist on it that she should remark how
12203 he was squinting, as if he did it with design, like the gypsies when
12204 Borrow read the New Testament to them. This was rather too much for
12205 poor Mary; sometimes it made her bilious, sometimes it upset her
12206 gravity. One day that she had an opportunity she could not resist
12207 describing the kitchen scene to Fred, who would not be hindered from
12208 immediately going to see it, affecting simply to pass through. But no
12209 sooner did he face the four eyes than he had to rush through the
12210 nearest door which happened to lead to the dairy, and there under the
12211 high roof and among the pans he gave way to laughter which made a
12212 hollow resonance perfectly audible in the kitchen. He fled by another
12213 doorway, but Mr. Jonah, who had not before seen Fred's white
12214 complexion, long legs, and pinched delicacy of face, prepared many
12215 sarcasms in which these points of appearance were wittily combined with
12216 the lowest moral attributes.
12217
12218 "Why, Tom, _you_ don't wear such gentlemanly trousers--you haven't got
12219 half such fine long legs," said Jonah to his nephew, winking at the
12220 same time, to imply that there was something more in these statements
12221 than their undeniableness. Tom looked at his legs, but left it
12222 uncertain whether he preferred his moral advantages to a more vicious
12223 length of limb and reprehensible gentility of trouser.
12224
12225 In the large wainscoted parlor too there were constantly pairs of eyes
12226 on the watch, and own relatives eager to be "sitters-up." Many came,
12227 lunched, and departed, but Brother Solomon and the lady who had been
12228 Jane Featherstone for twenty-five years before she was Mrs. Waule found
12229 it good to be there every day for hours, without other calculable
12230 occupation than that of observing the cunning Mary Garth (who was so
12231 deep that she could be found out in nothing) and giving occasional dry
12232 wrinkly indications of crying--as if capable of torrents in a wetter
12233 season--at the thought that they were not allowed to go into Mr.
12234 Featherstone's room. For the old man's dislike of his own family
12235 seemed to get stronger as he got less able to amuse himself by saying
12236 biting things to them. Too languid to sting, he had the more venom
12237 refluent in his blood.
12238
12239 Not fully believing the message sent through Mary Garth, they had
12240 presented themselves together within the door of the bedroom, both in
12241 black--Mrs. Waule having a white handkerchief partially unfolded in her
12242 hand--and both with faces in a sort of half-mourning purple; while Mrs.
12243 Vincy with her pink cheeks and pink ribbons flying was actually
12244 administering a cordial to their own brother, and the
12245 light-complexioned Fred, his short hair curling as might be expected in
12246 a gambler's, was lolling at his ease in a large chair.
12247
12248 Old Featherstone no sooner caught sight of these funereal figures
12249 appearing in spite of his orders than rage came to strengthen him more
12250 successfully than the cordial. He was propped up on a bed-rest, and
12251 always had his gold-headed stick lying by him. He seized it now and
12252 swept it backwards and forwards in as large an area as he could,
12253 apparently to ban these ugly spectres, crying in a hoarse sort of
12254 screech--
12255
12256 "Back, back, Mrs. Waule! Back, Solomon!"
12257
12258 "Oh, Brother. Peter," Mrs. Waule began--but Solomon put his hand
12259 before her repressingly. He was a large-cheeked man, nearly seventy,
12260 with small furtive eyes, and was not only of much blander temper but
12261 thought himself much deeper than his brother Peter; indeed not likely
12262 to be deceived in any of his fellow-men, inasmuch as they could not
12263 well be more greedy and deceitful than he suspected them of being.
12264 Even the invisible powers, he thought, were likely to be soothed by a
12265 bland parenthesis here and there--coming from a man of property, who
12266 might have been as impious as others.
12267
12268 "Brother Peter," he said, in a wheedling yet gravely official tone,
12269 "It's nothing but right I should speak to you about the Three Crofts
12270 and the Manganese. The Almighty knows what I've got on my mind--"
12271
12272 "Then he knows more than I want to know," said Peter, laying down his
12273 stick with a show of truce which had a threat in it too, for he
12274 reversed the stick so as to make the gold handle a club in case of
12275 closer fighting, and looked hard at Solomon's bald head.
12276
12277 "There's things you might repent of, Brother, for want of speaking to
12278 me," said Solomon, not advancing, however. "I could sit up with you
12279 to-night, and Jane with me, willingly, and you might take your own time
12280 to speak, or let me speak."
12281
12282 "Yes, I shall take my own time--you needn't offer me yours," said Peter.
12283
12284 "But you can't take your own time to die in, Brother," began Mrs.
12285 Waule, with her usual woolly tone. "And when you lie speechless you
12286 may be tired of having strangers about you, and you may think of me and
12287 my children"--but here her voice broke under the touching thought which
12288 she was attributing to her speechless brother; the mention of ourselves
12289 being naturally affecting.
12290
12291 "No, I shan't," said old Featherstone, contradictiously. "I shan't
12292 think of any of you. I've made my will, I tell you, I've made my
12293 will." Here he turned his head towards Mrs. Vincy, and swallowed some
12294 more of his cordial.
12295
12296 "Some people would be ashamed to fill up a place belonging by rights to
12297 others," said Mrs. Waule, turning her narrow eyes in the same direction.
12298
12299 "Oh, sister," said Solomon, with ironical softness, "you and me are not
12300 fine, and handsome, and clever enough: we must be humble and let smart
12301 people push themselves before us."
12302
12303 Fred's spirit could not bear this: rising and looking at Mr.
12304 Featherstone, he said, "Shall my mother and I leave the room, sir, that
12305 you may be alone with your friends?"
12306
12307 "Sit down, I tell you," said old Featherstone, snappishly. "Stop where
12308 you are. Good-by, Solomon," he added, trying to wield his stick again,
12309 but failing now that he had reversed the handle. "Good-by, Mrs. Waule.
12310 Don't you come again."
12311
12312 "I shall be down-stairs, Brother, whether or no," said Solomon. "I
12313 shall do my duty, and it remains to be seen what the Almighty will
12314 allow."
12315
12316 "Yes, in property going out of families," said Mrs. Waule, in
12317 continuation,--"and where there's steady young men to carry on. But I
12318 pity them who are not such, and I pity their mothers. Good-by, Brother
12319 Peter."
12320
12321 "Remember, I'm the eldest after you, Brother, and prospered from the
12322 first, just as you did, and have got land already by the name of
12323 Featherstone," said Solomon, relying much on that reflection, as one
12324 which might be suggested in the watches of the night. "But I bid you
12325 good-by for the present."
12326
12327 Their exit was hastened by their seeing old Mr. Featherstone pull his
12328 wig on each side and shut his eyes with his mouth-widening grimace, as
12329 if he were determined to be deaf and blind.
12330
12331 None the less they came to Stone Court daily and sat below at the post
12332 of duty, sometimes carrying on a slow dialogue in an undertone in which
12333 the observation and response were so far apart, that any one hearing
12334 them might have imagined himself listening to speaking automata, in
12335 some doubt whether the ingenious mechanism would really work, or wind
12336 itself up for a long time in order to stick and be silent. Solomon and
12337 Jane would have been sorry to be quick: what that led to might be seen
12338 on the other side of the wall in the person of Brother Jonah.
12339
12340 But their watch in the wainscoted parlor was sometimes varied by the
12341 presence of other guests from far or near. Now that Peter Featherstone
12342 was up-stairs, his property could be discussed with all that local
12343 enlightenment to be found on the spot: some rural and Middlemarch
12344 neighbors expressed much agreement with the family and sympathy with
12345 their interest against the Vincys, and feminine visitors were even
12346 moved to tears, in conversation with Mrs. Waule, when they recalled the
12347 fact that they themselves had been disappointed in times past by
12348 codicils and marriages for spite on the part of ungrateful elderly
12349 gentlemen, who, it might have been supposed, had been spared for
12350 something better. Such conversation paused suddenly, like an organ
12351 when the bellows are let drop, if Mary Garth came into the room; and
12352 all eyes were turned on her as a possible legatee, or one who might get
12353 access to iron chests.
12354
12355 But the younger men who were relatives or connections of the family,
12356 were disposed to admire her in this problematic light, as a girl who
12357 showed much conduct, and who among all the chances that were flying
12358 might turn out to be at least a moderate prize. Hence she had her
12359 share of compliments and polite attentions.
12360
12361 Especially from Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, a distinguished bachelor and
12362 auctioneer of those parts, much concerned in the sale of land and
12363 cattle: a public character, indeed, whose name was seen on widely
12364 distributed placards, and who might reasonably be sorry for those who
12365 did not know of him. He was second cousin to Peter Featherstone, and
12366 had been treated by him with more amenity than any other relative,
12367 being useful in matters of business; and in that programme of his
12368 funeral which the old man had himself dictated, he had been named as a
12369 Bearer. There was no odious cupidity in Mr. Borthrop Trumbull--nothing
12370 more than a sincere sense of his own merit, which, he was aware, in
12371 case of rivalry might tell against competitors; so that if Peter
12372 Featherstone, who so far as he, Trumbull, was concerned, had
12373 behaved like as good a soul as ever breathed, should have done anything
12374 handsome by him, all he could say was, that he had never fished and
12375 fawned, but had advised him to the best of his experience, which now
12376 extended over twenty years from the time of his apprenticeship at
12377 fifteen, and was likely to yield a knowledge of no surreptitious kind.
12378 His admiration was far from being confined to himself, but was
12379 accustomed professionally as well as privately to delight in estimating
12380 things at a high rate. He was an amateur of superior phrases, and
12381 never used poor language without immediately correcting himself--which
12382 was fortunate, as he was rather loud, and given to predominate,
12383 standing or walking about frequently, pulling down his waistcoat with
12384 the air of a man who is very much of his own opinion, trimming himself
12385 rapidly with his fore-finger, and marking each new series in these
12386 movements by a busy play with his large seals. There was occasionally
12387 a little fierceness in his demeanor, but it was directed chiefly
12388 against false opinion, of which there is so much to correct in the
12389 world that a man of some reading and experience necessarily has his
12390 patience tried. He felt that the Featherstone family generally was of
12391 limited understanding, but being a man of the world and a public
12392 character, took everything as a matter of course, and even went to
12393 converse with Mr. Jonah and young Cranch in the kitchen, not doubting
12394 that he had impressed the latter greatly by his leading questions
12395 concerning the Chalky Flats. If anybody had observed that Mr. Borthrop
12396 Trumbull, being an auctioneer, was bound to know the nature of
12397 everything, he would have smiled and trimmed himself silently with the
12398 sense that he came pretty near that. On the whole, in an auctioneering
12399 way, he was an honorable man, not ashamed of his business, and feeling
12400 that "the celebrated Peel, now Sir Robert," if introduced to him, would
12401 not fail to recognize his importance.
12402
12403 "I don't mind if I have a slice of that ham, and a glass of that ale,
12404 Miss Garth, if you will allow me," he said, coming into the parlor at
12405 half-past eleven, after having had the exceptional privilege of seeing
12406 old Featherstone, and standing with his back to the fire between Mrs.
12407 Waule and Solomon.
12408
12409 "It's not necessary for you to go out;--let me ring the bell."
12410
12411 "Thank you," said Mary, "I have an errand."
12412
12413 "Well, Mr. Trumbull, you're highly favored," said Mrs. Waule.
12414
12415 "What! seeing the old man?" said the auctioneer, playing with his seals
12416 dispassionately. "Ah, you see he has relied on me considerably." Here
12417 he pressed his lips together, and frowned meditatively.
12418
12419 "Might anybody ask what their brother has been saying?" said Solomon,
12420 in a soft tone of humility, in which he had a sense of luxurious
12421 cunning, he being a rich man and not in need of it.
12422
12423 "Oh yes, anybody may ask," said Mr. Trumbull, with loud and
12424 good-humored though cutting sarcasm. "Anybody may interrogate. Any
12425 one may give their remarks an interrogative turn," he continued, his
12426 sonorousness rising with his style. "This is constantly done by good
12427 speakers, even when they anticipate no answer. It is what we call a
12428 figure of speech--speech at a high figure, as one may say." The
12429 eloquent auctioneer smiled at his own ingenuity.
12430
12431 "I shouldn't be sorry to hear he'd remembered you, Mr. Trumbull," said
12432 Solomon. "I never was against the deserving. It's the undeserving I'm
12433 against."
12434
12435 "Ah, there it is, you see, there it is," said Mr. Trumbull,
12436 significantly. "It can't be denied that undeserving people have been
12437 legatees, and even residuary legatees. It is so, with testamentary
12438 dispositions." Again he pursed up his lips and frowned a little.
12439
12440 "Do you mean to say for certain, Mr. Trumbull, that my brother has left
12441 his land away from our family?" said Mrs. Waule, on whom, as an
12442 unhopeful woman, those long words had a depressing effect.
12443
12444 "A man might as well turn his land into charity land at once as leave
12445 it to some people," observed Solomon, his sister's question having
12446 drawn no answer.
12447
12448 "What, Blue-Coat land?" said Mrs. Waule, again. "Oh, Mr. Trumbull, you
12449 never can mean to say that. It would be flying in the face of the
12450 Almighty that's prospered him."
12451
12452 While Mrs. Waule was speaking, Mr. Borthrop Trumbull walked away from
12453 the fireplace towards the window, patrolling with his fore-finger round
12454 the inside of his stock, then along his whiskers and the curves of his
12455 hair. He now walked to Miss Garth's work-table, opened a book which
12456 lay there and read the title aloud with pompous emphasis as if he were
12457 offering it for sale:
12458
12459 "'Anne of Geierstein' (pronounced Jeersteen) or the 'Maiden of the
12460 Mist, by the author of Waverley.'" Then turning the page, he began
12461 sonorously--"The course of four centuries has well-nigh elapsed since
12462 the series of events which are related in the following chapters took
12463 place on the Continent." He pronounced the last truly admirable word
12464 with the accent on the last syllable, not as unaware of vulgar usage,
12465 but feeling that this novel delivery enhanced the sonorous beauty which
12466 his reading had given to the whole.
12467
12468 And now the servant came in with the tray, so that the moments for
12469 answering Mrs. Waule's question had gone by safely, while she and
12470 Solomon, watching Mr. Trumbull's movements, were thinking that high
12471 learning interfered sadly with serious affairs. Mr. Borthrop Trumbull
12472 really knew nothing about old Featherstone's will; but he could hardly
12473 have been brought to declare any ignorance unless he had been arrested
12474 for misprision of treason.
12475
12476 "I shall take a mere mouthful of ham and a glass of ale," he said,
12477 reassuringly. "As a man with public business, I take a snack when I
12478 can. I will back this ham," he added, after swallowing some morsels
12479 with alarming haste, "against any ham in the three kingdoms. In my
12480 opinion it is better than the hams at Freshitt Hall--and I think I am
12481 a tolerable judge."
12482
12483 "Some don't like so much sugar in their hams," said Mrs. Waule. "But
12484 my poor brother would always have sugar."
12485
12486 "If any person demands better, he is at liberty to do so; but, God
12487 bless me, what an aroma! I should be glad to buy in that quality, I
12488 know. There is some gratification to a gentleman"--here Mr.
12489 Trumbull's voice conveyed an emotional remonstrance--"in having this
12490 kind of ham set on his table."
12491
12492 He pushed aside his plate, poured out his glass of ale and drew his
12493 chair a little forward, profiting by the occasion to look at the inner
12494 side of his legs, which he stroked approvingly--Mr. Trumbull having
12495 all those less frivolous airs and gestures which distinguish the
12496 predominant races of the north.
12497
12498 "You have an interesting work there, I see, Miss Garth," he observed,
12499 when Mary re-entered. "It is by the author of 'Waverley': that is Sir
12500 Walter Scott. I have bought one of his works myself--a very nice
12501 thing, a very superior publication, entitled 'Ivanhoe.' You will not
12502 get any writer to beat him in a hurry, I think--he will not, in my
12503 opinion, be speedily surpassed. I have just been reading a portion at
12504 the commencement of 'Anne of Jeersteen.' It commences well." (Things
12505 never began with Mr. Borthrop Trumbull: they always commenced, both in
12506 private life and on his handbills.) "You are a reader, I see. Do you
12507 subscribe to our Middlemarch library?"
12508
12509 "No," said Mary. "Mr. Fred Vincy brought this book."
12510
12511 "I am a great bookman myself," returned Mr. Trumbull. "I have no less
12512 than two hundred volumes in calf, and I flatter myself they are well
12513 selected. Also pictures by Murillo, Rubens, Teniers, Titian, Vandyck,
12514 and others. I shall be happy to lend you any work you like to mention,
12515 Miss Garth."
12516
12517 "I am much obliged," said Mary, hastening away again, "but I have
12518 little time for reading."
12519
12520 "I should say my brother has done something for _her_ in his will,"
12521 said Mr. Solomon, in a very low undertone, when she had shut the door
12522 behind her, pointing with his head towards the absent Mary.
12523
12524 "His first wife was a poor match for him, though," said Mrs. Waule.
12525 "She brought him nothing: and this young woman is only her niece,--and
12526 very proud. And my brother has always paid her wage."
12527
12528 "A sensible girl though, in my opinion," said Mr. Trumbull, finishing
12529 his ale and starting up with an emphatic adjustment of his waistcoat.
12530 "I have observed her when she has been mixing medicine in drops. She
12531 minds what she is doing, sir. That is a great point in a woman, and a
12532 great point for our friend up-stairs, poor dear old soul. A man whose
12533 life is of any value should think of his wife as a nurse: that is what
12534 I should do, if I married; and I believe I have lived single long
12535 enough not to make a mistake in that line. Some men must marry to
12536 elevate themselves a little, but when I am in need of that, I hope some
12537 one will tell me so--I hope some individual will apprise me of the
12538 fact. I wish you good morning, Mrs. Waule. Good morning, Mr. Solomon.
12539 I trust we shall meet under less melancholy auspices."
12540
12541 When Mr. Trumbull had departed with a fine bow, Solomon, leaning
12542 forward, observed to his sister, "You may depend, Jane, my brother has
12543 left that girl a lumping sum."
12544
12545 "Anybody would think so, from the way Mr. Trumbull talks," said Jane.
12546 Then, after a pause, "He talks as if my daughters wasn't to be trusted
12547 to give drops."
12548
12549 "Auctioneers talk wild," said Solomon. "Not but what Trumbull has made
12550 money."
12551
12552
12553
12554 CHAPTER XXXIII.
12555
12556 "Close up his eyes and draw the curtain close;
12557 And let us all to meditation."
12558 --2 Henry VI.
12559
12560
12561 That night after twelve o'clock Mary Garth relieved the watch in Mr.
12562 Featherstone's room, and sat there alone through the small hours. She
12563 often chose this task, in which she found some pleasure,
12564 notwithstanding the old man's testiness whenever he demanded her
12565 attentions. There were intervals in which she could sit perfectly
12566 still, enjoying the outer stillness and the subdued light. The red
12567 fire with its gently audible movement seemed like a solemn existence
12568 calmly independent of the petty passions, the imbecile desires, the
12569 straining after worthless uncertainties, which were daily moving her
12570 contempt. Mary was fond of her own thoughts, and could amuse herself
12571 well sitting in twilight with her hands in her lap; for, having early
12572 had strong reason to believe that things were not likely to be arranged
12573 for her peculiar satisfaction, she wasted no time in astonishment and
12574 annoyance at that fact. And she had already come to take life very
12575 much as a comedy in which she had a proud, nay, a generous resolution
12576 not to act the mean or treacherous part. Mary might have become
12577 cynical if she had not had parents whom she honored, and a well of
12578 affectionate gratitude within her, which was all the fuller because she
12579 had learned to make no unreasonable claims.
12580
12581 She sat to-night revolving, as she was wont, the scenes of the day, her
12582 lips often curling with amusement at the oddities to which her fancy
12583 added fresh drollery: people were so ridiculous with their illusions,
12584 carrying their fool's caps unawares, thinking their own lies opaque
12585 while everybody else's were transparent, making themselves exceptions
12586 to everything, as if when all the world looked yellow under a lamp they
12587 alone were rosy. Yet there were some illusions under Mary's eyes which
12588 were not quite comic to her. She was secretly convinced, though she
12589 had no other grounds than her close observation of old Featherstone's
12590 nature, that in spite of his fondness for having the Vincys about him,
12591 they were as likely to be disappointed as any of the relations whom he
12592 kept at a distance. She had a good deal of disdain for Mrs. Vincy's
12593 evident alarm lest she and Fred should be alone together, but it did
12594 not hinder her from thinking anxiously of the way in which Fred would
12595 be affected, if it should turn out that his uncle had left him as poor
12596 as ever. She could make a butt of Fred when he was present, but she
12597 did not enjoy his follies when he was absent.
12598
12599 Yet she liked her thoughts: a vigorous young mind not overbalanced by
12600 passion, finds a good in making acquaintance with life, and watches its
12601 own powers with interest. Mary had plenty of merriment within.
12602
12603 Her thought was not veined by any solemnity or pathos about the old man
12604 on the bed: such sentiments are easier to affect than to feel about an
12605 aged creature whose life is not visibly anything but a remnant of
12606 vices. She had always seen the most disagreeable side of Mr.
12607 Featherstone: he was not proud of her, and she was only useful to him.
12608 To be anxious about a soul that is always snapping at you must be left
12609 to the saints of the earth; and Mary was not one of them. She had
12610 never returned him a harsh word, and had waited on him faithfully: that
12611 was her utmost. Old Featherstone himself was not in the least anxious
12612 about his soul, and had declined to see Mr. Tucker on the subject.
12613
12614 To-night he had not snapped, and for the first hour or two he lay
12615 remarkably still, until at last Mary heard him rattling his bunch of
12616 keys against the tin box which he always kept in the bed beside him.
12617 About three o'clock he said, with remarkable distinctness, "Missy, come
12618 here!"
12619
12620 Mary obeyed, and found that he had already drawn the tin box from under
12621 the clothes, though he usually asked to have this done for him; and he
12622 had selected the key. He now unlocked the box, and, drawing from it
12623 another key, looked straight at her with eyes that seemed to have
12624 recovered all their sharpness and said, "How many of 'em are in the
12625 house?"
12626
12627 "You mean of your own relations, sir," said Mary, well used to the old
12628 man's way of speech. He nodded slightly and she went on.
12629
12630 "Mr. Jonah Featherstone and young Cranch are sleeping here."
12631
12632 "Oh ay, they stick, do they? and the rest--they come every day, I'll
12633 warrant--Solomon and Jane, and all the young uns? They come peeping,
12634 and counting and casting up?"
12635
12636 "Not all of them every day. Mr. Solomon and Mrs. Waule are here every
12637 day, and the others come often."
12638
12639 The old man listened with a grimace while she spoke, and then said,
12640 relaxing his face, "The more fools they. You hearken, missy. It's
12641 three o'clock in the morning, and I've got all my faculties as well as
12642 ever I had in my life. I know all my property, and where the money's
12643 put out, and everything. And I've made everything ready to change my
12644 mind, and do as I like at the last. Do you hear, missy? I've got my
12645 faculties."
12646
12647 "Well, sir?" said Mary, quietly.
12648
12649 He now lowered his tone with an air of deeper cunning. "I've made two
12650 wills, and I'm going to burn one. Now you do as I tell you. This is
12651 the key of my iron chest, in the closet there. You push well at the
12652 side of the brass plate at the top, till it goes like a bolt: then you
12653 can put the key in the front lock and turn it. See and do that; and
12654 take out the topmost paper--Last Will and Testament--big printed."
12655
12656 "No, sir," said Mary, in a firm voice, "I cannot do that."
12657
12658 "Not do it? I tell you, you must," said the old man, his voice
12659 beginning to shake under the shock of this resistance.
12660
12661 "I cannot touch your iron chest or your will. I must refuse to do
12662 anything that might lay me open to suspicion."
12663
12664 "I tell you, I'm in my right mind. Shan't I do as I like at the last?
12665 I made two wills on purpose. Take the key, I say."
12666
12667 "No, sir, I will not," said Mary, more resolutely still. Her repulsion
12668 was getting stronger.
12669
12670 "I tell you, there's no time to lose."
12671
12672 "I cannot help that, sir. I will not let the close of your life soil
12673 the beginning of mine. I will not touch your iron chest or your will."
12674 She moved to a little distance from the bedside.
12675
12676 The old man paused with a blank stare for a little while, holding the
12677 one key erect on the ring; then with an agitated jerk he began to work
12678 with his bony left hand at emptying the tin box before him.
12679
12680 "Missy," he began to say, hurriedly, "look here! take the money--the
12681 notes and gold--look here--take it--you shall have it all--do as I
12682 tell you."
12683
12684 He made an effort to stretch out the key towards her as far as
12685 possible, and Mary again retreated.
12686
12687 "I will not touch your key or your money, sir. Pray don't ask me to do
12688 it again. If you do, I must go and call your brother."
12689
12690 He let his hand fall, and for the first time in her life Mary saw old
12691 Peter Featherstone begin to cry childishly. She said, in as gentle a
12692 tone as she could command, "Pray put up your money, sir;" and then went
12693 away to her seat by the fire, hoping this would help to convince him
12694 that it was useless to say more. Presently he rallied and said
12695 eagerly--
12696
12697 "Look here, then. Call the young chap. Call Fred Vincy."
12698
12699 Mary's heart began to beat more quickly. Various ideas rushed through
12700 her mind as to what the burning of a second will might imply. She had
12701 to make a difficult decision in a hurry.
12702
12703 "I will call him, if you will let me call Mr. Jonah and others with
12704 him."
12705
12706 "Nobody else, I say. The young chap. I shall do as I like."
12707
12708 "Wait till broad daylight, sir, when every one is stirring. Or let me
12709 call Simmons now, to go and fetch the lawyer? He can be here in less
12710 than two hours."
12711
12712 "Lawyer? What do I want with the lawyer? Nobody shall know--I say,
12713 nobody shall know. I shall do as I like."
12714
12715 "Let me call some one else, sir," said Mary, persuasively. She did not
12716 like her position--alone with the old man, who seemed to show a strange
12717 flaring of nervous energy which enabled him to speak again and again
12718 without falling into his usual cough; yet she desired not to push
12719 unnecessarily the contradiction which agitated him. "Let me, pray,
12720 call some one else."
12721
12722 "You let me alone, I say. Look here, missy. Take the money. You'll
12723 never have the chance again. It's pretty nigh two hundred--there's
12724 more in the box, and nobody knows how much there was. Take it and do
12725 as I tell you."
12726
12727 Mary, standing by the fire, saw its red light falling on the old man,
12728 propped up on his pillows and bed-rest, with his bony hand holding out
12729 the key, and the money lying on the quilt before him. She never forgot
12730 that vision of a man wanting to do as he liked at the last. But the
12731 way in which he had put the offer of the money urged her to speak with
12732 harder resolution than ever.
12733
12734 "It is of no use, sir. I will not do it. Put up your money. I will
12735 not touch your money. I will do anything else I can to comfort you;
12736 but I will not touch your keys or your money."
12737
12738 "Anything else anything else!" said old Featherstone, with hoarse rage,
12739 which, as if in a nightmare, tried to be loud, and yet was only just
12740 audible. "I want nothing else. You come here--you come here."
12741
12742 Mary approached him cautiously, knowing him too well. She saw him
12743 dropping his keys and trying to grasp his stick, while he looked at her
12744 like an aged hyena, the muscles of his face getting distorted with the
12745 effort of his hand. She paused at a safe distance.
12746
12747 "Let me give you some cordial," she said, quietly, "and try to compose
12748 yourself. You will perhaps go to sleep. And to-morrow by daylight you
12749 can do as you like."
12750
12751 He lifted the stick, in spite of her being beyond his reach, and threw
12752 it with a hard effort which was but impotence. It fell, slipping over
12753 the foot of the bed. Mary let it lie, and retreated to her chair by
12754 the fire. By-and-by she would go to him with the cordial. Fatigue
12755 would make him passive. It was getting towards the chillest moment of
12756 the morning, the fire had got low, and she could see through the chink
12757 between the moreen window-curtains the light whitened by the blind.
12758 Having put some wood on the fire and thrown a shawl over her, she sat
12759 down, hoping that Mr. Featherstone might now fall asleep. If she went
12760 near him the irritation might be kept up. He had said nothing after
12761 throwing the stick, but she had seen him taking his keys again and
12762 laying his right hand on the money. He did not put it up, however, and
12763 she thought that he was dropping off to sleep.
12764
12765 But Mary herself began to be more agitated by the remembrance of what
12766 she had gone through, than she had been by the reality--questioning
12767 those acts of hers which had come imperatively and excluded all
12768 question in the critical moment.
12769
12770 Presently the dry wood sent out a flame which illuminated every
12771 crevice, and Mary saw that the old man was lying quietly with his head
12772 turned a little on one side. She went towards him with inaudible
12773 steps, and thought that his face looked strangely motionless; but the
12774 next moment the movement of the flame communicating itself to all
12775 objects made her uncertain. The violent beating of her heart rendered
12776 her perceptions so doubtful that even when she touched him and listened
12777 for his breathing, she could not trust her conclusions. She went to
12778 the window and gently propped aside the curtain and blind, so that the
12779 still light of the sky fell on the bed.
12780
12781 The next moment she ran to the bell and rang it energetically. In a
12782 very little while there was no longer any doubt that Peter Featherstone
12783 was dead, with his right hand clasping the keys, and his left hand
12784 lying on the heap of notes and gold.
12785
12786
12787
12788
12789
12790 BOOK IV.
12791
12792
12793
12794
12795
12796 THREE LOVE PROBLEMS.
12797
12798
12799
12800 CHAPTER XXXIV.
12801
12802 1st Gent. Such men as this are feathers, chips, and straws.
12803 Carry no weight, no force.
12804 2d Gent. But levity
12805 Is causal too, and makes the sum of weight.
12806 For power finds its place in lack of power;
12807 Advance is cession, and the driven ship
12808 May run aground because the helmsman's thought
12809 Lacked force to balance opposites."
12810
12811
12812 It was on a morning of May that Peter Featherstone was buried. In the
12813 prosaic neighborhood of Middlemarch, May was not always warm and sunny,
12814 and on this particular morning a chill wind was blowing the blossoms
12815 from the surrounding gardens on to the green mounds of Lowick
12816 churchyard. Swiftly moving clouds only now and then allowed a gleam to
12817 light up any object, whether ugly or beautiful, that happened to stand
12818 within its golden shower. In the churchyard the objects were
12819 remarkably various, for there was a little country crowd waiting to see
12820 the funeral. The news had spread that it was to be a "big burying;"
12821 the old gentleman had left written directions about everything and
12822 meant to have a funeral "beyond his betters." This was true; for old
12823 Featherstone had not been a Harpagon whose passions had all been
12824 devoured by the ever-lean and ever-hungry passion of saving, and who
12825 would drive a bargain with his undertaker beforehand. He loved money,
12826 but he also loved to spend it in gratifying his peculiar tastes, and
12827 perhaps he loved it best of all as a means of making others feel his
12828 power more or less uncomfortably. If any one will here contend that
12829 there must have been traits of goodness in old Featherstone, I will not
12830 presume to deny this; but I must observe that goodness is of a modest
12831 nature, easily discouraged, and when much privacy, elbowed in early
12832 life by unabashed vices, is apt to retire into extreme privacy, so that
12833 it is more easily believed in by those who construct a selfish old
12834 gentleman theoretically, than by those who form the narrower judgments
12835 based on his personal acquaintance. In any case, he had been bent on
12836 having a handsome funeral, and on having persons "bid" to it who would
12837 rather have stayed at home. He had even desired that female relatives
12838 should follow him to the grave, and poor sister Martha had taken a
12839 difficult journey for this purpose from the Chalky Flats. She and Jane
12840 would have been altogether cheered (in a tearful manner) by this sign
12841 that a brother who disliked seeing them while he was living had been
12842 prospectively fond of their presence when he should have become a
12843 testator, if the sign had not been made equivocal by being extended to
12844 Mrs. Vincy, whose expense in handsome crape seemed to imply the most
12845 presumptuous hopes, aggravated by a bloom of complexion which told
12846 pretty plainly that she was not a blood-relation, but of that generally
12847 objectionable class called wife's kin.
12848
12849 We are all of us imaginative in some form or other, for images are the
12850 brood of desire; and poor old Featherstone, who laughed much at the way
12851 in which others cajoled themselves, did not escape the fellowship of
12852 illusion. In writing the programme for his burial he certainly did not
12853 make clear to himself that his pleasure in the little drama of which it
12854 formed a part was confined to anticipation. In chuckling over the
12855 vexations he could inflict by the rigid clutch of his dead hand, he
12856 inevitably mingled his consciousness with that livid stagnant presence,
12857 and so far as he was preoccupied with a future life, it was with one of
12858 gratification inside his coffin. Thus old Featherstone was
12859 imaginative, after his fashion.
12860
12861 However, the three mourning-coaches were filled according to the
12862 written orders of the deceased. There were pall-bearers on horseback,
12863 with the richest scarfs and hatbands, and even the under-bearers had
12864 trappings of woe which were of a good well-priced quality. The black
12865 procession, when dismounted, looked the larger for the smallness of the
12866 churchyard; the heavy human faces and the black draperies shivering in
12867 the wind seemed to tell of a world strangely incongruous with the
12868 lightly dropping blossoms and the gleams of sunshine on the daisies.
12869 The clergyman who met the procession was Mr. Cadwallader--also
12870 according to the request of Peter Featherstone, prompted as usual by
12871 peculiar reasons. Having a contempt for curates, whom he always called
12872 understrappers, he was resolved to be buried by a beneficed clergyman.
12873 Mr. Casaubon was out of the question, not merely because he declined
12874 duty of this sort, but because Featherstone had an especial dislike to
12875 him as the rector of his own parish, who had a lien on the land in the
12876 shape of tithe, also as the deliverer of morning sermons, which the old
12877 man, being in his pew and not at all sleepy, had been obliged to sit
12878 through with an inward snarl. He had an objection to a parson stuck up
12879 above his head preaching to him. But his relations with Mr.
12880 Cadwallader had been of a different kind: the trout-stream which ran
12881 through Mr. Casaubon's land took its course through Featherstone's
12882 also, so that Mr. Cadwallader was a parson who had had to ask a favor
12883 instead of preaching. Moreover, he was one of the high gentry living
12884 four miles away from Lowick, and was thus exalted to an equal sky with
12885 the sheriff of the county and other dignities vaguely regarded as
12886 necessary to the system of things. There would be a satisfaction in
12887 being buried by Mr. Cadwallader, whose very name offered a fine
12888 opportunity for pronouncing wrongly if you liked.
12889
12890 This distinction conferred on the Rector of Tipton and Freshitt was the
12891 reason why Mrs. Cadwallader made one of the group that watched old
12892 Featherstone's funeral from an upper window of the manor. She was not
12893 fond of visiting that house, but she liked, as she said, to see
12894 collections of strange animals such as there would be at this funeral;
12895 and she had persuaded Sir James and the young Lady Chettam to drive the
12896 Rector and herself to Lowick in order that the visit might be
12897 altogether pleasant.
12898
12899 "I will go anywhere with you, Mrs. Cadwallader," Celia had said; "but I
12900 don't like funerals."
12901
12902 "Oh, my dear, when you have a clergyman in your family you must
12903 accommodate your tastes: I did that very early. When I married
12904 Humphrey I made up my mind to like sermons, and I set out by liking the
12905 end very much. That soon spread to the middle and the beginning,
12906 because I couldn't have the end without them."
12907
12908 "No, to be sure not," said the Dowager Lady Chettam, with stately
12909 emphasis.
12910
12911 The upper window from which the funeral could be well seen was in the
12912 room occupied by Mr. Casaubon when he had been forbidden to work; but
12913 he had resumed nearly his habitual style of life now in spite of
12914 warnings and prescriptions, and after politely welcoming Mrs.
12915 Cadwallader had slipped again into the library to chew a cud of erudite
12916 mistake about Cush and Mizraim.
12917
12918 But for her visitors Dorothea too might have been shut up in the
12919 library, and would not have witnessed this scene of old Featherstone's
12920 funeral, which, aloof as it seemed to be from the tenor of her life,
12921 always afterwards came back to her at the touch of certain sensitive
12922 points in memory, just as the vision of St. Peter's at Rome was inwoven
12923 with moods of despondency. Scenes which make vital changes in our
12924 neighbors' lot are but the background of our own, yet, like a
12925 particular aspect of the fields and trees, they become associated for
12926 us with the epochs of our own history, and make a part of that unity
12927 which lies in the selection of our keenest consciousness.
12928
12929 The dream-like association of something alien and ill-understood with
12930 the deepest secrets of her experience seemed to mirror that sense of
12931 loneliness which was due to the very ardor of Dorothea's nature. The
12932 country gentry of old time lived in a rarefied social air: dotted apart
12933 on their stations up the mountain they looked down with imperfect
12934 discrimination on the belts of thicker life below. And Dorothea was
12935 not at ease in the perspective and chilliness of that height.
12936
12937 "I shall not look any more," said Celia, after the train had entered
12938 the church, placing herself a little behind her husband's elbow so that
12939 she could slyly touch his coat with her cheek. "I dare say Dodo likes
12940 it: she is fond of melancholy things and ugly people."
12941
12942 "I am fond of knowing something about the people I live among," said
12943 Dorothea, who had been watching everything with the interest of a monk
12944 on his holiday tour. "It seems to me we know nothing of our neighbors,
12945 unless they are cottagers. One is constantly wondering what sort of
12946 lives other people lead, and how they take things. I am quite obliged
12947 to Mrs. Cadwallader for coming and calling me out of the library."
12948
12949 "Quite right to feel obliged to me," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Your rich
12950 Lowick farmers are as curious as any buffaloes or bisons, and I dare
12951 say you don't half see them at church. They are quite different from
12952 your uncle's tenants or Sir James's--monsters--farmers without
12953 landlords--one can't tell how to class them."
12954
12955 "Most of these followers are not Lowick people," said Sir James; "I
12956 suppose they are legatees from a distance, or from Middlemarch.
12957 Lovegood tells me the old fellow has left a good deal of money as well
12958 as land."
12959
12960 "Think of that now! when so many younger sons can't dine at their own
12961 expense," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Ah," turning round at the sound of
12962 the opening door, "here is Mr. Brooke. I felt that we were incomplete
12963 before, and here is the explanation. You are come to see this odd
12964 funeral, of course?"
12965
12966 "No, I came to look after Casaubon--to see how he goes on, you know.
12967 And to bring a little news--a little news, my dear," said Mr. Brooke,
12968 nodding at Dorothea as she came towards him. "I looked into the
12969 library, and I saw Casaubon over his books. I told him it wouldn't do:
12970 I said, 'This will never do, you know: think of your wife, Casaubon.'
12971 And he promised me to come up. I didn't tell him my news: I said, he
12972 must come up."
12973
12974 "Ah, now they are coming out of church," Mrs. Cadwallader exclaimed.
12975 "Dear me, what a wonderfully mixed set! Mr. Lydgate as doctor, I
12976 suppose. But that is really a good looking woman, and the fair young
12977 man must be her son. Who are they, Sir James, do you know?"
12978
12979 "I see Vincy, the Mayor of Middlemarch; they are probably his wife and
12980 son," said Sir James, looking interrogatively at Mr. Brooke, who nodded
12981 and said--
12982
12983 "Yes, a very decent family--a very good fellow is Vincy; a credit to
12984 the manufacturing interest. You have seen him at my house, you know."
12985
12986 "Ah, yes: one of your secret committee," said Mrs. Cadwallader,
12987 provokingly.
12988
12989 "A coursing fellow, though," said Sir James, with a fox-hunter's
12990 disgust.
12991
12992 "And one of those who suck the life out of the wretched handloom
12993 weavers in Tipton and Freshitt. That is how his family look so fair
12994 and sleek," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Those dark, purple-faced people
12995 are an excellent foil. Dear me, they are like a set of jugs! Do look
12996 at Humphrey: one might fancy him an ugly archangel towering above them
12997 in his white surplice."
12998
12999 "It's a solemn thing, though, a funeral," said Mr. Brooke, "if you take
13000 it in that light, you know."
13001
13002 "But I am not taking it in that light. I can't wear my solemnity too
13003 often, else it will go to rags. It was time the old man died, and none
13004 of these people are sorry."
13005
13006 "How piteous!" said Dorothea. "This funeral seems to me the most
13007 dismal thing I ever saw. It is a blot on the morning I cannot bear to
13008 think that any one should die and leave no love behind."
13009
13010 She was going to say more, but she saw her husband enter and seat
13011 himself a little in the background. The difference his presence made
13012 to her was not always a happy one: she felt that he often inwardly
13013 objected to her speech.
13014
13015 "Positively," exclaimed Mrs. Cadwallader, "there is a new face come out
13016 from behind that broad man queerer than any of them: a little round
13017 head with bulging eyes--a sort of frog-face--do look. He must be of
13018 another blood, I think."
13019
13020 "Let me see!" said Celia, with awakened curiosity, standing behind Mrs.
13021 Cadwallader and leaning forward over her head. "Oh, what an odd face!"
13022 Then with a quick change to another sort of surprised expression, she
13023 added, "Why, Dodo, you never told me that Mr. Ladislaw was come again!"
13024
13025 Dorothea felt a shock of alarm: every one noticed her sudden paleness
13026 as she looked up immediately at her uncle, while Mr. Casaubon looked at
13027 her.
13028
13029 "He came with me, you know; he is my guest--puts up with me at the
13030 Grange," said Mr. Brooke, in his easiest tone, nodding at Dorothea, as
13031 if the announcement were just what she might have expected. "And we
13032 have brought the picture at the top of the carriage. I knew you would
13033 be pleased with the surprise, Casaubon. There you are to the very
13034 life--as Aquinas, you know. Quite the right sort of thing. And you
13035 will hear young Ladislaw talk about it. He talks uncommonly
13036 well--points out this, that, and the other--knows art and everything of
13037 that kind--companionable, you know--is up with you in any track--what
13038 I've been wanting a long while."
13039
13040 Mr. Casaubon bowed with cold politeness, mastering his irritation, but
13041 only so far as to be silent. He remembered Will's letter quite as well
13042 as Dorothea did; he had noticed that it was not among the letters which
13043 had been reserved for him on his recovery, and secretly concluding that
13044 Dorothea had sent word to Will not to come to Lowick, he had shrunk
13045 with proud sensitiveness from ever recurring to the subject. He now
13046 inferred that she had asked her uncle to invite Will to the Grange; and
13047 she felt it impossible at that moment to enter into any explanation.
13048
13049 Mrs. Cadwallader's eyes, diverted from the churchyard, saw a good deal
13050 of dumb show which was not so intelligible to her as she could have
13051 desired, and could not repress the question, "Who is Mr. Ladislaw?"
13052
13053 "A young relative of Mr. Casaubon's," said Sir James, promptly. His
13054 good-nature often made him quick and clear-seeing in personal matters,
13055 and he had divined from Dorothea's glance at her husband that there was
13056 some alarm in her mind.
13057
13058 "A very nice young fellow--Casaubon has done everything for him,"
13059 explained Mr. Brooke. "He repays your expense in him, Casaubon," he
13060 went on, nodding encouragingly. "I hope he will stay with me a long
13061 while and we shall make something of my documents. I have plenty of
13062 ideas and facts, you know, and I can see he is just the man to put them
13063 into shape--remembers what the right quotations are, omne tulit
13064 punctum, and that sort of thing--gives subjects a kind of turn. I
13065 invited him some time ago when you were ill, Casaubon; Dorothea said
13066 you couldn't have anybody in the house, you know, and she asked me to
13067 write."
13068
13069 Poor Dorothea felt that every word of her uncle's was about as pleasant
13070 as a grain of sand in the eye to Mr. Casaubon. It would be altogether
13071 unfitting now to explain that she had not wished her uncle to invite
13072 Will Ladislaw. She could not in the least make clear to herself the
13073 reasons for her husband's dislike to his presence--a dislike painfully
13074 impressed on her by the scene in the library; but she felt the
13075 unbecomingness of saying anything that might convey a notion of it to
13076 others. Mr. Casaubon, indeed, had not thoroughly represented those
13077 mixed reasons to himself; irritated feeling with him, as with all of
13078 us, seeking rather for justification than for self-knowledge. But he
13079 wished to repress outward signs, and only Dorothea could discern the
13080 changes in her husband's face before he observed with more of dignified
13081 bending and sing-song than usual--
13082
13083 "You are exceedingly hospitable, my dear sir; and I owe you
13084 acknowledgments for exercising your hospitality towards a relative of
13085 mine."
13086
13087 The funeral was ended now, and the churchyard was being cleared.
13088
13089 "Now you can see him, Mrs. Cadwallader," said Celia. "He is just like
13090 a miniature of Mr. Casaubon's aunt that hangs in Dorothea's
13091 boudoir--quite nice-looking."
13092
13093 "A very pretty sprig," said Mrs. Cadwallader, dryly. "What is your
13094 nephew to be, Mr. Casaubon?"
13095
13096 "Pardon me, he is not my nephew. He is my cousin."
13097
13098 "Well, you know," interposed Mr. Brooke, "he is trying his wings. He
13099 is just the sort of young fellow to rise. I should be glad to give him
13100 an opportunity. He would make a good secretary, now, like Hobbes,
13101 Milton, Swift--that sort of man."
13102
13103 "I understand," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "One who can write speeches."
13104
13105 "I'll fetch him in now, eh, Casaubon?" said Mr. Brooke. "He wouldn't
13106 come in till I had announced him, you know. And we'll go down and look
13107 at the picture. There you are to the life: a deep subtle sort of
13108 thinker with his fore-finger on the page, while Saint Bonaventure or
13109 somebody else, rather fat and florid, is looking up at the Trinity.
13110 Everything is symbolical, you know--the higher style of art: I like
13111 that up to a certain point, but not too far--it's rather straining to
13112 keep up with, you know. But you are at home in that, Casaubon. And
13113 your painter's flesh is good--solidity, transparency, everything of
13114 that sort. I went into that a great deal at one time. However, I'll
13115 go and fetch Ladislaw."
13116
13117
13118
13119 CHAPTER XXXV.
13120
13121 "Non, je ne comprends pas de plus charmant plaisir
13122 Que de voir d'heritiers une troupe affligee
13123 Le maintien interdit, et la mine allongee,
13124 Lire un long testament ou pales, etonnes
13125 On leur laisse un bonsoir avec un pied de nez.
13126 Pour voir au naturel leur tristesse profonde
13127 Je reviendrais, je crois, expres de l'autre monde."
13128 --REGNARD: Le Legataire Universel.
13129
13130
13131 When the animals entered the Ark in pairs, one may imagine that allied
13132 species made much private remark on each other, and were tempted to
13133 think that so many forms feeding on the same store of fodder were
13134 eminently superfluous, as tending to diminish the rations. (I fear the
13135 part played by the vultures on that occasion would be too painful for
13136 art to represent, those birds being disadvantageously naked about the
13137 gullet, and apparently without rites and ceremonies.)
13138
13139 The same sort of temptation befell the Christian Carnivora who formed
13140 Peter Featherstone's funeral procession; most of them having their
13141 minds bent on a limited store which each would have liked to get the
13142 most of. The long-recognized blood-relations and connections by
13143 marriage made already a goodly number, which, multiplied by
13144 possibilities, presented a fine range for jealous conjecture and
13145 pathetic hopefulness. Jealousy of the Vincys had created a fellowship
13146 in hostility among all persons of the Featherstone blood, so that in
13147 the absence of any decided indication that one of themselves was to
13148 have more than the rest, the dread lest that long-legged Fred Vincy
13149 should have the land was necessarily dominant, though it left abundant
13150 feeling and leisure for vaguer jealousies, such as were entertained
13151 towards Mary Garth. Solomon found time to reflect that Jonah was
13152 undeserving, and Jonah to abuse Solomon as greedy; Jane, the elder
13153 sister, held that Martha's children ought not to expect so much as the
13154 young Waules; and Martha, more lax on the subject of primogeniture, was
13155 sorry to think that Jane was so "having." These nearest of kin were
13156 naturally impressed with the unreasonableness of expectations in
13157 cousins and second cousins, and used their arithmetic in reckoning the
13158 large sums that small legacies might mount to, if there were too many
13159 of them. Two cousins were present to hear the will, and a second
13160 cousin besides Mr. Trumbull. This second cousin was a Middlemarch
13161 mercer of polite manners and superfluous aspirates. The two cousins
13162 were elderly men from Brassing, one of them conscious of claims on the
13163 score of inconvenient expense sustained by him in presents of oysters
13164 and other eatables to his rich cousin Peter; the other entirely
13165 saturnine, leaning his hands and chin on a stick, and conscious of
13166 claims based on no narrow performance but on merit generally: both
13167 blameless citizens of Brassing, who wished that Jonah Featherstone did
13168 not live there. The wit of a family is usually best received among
13169 strangers.
13170
13171 "Why, Trumbull himself is pretty sure of five hundred--_that_ you may
13172 depend,--I shouldn't wonder if my brother promised him," said Solomon,
13173 musing aloud with his sisters, the evening before the funeral.
13174
13175 "Dear, dear!" said poor sister Martha, whose imagination of hundreds
13176 had been habitually narrowed to the amount of her unpaid rent.
13177
13178 But in the morning all the ordinary currents of conjecture were
13179 disturbed by the presence of a strange mourner who had plashed among
13180 them as if from the moon. This was the stranger described by Mrs.
13181 Cadwallader as frog-faced: a man perhaps about two or three and thirty,
13182 whose prominent eyes, thin-lipped, downward-curved mouth, and hair
13183 sleekly brushed away from a forehead that sank suddenly above the ridge
13184 of the eyebrows, certainly gave his face a batrachian unchangeableness
13185 of expression. Here, clearly, was a new legatee; else why was he
13186 bidden as a mourner? Here were new possibilities, raising a new
13187 uncertainty, which almost checked remark in the mourning-coaches. We
13188 are all humiliated by the sudden discovery of a fact which has existed
13189 very comfortably and perhaps been staring at us in private while we
13190 have been making up our world entirely without it. No one had seen
13191 this questionable stranger before except Mary Garth, and she knew
13192 nothing more of him than that he had twice been to Stone Court when Mr.
13193 Featherstone was down-stairs, and had sat alone with him for several
13194 hours. She had found an opportunity of mentioning this to her father,
13195 and perhaps Caleb's were the only eyes, except the lawyer's, which
13196 examined the stranger with more of inquiry than of disgust or
13197 suspicion. Caleb Garth, having little expectation and less cupidity,
13198 was interested in the verification of his own guesses, and the calmness
13199 with which he half smilingly rubbed his chin and shot intelligent
13200 glances much as if he were valuing a tree, made a fine contrast with
13201 the alarm or scorn visible in other faces when the unknown mourner,
13202 whose name was understood to be Rigg, entered the wainscoted parlor and
13203 took his seat near the door to make part of the audience when the will
13204 should be read. Just then Mr. Solomon and Mr. Jonah were gone
13205 up-stairs with the lawyer to search for the will; and Mrs. Waule,
13206 seeing two vacant seats between herself and Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, had
13207 the spirit to move next to that great authority, who was handling his
13208 watch-seals and trimming his outlines with a determination not to show
13209 anything so compromising to a man of ability as wonder or surprise.
13210
13211 "I suppose you know everything about what my poor brother's done, Mr.
13212 Trumbull," said Mrs. Waule, in the lowest of her woolly tones, while
13213 she turned her crape-shadowed bonnet towards Mr. Trumbull's ear.
13214
13215 "My good lady, whatever was told me was told in confidence," said the
13216 auctioneer, putting his hand up to screen that secret.
13217
13218 "Them who've made sure of their good-luck may be disappointed yet,"
13219 Mrs. Waule continued, finding some relief in this communication.
13220
13221 "Hopes are often delusive," said Mr. Trumbull, still in confidence.
13222
13223 "Ah!" said Mrs. Waule, looking across at the Vincys, and then moving
13224 back to the side of her sister Martha.
13225
13226 "It's wonderful how close poor Peter was," she said, in the same
13227 undertones. "We none of us know what he might have had on his mind. I
13228 only hope and trust he wasn't a worse liver than we think of, Martha."
13229
13230 Poor Mrs. Cranch was bulky, and, breathing asthmatically, had the
13231 additional motive for making her remarks unexceptionable and giving
13232 them a general bearing, that even her whispers were loud and liable to
13233 sudden bursts like those of a deranged barrel-organ.
13234
13235 "I never _was_ covetous, Jane," she replied; "but I have six children
13236 and have buried three, and I didn't marry into money. The eldest, that
13237 sits there, is but nineteen--so I leave you to guess. And stock always
13238 short, and land most awkward. But if ever I've begged and prayed; it's
13239 been to God above; though where there's one brother a bachelor and the
13240 other childless after twice marrying--anybody might think!"
13241
13242 Meanwhile, Mr. Vincy had glanced at the passive face of Mr. Rigg, and
13243 had taken out his snuff-box and tapped it, but had put it again
13244 unopened as an indulgence which, however clarifying to the judgment,
13245 was unsuited to the occasion. "I shouldn't wonder if Featherstone had
13246 better feelings than any of us gave him credit for," he observed, in
13247 the ear of his wife. "This funeral shows a thought about everybody: it
13248 looks well when a man wants to be followed by his friends, and if they
13249 are humble, not to be ashamed of them. I should be all the better
13250 pleased if he'd left lots of small legacies. They may be uncommonly
13251 useful to fellows in a small way."
13252
13253 "Everything is as handsome as could be, crape and silk and everything,"
13254 said Mrs. Vincy, contentedly.
13255
13256 But I am sorry to say that Fred was under some difficulty in repressing
13257 a laugh, which would have been more unsuitable than his father's
13258 snuff-box. Fred had overheard Mr. Jonah suggesting something about a
13259 "love-child," and with this thought in his mind, the stranger's face,
13260 which happened to be opposite him, affected him too ludicrously. Mary
13261 Garth, discerning his distress in the twitchings of his mouth, and his
13262 recourse to a cough, came cleverly to his rescue by asking him to
13263 change seats with her, so that he got into a shadowy corner. Fred was
13264 feeling as good-naturedly as possible towards everybody, including
13265 Rigg; and having some relenting towards all these people who were less
13266 lucky than he was aware of being himself, he would not for the world
13267 have behaved amiss; still, it was particularly easy to laugh.
13268
13269 But the entrance of the lawyer and the two brothers drew every one's
13270 attention. The lawyer was Mr. Standish, and he had come to Stone Court
13271 this morning believing that he knew thoroughly well who would be
13272 pleased and who disappointed before the day was over. The will he
13273 expected to read was the last of three which he had drawn up for Mr.
13274 Featherstone. Mr. Standish was not a man who varied his manners: he
13275 behaved with the same deep-voiced, off-hand civility to everybody, as
13276 if he saw no difference in them, and talked chiefly of the hay-crop,
13277 which would be "very fine, by God!" of the last bulletins concerning
13278 the King, and of the Duke of Clarence, who was a sailor every inch of
13279 him, and just the man to rule over an island like Britain.
13280
13281 Old Featherstone had often reflected as he sat looking at the fire that
13282 Standish would be surprised some day: it is true that if he had done as
13283 he liked at the last, and burnt the will drawn up by another lawyer, he
13284 would not have secured that minor end; still he had had his pleasure in
13285 ruminating on it. And certainly Mr. Standish was surprised, but not at
13286 all sorry; on the contrary, he rather enjoyed the zest of a little
13287 curiosity in his own mind, which the discovery of a second will added
13288 to the prospective amazement on the part of the Featherstone family.
13289
13290 As to the sentiments of Solomon and Jonah, they were held in utter
13291 suspense: it seemed to them that the old will would have a certain
13292 validity, and that there might be such an interlacement of poor Peter's
13293 former and latter intentions as to create endless "lawing" before
13294 anybody came by their own--an inconvenience which would have at least
13295 the advantage of going all round. Hence the brothers showed a
13296 thoroughly neutral gravity as they re-entered with Mr. Standish; but
13297 Solomon took out his white handkerchief again with a sense that in any
13298 case there would be affecting passages, and crying at funerals, however
13299 dry, was customarily served up in lawn.
13300
13301 Perhaps the person who felt the most throbbing excitement at this
13302 moment was Mary Garth, in the consciousness that it was she who had
13303 virtually determined the production of this second will, which might
13304 have momentous effects on the lot of some persons present. No soul
13305 except herself knew what had passed on that final night.
13306
13307 "The will I hold in my hand," said Mr. Standish, who, seated at the
13308 table in the middle of the room, took his time about everything,
13309 including the coughs with which he showed a disposition to clear his
13310 voice, "was drawn up by myself and executed by our deceased friend on
13311 the 9th of August, 1825. But I find that there is a subsequent
13312 instrument hitherto unknown to me, bearing date the 20th of July, 1826,
13313 hardly a year later than the previous one. And there is farther, I
13314 see"--Mr. Standish was cautiously travelling over the document with his
13315 spectacles--"a codicil to this latter will, bearing date March 1, 1828."
13316
13317 "Dear, dear!" said sister Martha, not meaning to be audible, but driven
13318 to some articulation under this pressure of dates.
13319
13320 "I shall begin by reading the earlier will," continued Mr. Standish,
13321 "since such, as appears by his not having destroyed the document, was
13322 the intention of deceased."
13323
13324 The preamble was felt to be rather long, and several besides Solomon
13325 shook their heads pathetically, looking on the ground: all eyes avoided
13326 meeting other eyes, and were chiefly fixed either on the spots in the
13327 table-cloth or on Mr. Standish's bald head; excepting Mary Garth's.
13328 When all the rest were trying to look nowhere in particular, it was
13329 safe for her to look at them. And at the sound of the first "give and
13330 bequeath" she could see all complexions changing subtly, as if some
13331 faint vibration were passing through them, save that of Mr. Rigg. He
13332 sat in unaltered calm, and, in fact, the company, preoccupied with more
13333 important problems, and with the complication of listening to bequests
13334 which might or might not be revoked, had ceased to think of him. Fred
13335 blushed, and Mr. Vincy found it impossible to do without his snuff-box
13336 in his hand, though he kept it closed.
13337
13338 The small bequests came first, and even the recollection that there was
13339 another will and that poor Peter might have thought better of it, could
13340 not quell the rising disgust and indignation. One likes to be done
13341 well by in every tense, past, present, and future. And here was Peter
13342 capable five years ago of leaving only two hundred apiece to his own
13343 brothers and sisters, and only a hundred apiece to his own nephews and
13344 nieces: the Garths were not mentioned, but Mrs. Vincy and Rosamond were
13345 each to have a hundred. Mr. Trumbull was to have the gold-headed cane
13346 and fifty pounds; the other second cousins and the cousins present were
13347 each to have the like handsome sum, which, as the saturnine cousin
13348 observed, was a sort of legacy that left a man nowhere; and there was
13349 much more of such offensive dribbling in favor of persons not
13350 present--problematical, and, it was to be feared, low connections.
13351 Altogether, reckoning hastily, here were about three thousand disposed of.
13352 Where then had Peter meant the rest of the money to go--and where the
13353 land? and what was revoked and what not revoked--and was the revocation
13354 for better or for worse? All emotion must be conditional, and might turn
13355 out to be the wrong thing. The men were strong enough to bear up and
13356 keep quiet under this confused suspense; some letting their lower lip
13357 fall, others pursing it up, according to the habit of their muscles.
13358 But Jane and Martha sank under the rush of questions, and began to cry;
13359 poor Mrs. Cranch being half moved with the consolation of getting any
13360 hundreds at all without working for them, and half aware that her share
13361 was scanty; whereas Mrs. Waule's mind was entirely flooded with the
13362 sense of being an own sister and getting little, while somebody else
13363 was to have much. The general expectation now was that the "much"
13364 would fall to Fred Vincy, but the Vincys themselves were surprised when
13365 ten thousand pounds in specified investments were declared to be
13366 bequeathed to him:--was the land coming too? Fred bit his lips: it was
13367 difficult to help smiling, and Mrs. Vincy felt herself the happiest of
13368 women--possible revocation shrinking out of sight in this dazzling
13369 vision.
13370
13371 There was still a residue of personal property as well as the land, but
13372 the whole was left to one person, and that person was--O
13373 possibilities! O expectations founded on the favor of "close" old
13374 gentlemen! O endless vocatives that would still leave expression
13375 slipping helpless from the measurement of mortal folly!--that
13376 residuary legatee was Joshua Rigg, who was also sole executor, and who
13377 was to take thenceforth the name of Featherstone.
13378
13379 There was a rustling which seemed like a shudder running round the
13380 room. Every one stared afresh at Mr. Rigg, who apparently experienced
13381 no surprise.
13382
13383 "A most singular testamentary disposition!" exclaimed Mr. Trumbull,
13384 preferring for once that he should be considered ignorant in the past.
13385 "But there is a second will--there is a further document. We have not
13386 yet heard the final wishes of the deceased."
13387
13388 Mary Garth was feeling that what they had yet to hear were not the
13389 final wishes. The second will revoked everything except the legacies
13390 to the low persons before mentioned (some alterations in these being
13391 the occasion of the codicil), and the bequest of all the land lying in
13392 Lowick parish with all the stock and household furniture, to Joshua
13393 Rigg. The residue of the property was to be devoted to the erection
13394 and endowment of almshouses for old men, to be called Featherstone's
13395 Alms-Houses, and to be built on a piece of land near Middlemarch
13396 already bought for the purpose by the testator, he wishing--so the
13397 document declared--to please God Almighty. Nobody present had a
13398 farthing; but Mr. Trumbull had the gold-headed cane. It took some time
13399 for the company to recover the power of expression. Mary dared not
13400 look at Fred.
13401
13402 Mr. Vincy was the first to speak--after using his snuff-box
13403 energetically--and he spoke with loud indignation. "The most
13404 unaccountable will I ever heard! I should say he was not in his right
13405 mind when he made it. I should say this last will was void," added Mr.
13406 Vincy, feeling that this expression put the thing in the true light.
13407 "Eh Standish?"
13408
13409 "Our deceased friend always knew what he was about, I think," said Mr.
13410 Standish. "Everything is quite regular. Here is a letter from
13411 Clemmens of Brassing tied with the will. He drew it up. A very
13412 respectable solicitor."
13413
13414 "I never noticed any alienation of mind--any aberration of intellect in
13415 the late Mr. Featherstone," said Borthrop Trumbull, "but I call this
13416 will eccentric. I was always willingly of service to the old soul; and
13417 he intimated pretty plainly a sense of obligation which would show
13418 itself in his will. The gold-headed cane is farcical considered as an
13419 acknowledgment to me; but happily I am above mercenary considerations."
13420
13421 "There's nothing very surprising in the matter that I can see," said
13422 Caleb Garth. "Anybody might have had more reason for wondering if the
13423 will had been what you might expect from an open-minded straightforward
13424 man. For my part, I wish there was no such thing as a will."
13425
13426 "That's a strange sentiment to come from a Christian man, by God!" said
13427 the lawyer. "I should like to know how you will back that up, Garth!"
13428
13429 "Oh," said Caleb, leaning forward, adjusting his finger-tips with
13430 nicety and looking meditatively on the ground. It always seemed to him
13431 that words were the hardest part of "business."
13432
13433 But here Mr. Jonah Featherstone made himself heard. "Well, he always
13434 was a fine hypocrite, was my brother Peter. But this will cuts out
13435 everything. If I'd known, a wagon and six horses shouldn't have drawn
13436 me from Brassing. I'll put a white hat and drab coat on to-morrow."
13437
13438 "Dear, dear," wept Mrs. Cranch, "and we've been at the expense of
13439 travelling, and that poor lad sitting idle here so long! It's the
13440 first time I ever heard my brother Peter was so wishful to please God
13441 Almighty; but if I was to be struck helpless I must say it's hard--I
13442 can think no other."
13443
13444 "It'll do him no good where he's gone, that's my belief," said Solomon,
13445 with a bitterness which was remarkably genuine, though his tone could
13446 not help being sly. "Peter was a bad liver, and almshouses won't cover
13447 it, when he's had the impudence to show it at the last."
13448
13449 "And all the while had got his own lawful family--brothers and sisters
13450 and nephews and nieces--and has sat in church with 'em whenever he
13451 thought well to come," said Mrs. Waule. "And might have left his
13452 property so respectable, to them that's never been used to extravagance
13453 or unsteadiness in no manner of way--and not so poor but what they
13454 could have saved every penny and made more of it. And me--the trouble
13455 I've been at, times and times, to come here and be sisterly--and him
13456 with things on his mind all the while that might make anybody's flesh
13457 creep. But if the Almighty's allowed it, he means to punish him for
13458 it. Brother Solomon, I shall be going, if you'll drive me."
13459
13460 "I've no desire to put my foot on the premises again," said Solomon.
13461 "I've got land of my own and property of my own to will away."
13462
13463 "It's a poor tale how luck goes in the world," said Jonah. "It never
13464 answers to have a bit of spirit in you. You'd better be a dog in the
13465 manger. But those above ground might learn a lesson. One fool's will
13466 is enough in a family."
13467
13468 "There's more ways than one of being a fool," said Solomon. "I shan't
13469 leave my money to be poured down the sink, and I shan't leave it to
13470 foundlings from Africay. I like Featherstones that were brewed such,
13471 and not turned Featherstones with sticking the name on 'em."
13472
13473 Solomon addressed these remarks in a loud aside to Mrs. Waule as he
13474 rose to accompany her. Brother Jonah felt himself capable of much more
13475 stinging wit than this, but he reflected that there was no use in
13476 offending the new proprietor of Stone Court, until you were certain
13477 that he was quite without intentions of hospitality towards witty men
13478 whose name he was about to bear.
13479
13480 Mr. Joshua Rigg, in fact, appeared to trouble himself little about any
13481 innuendoes, but showed a notable change of manner, walking coolly up to
13482 Mr. Standish and putting business questions with much coolness. He had
13483 a high chirping voice and a vile accent. Fred, whom he no longer moved
13484 to laughter, thought him the lowest monster he had ever seen. But Fred
13485 was feeling rather sick. The Middlemarch mercer waited for an
13486 opportunity of engaging Mr. Rigg in conversation: there was no knowing
13487 how many pairs of legs the new proprietor might require hose for, and
13488 profits were more to be relied on than legacies. Also, the mercer, as
13489 a second cousin, was dispassionate enough to feel curiosity.
13490
13491 Mr. Vincy, after his one outburst, had remained proudly silent, though
13492 too much preoccupied with unpleasant feelings to think of moving, till
13493 he observed that his wife had gone to Fred's side and was crying
13494 silently while she held her darling's hand. He rose immediately, and
13495 turning his back on the company while he said to her in an
13496 undertone,--"Don't give way, Lucy; don't make a fool of yourself, my
13497 dear, before these people," he added in his usual loud voice--"Go and
13498 order the phaeton, Fred; I have no time to waste."
13499
13500 Mary Garth had before this been getting ready to go home with her
13501 father. She met Fred in the hall, and now for the first time had the
13502 courage to look at him. He had that withered sort of paleness which
13503 will sometimes come on young faces, and his hand was very cold when she
13504 shook it. Mary too was agitated; she was conscious that fatally,
13505 without will of her own, she had perhaps made a great difference to
13506 Fred's lot.
13507
13508 "Good-by," she said, with affectionate sadness. "Be brave, Fred. I do
13509 believe you are better without the money. What was the good of it to
13510 Mr. Featherstone?"
13511
13512 "That's all very fine," said Fred, pettishly. "What is a fellow to do?
13513 I must go into the Church now." (He knew that this would vex Mary:
13514 very well; then she must tell him what else he could do.) "And I
13515 thought I should be able to pay your father at once and make everything
13516 right. And you have not even a hundred pounds left you. What shall
13517 you do now, Mary?"
13518
13519 "Take another situation, of course, as soon as I can get one. My
13520 father has enough to do to keep the rest, without me. Good-by."
13521
13522 In a very short time Stone Court was cleared of well-brewed
13523 Featherstones and other long-accustomed visitors. Another stranger had
13524 been brought to settle in the neighborhood of Middlemarch, but in the
13525 case of Mr. Rigg Featherstone there was more discontent with immediate
13526 visible consequences than speculation as to the effect which his
13527 presence might have in the future. No soul was prophetic enough to
13528 have any foreboding as to what might appear on the trial of Joshua Rigg.
13529
13530 And here I am naturally led to reflect on the means of elevating a low
13531 subject. Historical parallels are remarkably efficient in this way.
13532 The chief objection to them is, that the diligent narrator may lack
13533 space, or (what is often the same thing) may not be able to think of
13534 them with any degree of particularity, though he may have a
13535 philosophical confidence that if known they would be illustrative. It
13536 seems an easier and shorter way to dignity, to observe that--since
13537 there never was a true story which could not be told in parables, where
13538 you might put a monkey for a margrave, and vice versa--whatever has
13539 been or is to be narrated by me about low people, may be ennobled by
13540 being considered a parable; so that if any bad habits and ugly
13541 consequences are brought into view, the reader may have the relief of
13542 regarding them as not more than figuratively ungenteel, and may feel
13543 himself virtually in company with persons of some style. Thus while I
13544 tell the truth about loobies, my reader's imagination need not be
13545 entirely excluded from an occupation with lords; and the petty sums
13546 which any bankrupt of high standing would be sorry to retire upon, may
13547 be lifted to the level of high commercial transactions by the
13548 inexpensive addition of proportional ciphers.
13549
13550 As to any provincial history in which the agents are all of high moral
13551 rank, that must be of a date long posterior to the first Reform Bill,
13552 and Peter Featherstone, you perceive, was dead and buried some months
13553 before Lord Grey came into office.
13554
13555
13556
13557 CHAPTER XXXVI.
13558
13559 "'Tis strange to see the humors of these men,
13560 These great aspiring spirits, that should be wise:
13561 . . . . . . . .
13562 For being the nature of great spirits to love
13563 To be where they may be most eminent;
13564 They, rating of themselves so farre above
13565 Us in conceit, with whom they do frequent,
13566 Imagine how we wonder and esteeme
13567 All that they do or say; which makes them strive
13568 To make our admiration more extreme,
13569 Which they suppose they cannot, 'less they give
13570 Notice of their extreme and highest thoughts.
13571 --DANIEL: Tragedy of Philotas.
13572
13573
13574 Mr. Vincy went home from the reading of the will with his point of view
13575 considerably changed in relation to many subjects. He was an
13576 open-minded man, but given to indirect modes of expressing himself:
13577 when he was disappointed in a market for his silk braids, he swore at
13578 the groom; when his brother-in-law Bulstrode had vexed him, he made
13579 cutting remarks on Methodism; and it was now apparent that he regarded
13580 Fred's idleness with a sudden increase of severity, by his throwing an
13581 embroidered cap out of the smoking-room on to the hall-floor.
13582
13583 "Well, sir," he observed, when that young gentleman was moving off to
13584 bed, "I hope you've made up your mind now to go up next term and pass
13585 your examination. I've taken my resolution, so I advise you to lose no
13586 time in taking yours."
13587
13588 Fred made no answer: he was too utterly depressed. Twenty-four hours
13589 ago he had thought that instead of needing to know what he should do,
13590 he should by this time know that he needed to do nothing: that he
13591 should hunt in pink, have a first-rate hunter, ride to cover on a fine
13592 hack, and be generally respected for doing so; moreover, that he should
13593 be able at once to pay Mr. Garth, and that Mary could no longer have
13594 any reason for not marrying him. And all this was to have come without
13595 study or other inconvenience, purely by the favor of providence in the
13596 shape of an old gentleman's caprice. But now, at the end of the
13597 twenty-four hours, all those firm expectations were upset. It was
13598 "rather hard lines" that while he was smarting under this
13599 disappointment he should be treated as if he could have helped it. But
13600 he went away silently and his mother pleaded for him.
13601
13602 "Don't be hard on the poor boy, Vincy. He'll turn out well yet, though
13603 that wicked man has deceived him. I feel as sure as I sit here, Fred
13604 will turn out well--else why was he brought back from the brink of the
13605 grave? And I call it a robbery: it was like giving him the land, to
13606 promise it; and what is promising, if making everybody believe is not
13607 promising? And you see he did leave him ten thousand pounds, and then
13608 took it away again."
13609
13610 "Took it away again!" said Mr. Vincy, pettishly. "I tell you the lad's
13611 an unlucky lad, Lucy. And you've always spoiled him."
13612
13613 "Well, Vincy, he was my first, and you made a fine fuss with him when
13614 he came. You were as proud as proud," said Mrs. Vincy, easily
13615 recovering her cheerful smile.
13616
13617 "Who knows what babies will turn to? I was fool enough, I dare say,"
13618 said the husband--more mildly, however.
13619
13620 "But who has handsomer, better children than ours? Fred is far beyond
13621 other people's sons: you may hear it in his speech, that he has kept
13622 college company. And Rosamond--where is there a girl like her? She
13623 might stand beside any lady in the land, and only look the better for
13624 it. You see--Mr. Lydgate has kept the highest company and been
13625 everywhere, and he fell in love with her at once. Not but what I could
13626 have wished Rosamond had not engaged herself. She might have met
13627 somebody on a visit who would have been a far better match; I mean at
13628 her schoolfellow Miss Willoughby's. There are relations in that family
13629 quite as high as Mr. Lydgate's."
13630
13631 "Damn relations!" said Mr. Vincy; "I've had enough of them. I don't
13632 want a son-in-law who has got nothing but his relations to recommend
13633 him."
13634
13635 "Why, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, "you seemed as pleased as could be
13636 about it. It's true, I wasn't at home; but Rosamond told me you hadn't
13637 a word to say against the engagement. And she has begun to buy in the
13638 best linen and cambric for her underclothing."
13639
13640 "Not by my will," said Mr. Vincy. "I shall have enough to do this
13641 year, with an idle scamp of a son, without paying for wedding-clothes.
13642 The times are as tight as can be; everybody is being ruined; and I
13643 don't believe Lydgate has got a farthing. I shan't give my consent to
13644 their marrying. Let 'em wait, as their elders have done before 'em."
13645
13646 "Rosamond will take it hard, Vincy, and you know you never could bear
13647 to cross her."
13648
13649 "Yes, I could. The sooner the engagement's off, the better. I don't
13650 believe he'll ever make an income, the way he goes on. He makes
13651 enemies; that's all I hear of his making."
13652
13653 "But he stands very high with Mr. Bulstrode, my dear. The marriage
13654 would please _him_, I should think."
13655
13656 "Please the deuce!" said Mr. Vincy. "Bulstrode won't pay for their
13657 keep. And if Lydgate thinks I'm going to give money for them to set up
13658 housekeeping, he's mistaken, that's all. I expect I shall have to put
13659 down my horses soon. You'd better tell Rosy what I say."
13660
13661 This was a not infrequent procedure with Mr. Vincy--to be rash in
13662 jovial assent, and on becoming subsequently conscious that he had been
13663 rash, to employ others in making the offensive retractation. However,
13664 Mrs. Vincy, who never willingly opposed her husband, lost no time the
13665 next morning in letting Rosamond know what he had said. Rosamond,
13666 examining some muslin-work, listened in silence, and at the end gave a
13667 certain turn of her graceful neck, of which only long experience could
13668 teach you that it meant perfect obstinacy.
13669
13670 "What do you say, my dear?" said her mother, with affectionate
13671 deference.
13672
13673 "Papa does not mean anything of the kind," said Rosamond, quite calmly.
13674 "He has always said that he wished me to marry the man I loved. And I
13675 shall marry Mr. Lydgate. It is seven weeks now since papa gave his
13676 consent. And I hope we shall have Mrs. Bretton's house."
13677
13678 "Well, my dear, I shall leave you to manage your papa. You always do
13679 manage everybody. But if we ever do go and get damask, Sadler's is the
13680 place--far better than Hopkins's. Mrs. Bretton's is very large, though:
13681 I should love you to have such a house; but it will take a great deal
13682 of furniture--carpeting and everything, besides plate and glass. And
13683 you hear, your papa says he will give no money. Do you think Mr.
13684 Lydgate expects it?"
13685
13686 "You cannot imagine that I should ask him, mamma. Of course he
13687 understands his own affairs."
13688
13689 "But he may have been looking for money, my dear, and we all thought of
13690 your having a pretty legacy as well as Fred;--and now everything is so
13691 dreadful--there's no pleasure in thinking of anything, with that poor
13692 boy disappointed as he is."
13693
13694 "That has nothing to do with my marriage, mamma. Fred must leave off
13695 being idle. I am going up-stairs to take this work to Miss Morgan: she
13696 does the open hemming very well. Mary Garth might do some work for me
13697 now, I should think. Her sewing is exquisite; it is the nicest thing I
13698 know about Mary. I should so like to have all my cambric frilling
13699 double-hemmed. And it takes a long time."
13700
13701 Mrs. Vincy's belief that Rosamond could manage her papa was well
13702 founded. Apart from his dinners and his coursing, Mr. Vincy,
13703 blustering as he was, had as little of his own way as if he had been a
13704 prime minister: the force of circumstances was easily too much for him,
13705 as it is for most pleasure-loving florid men; and the circumstance
13706 called Rosamond was particularly forcible by means of that mild
13707 persistence which, as we know, enables a white soft living substance to
13708 make its way in spite of opposing rock. Papa was not a rock: he had no
13709 other fixity than that fixity of alternating impulses sometimes called
13710 habit, and this was altogether unfavorable to his taking the only
13711 decisive line of conduct in relation to his daughter's
13712 engagement--namely, to inquire thoroughly into Lydgate's circumstances,
13713 declare his own inability to furnish money, and forbid alike either a
13714 speedy marriage or an engagement which must be too lengthy. That seems
13715 very simple and easy in the statement; but a disagreeable resolve
13716 formed in the chill hours of the morning had as many conditions against
13717 it as the early frost, and rarely persisted under the warming
13718 influences of the day. The indirect though emphatic expression of
13719 opinion to which Mr. Vincy was prone suffered much restraint in this
13720 case: Lydgate was a proud man towards whom innuendoes were obviously
13721 unsafe, and throwing his hat on the floor was out of the question. Mr.
13722 Vincy was a little in awe of him, a little vain that he wanted to marry
13723 Rosamond, a little indisposed to raise a question of money in which his
13724 own position was not advantageous, a little afraid of being worsted in
13725 dialogue with a man better educated and more highly bred than himself,
13726 and a little afraid of doing what his daughter would not like. The
13727 part Mr. Vincy preferred playing was that of the generous host whom
13728 nobody criticises. In the earlier half of the day there was business
13729 to hinder any formal communication of an adverse resolve; in the later
13730 there was dinner, wine, whist, and general satisfaction. And in the
13731 mean while the hours were each leaving their little deposit and
13732 gradually forming the final reason for inaction, namely, that action
13733 was too late. The accepted lover spent most of his evenings in Lowick
13734 Gate, and a love-making not at all dependent on money-advances from
13735 fathers-in-law, or prospective income from a profession, went on
13736 flourishingly under Mr. Vincy's own eyes. Young love-making--that
13737 gossamer web! Even the points it clings to--the things whence its
13738 subtle interlacings are swung--are scarcely perceptible: momentary
13739 touches of fingertips, meetings of rays from blue and dark orbs,
13740 unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and lip, faintest
13741 tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and indefinable
13742 joys, yearnings of one life towards another, visions of completeness,
13743 indefinite trust. And Lydgate fell to spinning that web from his
13744 inward self with wonderful rapidity, in spite of experience supposed to
13745 be finished off with the drama of Laure--in spite too of medicine and
13746 biology; for the inspection of macerated muscle or of eyes presented in
13747 a dish (like Santa Lucia's), and other incidents of scientific inquiry,
13748 are observed to be less incompatible with poetic love than a native
13749 dulness or a lively addiction to the lowest prose. As for Rosamond,
13750 she was in the water-lily's expanding wonderment at its own fuller
13751 life, and she too was spinning industriously at the mutual web. All
13752 this went on in the corner of the drawing-room where the piano stood,
13753 and subtle as it was, the light made it a sort of rainbow visible to
13754 many observers besides Mr. Farebrother. The certainty that Miss Vincy
13755 and Mr. Lydgate were engaged became general in Middlemarch without the
13756 aid of formal announcement.
13757
13758 Aunt Bulstrode was again stirred to anxiety; but this time she
13759 addressed herself to her brother, going to the warehouse expressly to
13760 avoid Mrs. Vincy's volatility. His replies were not satisfactory.
13761
13762 "Walter, you never mean to tell me that you have allowed all this to go
13763 on without inquiry into Mr. Lydgate's prospects?" said Mrs. Bulstrode,
13764 opening her eyes with wider gravity at her brother, who was in his
13765 peevish warehouse humor. "Think of this girl brought up in luxury--in
13766 too worldly a way, I am sorry to say--what will she do on a small
13767 income?"
13768
13769 "Oh, confound it, Harriet! What can I do when men come into the town
13770 without any asking of mine? Did you shut your house up against
13771 Lydgate? Bulstrode has pushed him forward more than anybody. I never
13772 made any fuss about the young fellow. You should go and talk to your
13773 husband about it, not me."
13774
13775 "Well, really, Walter, how can Mr. Bulstrode be to blame? I am sure he
13776 did not wish for the engagement."
13777
13778 "Oh, if Bulstrode had not taken him by the hand, I should never have
13779 invited him."
13780
13781 "But you called him in to attend on Fred, and I am sure that was a
13782 mercy," said Mrs. Bulstrode, losing her clew in the intricacies of the
13783 subject.
13784
13785 "I don't know about mercy," said Mr. Vincy, testily. "I know I am
13786 worried more than I like with my family. I was a good brother to you,
13787 Harriet, before you married Bulstrode, and I must say he doesn't always
13788 show that friendly spirit towards your family that might have been
13789 expected of him." Mr. Vincy was very little like a Jesuit, but no
13790 accomplished Jesuit could have turned a question more adroitly.
13791 Harriet had to defend her husband instead of blaming her brother, and
13792 the conversation ended at a point as far from the beginning as some
13793 recent sparring between the brothers-in-law at a vestry meeting.
13794
13795 Mrs. Bulstrode did not repeat her brother's complaints to her husband,
13796 but in the evening she spoke to him of Lydgate and Rosamond. He did
13797 not share her warm interest, however; and only spoke with resignation
13798 of the risks attendant on the beginning of medical practice and the
13799 desirability of prudence.
13800
13801 "I am sure we are bound to pray for that thoughtless girl--brought up
13802 as she has been," said Mrs. Bulstrode, wishing to rouse her husband's
13803 feelings.
13804
13805 "Truly, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, assentingly. "Those who are not
13806 of this world can do little else to arrest the errors of the
13807 obstinately worldly. That is what we must accustom ourselves to
13808 recognize with regard to your brother's family. I could have wished
13809 that Mr. Lydgate had not entered into such a union; but my relations
13810 with him are limited to that use of his gifts for God's purposes which
13811 is taught us by the divine government under each dispensation."
13812
13813 Mrs. Bulstrode said no more, attributing some dissatisfaction which she
13814 felt to her own want of spirituality. She believed that her husband
13815 was one of those men whose memoirs should be written when they died.
13816
13817 As to Lydgate himself, having been accepted, he was prepared to accept
13818 all the consequences which he believed himself to foresee with perfect
13819 clearness. Of course he must be married in a year--perhaps even in
13820 half a year. This was not what he had intended; but other schemes
13821 would not be hindered: they would simply adjust themselves anew.
13822 Marriage, of course, must be prepared for in the usual way. A house
13823 must be taken instead of the rooms he at present occupied; and Lydgate,
13824 having heard Rosamond speak with admiration of old Mrs. Bretton's house
13825 (situated in Lowick Gate), took notice when it fell vacant after the
13826 old lady's death, and immediately entered into treaty for it.
13827
13828 He did this in an episodic way, very much as he gave orders to his
13829 tailor for every requisite of perfect dress, without any notion of
13830 being extravagant. On the contrary, he would have despised any
13831 ostentation of expense; his profession had familiarized him with all
13832 grades of poverty, and he cared much for those who suffered hardships.
13833 He would have behaved perfectly at a table where the sauce was served
13834 in a jug with the handle off, and he would have remembered nothing
13835 about a grand dinner except that a man was there who talked well. But
13836 it had never occurred to him that he should live in any other than what
13837 he would have called an ordinary way, with green glasses for hock, and
13838 excellent waiting at table. In warming himself at French social
13839 theories he had brought away no smell of scorching. We may handle even
13840 extreme opinions with impunity while our furniture, our dinner-giving,
13841 and preference for armorial bearings in our own case, link us
13842 indissolubly with the established order. And Lydgate's tendency was
13843 not towards extreme opinions: he would have liked no barefooted
13844 doctrines, being particular about his boots: he was no radical in
13845 relation to anything but medical reform and the prosecution of
13846 discovery. In the rest of practical life he walked by hereditary
13847 habit; half from that personal pride and unreflecting egoism which I
13848 have already called commonness, and half from that naivete which
13849 belonged to preoccupation with favorite ideas.
13850
13851 Any inward debate Lydgate had as to the consequences of this engagement
13852 which had stolen upon him, turned on the paucity of time rather than of
13853 money. Certainly, being in love and being expected continually by some
13854 one who always turned out to be prettier than memory could represent
13855 her to be, did interfere with the diligent use of spare hours which
13856 might serve some "plodding fellow of a German" to make the great,
13857 imminent discovery. This was really an argument for not deferring the
13858 marriage too long, as he implied to Mr. Farebrother, one day that the
13859 Vicar came to his room with some pond-products which he wanted to
13860 examine under a better microscope than his own, and, finding Lydgate's
13861 tableful of apparatus and specimens in confusion, said sarcastically--
13862
13863 "Eros has degenerated; he began by introducing order and harmony, and
13864 now he brings back chaos."
13865
13866 "Yes, at some stages," said Lydgate, lifting his brows and smiling,
13867 while he began to arrange his microscope. "But a better order will
13868 begin after."
13869
13870 "Soon?" said the Vicar.
13871
13872 "I hope so, really. This unsettled state of affairs uses up the time,
13873 and when one has notions in science, every moment is an opportunity. I
13874 feel sure that marriage must be the best thing for a man who wants to
13875 work steadily. He has everything at home then--no teasing with
13876 personal speculations--he can get calmness and freedom."
13877
13878 "You are an enviable dog," said the Vicar, "to have such a
13879 prospect--Rosamond, calmness and freedom, all to your share. Here am
13880 I with nothing but my pipe and pond-animalcules. Now, are you ready?"
13881
13882 Lydgate did not mention to the Vicar another reason he had for wishing
13883 to shorten the period of courtship. It was rather irritating to him,
13884 even with the wine of love in his veins, to be obliged to mingle so
13885 often with the family party at the Vincys', and to enter so much into
13886 Middlemarch gossip, protracted good cheer, whist-playing, and general
13887 futility. He had to be deferential when Mr. Vincy decided questions
13888 with trenchant ignorance, especially as to those liquors which were the
13889 best inward pickle, preserving you from the effects of bad air. Mrs.
13890 Vincy's openness and simplicity were quite unstreaked with suspicion as
13891 to the subtle offence she might give to the taste of her intended
13892 son-in-law; and altogether Lydgate had to confess to himself that he
13893 was descending a little in relation to Rosamond's family. But that
13894 exquisite creature herself suffered in the same sort of way:--it was
13895 at least one delightful thought that in marrying her, he could give her
13896 a much-needed transplantation.
13897
13898 "Dear!" he said to her one evening, in his gentlest tone, as he sat
13899 down by her and looked closely at her face--
13900
13901 But I must first say that he had found her alone in the drawing-room,
13902 where the great old-fashioned window, almost as large as the side of
13903 the room, was opened to the summer scents of the garden at the back of
13904 the house. Her father and mother were gone to a party, and the rest
13905 were all out with the butterflies.
13906
13907 "Dear! your eyelids are red."
13908
13909 "Are they?" said Rosamond. "I wonder why." It was not in her nature
13910 to pour forth wishes or grievances. They only came forth gracefully on
13911 solicitation.
13912
13913 "As if you could hide it from me!" said Lydgate, laying his hand
13914 tenderly on both of hers. "Don't I see a tiny drop on one of the
13915 lashes? Things trouble you, and you don't tell me. That is unloving."
13916
13917 "Why should I tell you what you cannot alter? They are every-day
13918 things:--perhaps they have been a little worse lately."
13919
13920 "Family annoyances. Don't fear speaking. I guess them."
13921
13922 "Papa has been more irritable lately. Fred makes him angry, and this
13923 morning there was a fresh quarrel because Fred threatens to throw his
13924 whole education away, and do something quite beneath him. And
13925 besides--"
13926
13927 Rosamond hesitated, and her cheeks were gathering a slight flush.
13928 Lydgate had never seen her in trouble since the morning of their
13929 engagement, and he had never felt so passionately towards her as at
13930 this moment. He kissed the hesitating lips gently, as if to encourage
13931 them.
13932
13933 "I feel that papa is not quite pleased about our engagement," Rosamond
13934 continued, almost in a whisper; "and he said last night that he should
13935 certainly speak to you and say it must be given up."
13936
13937 "Will you give it up?" said Lydgate, with quick energy--almost angrily.
13938
13939 "I never give up anything that I choose to do," said Rosamond,
13940 recovering her calmness at the touching of this chord.
13941
13942 "God bless you!" said Lydgate, kissing her again. This constancy of
13943 purpose in the right place was adorable. He went on:--
13944
13945 "It is too late now for your father to say that our engagement must be
13946 given up. You are of age, and I claim you as mine. If anything is
13947 done to make you unhappy,--that is a reason for hastening our marriage."
13948
13949 An unmistakable delight shone forth from the blue eyes that met his,
13950 and the radiance seemed to light up all his future with mild sunshine.
13951 Ideal happiness (of the kind known in the Arabian Nights, in which you
13952 are invited to step from the labor and discord of the street into a
13953 paradise where everything is given to you and nothing claimed) seemed
13954 to be an affair of a few weeks' waiting, more or less.
13955
13956 "Why should we defer it?" he said, with ardent insistence. "I have
13957 taken the house now: everything else can soon be got ready--can it
13958 not? You will not mind about new clothes. Those can be bought
13959 afterwards."
13960
13961 "What original notions you clever men have!" said Rosamond, dimpling
13962 with more thorough laughter than usual at this humorous incongruity.
13963 "This is the first time I ever heard of wedding-clothes being bought
13964 after marriage."
13965
13966 "But you don't mean to say you would insist on my waiting months for
13967 the sake of clothes?" said Lydgate, half thinking that Rosamond was
13968 tormenting him prettily, and half fearing that she really shrank from
13969 speedy marriage. "Remember, we are looking forward to a better sort of
13970 happiness even than this--being continually together, independent of
13971 others, and ordering our lives as we will. Come, dear, tell me how
13972 soon you can be altogether mine."
13973
13974 There was a serious pleading in Lydgate's tone, as if he felt that she
13975 would be injuring him by any fantastic delays. Rosamond became serious
13976 too, and slightly meditative; in fact, she was going through many
13977 intricacies of lace-edging and hosiery and petticoat-tucking, in order
13978 to give an answer that would at least be approximative.
13979
13980 "Six weeks would be ample--say so, Rosamond," insisted Lydgate,
13981 releasing her hands to put his arm gently round her.
13982
13983 One little hand immediately went to pat her hair, while she gave her
13984 neck a meditative turn, and then said seriously--
13985
13986 "There would be the house-linen and the furniture to be prepared.
13987 Still, mamma could see to those while we were away."
13988
13989 "Yes, to be sure. We must be away a week or so."
13990
13991 "Oh, more than that!" said Rosamond, earnestly. She was thinking of
13992 her evening dresses for the visit to Sir Godwin Lydgate's, which she
13993 had long been secretly hoping for as a delightful employment of at
13994 least one quarter of the honeymoon, even if she deferred her
13995 introduction to the uncle who was a doctor of divinity (also a pleasing
13996 though sober kind of rank, when sustained by blood). She looked at her
13997 lover with some wondering remonstrance as she spoke, and he readily
13998 understood that she might wish to lengthen the sweet time of double
13999 solitude.
14000
14001 "Whatever you wish, my darling, when the day is fixed. But let us take
14002 a decided course, and put an end to any discomfort you may be
14003 suffering. Six weeks!--I am sure they would be ample."
14004
14005 "I could certainly hasten the work," said Rosamond. "Will you, then,
14006 mention it to papa?--I think it would be better to write to him." She
14007 blushed and looked at him as the garden flowers look at us when we walk
14008 forth happily among them in the transcendent evening light: is there
14009 not a soul beyond utterance, half nymph, half child, in those delicate
14010 petals which glow and breathe about the centres of deep color?
14011
14012 He touched her ear and a little bit of neck under it with his lips, and
14013 they sat quite still for many minutes which flowed by them like a small
14014 gurgling brook with the kisses of the sun upon it. Rosamond thought
14015 that no one could be more in love than she was; and Lydgate thought
14016 that after all his wild mistakes and absurd credulity, he had found
14017 perfect womanhood--felt as if already breathed upon by exquisite wedded
14018 affection such as would be bestowed by an accomplished creature who
14019 venerated his high musings and momentous labors and would never
14020 interfere with them; who would create order in the home and accounts
14021 with still magic, yet keep her fingers ready to touch the lute and
14022 transform life into romance at any moment; who was instructed to the
14023 true womanly limit and not a hair's-breadth beyond--docile, therefore,
14024 and ready to carry out behests which came from that limit. It was
14025 plainer now than ever that his notion of remaining much longer a
14026 bachelor had been a mistake: marriage would not be an obstruction but a
14027 furtherance. And happening the next day to accompany a patient to
14028 Brassing, he saw a dinner-service there which struck him as so exactly
14029 the right thing that he bought it at once. It saved time to do these
14030 things just when you thought of them, and Lydgate hated ugly crockery.
14031 The dinner-service in question was expensive, but that might be in the
14032 nature of dinner-services. Furnishing was necessarily expensive; but
14033 then it had to be done only once.
14034
14035 "It must be lovely," said Mrs. Vincy, when Lydgate mentioned his
14036 purchase with some descriptive touches. "Just what Rosy ought to have.
14037 I trust in heaven it won't be broken!"
14038
14039 "One must hire servants who will not break things," said Lydgate.
14040 (Certainly, this was reasoning with an imperfect vision of sequences.
14041 But at that period there was no sort of reasoning which was not more or
14042 less sanctioned by men of science.)
14043
14044 Of course it was unnecessary to defer the mention of anything to mamma,
14045 who did not readily take views that were not cheerful, and being a
14046 happy wife herself, had hardly any feeling but pride in her daughter's
14047 marriage. But Rosamond had good reasons for suggesting to Lydgate that
14048 papa should be appealed to in writing. She prepared for the arrival of
14049 the letter by walking with her papa to the warehouse the next morning,
14050 and telling him on the way that Mr. Lydgate wished to be married soon.
14051
14052 "Nonsense, my dear!" said Mr. Vincy. "What has he got to marry on?
14053 You'd much better give up the engagement. I've told you so pretty
14054 plainly before this. What have you had such an education for, if you
14055 are to go and marry a poor man? It's a cruel thing for a father to
14056 see."
14057
14058 "Mr. Lydgate is not poor, papa. He bought Mr. Peacock's practice,
14059 which, they say, is worth eight or nine hundred a-year."
14060
14061 "Stuff and nonsense! What's buying a practice? He might as well buy
14062 next year's swallows. It'll all slip through his fingers."
14063
14064 "On the contrary, papa, he will increase the practice. See how he has
14065 been called in by the Chettams and Casaubons."
14066
14067 "I hope he knows I shan't give anything--with this disappointment about
14068 Fred, and Parliament going to be dissolved, and machine-breaking
14069 everywhere, and an election coming on--"
14070
14071 "Dear papa! what can that have to do with my marriage?"
14072
14073 "A pretty deal to do with it! We may all be ruined for what I know--the
14074 country's in that state! Some say it's the end of the world, and
14075 be hanged if I don't think it looks like it! Anyhow, it's not a time
14076 for me to be drawing money out of my business, and I should wish
14077 Lydgate to know that."
14078
14079 "I am sure he expects nothing, papa. And he has such very high
14080 connections: he is sure to rise in one way or another. He is engaged
14081 in making scientific discoveries."
14082
14083 Mr. Vincy was silent.
14084
14085 "I cannot give up my only prospect of happiness, papa. Mr. Lydgate is a
14086 gentleman. I could never love any one who was not a perfect gentleman.
14087 You would not like me to go into a consumption, as Arabella Hawley did.
14088 And you know that I never change my mind."
14089
14090 Again papa was silent.
14091
14092 "Promise me, papa, that you will consent to what we wish. We shall
14093 never give each other up; and you know that you have always objected to
14094 long courtships and late marriages."
14095
14096 There was a little more urgency of this kind, till Mr. Vincy said,
14097 "Well, well, child, he must write to me first before I can answer
14098 him,"--and Rosamond was certain that she had gained her point.
14099
14100 Mr. Vincy's answer consisted chiefly in a demand that Lydgate should
14101 insure his life--a demand immediately conceded. This was a
14102 delightfully reassuring idea supposing that Lydgate died, but in the
14103 mean time not a self-supporting idea. However, it seemed to make
14104 everything comfortable about Rosamond's marriage; and the necessary
14105 purchases went on with much spirit. Not without prudential
14106 considerations, however. A bride (who is going to visit at a
14107 baronet's) must have a few first-rate pocket-handkerchiefs; but beyond
14108 the absolutely necessary half-dozen, Rosamond contented herself without
14109 the very highest style of embroidery and Valenciennes. Lydgate also,
14110 finding that his sum of eight hundred pounds had been considerably
14111 reduced since he had come to Middlemarch, restrained his inclination
14112 for some plate of an old pattern which was shown to him when he went
14113 into Kibble's establishment at Brassing to buy forks and spoons. He
14114 was too proud to act as if he presupposed that Mr. Vincy would advance
14115 money to provide furniture; and though, since it would not be
14116 necessary to pay for everything at once, some bills would be left
14117 standing over, he did not waste time in conjecturing how much his
14118 father-in-law would give in the form of dowry, to make payment easy.
14119 He was not going to do anything extravagant, but the requisite things
14120 must be bought, and it would be bad economy to buy them of a poor
14121 quality. All these matters were by the bye. Lydgate foresaw that
14122 science and his profession were the objects he should alone pursue
14123 enthusiastically; but he could not imagine himself pursuing them in
14124 such a home as Wrench had--the doors all open, the oil-cloth worn, the
14125 children in soiled pinafores, and lunch lingering in the form of bones,
14126 black-handled knives, and willow-pattern. But Wrench had a wretched
14127 lymphatic wife who made a mummy of herself indoors in a large shawl;
14128 and he must have altogether begun with an ill-chosen domestic apparatus.
14129
14130 Rosamond, however, was on her side much occupied with conjectures,
14131 though her quick imitative perception warned her against betraying them
14132 too crudely.
14133
14134 "I shall like so much to know your family," she said one day, when the
14135 wedding journey was being discussed. "We might perhaps take a
14136 direction that would allow us to see them as we returned. Which of
14137 your uncles do you like best?"
14138
14139 "Oh,--my uncle Godwin, I think. He is a good-natured old fellow."
14140
14141 "You were constantly at his house at Quallingham, when you were a boy,
14142 were you not? I should so like to see the old spot and everything you
14143 were used to. Does he know you are going to be married?"
14144
14145 "No," said Lydgate, carelessly, turning in his chair and rubbing his
14146 hair up.
14147
14148 "Do send him word of it, you naughty undutiful nephew. He will perhaps
14149 ask you to take me to Quallingham; and then you could show me about the
14150 grounds, and I could imagine you there when you were a boy. Remember,
14151 you see me in my home, just as it has been since I was a child. It is
14152 not fair that I should be so ignorant of yours. But perhaps you would
14153 be a little ashamed of me. I forgot that."
14154
14155 Lydgate smiled at her tenderly, and really accepted the suggestion that
14156 the proud pleasure of showing so charming a bride was worth some
14157 trouble. And now he came to think of it, he would like to see the old
14158 spots with Rosamond.
14159
14160 "I will write to him, then. But my cousins are bores."
14161
14162 It seemed magnificent to Rosamond to be able to speak so slightingly of
14163 a baronet's family, and she felt much contentment in the prospect of
14164 being able to estimate them contemptuously on her own account.
14165
14166 But mamma was near spoiling all, a day or two later, by saying--
14167
14168 "I hope your uncle Sir Godwin will not look down on Rosy, Mr. Lydgate.
14169 I should think he would do something handsome. A thousand or two can
14170 be nothing to a baronet."
14171
14172 "Mamma!" said Rosamond, blushing deeply; and Lydgate pitied her so much
14173 that he remained silent and went to the other end of the room to
14174 examine a print curiously, as if he had been absent-minded. Mamma had a
14175 little filial lecture afterwards, and was docile as usual. But
14176 Rosamond reflected that if any of those high-bred cousins who were
14177 bores, should be induced to visit Middlemarch, they would see many
14178 things in her own family which might shock them. Hence it seemed
14179 desirable that Lydgate should by-and-by get some first-rate position
14180 elsewhere than in Middlemarch; and this could hardly be difficult in
14181 the case of a man who had a titled uncle and could make discoveries.
14182 Lydgate, you perceive, had talked fervidly to Rosamond of his hopes as
14183 to the highest uses of his life, and had found it delightful to be
14184 listened to by a creature who would bring him the sweet furtherance of
14185 satisfying affection--beauty--repose--such help as our thoughts get
14186 from the summer sky and the flower-fringed meadows.
14187
14188 Lydgate relied much on the psychological difference between what for
14189 the sake of variety I will call goose and gander: especially on the
14190 innate submissiveness of the goose as beautifully corresponding to the
14191 strength of the gander.
14192
14193
14194
14195 CHAPTER XXXVII.
14196
14197 "Thrice happy she that is so well assured
14198 Unto herself and settled so in heart
14199 That neither will for better be allured
14200 Ne fears to worse with any chance to start,
14201 But like a steddy ship doth strongly part
14202 The raging waves and keeps her course aright;
14203 Ne aught for tempest doth from it depart,
14204 Ne aught for fairer weather's false delight.
14205 Such self-assurance need not fear the spight
14206 Of grudging foes; ne favour seek of friends;
14207 But in the stay of her own stedfast might
14208 Neither to one herself nor other bends.
14209 Most happy she that most assured doth rest,
14210 But he most happy who such one loves best."
14211 --SPENSER.
14212
14213
14214 The doubt hinted by Mr. Vincy whether it were only the general election
14215 or the end of the world that was coming on, now that George the Fourth
14216 was dead, Parliament dissolved, Wellington and Peel generally
14217 depreciated and the new King apologetic, was a feeble type of the
14218 uncertainties in provincial opinion at that time. With the glow-worm
14219 lights of country places, how could men see which were their own
14220 thoughts in the confusion of a Tory Ministry passing Liberal measures,
14221 of Tory nobles and electors being anxious to return Liberals rather
14222 than friends of the recreant Ministers, and of outcries for remedies
14223 which seemed to have a mysteriously remote bearing on private interest,
14224 and were made suspicious by the advocacy of disagreeable neighbors?
14225 Buyers of the Middlemarch newspapers found themselves in an anomalous
14226 position: during the agitation on the Catholic Question many had given
14227 up the "Pioneer"--which had a motto from Charles James Fox and was in
14228 the van of progress--because it had taken Peel's side about the
14229 Papists, and had thus blotted its Liberalism with a toleration of
14230 Jesuitry and Baal; but they were ill-satisfied with the "Trumpet,"
14231 which--since its blasts against Rome, and in the general flaccidity of
14232 the public mind (nobody knowing who would support whom)--had become
14233 feeble in its blowing.
14234
14235 It was a time, according to a noticeable article in the "Pioneer," when
14236 the crying needs of the country might well counteract a reluctance to
14237 public action on the part of men whose minds had from long experience
14238 acquired breadth as well as concentration, decision of judgment as well
14239 as tolerance, dispassionateness as well as energy--in fact, all those
14240 qualities which in the melancholy experience of mankind have been the
14241 least disposed to share lodgings.
14242
14243 Mr. Hackbutt, whose fluent speech was at that time floating more widely
14244 than usual, and leaving much uncertainty as to its ultimate channel,
14245 was heard to say in Mr. Hawley's office that the article in question
14246 "emanated" from Brooke of Tipton, and that Brooke had secretly bought
14247 the "Pioneer" some months ago.
14248
14249 "That means mischief, eh?" said Mr. Hawley. "He's got the freak of
14250 being a popular man now, after dangling about like a stray tortoise.
14251 So much the worse for him. I've had my eye on him for some time. He
14252 shall be prettily pumped upon. He's a damned bad landlord. What
14253 business has an old county man to come currying favor with a low set of
14254 dark-blue freemen? As to his paper, I only hope he may do the writing
14255 himself. It would be worth our paying for."
14256
14257 "I understand he has got a very brilliant young fellow to edit it, who
14258 can write the highest style of leading article, quite equal to anything
14259 in the London papers. And he means to take very high ground on Reform."
14260
14261 "Let Brooke reform his rent-roll. He's a cursed old screw, and the
14262 buildings all over his estate are going to rack. I suppose this young
14263 fellow is some loose fish from London."
14264
14265 "His name is Ladislaw. He is said to be of foreign extraction."
14266
14267 "I know the sort," said Mr. Hawley; "some emissary. He'll begin with
14268 flourishing about the Rights of Man and end with murdering a wench.
14269 That's the style."
14270
14271 "You must concede that there are abuses, Hawley," said Mr. Hackbutt,
14272 foreseeing some political disagreement with his family lawyer. "I
14273 myself should never favor immoderate views--in fact I take my stand
14274 with Huskisson--but I cannot blind myself to the consideration that the
14275 non-representation of large towns--"
14276
14277 "Large towns be damned!" said Mr. Hawley, impatient of exposition. "I
14278 know a little too much about Middlemarch elections. Let 'em quash
14279 every pocket borough to-morrow, and bring in every mushroom town in the
14280 kingdom--they'll only increase the expense of getting into Parliament.
14281 I go upon facts."
14282
14283 Mr. Hawley's disgust at the notion of the "Pioneer" being edited by an
14284 emissary, and of Brooke becoming actively political--as if a tortoise
14285 of desultory pursuits should protrude its small head ambitiously and
14286 become rampant--was hardly equal to the annoyance felt by some members
14287 of Mr. Brooke's own family. The result had oozed forth gradually, like
14288 the discovery that your neighbor has set up an unpleasant kind of
14289 manufacture which will be permanently under your nostrils without legal
14290 remedy. The "Pioneer" had been secretly bought even before Will
14291 Ladislaw's arrival, the expected opportunity having offered itself in
14292 the readiness of the proprietor to part with a valuable property which
14293 did not pay; and in the interval since Mr. Brooke had written his
14294 invitation, those germinal ideas of making his mind tell upon the world
14295 at large which had been present in him from his younger years, but had
14296 hitherto lain in some obstruction, had been sprouting under cover.
14297
14298 The development was much furthered by a delight in his guest which
14299 proved greater even than he had anticipated. For it seemed that Will
14300 was not only at home in all those artistic and literary subjects which
14301 Mr. Brooke had gone into at one time, but that he was strikingly ready
14302 at seizing the points of the political situation, and dealing with them
14303 in that large spirit which, aided by adequate memory, lends itself to
14304 quotation and general effectiveness of treatment.
14305
14306 "He seems to me a kind of Shelley, you know," Mr. Brooke took an
14307 opportunity of saying, for the gratification of Mr. Casaubon. "I don't
14308 mean as to anything objectionable--laxities or atheism, or anything of
14309 that kind, you know--Ladislaw's sentiments in every way I am sure are
14310 good--indeed, we were talking a great deal together last night. But he
14311 has the same sort of enthusiasm for liberty, freedom, emancipation--a
14312 fine thing under guidance--under guidance, you know. I think I shall
14313 be able to put him on the right tack; and I am the more pleased because
14314 he is a relation of yours, Casaubon."
14315
14316 If the right tack implied anything more precise than the rest of Mr.
14317 Brooke's speech, Mr. Casaubon silently hoped that it referred to some
14318 occupation at a great distance from Lowick. He had disliked Will while
14319 he helped him, but he had begun to dislike him still more now that Will
14320 had declined his help. That is the way with us when we have any uneasy
14321 jealousy in our disposition: if our talents are chiefly of the
14322 burrowing kind, our honey-sipping cousin (whom we have grave reasons
14323 for objecting to) is likely to have a secret contempt for us, and any
14324 one who admires him passes an oblique criticism on ourselves. Having
14325 the scruples of rectitude in our souls, we are above the meanness of
14326 injuring him--rather we meet all his claims on us by active benefits;
14327 and the drawing of cheques for him, being a superiority which he must
14328 recognize, gives our bitterness a milder infusion. Now Mr. Casaubon
14329 had been deprived of that superiority (as anything more than a
14330 remembrance) in a sudden, capricious manner. His antipathy to Will did
14331 not spring from the common jealousy of a winter-worn husband: it was
14332 something deeper, bred by his lifelong claims and discontents; but
14333 Dorothea, now that she was present--Dorothea, as a young wife who
14334 herself had shown an offensive capability of criticism, necessarily
14335 gave concentration to the uneasiness which had before been vague.
14336
14337 Will Ladislaw on his side felt that his dislike was flourishing at the
14338 expense of his gratitude, and spent much inward discourse in justifying
14339 the dislike. Casaubon hated him--he knew that very well; on his first
14340 entrance he could discern a bitterness in the mouth and a venom in the
14341 glance which would almost justify declaring war in spite of past
14342 benefits. He was much obliged to Casaubon in the past, but really the
14343 act of marrying this wife was a set-off against the obligation. It was
14344 a question whether gratitude which refers to what is done for one's
14345 self ought not to give way to indignation at what is done against
14346 another. And Casaubon had done a wrong to Dorothea in marrying her. A
14347 man was bound to know himself better than that, and if he chose to grow
14348 gray crunching bones in a cavern, he had no business to be luring a
14349 girl into his companionship. "It is the most horrible of
14350 virgin-sacrifices," said Will; and he painted to himself what were
14351 Dorothea's inward sorrows as if he had been writing a choric wail. But
14352 he would never lose sight of her: he would watch over her--if he gave
14353 up everything else in life he would watch over her, and she should know
14354 that she had one slave in the world, Will had--to use Sir Thomas
14355 Browne's phrase--a "passionate prodigality" of statement both to
14356 himself and others. The simple truth was that nothing then invited him
14357 so strongly as the presence of Dorothea.
14358
14359 Invitations of the formal kind had been wanting, however, for Will had
14360 never been asked to go to Lowick. Mr. Brooke, indeed, confident of
14361 doing everything agreeable which Casaubon, poor fellow, was too much
14362 absorbed to think of, had arranged to bring Ladislaw to Lowick several
14363 times (not neglecting meanwhile to introduce him elsewhere on every
14364 opportunity as "a young relative of Casaubon's"). And though Will had
14365 not seen Dorothea alone, their interviews had been enough to restore
14366 her former sense of young companionship with one who was cleverer than
14367 herself, yet seemed ready to be swayed by her. Poor Dorothea before
14368 her marriage had never found much room in other minds for what she
14369 cared most to say; and she had not, as we know, enjoyed her husband's
14370 superior instruction so much as she had expected. If she spoke with
14371 any keenness of interest to Mr. Casaubon, he heard her with an air of
14372 patience as if she had given a quotation from the Delectus familiar to
14373 him from his tender years, and sometimes mentioned curtly what ancient
14374 sects or personages had held similar ideas, as if there were too much
14375 of that sort in stock already; at other times he would inform her that
14376 she was mistaken, and reassert what her remark had questioned.
14377
14378 But Will Ladislaw always seemed to see more in what she said than she
14379 herself saw. Dorothea had little vanity, but she had the ardent
14380 woman's need to rule beneficently by making the joy of another soul.
14381 Hence the mere chance of seeing Will occasionally was like a lunette
14382 opened in the wall of her prison, giving her a glimpse of the sunny
14383 air; and this pleasure began to nullify her original alarm at what her
14384 husband might think about the introduction of Will as her uncle's
14385 guest. On this subject Mr. Casaubon had remained dumb.
14386
14387 But Will wanted to talk with Dorothea alone, and was impatient of slow
14388 circumstance. However slight the terrestrial intercourse between Dante
14389 and Beatrice or Petrarch and Laura, time changes the proportion of
14390 things, and in later days it is preferable to have fewer sonnets and
14391 more conversation. Necessity excused stratagem, but stratagem was
14392 limited by the dread of offending Dorothea. He found out at last that
14393 he wanted to take a particular sketch at Lowick; and one morning when
14394 Mr. Brooke had to drive along the Lowick road on his way to the county
14395 town, Will asked to be set down with his sketch-book and camp-stool at
14396 Lowick, and without announcing himself at the Manor settled himself to
14397 sketch in a position where he must see Dorothea if she came out to
14398 walk--and he knew that she usually walked an hour in the morning.
14399
14400 But the stratagem was defeated by the weather. Clouds gathered with
14401 treacherous quickness, the rain came down, and Will was obliged to take
14402 shelter in the house. He intended, on the strength of relationship, to
14403 go into the drawing-room and wait there without being announced; and
14404 seeing his old acquaintance the butler in the hall, he said, "Don't
14405 mention that I am here, Pratt; I will wait till luncheon; I know Mr.
14406 Casaubon does not like to be disturbed when he is in the library."
14407
14408 "Master is out, sir; there's only Mrs. Casaubon in the library. I'd
14409 better tell her you're here, sir," said Pratt, a red-cheeked man given
14410 to lively converse with Tantripp, and often agreeing with her that it
14411 must be dull for Madam.
14412
14413 "Oh, very well; this confounded rain has hindered me from sketching,"
14414 said Will, feeling so happy that he affected indifference with
14415 delightful ease.
14416
14417 In another minute he was in the library, and Dorothea was meeting him
14418 with her sweet unconstrained smile.
14419
14420 "Mr. Casaubon has gone to the Archdeacon's," she said, at once. "I
14421 don't know whether he will be at home again long before dinner. He was
14422 uncertain how long he should be. Did you want to say anything
14423 particular to him?"
14424
14425 "No; I came to sketch, but the rain drove me in. Else I would not have
14426 disturbed you yet. I supposed that Mr. Casaubon was here, and I know
14427 he dislikes interruption at this hour."
14428
14429 "I am indebted to the rain, then. I am so glad to see you." Dorothea
14430 uttered these common words with the simple sincerity of an unhappy
14431 child, visited at school.
14432
14433 "I really came for the chance of seeing you alone," said Will,
14434 mysteriously forced to be just as simple as she was. He could not stay
14435 to ask himself, why not? "I wanted to talk about things, as we did in
14436 Rome. It always makes a difference when other people are present."
14437
14438 "Yes," said Dorothea, in her clear full tone of assent. "Sit down."
14439 She seated herself on a dark ottoman with the brown books behind her,
14440 looking in her plain dress of some thin woollen-white material, without
14441 a single ornament on her besides her wedding-ring, as if she were under
14442 a vow to be different from all other women; and Will sat down opposite
14443 her at two yards' distance, the light falling on his bright curls and
14444 delicate but rather petulant profile, with its defiant curves of lip
14445 and chin. Each looked at the other as if they had been two flowers
14446 which had opened then and there. Dorothea for the moment forgot her
14447 husband's mysterious irritation against Will: it seemed fresh water at
14448 her thirsty lips to speak without fear to the one person whom she had
14449 found receptive; for in looking backward through sadness she
14450 exaggerated a past solace.
14451
14452 "I have often thought that I should like to talk to you again," she
14453 said, immediately. "It seems strange to me how many things I said to
14454 you."
14455
14456 "I remember them all," said Will, with the unspeakable content in his
14457 soul of feeling that he was in the presence of a creature worthy to be
14458 perfectly loved. I think his own feelings at that moment were perfect,
14459 for we mortals have our divine moments, when love is satisfied in the
14460 completeness of the beloved object.
14461
14462 "I have tried to learn a great deal since we were in Rome," said
14463 Dorothea. "I can read Latin a little, and I am beginning to understand
14464 just a little Greek. I can help Mr. Casaubon better now. I can find
14465 out references for him and save his eyes in many ways. But it is very
14466 difficult to be learned; it seems as if people were worn out on the way
14467 to great thoughts, and can never enjoy them because they are too tired."
14468
14469 "If a man has a capacity for great thoughts, he is likely to overtake
14470 them before he is decrepit," said Will, with irrepressible quickness.
14471 But through certain sensibilities Dorothea was as quick as he, and
14472 seeing her face change, he added, immediately, "But it is quite true
14473 that the best minds have been sometimes overstrained in working out
14474 their ideas."
14475
14476 "You correct me," said Dorothea. "I expressed myself ill. I should
14477 have said that those who have great thoughts get too much worn in
14478 working them out. I used to feel about that, even when I was a little
14479 girl; and it always seemed to me that the use I should like to make of
14480 my life would be to help some one who did great works, so that his
14481 burthen might be lighter."
14482
14483 Dorothea was led on to this bit of autobiography without any sense of
14484 making a revelation. But she had never before said anything to Will
14485 which threw so strong a light on her marriage. He did not shrug his
14486 shoulders; and for want of that muscular outlet he thought the more
14487 irritably of beautiful lips kissing holy skulls and other emptinesses
14488 ecclesiastically enshrined. Also he had to take care that his speech
14489 should not betray that thought.
14490
14491 "But you may easily carry the help too far," he said, "and get
14492 over-wrought yourself. Are you not too much shut up? You already look
14493 paler. It would be better for Mr. Casaubon to have a secretary; he
14494 could easily get a man who would do half his work for him. It would
14495 save him more effectually, and you need only help him in lighter ways."
14496
14497 "How can you think of that?" said Dorothea, in a tone of earnest
14498 remonstrance. "I should have no happiness if I did not help him in his
14499 work. What could I do? There is no good to be done in Lowick. The
14500 only thing I desire is to help him more. And he objects to a
14501 secretary: please not to mention that again."
14502
14503 "Certainly not, now I know your feeling. But I have heard both Mr.
14504 Brooke and Sir James Chettam express the same wish."
14505
14506 "Yes?" said Dorothea, "but they don't understand--they want me to be a
14507 great deal on horseback, and have the garden altered and new
14508 conservatories, to fill up my days. I thought you could understand
14509 that one's mind has other wants," she added, rather
14510 impatiently--"besides, Mr. Casaubon cannot bear to hear of a secretary."
14511
14512 "My mistake is excusable," said Will. "In old days I used to hear Mr.
14513 Casaubon speak as if he looked forward to having a secretary. Indeed
14514 he held out the prospect of that office to me. But I turned out to
14515 be--not good enough for it."
14516
14517 Dorothea was trying to extract out of this an excuse for her husband's
14518 evident repulsion, as she said, with a playful smile, "You were not a
14519 steady worker enough."
14520
14521 "No," said Will, shaking his head backward somewhat after the manner of
14522 a spirited horse. And then, the old irritable demon prompting him to
14523 give another good pinch at the moth-wings of poor Mr. Casaubon's glory,
14524 he went on, "And I have seen since that Mr. Casaubon does not like any
14525 one to overlook his work and know thoroughly what he is doing. He is
14526 too doubtful--too uncertain of himself. I may not be good for much,
14527 but he dislikes me because I disagree with him."
14528
14529 Will was not without his intentions to be always generous, but our
14530 tongues are little triggers which have usually been pulled before
14531 general intentions can be brought to bear. And it was too intolerable
14532 that Casaubon's dislike of him should not be fairly accounted for to
14533 Dorothea. Yet when he had spoken he was rather uneasy as to the effect
14534 on her.
14535
14536 But Dorothea was strangely quiet--not immediately indignant, as she had
14537 been on a like occasion in Rome. And the cause lay deep. She was no
14538 longer struggling against the perception of facts, but adjusting
14539 herself to their clearest perception; and now when she looked steadily
14540 at her husband's failure, still more at his possible consciousness of
14541 failure, she seemed to be looking along the one track where duty became
14542 tenderness. Will's want of reticence might have been met with more
14543 severity, if he had not already been recommended to her mercy by her
14544 husband's dislike, which must seem hard to her till she saw better
14545 reason for it.
14546
14547 She did not answer at once, but after looking down ruminatingly she
14548 said, with some earnestness, "Mr. Casaubon must have overcome his
14549 dislike of you so far as his actions were concerned: and that is
14550 admirable."
14551
14552 "Yes; he has shown a sense of justice in family matters. It was an
14553 abominable thing that my grandmother should have been disinherited
14554 because she made what they called a mesalliance, though there was
14555 nothing to be said against her husband except that he was a Polish
14556 refugee who gave lessons for his bread."
14557
14558 "I wish I knew all about her!" said Dorothea. "I wonder how she bore
14559 the change from wealth to poverty: I wonder whether she was happy with
14560 her husband! Do you know much about them?"
14561
14562 "No; only that my grandfather was a patriot--a bright fellow--could
14563 speak many languages--musical--got his bread by teaching all sorts of
14564 things. They both died rather early. And I never knew much of my
14565 father, beyond what my mother told me; but he inherited the musical
14566 talents. I remember his slow walk and his long thin hands; and one day
14567 remains with me when he was lying ill, and I was very hungry, and had
14568 only a little bit of bread."
14569
14570 "Ah, what a different life from mine!" said Dorothea, with keen
14571 interest, clasping her hands on her lap. "I have always had too much
14572 of everything. But tell me how it was--Mr. Casaubon could not have
14573 known about you then."
14574
14575 "No; but my father had made himself known to Mr. Casaubon, and that was
14576 my last hungry day. My father died soon after, and my mother and I
14577 were well taken care of. Mr. Casaubon always expressly recognized it
14578 as his duty to take care of us because of the harsh injustice which had
14579 been shown to his mother's sister. But now I am telling you what is
14580 not new to you."
14581
14582 In his inmost soul Will was conscious of wishing to tell Dorothea what
14583 was rather new even in his own construction of things--namely, that
14584 Mr. Casaubon had never done more than pay a debt towards him. Will was
14585 much too good a fellow to be easy under the sense of being ungrateful.
14586 And when gratitude has become a matter of reasoning there are many ways
14587 of escaping from its bonds.
14588
14589 "No," answered Dorothea; "Mr. Casaubon has always avoided dwelling on
14590 his own honorable actions." She did not feel that her husband's
14591 conduct was depreciated; but this notion of what justice had required
14592 in his relations with Will Ladislaw took strong hold on her mind.
14593 After a moment's pause, she added, "He had never told me that he
14594 supported your mother. Is she still living?"
14595
14596 "No; she died by an accident--a fall--four years ago. It is curious
14597 that my mother, too, ran away from her family, but not for the sake of
14598 her husband. She never would tell me anything about her family, except
14599 that she forsook them to get her own living--went on the stage, in
14600 fact. She was a dark-eyed creature, with crisp ringlets, and never
14601 seemed to be getting old. You see I come of rebellious blood on both
14602 sides," Will ended, smiling brightly at Dorothea, while she was still
14603 looking with serious intentness before her, like a child seeing a drama
14604 for the first time.
14605
14606 But her face, too, broke into a smile as she said, "That is your
14607 apology, I suppose, for having yourself been rather rebellious; I mean,
14608 to Mr. Casaubon's wishes. You must remember that you have not done
14609 what he thought best for you. And if he dislikes you--you were
14610 speaking of dislike a little while ago--but I should rather say, if he
14611 has shown any painful feelings towards you, you must consider how
14612 sensitive he has become from the wearing effect of study. Perhaps,"
14613 she continued, getting into a pleading tone, "my uncle has not told you
14614 how serious Mr. Casaubon's illness was. It would be very petty of us
14615 who are well and can bear things, to think much of small offences from
14616 those who carry a weight of trial."
14617
14618 "You teach me better," said Will. "I will never grumble on that
14619 subject again." There was a gentleness in his tone which came from the
14620 unutterable contentment of perceiving--what Dorothea was hardly
14621 conscious of--that she was travelling into the remoteness of pure pity
14622 and loyalty towards her husband. Will was ready to adore her pity and
14623 loyalty, if she would associate himself with her in manifesting them.
14624 "I have really sometimes been a perverse fellow," he went on, "but I
14625 will never again, if I can help it, do or say what you would
14626 disapprove."
14627
14628 "That is very good of you," said Dorothea, with another open smile. "I
14629 shall have a little kingdom then, where I shall give laws. But you
14630 will soon go away, out of my rule, I imagine. You will soon be tired
14631 of staying at the Grange."
14632
14633 "That is a point I wanted to mention to you--one of the reasons why I
14634 wished to speak to you alone. Mr. Brooke proposes that I should stay
14635 in this neighborhood. He has bought one of the Middlemarch newspapers,
14636 and he wishes me to conduct that, and also to help him in other ways."
14637
14638 "Would not that be a sacrifice of higher prospects for you?" said
14639 Dorothea.
14640
14641 "Perhaps; but I have always been blamed for thinking of prospects, and
14642 not settling to anything. And here is something offered to me. If you
14643 would not like me to accept it, I will give it up. Otherwise I would
14644 rather stay in this part of the country than go away. I belong to
14645 nobody anywhere else."
14646
14647 "I should like you to stay very much," said Dorothea, at once, as
14648 simply and readily as she had spoken at Rome. There was not the shadow
14649 of a reason in her mind at the moment why she should not say so.
14650
14651 "Then I _will_ stay," said Ladislaw, shaking his head backward, rising
14652 and going towards the window, as if to see whether the rain had ceased.
14653
14654 But the next moment, Dorothea, according to a habit which was getting
14655 continually stronger, began to reflect that her husband felt
14656 differently from herself, and she colored deeply under the double
14657 embarrassment of having expressed what might be in opposition to her
14658 husband's feeling, and of having to suggest this opposition to Will.
14659 His face was not turned towards her, and this made it easier to say--
14660
14661 "But my opinion is of little consequence on such a subject. I think
14662 you should be guided by Mr. Casaubon. I spoke without thinking of
14663 anything else than my own feeling, which has nothing to do with the
14664 real question. But it now occurs to me--perhaps Mr. Casaubon might
14665 see that the proposal was not wise. Can you not wait now and mention
14666 it to him?"
14667
14668 "I can't wait to-day," said Will, inwardly seared by the possibility
14669 that Mr. Casaubon would enter. "The rain is quite over now. I told
14670 Mr. Brooke not to call for me: I would rather walk the five miles. I
14671 shall strike across Halsell Common, and see the gleams on the wet
14672 grass. I like that."
14673
14674 He approached her to shake hands quite hurriedly, longing but not
14675 daring to say, "Don't mention the subject to Mr. Casaubon." No, he
14676 dared not, could not say it. To ask her to be less simple and direct
14677 would be like breathing on the crystal that you want to see the light
14678 through. And there was always the other great dread--of himself
14679 becoming dimmed and forever ray-shorn in her eyes.
14680
14681 "I wish you could have stayed," said Dorothea, with a touch of
14682 mournfulness, as she rose and put out her hand. She also had her
14683 thought which she did not like to express:--Will certainly ought to
14684 lose no time in consulting Mr. Casaubon's wishes, but for her to urge
14685 this might seem an undue dictation.
14686
14687 So they only said "Good-by," and Will quitted the house, striking
14688 across the fields so as not to run any risk of encountering Mr.
14689 Casaubon's carriage, which, however, did not appear at the gate until
14690 four o'clock. That was an unpropitious hour for coming home: it was too
14691 early to gain the moral support under ennui of dressing his person for
14692 dinner, and too late to undress his mind of the day's frivolous
14693 ceremony and affairs, so as to be prepared for a good plunge into the
14694 serious business of study. On such occasions he usually threw into an
14695 easy-chair in the library, and allowed Dorothea to read the London
14696 papers to him, closing his eyes the while. To-day, however, he
14697 declined that relief, observing that he had already had too many public
14698 details urged upon him; but he spoke more cheerfully than usual, when
14699 Dorothea asked about his fatigue, and added with that air of formal
14700 effort which never forsook him even when he spoke without his waistcoat
14701 and cravat--
14702
14703 "I have had the gratification of meeting my former acquaintance, Dr.
14704 Spanning, to-day, and of being praised by one who is himself a worthy
14705 recipient of praise. He spoke very handsomely of my late tractate on
14706 the Egyptian Mysteries,--using, in fact, terms which it would not
14707 become me to repeat." In uttering the last clause, Mr. Casaubon leaned
14708 over the elbow of his chair, and swayed his head up and down,
14709 apparently as a muscular outlet instead of that recapitulation which
14710 would not have been becoming.
14711
14712 "I am very glad you have had that pleasure," said Dorothea, delighted
14713 to see her husband less weary than usual at this hour. "Before you
14714 came I had been regretting that you happened to be out to-day."
14715
14716 "Why so, my dear?" said Mr. Casaubon, throwing himself backward again.
14717
14718 "Because Mr. Ladislaw has been here; and he has mentioned a proposal of
14719 my uncle's which I should like to know your opinion of." Her husband
14720 she felt was really concerned in this question. Even with her
14721 ignorance of the world she had a vague impression that the position
14722 offered to Will was out of keeping with his family connections, and
14723 certainly Mr. Casaubon had a claim to be consulted. He did not speak,
14724 but merely bowed.
14725
14726 "Dear uncle, you know, has many projects. It appears that he has
14727 bought one of the Middlemarch newspapers, and he has asked Mr. Ladislaw
14728 to stay in this neighborhood and conduct the paper for him, besides
14729 helping him in other ways."
14730
14731 Dorothea looked at her husband while she spoke, but he had at first
14732 blinked and finally closed his eyes, as if to save them; while his lips
14733 became more tense. "What is your opinion?" she added, rather timidly,
14734 after a slight pause.
14735
14736 "Did Mr. Ladislaw come on purpose to ask my opinion?" said Mr.
14737 Casaubon, opening his eyes narrowly with a knife-edged look at
14738 Dorothea. She was really uncomfortable on the point he inquired about,
14739 but she only became a little more serious, and her eyes did not swerve.
14740
14741 "No," she answered immediately, "he did not say that he came to ask
14742 your opinion. But when he mentioned the proposal, he of course
14743 expected me to tell you of it."
14744
14745 Mr. Casaubon was silent.
14746
14747 "I feared that you might feel some objection. But certainly a young
14748 man with so much talent might be very useful to my uncle--might help
14749 him to do good in a better way. And Mr. Ladislaw wishes to have some
14750 fixed occupation. He has been blamed, he says, for not seeking
14751 something of that kind, and he would like to stay in this neighborhood
14752 because no one cares for him elsewhere."
14753
14754 Dorothea felt that this was a consideration to soften her husband.
14755 However, he did not speak, and she presently recurred to Dr. Spanning
14756 and the Archdeacon's breakfast. But there was no longer sunshine on
14757 these subjects.
14758
14759 The next morning, without Dorothea's knowledge, Mr. Casaubon despatched
14760 the following letter, beginning "Dear Mr. Ladislaw" (he had always
14761 before addressed him as "Will"):--
14762
14763
14764 "Mrs. Casaubon informs me that a proposal has been made to you, and
14765 (according to an inference by no means stretched) has on your part been
14766 in some degree entertained, which involves your residence in this
14767 neighborhood in a capacity which I am justified in saying touches my
14768 own position in such a way as renders it not only natural and
14769 warrantable in me when that effect is viewed under the influence of
14770 legitimate feeling, but incumbent on me when the same effect is
14771 considered in the light of my responsibilities, to state at once that
14772 your acceptance of the proposal above indicated would be highly
14773 offensive to me. That I have some claim to the exercise of a veto
14774 here, would not, I believe, be denied by any reasonable person
14775 cognizant of the relations between us: relations which, though thrown
14776 into the past by your recent procedure, are not thereby annulled in
14777 their character of determining antecedents. I will not here make
14778 reflections on any person's judgment. It is enough for me to point out
14779 to yourself that there are certain social fitnesses and proprieties
14780 which should hinder a somewhat near relative of mine from becoming any
14781 wise conspicuous in this vicinity in a status not only much beneath my
14782 own, but associated at best with the sciolism of literary or political
14783 adventurers. At any rate, the contrary issue must exclude you from
14784 further reception at my house.
14785
14786 Yours faithfully,
14787 "EDWARD CASAUBON."
14788
14789
14790 Meanwhile Dorothea's mind was innocently at work towards the further
14791 embitterment of her husband; dwelling, with a sympathy that grew to
14792 agitation, on what Will had told her about his parents and
14793 grandparents. Any private hours in her day were usually spent in her
14794 blue-green boudoir, and she had come to be very fond of its pallid
14795 quaintness. Nothing had been outwardly altered there; but while the
14796 summer had gradually advanced over the western fields beyond the avenue
14797 of elms, the bare room had gathered within it those memories of an
14798 inward life which fill the air as with a cloud of good or bad angels,
14799 the invisible yet active forms of our spiritual triumphs or our
14800 spiritual falls. She had been so used to struggle for and to find
14801 resolve in looking along the avenue towards the arch of western light
14802 that the vision itself had gained a communicating power. Even the pale
14803 stag seemed to have reminding glances and to mean mutely, "Yes, we
14804 know." And the group of delicately touched miniatures had made an
14805 audience as of beings no longer disturbed about their own earthly lot,
14806 but still humanly interested. Especially the mysterious "Aunt Julia"
14807 about whom Dorothea had never found it easy to question her husband.
14808
14809 And now, since her conversation with Will, many fresh images had
14810 gathered round that Aunt Julia who was Will's grandmother; the presence
14811 of that delicate miniature, so like a living face that she knew,
14812 helping to concentrate her feelings. What a wrong, to cut off the girl
14813 from the family protection and inheritance only because she had chosen
14814 a man who was poor! Dorothea, early troubling her elders with
14815 questions about the facts around her, had wrought herself into some
14816 independent clearness as to the historical, political reasons why
14817 eldest sons had superior rights, and why land should be entailed: those
14818 reasons, impressing her with a certain awe, might be weightier than she
14819 knew, but here was a question of ties which left them uninfringed.
14820 Here was a daughter whose child--even according to the ordinary aping
14821 of aristocratic institutions by people who are no more aristocratic
14822 than retired grocers, and who have no more land to "keep together" than
14823 a lawn and a paddock--would have a prior claim. Was inheritance a
14824 question of liking or of responsibility? All the energy of Dorothea's
14825 nature went on the side of responsibility--the fulfilment of claims
14826 founded on our own deeds, such as marriage and parentage.
14827
14828 It was true, she said to herself, that Mr. Casaubon had a debt to the
14829 Ladislaws--that he had to pay back what the Ladislaws had been wronged
14830 of. And now she began to think of her husband's will, which had been
14831 made at the time of their marriage, leaving the bulk of his property to
14832 her, with proviso in case of her having children. That ought to be
14833 altered; and no time ought to be lost. This very question which had
14834 just arisen about Will Ladislaw's occupation, was the occasion for
14835 placing things on a new, right footing. Her husband, she felt sure,
14836 according to all his previous conduct, would be ready to take the just
14837 view, if she proposed it--she, in whose interest an unfair
14838 concentration of the property had been urged. His sense of right had
14839 surmounted and would continue to surmount anything that might be called
14840 antipathy. She suspected that her uncle's scheme was disapproved by
14841 Mr. Casaubon, and this made it seem all the more opportune that a fresh
14842 understanding should be begun, so that instead of Will's starting
14843 penniless and accepting the first function that offered itself, he
14844 should find himself in possession of a rightful income which should be
14845 paid by her husband during his life, and, by an immediate alteration of
14846 the will, should be secured at his death. The vision of all this as
14847 what ought to be done seemed to Dorothea like a sudden letting in of
14848 daylight, waking her from her previous stupidity and incurious
14849 self-absorbed ignorance about her husband's relation to others. Will
14850 Ladislaw had refused Mr. Casaubon's future aid on a ground that no
14851 longer appeared right to her; and Mr. Casaubon had never himself seen
14852 fully what was the claim upon him. "But he will!" said Dorothea. "The
14853 great strength of his character lies here. And what are we doing with
14854 our money? We make no use of half of our income. My own money buys me
14855 nothing but an uneasy conscience."
14856
14857 There was a peculiar fascination for Dorothea in this division of
14858 property intended for herself, and always regarded by her as excessive.
14859 She was blind, you see, to many things obvious to others--likely to
14860 tread in the wrong places, as Celia had warned her; yet her blindness
14861 to whatever did not lie in her own pure purpose carried her safely by
14862 the side of precipices where vision would have been perilous with fear.
14863
14864 The thoughts which had gathered vividness in the solitude of her
14865 boudoir occupied her incessantly through the day on which Mr. Casaubon
14866 had sent his letter to Will. Everything seemed hindrance to her till
14867 she could find an opportunity of opening her heart to her husband. To
14868 his preoccupied mind all subjects were to be approached gently, and she
14869 had never since his illness lost from her consciousness the dread of
14870 agitating him. But when young ardor is set brooding over the
14871 conception of a prompt deed, the deed itself seems to start forth with
14872 independent life, mastering ideal obstacles. The day passed in a
14873 sombre fashion, not unusual, though Mr. Casaubon was perhaps unusually
14874 silent; but there were hours of the night which might be counted on as
14875 opportunities of conversation; for Dorothea, when aware of her
14876 husband's sleeplessness, had established a habit of rising, lighting a
14877 candle, and reading him to sleep again. And this night she was from
14878 the beginning sleepless, excited by resolves. He slept as usual for a
14879 few hours, but she had risen softly and had sat in the darkness for
14880 nearly an hour before he said--
14881
14882 "Dorothea, since you are up, will you light a candle?"
14883
14884 "Do you feel ill, dear?" was her first question, as she obeyed him.
14885
14886 "No, not at all; but I shall be obliged, since you are up, if you will
14887 read me a few pages of Lowth."
14888
14889 "May I talk to you a little instead?" said Dorothea.
14890
14891 "Certainly."
14892
14893 "I have been thinking about money all day--that I have always had too
14894 much, and especially the prospect of too much."
14895
14896 "These, my dear Dorothea, are providential arrangements."
14897
14898 "But if one has too much in consequence of others being wronged, it
14899 seems to me that the divine voice which tells us to set that wrong
14900 right must be obeyed."
14901
14902 "What, my love, is the bearing of your remark?"
14903
14904 "That you have been too liberal in arrangements for me--I mean, with
14905 regard to property; and that makes me unhappy."
14906
14907 "How so? I have none but comparatively distant connections."
14908
14909 "I have been led to think about your aunt Julia, and how she was left
14910 in poverty only because she married a poor man, an act which was not
14911 disgraceful, since he was not unworthy. It was on that ground, I know,
14912 that you educated Mr. Ladislaw and provided for his mother."
14913
14914 Dorothea waited a few moments for some answer that would help her
14915 onward. None came, and her next words seemed the more forcible to her,
14916 falling clear upon the dark silence.
14917
14918 "But surely we should regard his claim as a much greater one, even to
14919 the half of that property which I know that you have destined for me.
14920 And I think he ought at once to be provided for on that understanding.
14921 It is not right that he should be in the dependence of poverty while we
14922 are rich. And if there is any objection to the proposal he mentioned,
14923 the giving him his true place and his true share would set aside any
14924 motive for his accepting it."
14925
14926 "Mr. Ladislaw has probably been speaking to you on this subject?" said
14927 Mr. Casaubon, with a certain biting quickness not habitual to him.
14928
14929 "Indeed, no!" said Dorothea, earnestly. "How can you imagine it, since
14930 he has so lately declined everything from you? I fear you think too
14931 hardly of him, dear. He only told me a little about his parents and
14932 grandparents, and almost all in answer to my questions. You are so
14933 good, so just--you have done everything you thought to be right. But
14934 it seems to me clear that more than that is right; and I must speak
14935 about it, since I am the person who would get what is called benefit by
14936 that 'more' not being done."
14937
14938 There was a perceptible pause before Mr. Casaubon replied, not quickly
14939 as before, but with a still more biting emphasis.
14940
14941 "Dorothea, my love, this is not the first occasion, but it were well
14942 that it should be the last, on which you have assumed a judgment on
14943 subjects beyond your scope. Into the question how far conduct,
14944 especially in the matter of alliances, constitutes a forfeiture of
14945 family claims, I do not now enter. Suffice it, that you are not here
14946 qualified to discriminate. What I now wish you to understand is, that
14947 I accept no revision, still less dictation within that range of affairs
14948 which I have deliberated upon as distinctly and properly mine. It is
14949 not for you to interfere between me and Mr. Ladislaw, and still less to
14950 encourage communications from him to you which constitute a criticism
14951 on my procedure."
14952
14953 Poor Dorothea, shrouded in the darkness, was in a tumult of conflicting
14954 emotions. Alarm at the possible effect on himself of her husband's
14955 strongly manifested anger, would have checked any expression of her own
14956 resentment, even if she had been quite free from doubt and compunction
14957 under the consciousness that there might be some justice in his last
14958 insinuation. Hearing him breathe quickly after he had spoken, she sat
14959 listening, frightened, wretched--with a dumb inward cry for help to
14960 bear this nightmare of a life in which every energy was arrested by
14961 dread. But nothing else happened, except that they both remained a
14962 long while sleepless, without speaking again.
14963
14964 The next day, Mr. Casaubon received the following answer from Will
14965 Ladislaw:--
14966
14967
14968 "DEAR MR. CASAUBON,--I have given all due consideration to your letter
14969 of yesterday, but I am unable to take precisely your view of our mutual
14970 position. With the fullest acknowledgment of your generous conduct to
14971 me in the past, I must still maintain that an obligation of this kind
14972 cannot fairly fetter me as you appear to expect that it should.
14973 Granted that a benefactor's wishes may constitute a claim; there must
14974 always be a reservation as to the quality of those wishes. They may
14975 possibly clash with more imperative considerations. Or a benefactor's
14976 veto might impose such a negation on a man's life that the consequent
14977 blank might be more cruel than the benefaction was generous. I am
14978 merely using strong illustrations. In the present case I am unable to
14979 take your view of the bearing which my acceptance of occupation--not
14980 enriching certainly, but not dishonorable--will have on your own
14981 position which seems to me too substantial to be affected in that
14982 shadowy manner. And though I do not believe that any change in our
14983 relations will occur (certainly none has yet occurred) which can
14984 nullify the obligations imposed on me by the past, pardon me for not
14985 seeing that those obligations should restrain me from using the
14986 ordinary freedom of living where I choose, and maintaining myself by
14987 any lawful occupation I may choose. Regretting that there exists this
14988 difference between us as to a relation in which the conferring of
14989 benefits has been entirely on your side--
14990
14991 I remain, yours with persistent obligation,
14992 WILL LADISLAW."
14993
14994
14995 Poor Mr. Casaubon felt (and must not we, being impartial, feel with him
14996 a little?) that no man had juster cause for disgust and suspicion than
14997 he. Young Ladislaw, he was sure, meant to defy and annoy him, meant to
14998 win Dorothea's confidence and sow her mind with disrespect, and perhaps
14999 aversion, towards her husband. Some motive beneath the surface had
15000 been needed to account for Will's sudden change of course in rejecting Mr.
15001 Casaubon's aid and quitting his travels; and this defiant determination
15002 to fix himself in the neighborhood by taking up something so much at
15003 variance with his former choice as Mr. Brooke's Middlemarch projects,
15004 revealed clearly enough that the undeclared motive had relation to
15005 Dorothea. Not for one moment did Mr. Casaubon suspect Dorothea of any
15006 doubleness: he had no suspicions of her, but he had (what was little
15007 less uncomfortable) the positive knowledge that her tendency to form
15008 opinions about her husband's conduct was accompanied with a disposition
15009 to regard Will Ladislaw favorably and be influenced by what he said.
15010 His own proud reticence had prevented him from ever being undeceived in
15011 the supposition that Dorothea had originally asked her uncle to invite
15012 Will to his house.
15013
15014 And now, on receiving Will's letter, Mr. Casaubon had to consider his
15015 duty. He would never have been easy to call his action anything else
15016 than duty; but in this case, contending motives thrust him back into
15017 negations.
15018
15019 Should he apply directly to Mr. Brooke, and demand of that troublesome
15020 gentleman to revoke his proposal? Or should he consult Sir James
15021 Chettam, and get him to concur in remonstrance against a step which
15022 touched the whole family? In either case Mr. Casaubon was aware that
15023 failure was just as probable as success. It was impossible for him to
15024 mention Dorothea's name in the matter, and without some alarming
15025 urgency Mr. Brooke was as likely as not, after meeting all
15026 representations with apparent assent, to wind up by saying, "Never
15027 fear, Casaubon! Depend upon it, young Ladislaw will do you credit.
15028 Depend upon it, I have put my finger on the right thing." And Mr.
15029 Casaubon shrank nervously from communicating on the subject with Sir
15030 James Chettam, between whom and himself there had never been any
15031 cordiality, and who would immediately think of Dorothea without any
15032 mention of her.
15033
15034 Poor Mr. Casaubon was distrustful of everybody's feeling towards him,
15035 especially as a husband. To let any one suppose that he was jealous
15036 would be to admit their (suspected) view of his disadvantages: to let
15037 them know that he did not find marriage particularly blissful would
15038 imply his conversion to their (probably) earlier disapproval. It would
15039 be as bad as letting Carp, and Brasenose generally, know how backward
15040 he was in organizing the matter for his "Key to all Mythologies." All
15041 through his life Mr. Casaubon had been trying not to admit even to
15042 himself the inward sores of self-doubt and jealousy. And on the most
15043 delicate of all personal subjects, the habit of proud suspicious
15044 reticence told doubly.
15045
15046 Thus Mr. Casaubon remained proudly, bitterly silent. But he had
15047 forbidden Will to come to Lowick Manor, and he was mentally preparing
15048 other measures of frustration.
15049
15050
15051
15052 CHAPTER XXXVIII.
15053
15054 "C'est beaucoup que le jugement des hommes sur les actions
15055 humaines; tôt ou tard il devient efficace."--GUIZOT.
15056
15057
15058 Sir James Chettam could not look with any satisfaction on Mr. Brooke's
15059 new courses; but it was easier to object than to hinder. Sir James
15060 accounted for his having come in alone one day to lunch with the
15061 Cadwalladers by saying--
15062
15063 "I can't talk to you as I want, before Celia: it might hurt her.
15064 Indeed, it would not be right."
15065
15066 "I know what you mean--the 'Pioneer' at the Grange!" darted in Mrs.
15067 Cadwallader, almost before the last word was off her friend's tongue.
15068 "It is frightful--this taking to buying whistles and blowing them in
15069 everybody's hearing. Lying in bed all day and playing at dominoes,
15070 like poor Lord Plessy, would be more private and bearable."
15071
15072 "I see they are beginning to attack our friend Brooke in the
15073 'Trumpet,'" said the Rector, lounging back and smiling easily, as he
15074 would have done if he had been attacked himself. "There are tremendous
15075 sarcasms against a landlord not a hundred miles from Middlemarch, who
15076 receives his own rents, and makes no returns."
15077
15078 "I do wish Brooke would leave that off," said Sir James, with his
15079 little frown of annoyance.
15080
15081 "Is he really going to be put in nomination, though?" said Mr.
15082 Cadwallader. "I saw Farebrother yesterday--he's Whiggish himself,
15083 hoists Brougham and Useful Knowledge; that's the worst I know of
15084 him;--and he says that Brooke is getting up a pretty strong party.
15085 Bulstrode, the banker, is his foremost man. But he thinks Brooke would
15086 come off badly at a nomination."
15087
15088 "Exactly," said Sir James, with earnestness. "I have been inquiring
15089 into the thing, for I've never known anything about Middlemarch
15090 politics before--the county being my business. What Brooke trusts to,
15091 is that they are going to turn out Oliver because he is a Peelite. But
15092 Hawley tells me that if they send up a Whig at all it is sure to be
15093 Bagster, one of those candidates who come from heaven knows where, but
15094 dead against Ministers, and an experienced Parliamentary man. Hawley's
15095 rather rough: he forgot that he was speaking to me. He said if Brooke
15096 wanted a pelting, he could get it cheaper than by going to the
15097 hustings."
15098
15099 "I warned you all of it," said Mrs. Cadwallader, waving her hands
15100 outward. "I said to Humphrey long ago, Mr. Brooke is going to make a
15101 splash in the mud. And now he has done it."
15102
15103 "Well, he might have taken it into his head to marry," said the Rector.
15104 "That would have been a graver mess than a little flirtation with
15105 politics."
15106
15107 "He may do that afterwards," said Mrs. Cadwallader--"when he has come
15108 out on the other side of the mud with an ague."
15109
15110 "What I care for most is his own dignity," said Sir James. "Of course
15111 I care the more because of the family. But he's getting on in life
15112 now, and I don't like to think of his exposing himself. They will be
15113 raking up everything against him."
15114
15115 "I suppose it's no use trying any persuasion," said the Rector.
15116 "There's such an odd mixture of obstinacy and changeableness in Brooke.
15117 Have you tried him on the subject?"
15118
15119 "Well, no," said Sir James; "I feel a delicacy in appearing to dictate.
15120 But I have been talking to this young Ladislaw that Brooke is making a
15121 factotum of. Ladislaw seems clever enough for anything. I thought it
15122 as well to hear what he had to say; and he is against Brooke's standing
15123 this time. I think he'll turn him round: I think the nomination may be
15124 staved off."
15125
15126 "I know," said Mrs. Cadwallader, nodding. "The independent member
15127 hasn't got his speeches well enough by heart."
15128
15129 "But this Ladislaw--there again is a vexatious business," said Sir
15130 James. "We have had him two or three times to dine at the Hall (you
15131 have met him, by the bye) as Brooke's guest and a relation of
15132 Casaubon's, thinking he was only on a flying visit. And now I find
15133 he's in everybody's mouth in Middlemarch as the editor of the
15134 'Pioneer.' There are stories going about him as a quill-driving alien,
15135 a foreign emissary, and what not."
15136
15137 "Casaubon won't like that," said the Rector.
15138
15139 "There _is_ some foreign blood in Ladislaw," returned Sir James. "I
15140 hope he won't go into extreme opinions and carry Brooke on."
15141
15142 "Oh, he's a dangerous young sprig, that Mr. Ladislaw," said Mrs.
15143 Cadwallader, "with his opera songs and his ready tongue. A sort of
15144 Byronic hero--an amorous conspirator, it strikes me. And Thomas
15145 Aquinas is not fond of him. I could see that, the day the picture was
15146 brought."
15147
15148 "I don't like to begin on the subject with Casaubon," said Sir James.
15149 "He has more right to interfere than I. But it's a disagreeable affair
15150 all round. What a character for anybody with decent connections to
15151 show himself in!--one of those newspaper fellows! You have only to
15152 look at Keck, who manages the 'Trumpet.' I saw him the other day with
15153 Hawley. His writing is sound enough, I believe, but he's such a low
15154 fellow, that I wished he had been on the wrong side."
15155
15156 "What can you expect with these peddling Middlemarch papers?" said the
15157 Rector. "I don't suppose you could get a high style of man anywhere to
15158 be writing up interests he doesn't really care about, and for pay that
15159 hardly keeps him in at elbows."
15160
15161 "Exactly: that makes it so annoying that Brooke should have put a man
15162 who has a sort of connection with the family in a position of that
15163 kind. For my part, I think Ladislaw is rather a fool for accepting."
15164
15165 "It is Aquinas's fault," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Why didn't he use his
15166 interest to get Ladislaw made an attache or sent to India? That is how
15167 families get rid of troublesome sprigs."
15168
15169 "There is no knowing to what lengths the mischief may go," said Sir
15170 James, anxiously. "But if Casaubon says nothing, what can I do?"
15171
15172 "Oh my dear Sir James," said the Rector, "don't let us make too much of
15173 all this. It is likely enough to end in mere smoke. After a month or
15174 two Brooke and this Master Ladislaw will get tired of each other;
15175 Ladislaw will take wing; Brooke will sell the 'Pioneer,' and everything
15176 will settle down again as usual."
15177
15178 "There is one good chance--that he will not like to feel his money
15179 oozing away," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "If I knew the items of election
15180 expenses I could scare him. It's no use plying him with wide words
15181 like Expenditure: I wouldn't talk of phlebotomy, I would empty a pot of
15182 leeches upon him. What we good stingy people don't like, is having our
15183 sixpences sucked away from us."
15184
15185 "And he will not like having things raked up against him," said Sir
15186 James. "There is the management of his estate. They have begun upon
15187 that already. And it really is painful for me to see. It is a
15188 nuisance under one's very nose. I do think one is bound to do the best
15189 for one's land and tenants, especially in these hard times."
15190
15191 "Perhaps the 'Trumpet' may rouse him to make a change, and some good
15192 may come of it all," said the Rector. "I know I should be glad. I
15193 should hear less grumbling when my tithe is paid. I don't know what I
15194 should do if there were not a modus in Tipton."
15195
15196 "I want him to have a proper man to look after things--I want him to
15197 take on Garth again," said Sir James. "He got rid of Garth twelve
15198 years ago, and everything has been going wrong since. I think of
15199 getting Garth to manage for me--he has made such a capital plan for my
15200 buildings; and Lovegood is hardly up to the mark. But Garth would not
15201 undertake the Tipton estate again unless Brooke left it entirely to
15202 him."
15203
15204 "In the right of it too," said the Rector. "Garth is an independent
15205 fellow: an original, simple-minded fellow. One day, when he was doing
15206 some valuation for me, he told me point-blank that clergymen seldom
15207 understood anything about business, and did mischief when they meddled;
15208 but he said it as quietly and respectfully as if he had been talking to
15209 me about sailors. He would make a different parish of Tipton, if
15210 Brooke would let him manage. I wish, by the help of the 'Trumpet,' you
15211 could bring that round."
15212
15213 "If Dorothea had kept near her uncle, there would have been some
15214 chance," said Sir James. "She might have got some power over him in
15215 time, and she was always uneasy about the estate. She had wonderfully
15216 good notions about such things. But now Casaubon takes her up
15217 entirely. Celia complains a good deal. We can hardly get her to dine
15218 with us, since he had that fit." Sir James ended with a look of pitying
15219 disgust, and Mrs. Cadwallader shrugged her shoulders as much as to say
15220 that _she_ was not likely to see anything new in that direction.
15221
15222 "Poor Casaubon!" the Rector said. "That was a nasty attack. I thought
15223 he looked shattered the other day at the Archdeacon's."
15224
15225 "In point of fact," resumed Sir James, not choosing to dwell on "fits,"
15226 "Brooke doesn't mean badly by his tenants or any one else, but he has
15227 got that way of paring and clipping at expenses."
15228
15229 "Come, that's a blessing," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "That helps him to
15230 find himself in a morning. He may not know his own opinions, but he
15231 does know his own pocket."
15232
15233 "I don't believe a man is in pocket by stinginess on his land," said
15234 Sir James.
15235
15236 "Oh, stinginess may be abused like other virtues: it will not do to
15237 keep one's own pigs lean," said Mrs. Cadwallader, who had risen to look
15238 out of the window. "But talk of an independent politician and he will
15239 appear."
15240
15241 "What! Brooke?" said her husband.
15242
15243 "Yes. Now, you ply him with the 'Trumpet,' Humphrey; and I will put
15244 the leeches on him. What will you do, Sir James?"
15245
15246 "The fact is, I don't like to begin about it with Brooke, in our mutual
15247 position; the whole thing is so unpleasant. I do wish people would
15248 behave like gentlemen," said the good baronet, feeling that this was a
15249 simple and comprehensive programme for social well-being.
15250
15251 "Here you all are, eh?" said Mr. Brooke, shuffling round and shaking
15252 hands. "I was going up to the Hall by-and-by, Chettam. But it's
15253 pleasant to find everybody, you know. Well, what do you think of
15254 things?--going on a little fast! It was true enough, what Lafitte
15255 said--'Since yesterday, a century has passed away:'--they're in the
15256 next century, you know, on the other side of the water. Going on
15257 faster than we are."
15258
15259 "Why, yes," said the Rector, taking up the newspaper. "Here is the
15260 'Trumpet' accusing you of lagging behind--did you see?"
15261
15262 "Eh? no," said Mr. Brooke, dropping his gloves into his hat and hastily
15263 adjusting his eye-glass. But Mr. Cadwallader kept the paper in his
15264 hand, saying, with a smile in his eyes--
15265
15266 "Look here! all this is about a landlord not a hundred miles from
15267 Middlemarch, who receives his own rents. They say he is the most
15268 retrogressive man in the county. I think you must have taught them
15269 that word in the 'Pioneer.'"
15270
15271 "Oh, that is Keck--an illiterate fellow, you know. Retrogressive, now!
15272 Come, that's capital. He thinks it means destructive: they want to
15273 make me out a destructive, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with that
15274 cheerfulness which is usually sustained by an adversary's ignorance.
15275
15276 "I think he knows the meaning of the word. Here is a sharp stroke or
15277 two. If we had to describe a man who is retrogressive in the most evil
15278 sense of the word--we should say, he is one who would dub himself a
15279 reformer of our constitution, while every interest for which he is
15280 immediately responsible is going to decay: a philanthropist who cannot
15281 bear one rogue to be hanged, but does not mind five honest tenants
15282 being half-starved: a man who shrieks at corruption, and keeps his
15283 farms at rack-rent: who roars himself red at rotten boroughs, and does
15284 not mind if every field on his farms has a rotten gate: a man very
15285 open-hearted to Leeds and Manchester, no doubt; he would give any
15286 number of representatives who will pay for their seats out of their own
15287 pockets: what he objects to giving, is a little return on rent-days to
15288 help a tenant to buy stock, or an outlay on repairs to keep the weather
15289 out at a tenant's barn-door or make his house look a little less like
15290 an Irish cottier's. But we all know the wag's definition of a
15291 philanthropist: a man whose charity increases directly as the square of
15292 the distance. And so on. All the rest is to show what sort of
15293 legislator a philanthropist is likely to make," ended the Rector,
15294 throwing down the paper, and clasping his hands at the back of his
15295 head, while he looked at Mr. Brooke with an air of amused neutrality.
15296
15297 "Come, that's rather good, you know," said Mr. Brooke, taking up the
15298 paper and trying to bear the attack as easily as his neighbor did, but
15299 coloring and smiling rather nervously; "that about roaring himself red
15300 at rotten boroughs--I never made a speech about rotten boroughs in my
15301 life. And as to roaring myself red and that kind of thing--these men
15302 never understand what is good satire. Satire, you know, should be true
15303 up to a certain point. I recollect they said that in 'The Edinburgh'
15304 somewhere--it must be true up to a certain point."
15305
15306 "Well, that is really a hit about the gates," said Sir James, anxious
15307 to tread carefully. "Dagley complained to me the other day that he
15308 hadn't got a decent gate on his farm. Garth has invented a new pattern
15309 of gate--I wish you would try it. One ought to use some of one's
15310 timber in that way."
15311
15312 "You go in for fancy farming, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke,
15313 appearing to glance over the columns of the "Trumpet." "That's your
15314 hobby, and you don't mind the expense."
15315
15316 "I thought the most expensive hobby in the world was standing for
15317 Parliament," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "They said the last unsuccessful
15318 candidate at Middlemarch--Giles, wasn't his name?--spent ten thousand
15319 pounds and failed because he did not bribe enough. What a bitter
15320 reflection for a man!"
15321
15322 "Somebody was saying," said the Rector, laughingly, "that East Retford
15323 was nothing to Middlemarch, for bribery."
15324
15325 "Nothing of the kind," said Mr. Brooke. "The Tories bribe, you know:
15326 Hawley and his set bribe with treating, hot codlings, and that sort of
15327 thing; and they bring the voters drunk to the poll. But they are not
15328 going to have it their own way in future--not in future, you know.
15329 Middlemarch is a little backward, I admit--the freemen are a little
15330 backward. But we shall educate them--we shall bring them on, you
15331 know. The best people there are on our side."
15332
15333 "Hawley says you have men on your side who will do you harm," remarked
15334 Sir James. "He says Bulstrode the banker will do you harm."
15335
15336 "And that if you got pelted," interposed Mrs. Cadwallader, "half the
15337 rotten eggs would mean hatred of your committee-man. Good heavens!
15338 Think what it must be to be pelted for wrong opinions. And I seem to
15339 remember a story of a man they pretended to chair and let him fall into
15340 a dust-heap on purpose!"
15341
15342 "Pelting is nothing to their finding holes in one's coat," said the
15343 Rector. "I confess that's what I should be afraid of, if we parsons
15344 had to stand at the hustings for preferment. I should be afraid of
15345 their reckoning up all my fishing days. Upon my word, I think the
15346 truth is the hardest missile one can be pelted with."
15347
15348 "The fact is," said Sir James, "if a man goes into public life he must
15349 be prepared for the consequences. He must make himself proof against
15350 calumny."
15351
15352 "My dear Chettam, that is all very fine, you know," said Mr. Brooke.
15353 "But how will you make yourself proof against calumny? You should read
15354 history--look at ostracism, persecution, martyrdom, and that kind of
15355 thing. They always happen to the best men, you know. But what is that
15356 in Horace?--'fiat justitia, ruat . . . something or other."
15357
15358 "Exactly," said Sir James, with a little more heat than usual. "What I
15359 mean by being proof against calumny is being able to point to the fact
15360 as a contradiction."
15361
15362 "And it is not martyrdom to pay bills that one has run into one's
15363 self," said Mrs. Cadwallader.
15364
15365 But it was Sir James's evident annoyance that most stirred Mr. Brooke.
15366 "Well, you know, Chettam," he said, rising, taking up his hat and
15367 leaning on his stick, "you and I have a different system. You are all
15368 for outlay with your farms. I don't want to make out that my system is
15369 good under all circumstances--under all circumstances, you know."
15370
15371 "There ought to be a new valuation made from time to time," said Sir
15372 James. "Returns are very well occasionally, but I like a fair
15373 valuation. What do you say, Cadwallader?"
15374
15375 "I agree with you. If I were Brooke, I would choke the 'Trumpet' at
15376 once by getting Garth to make a new valuation of the farms, and giving
15377 him carte blanche about gates and repairs: that's my view of the
15378 political situation," said the Rector, broadening himself by sticking
15379 his thumbs in his armholes, and laughing towards Mr. Brooke.
15380
15381 "That's a showy sort of thing to do, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "But
15382 I should like you to tell me of another landlord who has distressed his
15383 tenants for arrears as little as I have. I let the old tenants stay
15384 on. I'm uncommonly easy, let me tell you, uncommonly easy. I have my
15385 own ideas, and I take my stand on them, you know. A man who does that
15386 is always charged with eccentricity, inconsistency, and that kind of
15387 thing. When I change my line of action, I shall follow my own ideas."
15388
15389 After that, Mr. Brooke remembered that there was a packet which he had
15390 omitted to send off from the Grange, and he bade everybody hurriedly
15391 good-by.
15392
15393 "I didn't want to take a liberty with Brooke," said Sir James; "I see
15394 he is nettled. But as to what he says about old tenants, in point of
15395 fact no new tenant would take the farms on the present terms."
15396
15397 "I have a notion that he will be brought round in time," said the
15398 Rector. "But you were pulling one way, Elinor, and we were pulling
15399 another. You wanted to frighten him away from expense, and we want to
15400 frighten him into it. Better let him try to be popular and see that
15401 his character as a landlord stands in his way. I don't think it
15402 signifies two straws about the 'Pioneer,' or Ladislaw, or Brooke's
15403 speechifying to the Middlemarchers. But it does signify about the
15404 parishioners in Tipton being comfortable."
15405
15406 "Excuse me, it is you two who are on the wrong tack," said Mrs.
15407 Cadwallader. "You should have proved to him that he loses money by bad
15408 management, and then we should all have pulled together. If you put
15409 him a-horseback on politics, I warn you of the consequences. It was
15410 all very well to ride on sticks at home and call them ideas."
15411
15412
15413
15414 CHAPTER XXXIX.
15415
15416 "If, as I have, you also doe,
15417 Vertue attired in woman see,
15418 And dare love that, and say so too,
15419 And forget the He and She;
15420
15421 And if this love, though placed so,
15422 From prophane men you hide,
15423 Which will no faith on this bestow,
15424 Or, if they doe, deride:
15425
15426 Then you have done a braver thing
15427 Than all the Worthies did,
15428 And a braver thence will spring,
15429 Which is, to keep that hid."
15430 --DR. DONNE.
15431
15432
15433 Sir James Chettam's mind was not fruitful in devices, but his growing
15434 anxiety to "act on Brooke," once brought close to his constant belief
15435 in Dorothea's capacity for influence, became formative, and issued in a
15436 little plan; namely, to plead Celia's indisposition as a reason for
15437 fetching Dorothea by herself to the Hall, and to leave her at the
15438 Grange with the carriage on the way, after making her fully aware of
15439 the situation concerning the management of the estate.
15440
15441 In this way it happened that one day near four o'clock, when Mr. Brooke
15442 and Ladislaw were seated in the library, the door opened and Mrs.
15443 Casaubon was announced.
15444
15445 Will, the moment before, had been low in the depths of boredom, and,
15446 obliged to help Mr. Brooke in arranging "documents" about hanging
15447 sheep-stealers, was exemplifying the power our minds have of riding
15448 several horses at once by inwardly arranging measures towards getting a
15449 lodging for himself in Middlemarch and cutting short his constant
15450 residence at the Grange; while there flitted through all these steadier
15451 images a tickling vision of a sheep-stealing epic written with Homeric
15452 particularity. When Mrs. Casaubon was announced he started up as from
15453 an electric shock, and felt a tingling at his finger-ends. Any one
15454 observing him would have seen a change in his complexion, in the
15455 adjustment of his facial muscles, in the vividness of his glance, which
15456 might have made them imagine that every molecule in his body had passed
15457 the message of a magic touch. And so it had. For effective magic is
15458 transcendent nature; and who shall measure the subtlety of those
15459 touches which convey the quality of soul as well as body, and make a
15460 man's passion for one woman differ from his passion for another as joy
15461 in the morning light over valley and river and white mountain-top
15462 differs from joy among Chinese lanterns and glass panels? Will, too,
15463 was made of very impressible stuff. The bow of a violin drawn near him
15464 cleverly, would at one stroke change the aspect of the world for him,
15465 and his point of view shifted--as easily as his mood. Dorothea's
15466 entrance was the freshness of morning.
15467
15468 "Well, my dear, this is pleasant, now," said Mr. Brooke, meeting and
15469 kissing her. "You have left Casaubon with his books, I suppose.
15470 That's right. We must not have you getting too learned for a woman,
15471 you know."
15472
15473 "There is no fear of that, uncle," said Dorothea, turning to Will and
15474 shaking hands with open cheerfulness, while she made no other form of
15475 greeting, but went on answering her uncle. "I am very slow. When I
15476 want to be busy with books, I am often playing truant among my
15477 thoughts. I find it is not so easy to be learned as to plan cottages."
15478
15479 She seated herself beside her uncle opposite to Will, and was evidently
15480 preoccupied with something that made her almost unmindful of him. He
15481 was ridiculously disappointed, as if he had imagined that her coming
15482 had anything to do with him.
15483
15484 "Why, yes, my dear, it was quite your hobby to draw plans. But it was
15485 good to break that off a little. Hobbies are apt to ran away with us,
15486 you know; it doesn't do to be run away with. We must keep the reins.
15487 I have never let myself be run away with; I always pulled up. That is
15488 what I tell Ladislaw. He and I are alike, you know: he likes to go
15489 into everything. We are working at capital punishment. We shall do a
15490 great deal together, Ladislaw and I."
15491
15492 "Yes," said Dorothea, with characteristic directness, "Sir James has
15493 been telling me that he is in hope of seeing a great change made soon
15494 in your management of the estate--that you are thinking of having the
15495 farms valued, and repairs made, and the cottages improved, so that
15496 Tipton may look quite another place. Oh, how happy!"--she went on,
15497 clasping her hands, with a return to that more childlike impetuous
15498 manner, which had been subdued since her marriage. "If I were at home
15499 still, I should take to riding again, that I might go about with you
15500 and see all that! And you are going to engage Mr. Garth, who praised
15501 my cottages, Sir James says."
15502
15503 "Chettam is a little hasty, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, coloring
15504 slightly; "a little hasty, you know. I never said I should do anything
15505 of the kind. I never said I should _not_ do it, you know."
15506
15507 "He only feels confident that you will do it," said Dorothea, in a
15508 voice as clear and unhesitating as that of a young chorister chanting a
15509 credo, "because you mean to enter Parliament as a member who cares for
15510 the improvement of the people, and one of the first things to be made
15511 better is the state of the land and the laborers. Think of Kit Downes,
15512 uncle, who lives with his wife and seven children in a house with one
15513 sitting room and one bedroom hardly larger than this table!--and those
15514 poor Dagleys, in their tumble-down farmhouse, where they live in the
15515 back kitchen and leave the other rooms to the rats! That is one reason
15516 why I did not like the pictures here, dear uncle--which you think me
15517 stupid about. I used to come from the village with all that dirt and
15518 coarse ugliness like a pain within me, and the simpering pictures in
15519 the drawing-room seemed to me like a wicked attempt to find delight in
15520 what is false, while we don't mind how hard the truth is for the
15521 neighbors outside our walls. I think we have no right to come forward
15522 and urge wider changes for good, until we have tried to alter the evils
15523 which lie under our own hands."
15524
15525 Dorothea had gathered emotion as she went on, and had forgotten
15526 everything except the relief of pouring forth her feelings, unchecked:
15527 an experience once habitual with her, but hardly ever present since her
15528 marriage, which had been a perpetual struggle of energy with fear. For
15529 the moment, Will's admiration was accompanied with a chilling sense of
15530 remoteness. A man is seldom ashamed of feeling that he cannot love a
15531 woman so well when he sees a certain greatness in her: nature having
15532 intended greatness for men. But nature has sometimes made sad
15533 oversights in carrying out her intention; as in the case of good Mr.
15534 Brooke, whose masculine consciousness was at this moment in rather a
15535 stammering condition under the eloquence of his niece. He could not
15536 immediately find any other mode of expressing himself than that of
15537 rising, fixing his eye-glass, and fingering the papers before him. At
15538 last he said--
15539
15540 "There is something in what you say, my dear, something in what you
15541 say--but not everything--eh, Ladislaw? You and I don't like our
15542 pictures and statues being found fault with. Young ladies are a little
15543 ardent, you know--a little one-sided, my dear. Fine art, poetry, that
15544 kind of thing, elevates a nation--emollit mores--you understand a
15545 little Latin now. But--eh? what?"
15546
15547 These interrogatives were addressed to the footman who had come in to
15548 say that the keeper had found one of Dagley's boys with a leveret in
15549 his hand just killed.
15550
15551 "I'll come, I'll come. I shall let him off easily, you know," said Mr.
15552 Brooke aside to Dorothea, shuffling away very cheerfully.
15553
15554 "I hope you feel how right this change is that I--that Sir James wishes
15555 for," said Dorothea to Will, as soon as her uncle was gone.
15556
15557 "I do, now I have heard you speak about it. I shall not forget what
15558 you have said. But can you think of something else at this moment? I
15559 may not have another opportunity of speaking to you about what has
15560 occurred," said Will, rising with a movement of impatience, and holding
15561 the back of his chair with both hands.
15562
15563 "Pray tell me what it is," said Dorothea, anxiously, also rising and
15564 going to the open window, where Monk was looking in, panting and
15565 wagging his tail. She leaned her back against the window-frame, and
15566 laid her hand on the dog's head; for though, as we know, she was not
15567 fond of pets that must be held in the hands or trodden on, she was
15568 always attentive to the feelings of dogs, and very polite if she had to
15569 decline their advances.
15570
15571 Will followed her only with his eyes and said, "I presume you know that
15572 Mr. Casaubon has forbidden me to go to his house."
15573
15574 "No, I did not," said Dorothea, after a moment's pause. She was
15575 evidently much moved. "I am very, very sorry," she added, mournfully.
15576 She was thinking of what Will had no knowledge of--the conversation
15577 between her and her husband in the darkness; and she was anew smitten
15578 with hopelessness that she could influence Mr. Casaubon's action. But
15579 the marked expression of her sorrow convinced Will that it was not all
15580 given to him personally, and that Dorothea had not been visited by the
15581 idea that Mr. Casaubon's dislike and jealousy of him turned upon
15582 herself. He felt an odd mixture of delight and vexation: of delight
15583 that he could dwell and be cherished in her thought as in a pure home,
15584 without suspicion and without stint--of vexation because he was of too
15585 little account with her, was not formidable enough, was treated with an
15586 unhesitating benevolence which did not flatter him. But his dread of
15587 any change in Dorothea was stronger than his discontent, and he began
15588 to speak again in a tone of mere explanation.
15589
15590 "Mr. Casaubon's reason is, his displeasure at my taking a position here
15591 which he considers unsuited to my rank as his cousin. I have told him
15592 that I cannot give way on this point. It is a little too hard on me to
15593 expect that my course in life is to be hampered by prejudices which I
15594 think ridiculous. Obligation may be stretched till it is no better
15595 than a brand of slavery stamped on us when we were too young to know
15596 its meaning. I would not have accepted the position if I had not meant
15597 to make it useful and honorable. I am not bound to regard family
15598 dignity in any other light."
15599
15600 Dorothea felt wretched. She thought her husband altogether in the
15601 wrong, on more grounds than Will had mentioned.
15602
15603 "It is better for us not to speak on the subject," she said, with a
15604 tremulousness not common in her voice, "since you and Mr. Casaubon
15605 disagree. You intend to remain?" She was looking out on the lawn,
15606 with melancholy meditation.
15607
15608 "Yes; but I shall hardly ever see you now," said Will, in a tone of
15609 almost boyish complaint.
15610
15611 "No," said Dorothea, turning her eyes full upon him, "hardly ever. But
15612 I shall hear of you. I shall know what you are doing for my uncle."
15613
15614 "I shall know hardly anything about you," said Will. "No one will tell
15615 me anything."
15616
15617 "Oh, my life is very simple," said Dorothea, her lips curling with an
15618 exquisite smile, which irradiated her melancholy. "I am always at
15619 Lowick."
15620
15621 "That is a dreadful imprisonment," said Will, impetuously.
15622
15623 "No, don't think that," said Dorothea. "I have no longings."
15624
15625 He did not speak, but she replied to some change in his expression. "I
15626 mean, for myself. Except that I should like not to have so much more
15627 than my share without doing anything for others. But I have a belief
15628 of my own, and it comforts me."
15629
15630 "What is that?" said Will, rather jealous of the belief.
15631
15632 "That by desiring what is perfectly good, even when we don't quite know
15633 what it is and cannot do what we would, we are part of the divine power
15634 against evil--widening the skirts of light and making the struggle with
15635 darkness narrower."
15636
15637 "That is a beautiful mysticism--it is a--"
15638
15639 "Please not to call it by any name," said Dorothea, putting out her
15640 hands entreatingly. "You will say it is Persian, or something else
15641 geographical. It is my life. I have found it out, and cannot part
15642 with it. I have always been finding out my religion since I was a
15643 little girl. I used to pray so much--now I hardly ever pray. I try
15644 not to have desires merely for myself, because they may not be good for
15645 others, and I have too much already. I only told you, that you might
15646 know quite well how my days go at Lowick."
15647
15648 "God bless you for telling me!" said Will, ardently, and rather
15649 wondering at himself. They were looking at each other like two fond
15650 children who were talking confidentially of birds.
15651
15652 "What is _your_ religion?" said Dorothea. "I mean--not what you know
15653 about religion, but the belief that helps you most?"
15654
15655 "To love what is good and beautiful when I see it," said Will. "But I
15656 am a rebel: I don't feel bound, as you do, to submit to what I don't
15657 like."
15658
15659 "But if you like what is good, that comes to the same thing," said
15660 Dorothea, smiling.
15661
15662 "Now you are subtle," said Will.
15663
15664 "Yes; Mr. Casaubon often says I am too subtle. I don't feel as if I
15665 were subtle," said Dorothea, playfully. "But how long my uncle is! I
15666 must go and look for him. I must really go on to the Hall. Celia is
15667 expecting me."
15668
15669 Will offered to tell Mr. Brooke, who presently came and said that he
15670 would step into the carriage and go with Dorothea as far as Dagley's,
15671 to speak about the small delinquent who had been caught with the
15672 leveret. Dorothea renewed the subject of the estate as they drove
15673 along, but Mr. Brooke, not being taken unawares, got the talk under his
15674 own control.
15675
15676 "Chettam, now," he replied; "he finds fault with me, my dear; but I
15677 should not preserve my game if it were not for Chettam, and he can't
15678 say that that expense is for the sake of the tenants, you know. It's a
15679 little against my feeling:--poaching, now, if you come to look into
15680 it--I have often thought of getting up the subject. Not long ago,
15681 Flavell, the Methodist preacher, was brought up for knocking down a
15682 hare that came across his path when he and his wife were walking out
15683 together. He was pretty quick, and knocked it on the neck."
15684
15685 "That was very brutal, I think," said Dorothea
15686
15687 "Well, now, it seemed rather black to me, I confess, in a Methodist
15688 preacher, you know. And Johnson said, 'You may judge what a
15689 _hypocrite_ he is.' And upon my word, I thought Flavell looked very
15690 little like 'the highest style of man'--as somebody calls the
15691 Christian--Young, the poet Young, I think--you know Young? Well, now,
15692 Flavell in his shabby black gaiters, pleading that he thought the Lord
15693 had sent him and his wife a good dinner, and he had a right to knock it
15694 down, though not a mighty hunter before the Lord, as Nimrod was--I
15695 assure you it was rather comic: Fielding would have made something of
15696 it--or Scott, now--Scott might have worked it up. But really, when I
15697 came to think of it, I couldn't help liking that the fellow should have
15698 a bit of hare to say grace over. It's all a matter of
15699 prejudice--prejudice with the law on its side, you know--about the
15700 stick and the gaiters, and so on. However, it doesn't do to reason
15701 about things; and law is law. But I got Johnson to be quiet, and I
15702 hushed the matter up. I doubt whether Chettam would not have been more
15703 severe, and yet he comes down on me as if I were the hardest man in the
15704 county. But here we are at Dagley's."
15705
15706 Mr. Brooke got down at a farmyard-gate, and Dorothea drove on. It is
15707 wonderful how much uglier things will look when we only suspect that we
15708 are blamed for them. Even our own persons in the glass are apt to
15709 change their aspect for us after we have heard some frank remark on
15710 their less admirable points; and on the other hand it is astonishing
15711 how pleasantly conscience takes our encroachments on those who never
15712 complain or have nobody to complain for them. Dagley's homestead never
15713 before looked so dismal to Mr. Brooke as it did today, with his mind
15714 thus sore about the fault-finding of the "Trumpet," echoed by Sir James.
15715
15716 It is true that an observer, under that softening influence of the fine
15717 arts which makes other people's hardships picturesque, might have been
15718 delighted with this homestead called Freeman's End: the old house had
15719 dormer-windows in the dark red roof, two of the chimneys were choked
15720 with ivy, the large porch was blocked up with bundles of sticks, and
15721 half the windows were closed with gray worm-eaten shutters about which
15722 the jasmine-boughs grew in wild luxuriance; the mouldering garden wall
15723 with hollyhocks peeping over it was a perfect study of highly mingled
15724 subdued color, and there was an aged goat (kept doubtless on
15725 interesting superstitious grounds) lying against the open back-kitchen
15726 door. The mossy thatch of the cow-shed, the broken gray barn-doors,
15727 the pauper laborers in ragged breeches who had nearly finished
15728 unloading a wagon of corn into the barn ready for early thrashing; the
15729 scanty dairy of cows being tethered for milking and leaving one half of
15730 the shed in brown emptiness; the very pigs and white ducks seeming to
15731 wander about the uneven neglected yard as if in low spirits from
15732 feeding on a too meagre quality of rinsings,--all these objects under
15733 the quiet light of a sky marbled with high clouds would have made a
15734 sort of picture which we have all paused over as a "charming bit,"
15735 touching other sensibilities than those which are stirred by the
15736 depression of the agricultural interest, with the sad lack of farming
15737 capital, as seen constantly in the newspapers of that time. But these
15738 troublesome associations were just now strongly present to Mr. Brooke,
15739 and spoiled the scene for him. Mr. Dagley himself made a figure in the
15740 landscape, carrying a pitchfork and wearing his milking-hat--a very old
15741 beaver flattened in front. His coat and breeches were the best he had,
15742 and he would not have been wearing them on this weekday occasion if he
15743 had not been to market and returned later than usual, having given
15744 himself the rare treat of dining at the public table of the Blue Bull.
15745 How he came to fall into this extravagance would perhaps be matter of
15746 wonderment to himself on the morrow; but before dinner something in the
15747 state of the country, a slight pause in the harvest before the Far Dips
15748 were cut, the stories about the new King and the numerous handbills on
15749 the walls, had seemed to warrant a little recklessness. It was a maxim
15750 about Middlemarch, and regarded as self-evident, that good meat should
15751 have good drink, which last Dagley interpreted as plenty of table ale
15752 well followed up by rum-and-water. These liquors have so far truth in
15753 them that they were not false enough to make poor Dagley seem merry:
15754 they only made his discontent less tongue-tied than usual. He had also
15755 taken too much in the shape of muddy political talk, a stimulant
15756 dangerously disturbing to his farming conservatism, which consisted in
15757 holding that whatever is, is bad, and any change is likely to be worse.
15758 He was flushed, and his eyes had a decidedly quarrelsome stare as he
15759 stood still grasping his pitchfork, while the landlord approached with
15760 his easy shuffling walk, one hand in his trouser-pocket and the other
15761 swinging round a thin walking-stick.
15762
15763 "Dagley, my good fellow," began Mr. Brooke, conscious that he was going
15764 to be very friendly about the boy.
15765
15766 "Oh, ay, I'm a good feller, am I? Thank ye, sir, thank ye," said
15767 Dagley, with a loud snarling irony which made Fag the sheep-dog stir
15768 from his seat and prick his ears; but seeing Monk enter the yard after
15769 some outside loitering, Fag seated himself again in an attitude of
15770 observation. "I'm glad to hear I'm a good feller."
15771
15772 Mr. Brooke reflected that it was market-day, and that his worthy tenant
15773 had probably been dining, but saw no reason why he should not go on,
15774 since he could take the precaution of repeating what he had to say to
15775 Mrs. Dagley.
15776
15777 "Your little lad Jacob has been caught killing a leveret, Dagley: I
15778 have told Johnson to lock him up in the empty stable an hour or two,
15779 just to frighten him, you know. But he will be brought home by-and-by,
15780 before night: and you'll just look after him, will you, and give him a
15781 reprimand, you know?"
15782
15783 "No, I woon't: I'll be dee'd if I'll leather my boy to please you or
15784 anybody else, not if you was twenty landlords istid o' one, and that a
15785 bad un."
15786
15787 Dagley's words were loud enough to summon his wife to the back-kitchen
15788 door--the only entrance ever used, and one always open except in bad
15789 weather--and Mr. Brooke, saying soothingly, "Well, well, I'll speak to
15790 your wife--I didn't mean beating, you know," turned to walk to the
15791 house. But Dagley, only the more inclined to "have his say" with a
15792 gentleman who walked away from him, followed at once, with Fag
15793 slouching at his heels and sullenly evading some small and probably
15794 charitable advances on the part of Monk.
15795
15796 "How do you do, Mrs. Dagley?" said Mr. Brooke, making some haste. "I
15797 came to tell you about your boy: I don't want you to give him the
15798 stick, you know." He was careful to speak quite plainly this time.
15799
15800 Overworked Mrs. Dagley--a thin, worn woman, from whose life pleasure
15801 had so entirely vanished that she had not even any Sunday clothes which
15802 could give her satisfaction in preparing for church--had already had a
15803 misunderstanding with her husband since he had come home, and was in
15804 low spirits, expecting the worst. But her husband was beforehand in
15805 answering.
15806
15807 "No, nor he woon't hev the stick, whether you want it or no," pursued
15808 Dagley, throwing out his voice, as if he wanted it to hit hard.
15809 "You've got no call to come an' talk about sticks o' these primises, as
15810 you woon't give a stick tow'rt mending. Go to Middlemarch to ax for
15811 _your_ charrickter."
15812
15813 "You'd far better hold your tongue, Dagley," said the wife, "and not
15814 kick your own trough over. When a man as is father of a family has
15815 been an' spent money at market and made himself the worse for liquor,
15816 he's done enough mischief for one day. But I should like to know what
15817 my boy's done, sir."
15818
15819 "Niver do you mind what he's done," said Dagley, more fiercely, "it's
15820 my business to speak, an' not yourn. An' I wull speak, too. I'll hev
15821 my say--supper or no. An' what I say is, as I've lived upo' your
15822 ground from my father and grandfather afore me, an' hev dropped our
15823 money into't, an' me an' my children might lie an' rot on the ground
15824 for top-dressin' as we can't find the money to buy, if the King wasn't
15825 to put a stop."
15826
15827 "My good fellow, you're drunk, you know," said Mr. Brooke,
15828 confidentially but not judiciously. "Another day, another day," he
15829 added, turning as if to go.
15830
15831 But Dagley immediately fronted him, and Fag at his heels growled low,
15832 as his master's voice grew louder and more insulting, while Monk also
15833 drew close in silent dignified watch. The laborers on the wagon were
15834 pausing to listen, and it seemed wiser to be quite passive than to
15835 attempt a ridiculous flight pursued by a bawling man.
15836
15837 "I'm no more drunk nor you are, nor so much," said Dagley. "I can
15838 carry my liquor, an' I know what I meean. An' I meean as the King 'ull
15839 put a stop to 't, for them say it as knows it, as there's to be a
15840 Rinform, and them landlords as never done the right thing by their
15841 tenants 'ull be treated i' that way as they'll hev to scuttle off. An'
15842 there's them i' Middlemarch knows what the Rinform is--an' as knows
15843 who'll hev to scuttle. Says they, 'I know who _your_ landlord is.'
15844 An' says I, 'I hope you're the better for knowin' him, I arn't.' Says
15845 they, 'He's a close-fisted un.' 'Ay ay,' says I. 'He's a man for the
15846 Rinform,' says they. That's what they says. An' I made out what the
15847 Rinform were--an' it were to send you an' your likes a-scuttlin' an'
15848 wi' pretty strong-smellin' things too. An' you may do as you like now,
15849 for I'm none afeard on you. An' you'd better let my boy aloan, an'
15850 look to yoursen, afore the Rinform has got upo' your back. That's what
15851 I'n got to say," concluded Mr. Dagley, striking his fork into the
15852 ground with a firmness which proved inconvenient as he tried to draw it
15853 up again.
15854
15855 At this last action Monk began to bark loudly, and it was a moment for
15856 Mr. Brooke to escape. He walked out of the yard as quickly as he
15857 could, in some amazement at the novelty of his situation. He had never
15858 been insulted on his own land before, and had been inclined to regard
15859 himself as a general favorite (we are all apt to do so, when we think
15860 of our own amiability more than of what other people are likely to want
15861 of us). When he had quarrelled with Caleb Garth twelve years before he
15862 had thought that the tenants would be pleased at the landlord's taking
15863 everything into his own hands.
15864
15865 Some who follow the narrative of his experience may wonder at the
15866 midnight darkness of Mr. Dagley; but nothing was easier in those times
15867 than for an hereditary farmer of his grade to be ignorant, in spite
15868 somehow of having a rector in the twin parish who was a gentleman to
15869 the backbone, a curate nearer at hand who preached more learnedly than
15870 the rector, a landlord who had gone into everything, especially fine
15871 art and social improvement, and all the lights of Middlemarch only
15872 three miles off. As to the facility with which mortals escape
15873 knowledge, try an average acquaintance in the intellectual blaze of
15874 London, and consider what that eligible person for a dinner-party would
15875 have been if he had learned scant skill in "summing" from the
15876 parish-clerk of Tipton, and read a chapter in the Bible with immense
15877 difficulty, because such names as Isaiah or Apollos remained
15878 unmanageable after twice spelling. Poor Dagley read a few verses
15879 sometimes on a Sunday evening, and the world was at least not darker to
15880 him than it had been before. Some things he knew thoroughly, namely,
15881 the slovenly habits of farming, and the awkwardness of weather, stock
15882 and crops, at Freeman's End--so called apparently by way of sarcasm,
15883 to imply that a man was free to quit it if he chose, but that there was
15884 no earthly "beyond" open to him.
15885
15886
15887
15888 CHAPTER XL.
15889
15890 Wise in his daily work was he:
15891 To fruits of diligence,
15892 And not to faiths or polity,
15893 He plied his utmost sense.
15894 These perfect in their little parts,
15895 Whose work is all their prize--
15896 Without them how could laws, or arts,
15897 Or towered cities rise?
15898
15899
15900 In watching effects, if only of an electric battery, it is often
15901 necessary to change our place and examine a particular mixture or group
15902 at some distance from the point where the movement we are interested in
15903 was set up. The group I am moving towards is at Caleb Garth's
15904 breakfast-table in the large parlor where the maps and desk were:
15905 father, mother, and five of the children. Mary was just now at home
15906 waiting for a situation, while Christy, the boy next to her, was
15907 getting cheap learning and cheap fare in Scotland, having to his
15908 father's disappointment taken to books instead of that sacred calling
15909 "business."
15910
15911 The letters had come--nine costly letters, for which the postman had
15912 been paid three and twopence, and Mr. Garth was forgetting his tea and
15913 toast while he read his letters and laid them open one above the other,
15914 sometimes swaying his head slowly, sometimes screwing up his mouth in
15915 inward debate, but not forgetting to cut off a large red seal unbroken,
15916 which Letty snatched up like an eager terrier.
15917
15918 The talk among the rest went on unrestrainedly, for nothing disturbed
15919 Caleb's absorption except shaking the table when he was writing.
15920
15921 Two letters of the nine had been for Mary. After reading them, she had
15922 passed them to her mother, and sat playing with her tea-spoon absently,
15923 till with a sudden recollection she returned to her sewing, which she
15924 had kept on her lap during breakfast.
15925
15926 "Oh, don't sew, Mary!" said Ben, pulling her arm down. "Make me a
15927 peacock with this bread-crumb." He had been kneading a small mass for
15928 the purpose.
15929
15930 "No, no, Mischief!" said Mary, good-humoredly, while she pricked his
15931 hand lightly with her needle. "Try and mould it yourself: you have
15932 seen me do it often enough. I must get this sewing done. It is for
15933 Rosamond Vincy: she is to be married next week, and she can't be
15934 married without this handkerchief." Mary ended merrily, amused with
15935 the last notion.
15936
15937 "Why can't she, Mary?" said Letty, seriously interested in this
15938 mystery, and pushing her head so close to her sister that Mary now
15939 turned the threatening needle towards Letty's nose.
15940
15941 "Because this is one of a dozen, and without it there would only be
15942 eleven," said Mary, with a grave air of explanation, so that Letty sank
15943 back with a sense of knowledge.
15944
15945 "Have you made up your mind, my dear?" said Mrs. Garth, laying the
15946 letters down.
15947
15948 "I shall go to the school at York," said Mary. "I am less unfit to
15949 teach in a school than in a family. I like to teach classes best.
15950 And, you see, I must teach: there is nothing else to be done."
15951
15952 "Teaching seems to me the most delightful work in the world," said Mrs.
15953 Garth, with a touch of rebuke in her tone. "I could understand your
15954 objection to it if you had not knowledge enough, Mary, or if you
15955 disliked children."
15956
15957 "I suppose we never quite understand why another dislikes what we like,
15958 mother," said Mary, rather curtly. "I am not fond of a schoolroom: I
15959 like the outside world better. It is a very inconvenient fault of
15960 mine."
15961
15962 "It must be very stupid to be always in a girls' school," said Alfred.
15963 "Such a set of nincompoops, like Mrs. Ballard's pupils walking two and
15964 two."
15965
15966 "And they have no games worth playing at," said Jim. "They can neither
15967 throw nor leap. I don't wonder at Mary's not liking it."
15968
15969 "What is that Mary doesn't like, eh?" said the father, looking over his
15970 spectacles and pausing before he opened his next letter.
15971
15972 "Being among a lot of nincompoop girls," said Alfred.
15973
15974 "Is it the situation you had heard of, Mary?" said Caleb, gently,
15975 looking at his daughter.
15976
15977 "Yes, father: the school at York. I have determined to take it. It is
15978 quite the best. Thirty-five pounds a-year, and extra pay for teaching
15979 the smallest strummers at the piano."
15980
15981 "Poor child! I wish she could stay at home with us, Susan," said
15982 Caleb, looking plaintively at his wife.
15983
15984 "Mary would not be happy without doing her duty," said Mrs. Garth,
15985 magisterially, conscious of having done her own.
15986
15987 "It wouldn't make me happy to do such a nasty duty as that," said
15988 Alfred--at which Mary and her father laughed silently, but Mrs. Garth
15989 said, gravely--
15990
15991 "Do find a fitter word than nasty, my dear Alfred, for everything that
15992 you think disagreeable. And suppose that Mary could help you to go to
15993 Mr. Hanmer's with the money she gets?"
15994
15995 "That seems to me a great shame. But she's an old brick," said Alfred,
15996 rising from his chair, and pulling Mary's head backward to kiss her.
15997
15998 Mary colored and laughed, but could not conceal that the tears were
15999 coming. Caleb, looking on over his spectacles, with the angles of his
16000 eyebrows falling, had an expression of mingled delight and sorrow as he
16001 returned to the opening of his letter; and even Mrs. Garth, her lips
16002 curling with a calm contentment, allowed that inappropriate language to
16003 pass without correction, although Ben immediately took it up, and sang,
16004 "She's an old brick, old brick, old brick!" to a cantering measure,
16005 which he beat out with his fist on Mary's arm.
16006
16007 But Mrs. Garth's eyes were now drawn towards her husband, who was
16008 already deep in the letter he was reading. His face had an expression
16009 of grave surprise, which alarmed her a little, but he did not like to
16010 be questioned while he was reading, and she remained anxiously watching
16011 till she saw him suddenly shaken by a little joyous laugh as he turned
16012 back to the beginning of the letter, and looking at her above his
16013 spectacles, said, in a low tone, "What do you think, Susan?"
16014
16015 She went and stood behind him, putting her hand on his shoulder, while
16016 they read the letter together. It was from Sir James Chettam, offering
16017 to Mr. Garth the management of the family estates at Freshitt and
16018 elsewhere, and adding that Sir James had been requested by Mr. Brooke
16019 of Tipton to ascertain whether Mr. Garth would be disposed at the same
16020 time to resume the agency of the Tipton property. The Baronet added in
16021 very obliging words that he himself was particularly desirous of seeing
16022 the Freshitt and Tipton estates under the same management, and he hoped
16023 to be able to show that the double agency might be held on terms
16024 agreeable to Mr. Garth, whom he would be glad to see at the Hall at
16025 twelve o'clock on the following day.
16026
16027 "He writes handsomely, doesn't he, Susan?" said Caleb, turning his eyes
16028 upward to his wife, who raised her hand from his shoulder to his ear,
16029 while she rested her chin on his head. "Brooke didn't like to ask me
16030 himself, I can see," he continued, laughing silently.
16031
16032 "Here is an honor to your father, children," said Mrs. Garth, looking
16033 round at the five pair of eyes, all fixed on the parents. "He is asked
16034 to take a post again by those who dismissed him long ago. That shows
16035 that he did his work well, so that they feel the want of him."
16036
16037 "Like Cincinnatus--hooray!" said Ben, riding on his chair, with a
16038 pleasant confidence that discipline was relaxed.
16039
16040 "Will they come to fetch him, mother?" said Letty, thinking of the
16041 Mayor and Corporation in their robes.
16042
16043 Mrs. Garth patted Letty's head and smiled, but seeing that her husband
16044 was gathering up his letters and likely soon to be out of reach in that
16045 sanctuary "business," she pressed his shoulder and said emphatically--
16046
16047 "Now, mind you ask fair pay, Caleb."
16048
16049 "Oh yes," said Caleb, in a deep voice of assent, as if it would be
16050 unreasonable to suppose anything else of him. "It'll come to between
16051 four and five hundred, the two together." Then with a little start of
16052 remembrance he said, "Mary, write and give up that school. Stay and
16053 help your mother. I'm as pleased as Punch, now I've thought of that."
16054
16055 No manner could have been less like that of Punch triumphant than
16056 Caleb's, but his talents did not lie in finding phrases, though he was
16057 very particular about his letter-writing, and regarded his wife as a
16058 treasury of correct language.
16059
16060 There was almost an uproar among the children now, and Mary held up the
16061 cambric embroidery towards her mother entreatingly, that it might be
16062 put out of reach while the boys dragged her into a dance. Mrs. Garth,
16063 in placid joy, began to put the cups and plates together, while Caleb
16064 pushing his chair from the table, as if he were going to move to the
16065 desk, still sat holding his letters in his hand and looking on the
16066 ground meditatively, stretching out the fingers of his left hand,
16067 according to a mute language of his own. At last he said--
16068
16069 "It's a thousand pities Christy didn't take to business, Susan. I
16070 shall want help by-and-by. And Alfred must go off to the
16071 engineering--I've made up my mind to that." He fell into meditation and
16072 finger-rhetoric again for a little while, and then continued: "I shall
16073 make Brooke have new agreements with the tenants, and I shall draw up a
16074 rotation of crops. And I'll lay a wager we can get fine bricks out of
16075 the clay at Bott's corner. I must look into that: it would cheapen the
16076 repairs. It's a fine bit of work, Susan! A man without a family would
16077 be glad to do it for nothing."
16078
16079 "Mind you don't, though," said his wife, lifting up her finger.
16080
16081 "No, no; but it's a fine thing to come to a man when he's seen into the
16082 nature of business: to have the chance of getting a bit of the country
16083 into good fettle, as they say, and putting men into the right way with
16084 their farming, and getting a bit of good contriving and solid building
16085 done--that those who are living and those who come after will be the
16086 better for. I'd sooner have it than a fortune. I hold it the most
16087 honorable work that is." Here Caleb laid down his letters, thrust his
16088 fingers between the buttons of his waistcoat, and sat upright, but
16089 presently proceeded with some awe in his voice and moving his head
16090 slowly aside--"It's a great gift of God, Susan."
16091
16092 "That it is, Caleb," said his wife, with answering fervor. "And it
16093 will be a blessing to your children to have had a father who did such
16094 work: a father whose good work remains though his name may be
16095 forgotten." She could not say any more to him then about the pay.
16096
16097 In the evening, when Caleb, rather tired with his day's work, was
16098 seated in silence with his pocket-book open on his knee, while Mrs.
16099 Garth and Mary were at their sewing, and Letty in a corner was
16100 whispering a dialogue with her doll, Mr. Farebrother came up the
16101 orchard walk, dividing the bright August lights and shadows with the
16102 tufted grass and the apple-tree boughs. We know that he was fond of
16103 his parishioners the Garths, and had thought Mary worth mentioning to
16104 Lydgate. He used to the full the clergyman's privilege of disregarding
16105 the Middlemarch discrimination of ranks, and always told his mother
16106 that Mrs. Garth was more of a lady than any matron in the town. Still,
16107 you see, he spent his evenings at the Vincys', where the matron, though
16108 less of a lady, presided over a well-lit drawing-room and whist. In
16109 those days human intercourse was not determined solely by respect. But
16110 the Vicar did heartily respect the Garths, and a visit from him was no
16111 surprise to that family. Nevertheless he accounted for it even while
16112 he was shaking hands, by saying, "I come as an envoy, Mrs. Garth: I
16113 have something to say to you and Garth on behalf of Fred Vincy. The
16114 fact is, poor fellow," he continued, as he seated himself and looked
16115 round with his bright glance at the three who were listening to him,
16116 "he has taken me into his confidence."
16117
16118 Mary's heart beat rather quickly: she wondered how far Fred's
16119 confidence had gone.
16120
16121 "We haven't seen the lad for months," said Caleb. "I couldn't think
16122 what was become of him."
16123
16124 "He has been away on a visit," said the Vicar, "because home was a
16125 little too hot for him, and Lydgate told his mother that the poor
16126 fellow must not begin to study yet. But yesterday he came and poured
16127 himself out to me. I am very glad he did, because I have seen him grow
16128 up from a youngster of fourteen, and I am so much at home in the house
16129 that the children are like nephews and nieces to me. But it is a
16130 difficult case to advise upon. However, he has asked me to come and
16131 tell you that he is going away, and that he is so miserable about his
16132 debt to you, and his inability to pay, that he can't bear to come
16133 himself even to bid you good by."
16134
16135 "Tell him it doesn't signify a farthing," said Caleb, waving his hand.
16136 "We've had the pinch and have got over it. And now I'm going to be as
16137 rich as a Jew."
16138
16139 "Which means," said Mrs. Garth, smiling at the Vicar, "that we are
16140 going to have enough to bring up the boys well and to keep Mary at
16141 home."
16142
16143 "What is the treasure-trove?" said Mr. Farebrother.
16144
16145 "I'm going to be agent for two estates, Freshitt and Tipton; and
16146 perhaps for a pretty little bit of land in Lowick besides: it's all the
16147 same family connection, and employment spreads like water if it's once
16148 set going. It makes me very happy, Mr. Farebrother"--here Caleb threw
16149 back his head a little, and spread his arms on the elbows of his
16150 chair--"that I've got an opportunity again with the letting of the
16151 land, and carrying out a notion or two with improvements. It's a most
16152 uncommonly cramping thing, as I've often told Susan, to sit on
16153 horseback and look over the hedges at the wrong thing, and not be able
16154 to put your hand to it to make it right. What people do who go into
16155 politics I can't think: it drives me almost mad to see mismanagement
16156 over only a few hundred acres."
16157
16158 It was seldom that Caleb volunteered so long a speech, but his
16159 happiness had the effect of mountain air: his eyes were bright, and the
16160 words came without effort.
16161
16162 "I congratulate you heartily, Garth," said the Vicar. "This is the
16163 best sort of news I could have had to carry to Fred Vincy, for he dwelt
16164 a good deal on the injury he had done you in causing you to part with
16165 money--robbing you of it, he said--which you wanted for other purposes.
16166 I wish Fred were not such an idle dog; he has some very good points,
16167 and his father is a little hard upon him."
16168
16169 "Where is he going?" said Mrs. Garth, rather coldly.
16170
16171 "He means to try again for his degree, and he is going up to study
16172 before term. I have advised him to do that. I don't urge him to enter
16173 the Church--on the contrary. But if he will go and work so as to pass,
16174 that will be some guarantee that he has energy and a will; and he is
16175 quite at sea; he doesn't know what else to do. So far he will please
16176 his father, and I have promised in the mean time to try and reconcile
16177 Vincy to his son's adopting some other line of life. Fred says frankly
16178 he is not fit for a clergyman, and I would do anything I could to
16179 hinder a man from the fatal step of choosing the wrong profession. He
16180 quoted to me what you said, Miss Garth--do you remember it?" (Mr.
16181 Farebrother used to say "Mary" instead of "Miss Garth," but it was part
16182 of his delicacy to treat her with the more deference because, according
16183 to Mrs. Vincy's phrase, she worked for her bread.)
16184
16185 Mary felt uncomfortable, but, determined to take the matter lightly,
16186 answered at once, "I have said so many impertinent things to Fred--we
16187 are such old playfellows."
16188
16189 "You said, according to him, that he would be one of those ridiculous
16190 clergymen who help to make the whole clergy ridiculous. Really, that
16191 was so cutting that I felt a little cut myself."
16192
16193 Caleb laughed. "She gets her tongue from you, Susan," he said, with
16194 some enjoyment.
16195
16196 "Not its flippancy, father," said Mary, quickly, fearing that her
16197 mother would be displeased. "It is rather too bad of Fred to repeat my
16198 flippant speeches to Mr. Farebrother."
16199
16200 "It was certainly a hasty speech, my dear," said Mrs. Garth, with whom
16201 speaking evil of dignities was a high misdemeanor. "We should not
16202 value our Vicar the less because there was a ridiculous curate in the
16203 next parish."
16204
16205 "There's something in what she says, though," said Caleb, not disposed
16206 to have Mary's sharpness undervalued. "A bad workman of any sort makes
16207 his fellows mistrusted. Things hang together," he added, looking on
16208 the floor and moving his feet uneasily with a sense that words were
16209 scantier than thoughts.
16210
16211 "Clearly," said the Vicar, amused. "By being contemptible we set men's
16212 minds, to the tune of contempt. I certainly agree with Miss Garth's
16213 view of the matter, whether I am condemned by it or not. But as to
16214 Fred Vincy, it is only fair he should be excused a little: old
16215 Featherstone's delusive behavior did help to spoil him. There was
16216 something quite diabolical in not leaving him a farthing after all.
16217 But Fred has the good taste not to dwell on that. And what he cares
16218 most about is having offended you, Mrs. Garth; he supposes you will
16219 never think well of him again."
16220
16221 "I have been disappointed in Fred," said Mrs. Garth, with decision.
16222 "But I shall be ready to think well of him again when he gives me good
16223 reason to do so."
16224
16225 At this point Mary went out of the room, taking Letty with her.
16226
16227 "Oh, we must forgive young people when they're sorry," said Caleb,
16228 watching Mary close the door. "And as you say, Mr. Farebrother, there
16229 was the very devil in that old man. Now Mary's gone out, I must tell you
16230 a thing--it's only known to Susan and me, and you'll not tell it again.
16231 The old scoundrel wanted Mary to burn one of the wills the very night
16232 he died, when she was sitting up with him by herself, and he offered her
16233 a sum of money that he had in the box by him if she would do it. But Mary,
16234 you understand, could do no such thing--would not be handling his iron
16235 chest, and so on. Now, you see, the will he wanted burnt was this last,
16236 so that if Mary had done what he wanted, Fred Vincy would have had ten
16237 thousand pounds. The old man did turn to him at the last. That touches
16238 poor Mary close; she couldn't help it--she was in the right to do what
16239 she did, but she feels, as she says, much as if she had knocked down
16240 somebody's property and broken it against her will, when she was
16241 rightfully defending herself. I feel with her, somehow, and if I could
16242 make any amends to the poor lad, instead of bearing him a grudge for
16243 the harm he did us, I should be glad to do it. Now, what is your opinion,
16244 sir? Susan doesn't agree with me. She says--tell what you say, Susan."
16245
16246 "Mary could not have acted otherwise, even if she had known what would
16247 be the effect on Fred," said Mrs. Garth, pausing from her work, and
16248 looking at Mr. Farebrother.
16249
16250 "And she was quite ignorant of it. It seems to me, a loss which falls
16251 on another because we have done right is not to lie upon our
16252 conscience."
16253
16254 The Vicar did not answer immediately, and Caleb said, "It's the
16255 feeling. The child feels in that way, and I feel with her. You don't
16256 mean your horse to tread on a dog when you're backing out of the way;
16257 but it goes through you, when it's done."
16258
16259 "I am sure Mrs. Garth would agree with you there," said Mr.
16260 Farebrother, who for some reason seemed more inclined to ruminate than
16261 to speak. "One could hardly say that the feeling you mention about
16262 Fred is wrong--or rather, mistaken--though no man ought to make a claim
16263 on such feeling."
16264
16265 "Well, well," said Caleb, "it's a secret. You will not tell Fred."
16266
16267 "Certainly not. But I shall carry the other good news--that you can
16268 afford the loss he caused you."
16269
16270 Mr. Farebrother left the house soon after, and seeing Mary in the
16271 orchard with Letty, went to say good-by to her. They made a pretty
16272 picture in the western light which brought out the brightness of the
16273 apples on the old scant-leaved boughs--Mary in her lavender gingham and
16274 black ribbons holding a basket, while Letty in her well-worn nankin
16275 picked up the fallen apples. If you want to know more particularly how
16276 Mary looked, ten to one you will see a face like hers in the crowded
16277 street to-morrow, if you are there on the watch: she will not be among
16278 those daughters of Zion who are haughty, and walk with stretched-out
16279 necks and wanton eyes, mincing as they go: let all those pass, and fix
16280 your eyes on some small plump brownish person of firm but quiet
16281 carriage, who looks about her, but does not suppose that anybody is
16282 looking at her. If she has a broad face and square brow, well-marked
16283 eyebrows and curly dark hair, a certain expression of amusement in her
16284 glance which her mouth keeps the secret of, and for the rest features
16285 entirely insignificant--take that ordinary but not disagreeable person
16286 for a portrait of Mary Garth. If you made her smile, she would show
16287 you perfect little teeth; if you made her angry, she would not raise
16288 her voice, but would probably say one of the bitterest things you have
16289 ever tasted the flavor of; if you did her a kindness, she would never
16290 forget it. Mary admired the keen-faced handsome little Vicar in his
16291 well-brushed threadbare clothes more than any man she had had the
16292 opportunity of knowing. She had never heard him say a foolish thing,
16293 though she knew that he did unwise ones; and perhaps foolish sayings
16294 were more objectionable to her than any of Mr. Farebrother's unwise
16295 doings. At least, it was remarkable that the actual imperfections of
16296 the Vicar's clerical character never seemed to call forth the same
16297 scorn and dislike which she showed beforehand for the predicted
16298 imperfections of the clerical character sustained by Fred Vincy. These
16299 irregularities of judgment, I imagine, are found even in riper minds
16300 than Mary Garth's: our impartiality is kept for abstract merit and
16301 demerit, which none of us ever saw. Will any one guess towards which
16302 of those widely different men Mary had the peculiar woman's
16303 tenderness?--the one she was most inclined to be severe on, or the
16304 contrary?
16305
16306 "Have you any message for your old playfellow, Miss Garth?" said the
16307 Vicar, as he took a fragrant apple from the basket which she held
16308 towards him, and put it in his pocket. "Something to soften down that
16309 harsh judgment? I am going straight to see him."
16310
16311 "No," said Mary, shaking her head, and smiling. "If I were to say that
16312 he would not be ridiculous as a clergyman, I must say that he would be
16313 something worse than ridiculous. But I am very glad to hear that he is
16314 going away to work."
16315
16316 "On the other hand, I am very glad to hear that _you_ are not going
16317 away to work. My mother, I am sure, will be all the happier if you
16318 will come to see her at the vicarage: you know she is fond of having
16319 young people to talk to, and she has a great deal to tell about old
16320 times. You will really be doing a kindness."
16321
16322 "I should like it very much, if I may," said Mary. "Everything seems
16323 too happy for me all at once. I thought it would always be part of my
16324 life to long for home, and losing that grievance makes me feel rather
16325 empty: I suppose it served instead of sense to fill up my mind?"
16326
16327 "May I go with you, Mary?" whispered Letty--a most inconvenient child,
16328 who listened to everything. But she was made exultant by having her
16329 chin pinched and her cheek kissed by Mr. Farebrother--an incident
16330 which she narrated to her mother and father.
16331
16332 As the Vicar walked to Lowick, any one watching him closely might have
16333 seen him twice shrug his shoulders. I think that the rare Englishmen
16334 who have this gesture are never of the heavy type--for fear of any
16335 lumbering instance to the contrary, I will say, hardly ever; they have
16336 usually a fine temperament and much tolerance towards the smaller
16337 errors of men (themselves inclusive). The Vicar was holding an inward
16338 dialogue in which he told himself that there was probably something
16339 more between Fred and Mary Garth than the regard of old playfellows,
16340 and replied with a question whether that bit of womanhood were not a
16341 great deal too choice for that crude young gentleman. The rejoinder to
16342 this was the first shrug. Then he laughed at himself for being likely
16343 to have felt jealous, as if he had been a man able to marry, which,
16344 added he, it is as clear as any balance-sheet that I am not. Whereupon
16345 followed the second shrug.
16346
16347 What could two men, so different from each other, see in this "brown
16348 patch," as Mary called herself? It was certainly not her plainness
16349 that attracted them (and let all plain young ladies be warned against
16350 the dangerous encouragement given them by Society to confide in their
16351 want of beauty). A human being in this aged nation of ours is a very
16352 wonderful whole, the slow creation of long interchanging influences:
16353 and charm is a result of two such wholes, the one loving and the one
16354 loved.
16355
16356 When Mr. and Mrs. Garth were sitting alone, Caleb said, "Susan, guess
16357 what I'm thinking of."
16358
16359 "The rotation of crops," said Mrs. Garth, smiling at him, above her
16360 knitting, "or else the back-doors of the Tipton cottages."
16361
16362 "No," said Caleb, gravely; "I am thinking that I could do a great turn
16363 for Fred Vincy. Christy's gone, Alfred will be gone soon, and it will
16364 be five years before Jim is ready to take to business. I shall want
16365 help, and Fred might come in and learn the nature of things and act
16366 under me, and it might be the making of him into a useful man, if he
16367 gives up being a parson. What do you think?"
16368
16369 "I think, there is hardly anything honest that his family would object
16370 to more," said Mrs. Garth, decidedly.
16371
16372 "What care I about their objecting?" said Caleb, with a sturdiness
16373 which he was apt to show when he had an opinion. "The lad is of age
16374 and must get his bread. He has sense enough and quickness enough; he
16375 likes being on the land, and it's my belief that he could learn
16376 business well if he gave his mind to it."
16377
16378 "But would he? His father and mother wanted him to be a fine
16379 gentleman, and I think he has the same sort of feeling himself. They
16380 all think us beneath them. And if the proposal came from you, I am
16381 sure Mrs. Vincy would say that we wanted Fred for Mary."
16382
16383 "Life is a poor tale, if it is to be settled by nonsense of that sort,"
16384 said Caleb, with disgust.
16385
16386 "Yes, but there is a certain pride which is proper, Caleb."
16387
16388 "I call it improper pride to let fools' notions hinder you from doing a
16389 good action. There's no sort of work," said Caleb, with fervor,
16390 putting out his hand and moving it up and down to mark his emphasis,
16391 "that could ever be done well, if you minded what fools say. You must
16392 have it inside you that your plan is right, and that plan you must
16393 follow."
16394
16395 "I will not oppose any plan you have set your mind on, Caleb," said
16396 Mrs. Garth, who was a firm woman, but knew that there were some points
16397 on which her mild husband was yet firmer. "Still, it seems to be fixed
16398 that Fred is to go back to college: will it not be better to wait and
16399 see what he will choose to do after that? It is not easy to keep
16400 people against their will. And you are not yet quite sure enough of
16401 your own position, or what you will want."
16402
16403 "Well, it may be better to wait a bit. But as to my getting plenty of
16404 work for two, I'm pretty sure of that. I've always had my hands full
16405 with scattered things, and there's always something fresh turning up.
16406 Why, only yesterday--bless me, I don't think I told you!--it was rather
16407 odd that two men should have been at me on different sides to do the
16408 same bit of valuing. And who do you think they were?" said Caleb,
16409 taking a pinch of snuff and holding it up between his fingers, as if it
16410 were a part of his exposition. He was fond of a pinch when it occurred
16411 to him, but he usually forgot that this indulgence was at his command.
16412
16413 His wife held down her knitting and looked attentive.
16414
16415 "Why, that Rigg, or Rigg Featherstone, was one. But Bulstrode was
16416 before him, so I'm going to do it for Bulstrode. Whether it's mortgage
16417 or purchase they're going for, I can't tell yet."
16418
16419 "Can that man be going to sell the land just left him--which he has
16420 taken the name for?" said Mrs. Garth.
16421
16422 "Deuce knows," said Caleb, who never referred the knowledge of
16423 discreditable doings to any higher power than the deuce. "But
16424 Bulstrode has long been wanting to get a handsome bit of land under his
16425 fingers--that I know. And it's a difficult matter to get, in this part
16426 of the country."
16427
16428 Caleb scattered his snuff carefully instead of taking it, and then
16429 added, "The ins and outs of things are curious. Here is the land
16430 they've been all along expecting for Fred, which it seems the old man
16431 never meant to leave him a foot of, but left it to this side-slip of a
16432 son that he kept in the dark, and thought of his sticking there and
16433 vexing everybody as well as he could have vexed 'em himself if he could
16434 have kept alive. I say, it would be curious if it got into Bulstrode's
16435 hands after all. The old man hated him, and never would bank with him."
16436
16437 "What reason could the miserable creature have for hating a man whom he
16438 had nothing to do with?" said Mrs. Garth.
16439
16440 "Pooh! where's the use of asking for such fellows' reasons? The soul
16441 of man," said Caleb, with the deep tone and grave shake of the head
16442 which always came when he used this phrase--"The soul of man, when it
16443 gets fairly rotten, will bear you all sorts of poisonous toad-stools,
16444 and no eye can see whence came the seed thereof."
16445
16446 It was one of Caleb's quaintnesses, that in his difficulty of finding
16447 speech for his thought, he caught, as it were, snatches of diction
16448 which he associated with various points of view or states of mind; and
16449 whenever he had a feeling of awe, he was haunted by a sense of Biblical
16450 phraseology, though he could hardly have given a strict quotation.
16451
16452
16453
16454 CHAPTER XLI.
16455
16456 "By swaggering could I never thrive,
16457 For the rain it raineth every day.
16458 --Twelfth Night
16459
16460
16461 The transactions referred to by Caleb Garth as having gone forward
16462 between Mr. Bulstrode and Mr. Joshua Rigg Featherstone concerning the
16463 land attached to Stone Court, had occasioned the interchange of a
16464 letter or two between these personages.
16465
16466 Who shall tell what may be the effect of writing? If it happens to
16467 have been cut in stone, though it lie face down-most for ages on a
16468 forsaken beach, or "rest quietly under the drums and tramplings of many
16469 conquests," it may end by letting us into the secret of usurpations and
16470 other scandals gossiped about long empires ago:--this world being
16471 apparently a huge whispering-gallery. Such conditions are often
16472 minutely represented in our petty lifetimes. As the stone which has
16473 been kicked by generations of clowns may come by curious little links
16474 of effect under the eyes of a scholar, through whose labors it may at
16475 last fix the date of invasions and unlock religions, so a bit of ink
16476 and paper which has long been an innocent wrapping or stop-gap may at
16477 last be laid open under the one pair of eyes which have knowledge
16478 enough to turn it into the opening of a catastrophe. To Uriel watching
16479 the progress of planetary history from the sun, the one result would be
16480 just as much of a coincidence as the other.
16481
16482 Having made this rather lofty comparison I am less uneasy in calling
16483 attention to the existence of low people by whose interference, however
16484 little we may like it, the course of the world is very much determined.
16485 It would be well, certainly, if we could help to reduce their number,
16486 and something might perhaps be done by not lightly giving occasion to
16487 their existence. Socially speaking, Joshua Rigg would have been
16488 generally pronounced a superfluity. But those who like Peter
16489 Featherstone never had a copy of themselves demanded, are the very last
16490 to wait for such a request either in prose or verse. The copy in this
16491 case bore more of outside resemblance to the mother, in whose sex
16492 frog-features, accompanied with fresh-colored cheeks and a well-rounded
16493 figure, are compatible with much charm for a certain order of admirers.
16494 The result is sometimes a frog-faced male, desirable, surely, to no
16495 order of intelligent beings. Especially when he is suddenly brought
16496 into evidence to frustrate other people's expectations--the very
16497 lowest aspect in which a social superfluity can present himself.
16498
16499 But Mr. Rigg Featherstone's low characteristics were all of the sober,
16500 water-drinking kind. From the earliest to the latest hour of the day
16501 he was always as sleek, neat, and cool as the frog he resembled, and
16502 old Peter had secretly chuckled over an offshoot almost more
16503 calculating, and far more imperturbable, than himself. I will add that
16504 his finger-nails were scrupulously attended to, and that he meant to
16505 marry a well-educated young lady (as yet unspecified) whose person was
16506 good, and whose connections, in a solid middle-class way, were
16507 undeniable. Thus his nails and modesty were comparable to those of
16508 most gentlemen; though his ambition had been educated only by the
16509 opportunities of a clerk and accountant in the smaller commercial
16510 houses of a seaport. He thought the rural Featherstones very simple
16511 absurd people, and they in their turn regarded his "bringing up" in a
16512 seaport town as an exaggeration of the monstrosity that their brother
16513 Peter, and still more Peter's property, should have had such belongings.
16514
16515 The garden and gravel approach, as seen from the two windows of the
16516 wainscoted parlor at Stone Court, were never in better trim than now,
16517 when Mr. Rigg Featherstone stood, with his hands behind him, looking
16518 out on these grounds as their master. But it seemed doubtful whether
16519 he looked out for the sake of contemplation or of turning his back to a
16520 person who stood in the middle of the room, with his legs considerably
16521 apart and his hands in his trouser-pockets: a person in all respects a
16522 contrast to the sleek and cool Rigg. He was a man obviously on the way
16523 towards sixty, very florid and hairy, with much gray in his bushy
16524 whiskers and thick curly hair, a stoutish body which showed to
16525 disadvantage the somewhat worn joinings of his clothes, and the air of
16526 a swaggerer, who would aim at being noticeable even at a show of
16527 fireworks, regarding his own remarks on any other person's performance
16528 as likely to be more interesting than the performance itself.
16529
16530 His name was John Raffles, and he sometimes wrote jocosely W.A.G.
16531 after his signature, observing when he did so, that he was once taught
16532 by Leonard Lamb of Finsbury who wrote B.A. after his name, and that he,
16533 Raffles, originated the witticism of calling that celebrated principal
16534 Ba-Lamb. Such were the appearance and mental flavor of Mr. Raffles,
16535 both of which seemed to have a stale odor of travellers' rooms in the
16536 commercial hotels of that period.
16537
16538 "Come, now, Josh," he was saying, in a full rumbling tone, "look at it
16539 in this light: here is your poor mother going into the vale of years,
16540 and you could afford something handsome now to make her comfortable."
16541
16542 "Not while you live. Nothing would make her comfortable while you
16543 live," returned Rigg, in his cool high voice. "What I give her, you'll
16544 take."
16545
16546 "You bear me a grudge, Josh, that I know. But come, now--as between
16547 man and man--without humbug--a little capital might enable me to make a
16548 first-rate thing of the shop. The tobacco trade is growing. I should
16549 cut my own nose off in not doing the best I could at it. I should
16550 stick to it like a flea to a fleece for my own sake. I should always
16551 be on the spot. And nothing would make your poor mother so happy.
16552 I've pretty well done with my wild oats--turned fifty-five. I want to
16553 settle down in my chimney-corner. And if I once buckled to the tobacco
16554 trade, I could bring an amount of brains and experience to bear on it
16555 that would not be found elsewhere in a hurry. I don't want to be
16556 bothering you one time after another, but to get things once for all
16557 into the right channel. Consider that, Josh--as between man and
16558 man--and with your poor mother to be made easy for her life. I was
16559 always fond of the old woman, by Jove!"
16560
16561 "Have you done?" said Mr. Rigg, quietly, without looking away from the
16562 window.
16563
16564 "Yes, I've done," said Raffles, taking hold of his hat which stood
16565 before him on the table, and giving it a sort of oratorical push.
16566
16567 "Then just listen to me. The more you say anything, the less I shall
16568 believe it. The more you want me to do a thing, the more reason I
16569 shall have for never doing it. Do you think I mean to forget your
16570 kicking me when I was a lad, and eating all the best victual away from
16571 me and my mother? Do you think I forget your always coming home to
16572 sell and pocket everything, and going off again leaving us in the
16573 lurch? I should be glad to see you whipped at the cart-tail. My
16574 mother was a fool to you: she'd no right to give me a father-in-law,
16575 and she's been punished for it. She shall have her weekly allowance
16576 paid and no more: and that shall be stopped if you dare to come on to
16577 these premises again, or to come into this country after me again. The
16578 next time you show yourself inside the gates here, you shall be driven
16579 off with the dogs and the wagoner's whip."
16580
16581 As Rigg pronounced the last words he turned round and looked at Raffles
16582 with his prominent frozen eyes. The contrast was as striking as it
16583 could have been eighteen years before, when Rigg was a most unengaging
16584 kickable boy, and Raffles was the rather thick-set Adonis of bar-rooms
16585 and back-parlors. But the advantage now was on the side of Rigg, and
16586 auditors of this conversation might probably have expected that Raffles
16587 would retire with the air of a defeated dog. Not at all. He made a
16588 grimace which was habitual with him whenever he was "out" in a game;
16589 then subsided into a laugh, and drew a brandy-flask from his pocket.
16590
16591 "Come, Josh," he said, in a cajoling tone, "give us a spoonful of
16592 brandy, and a sovereign to pay the way back, and I'll go. Honor
16593 bright! I'll go like a bullet, _by_ Jove!"
16594
16595 "Mind," said Rigg, drawing out a bunch of keys, "if I ever see you
16596 again, I shan't speak to you. I don't own you any more than if I saw a
16597 crow; and if you want to own me you'll get nothing by it but a
16598 character for being what you are--a spiteful, brassy, bullying rogue."
16599
16600 "That's a pity, now, Josh," said Raffles, affecting to scratch his head
16601 and wrinkle his brows upward as if he were nonplussed. "I'm very fond
16602 of you; _by_ Jove, I am! There's nothing I like better than plaguing
16603 you--you're so like your mother, and I must do without it. But the
16604 brandy and the sovereign's a bargain."
16605
16606 He jerked forward the flask and Rigg went to a fine old oaken bureau
16607 with his keys. But Raffles had reminded himself by his movement with
16608 the flask that it had become dangerously loose from its leather
16609 covering, and catching sight of a folded paper which had fallen within
16610 the fender, he took it up and shoved it under the leather so as to make
16611 the glass firm.
16612
16613 By that time Rigg came forward with a brandy-bottle, filled the flask,
16614 and handed Raffles a sovereign, neither looking at him nor speaking to
16615 him. After locking up the bureau again, he walked to the window and
16616 gazed out as impassibly as he had done at the beginning of the
16617 interview, while Raffles took a small allowance from the flask, screwed
16618 it up, and deposited it in his side-pocket, with provoking slowness,
16619 making a grimace at his stepson's back.
16620
16621 "Farewell, Josh--and if forever!" said Raffles, turning back his head
16622 as he opened the door.
16623
16624 Rigg saw him leave the grounds and enter the lane. The gray day had
16625 turned to a light drizzling rain, which freshened the hedgerows and the
16626 grassy borders of the by-roads, and hastened the laborers who were
16627 loading the last shocks of corn. Raffles, walking with the uneasy gait
16628 of a town loiterer obliged to do a bit of country journeying on foot,
16629 looked as incongruous amid this moist rural quiet and industry as if he
16630 had been a baboon escaped from a menagerie. But there were none to
16631 stare at him except the long-weaned calves, and none to show dislike of
16632 his appearance except the little water-rats which rustled away at his
16633 approach.
16634
16635 He was fortunate enough when he got on to the highroad to be overtaken
16636 by the stage-coach, which carried him to Brassing; and there he took
16637 the new-made railway, observing to his fellow-passengers that he
16638 considered it pretty well seasoned now it had done for Huskisson. Mr.
16639 Raffles on most occasions kept up the sense of having been educated at
16640 an academy, and being able, if he chose, to pass well everywhere;
16641 indeed, there was not one of his fellow-men whom he did not feel
16642 himself in a position to ridicule and torment, confident of the
16643 entertainment which he thus gave to all the rest of the company.
16644
16645 He played this part now with as much spirit as if his journey had been
16646 entirely successful, resorting at frequent intervals to his flask. The
16647 paper with which he had wedged it was a letter signed Nicholas
16648 Bulstrode, but Raffles was not likely to disturb it from its present
16649 useful position.
16650
16651
16652
16653 CHAPTER XLII.
16654
16655 "How much, methinks, I could despise this man
16656 Were I not bound in charity against it!
16657 --SHAKESPEARE: Henry VIII.
16658
16659
16660 One of the professional calls made by Lydgate soon after his return
16661 from his wedding-journey was to Lowick Manor, in consequence of a
16662 letter which had requested him to fix a time for his visit.
16663
16664 Mr. Casaubon had never put any question concerning the nature of his
16665 illness to Lydgate, nor had he even to Dorothea betrayed any anxiety as
16666 to how far it might be likely to cut short his labors or his life. On
16667 this point, as on all others, he shrank from pity; and if the suspicion
16668 of being pitied for anything in his lot surmised or known in spite of
16669 himself was embittering, the idea of calling forth a show of compassion
16670 by frankly admitting an alarm or a sorrow was necessarily intolerable
16671 to him. Every proud mind knows something of this experience, and
16672 perhaps it is only to be overcome by a sense of fellowship deep enough
16673 to make all efforts at isolation seem mean and petty instead of
16674 exalting.
16675
16676 But Mr. Casaubon was now brooding over something through which the
16677 question of his health and life haunted his silence with a more
16678 harassing importunity even than through the autumnal unripeness of his
16679 authorship. It is true that this last might be called his central
16680 ambition; but there are some kinds of authorship in which by far the
16681 largest result is the uneasy susceptibility accumulated in the
16682 consciousness of the author--one knows of the river by a few streaks
16683 amid a long-gathered deposit of uncomfortable mud. That was the way
16684 with Mr. Casaubon's hard intellectual labors. Their most
16685 characteristic result was not the "Key to all Mythologies," but a
16686 morbid consciousness that others did not give him the place which he
16687 had not demonstrably merited--a perpetual suspicious conjecture that
16688 the views entertained of him were not to his advantage--a melancholy
16689 absence of passion in his efforts at achievement, and a passionate
16690 resistance to the confession that he had achieved nothing.
16691
16692 Thus his intellectual ambition which seemed to others to have absorbed
16693 and dried him, was really no security against wounds, least of all
16694 against those which came from Dorothea. And he had begun now to frame
16695 possibilities for the future which were somehow more embittering to him
16696 than anything his mind had dwelt on before.
16697
16698 Against certain facts he was helpless: against Will Ladislaw's
16699 existence, his defiant stay in the neighborhood of Lowick, and his
16700 flippant state of mind with regard to the possessors of authentic,
16701 well-stamped erudition: against Dorothea's nature, always taking on
16702 some new shape of ardent activity, and even in submission and silence
16703 covering fervid reasons which it was an irritation to think of: against
16704 certain notions and likings which had taken possession of her mind in
16705 relation to subjects that he could not possibly discuss with her.
16706 There was no denying that Dorothea was as virtuous and lovely a young
16707 lady as he could have obtained for a wife; but a young lady turned out
16708 to be something more troublesome than he had conceived. She nursed
16709 him, she read to him, she anticipated his wants, and was solicitous
16710 about his feelings; but there had entered into the husband's mind the
16711 certainty that she judged him, and that her wifely devotedness was like
16712 a penitential expiation of unbelieving thoughts--was accompanied with a
16713 power of comparison by which himself and his doings were seen too
16714 luminously as a part of things in general. His discontent passed
16715 vapor-like through all her gentle loving manifestations, and clung to
16716 that inappreciative world which she had only brought nearer to him.
16717
16718 Poor Mr. Casaubon! This suffering was the harder to bear because it
16719 seemed like a betrayal: the young creature who had worshipped him with
16720 perfect trust had quickly turned into the critical wife; and early
16721 instances of criticism and resentment had made an impression which no
16722 tenderness and submission afterwards could remove. To his suspicious
16723 interpretation Dorothea's silence now was a suppressed rebellion; a
16724 remark from her which he had not in any way anticipated was an
16725 assertion of conscious superiority; her gentle answers had an
16726 irritating cautiousness in them; and when she acquiesced it was a
16727 self-approved effort of forbearance. The tenacity with which he strove
16728 to hide this inward drama made it the more vivid for him; as we hear
16729 with the more keenness what we wish others not to hear.
16730
16731 Instead of wondering at this result of misery in Mr. Casaubon, I think
16732 it quite ordinary. Will not a tiny speck very close to our vision blot
16733 out the glory of the world, and leave only a margin by which we see the
16734 blot? I know no speck so troublesome as self. And who, if Mr.
16735 Casaubon had chosen to expound his discontents--his suspicions that he
16736 was not any longer adored without criticism--could have denied that
16737 they were founded on good reasons? On the contrary, there was a strong
16738 reason to be added, which he had not himself taken explicitly into
16739 account--namely, that he was not unmixedly adorable. He suspected
16740 this, however, as he suspected other things, without confessing it, and
16741 like the rest of us, felt how soothing it would have been to have a
16742 companion who would never find it out.
16743
16744 This sore susceptibility in relation to Dorothea was thoroughly
16745 prepared before Will Ladislaw had returned to Lowick, and what had
16746 occurred since then had brought Mr. Casaubon's power of suspicious
16747 construction into exasperated activity. To all the facts which he
16748 knew, he added imaginary facts both present and future which became
16749 more real to him than those because they called up a stronger dislike,
16750 a more predominating bitterness. Suspicion and jealousy of Will
16751 Ladislaw's intentions, suspicion and jealousy of Dorothea's
16752 impressions, were constantly at their weaving work. It would be quite
16753 unjust to him to suppose that he could have entered into any coarse
16754 misinterpretation of Dorothea: his own habits of mind and conduct,
16755 quite as much as the open elevation of her nature, saved him from any
16756 such mistake. What he was jealous of was her opinion, the sway that
16757 might be given to her ardent mind in its judgments, and the future
16758 possibilities to which these might lead her. As to Will, though until
16759 his last defiant letter he had nothing definite which he would choose
16760 formally to allege against him, he felt himself warranted in believing
16761 that he was capable of any design which could fascinate a rebellious
16762 temper and an undisciplined impulsiveness. He was quite sure that
16763 Dorothea was the cause of Will's return from Rome, and his
16764 determination to settle in the neighborhood; and he was penetrating
16765 enough to imagine that Dorothea had innocently encouraged this course.
16766 It was as clear as possible that she was ready to be attached to Will
16767 and to be pliant to his suggestions: they had never had a tete-a-tete
16768 without her bringing away from it some new troublesome impression, and
16769 the last interview that Mr. Casaubon was aware of (Dorothea, on
16770 returning from Freshitt Hall, had for the first time been silent about
16771 having seen Will) had led to a scene which roused an angrier feeling
16772 against them both than he had ever known before. Dorothea's outpouring
16773 of her notions about money, in the darkness of the night, had done
16774 nothing but bring a mixture of more odious foreboding into her
16775 husband's mind.
16776
16777 And there was the shock lately given to his health always sadly present
16778 with him. He was certainly much revived; he had recovered all his
16779 usual power of work: the illness might have been mere fatigue, and
16780 there might still be twenty years of achievement before him, which
16781 would justify the thirty years of preparation. That prospect was made
16782 the sweeter by a flavor of vengeance against the hasty sneers of Carp &
16783 Company; for even when Mr. Casaubon was carrying his taper among the
16784 tombs of the past, those modern figures came athwart the dim light, and
16785 interrupted his diligent exploration. To convince Carp of his mistake,
16786 so that he would have to eat his own words with a good deal of
16787 indigestion, would be an agreeable accident of triumphant authorship,
16788 which the prospect of living to future ages on earth and to all
16789 eternity in heaven could not exclude from contemplation. Since, thus,
16790 the prevision of his own unending bliss could not nullify the bitter
16791 savors of irritated jealousy and vindictiveness, it is the less
16792 surprising that the probability of a transient earthly bliss for other
16793 persons, when he himself should have entered into glory, had not a
16794 potently sweetening effect. If the truth should be that some
16795 undermining disease was at work within him, there might be large
16796 opportunity for some people to be the happier when he was gone; and if
16797 one of those people should be Will Ladislaw, Mr. Casaubon objected so
16798 strongly that it seemed as if the annoyance would make part of his
16799 disembodied existence.
16800
16801 This is a very bare and therefore a very incomplete way of putting the
16802 case. The human soul moves in many channels, and Mr. Casaubon, we
16803 know, had a sense of rectitude and an honorable pride in satisfying the
16804 requirements of honor, which compelled him to find other reasons for
16805 his conduct than those of jealousy and vindictiveness. The way in
16806 which Mr. Casaubon put the case was this:--"In marrying Dorothea Brooke
16807 I had to care for her well-being in case of my death. But well-being
16808 is not to be secured by ample, independent possession of property; on
16809 the contrary, occasions might arise in which such possession might
16810 expose her to the more danger. She is ready prey to any man who knows
16811 how to play adroitly either on her affectionate ardor or her Quixotic
16812 enthusiasm; and a man stands by with that very intention in his mind--a
16813 man with no other principle than transient caprice, and who has a
16814 personal animosity towards me--I am sure of it--an animosity which is
16815 fed by the consciousness of his ingratitude, and which he has
16816 constantly vented in ridicule of which I am as well assured as if I had
16817 heard it. Even if I live I shall not be without uneasiness as to what
16818 he may attempt through indirect influence. This man has gained
16819 Dorothea's ear: he has fascinated her attention; he has evidently tried
16820 to impress her mind with the notion that he has claims beyond anything
16821 I have done for him. If I die--and he is waiting here on the watch for
16822 that--he will persuade her to marry him. That would be calamity for
16823 her and success for him. _She_ would not think it calamity: he would
16824 make her believe anything; she has a tendency to immoderate attachment
16825 which she inwardly reproaches me for not responding to, and already her
16826 mind is occupied with his fortunes. He thinks of an easy conquest and
16827 of entering into my nest. That I will hinder! Such a marriage would be
16828 fatal to Dorothea. Has he ever persisted in anything except from
16829 contradiction? In knowledge he has always tried to be showy at small
16830 cost. In religion he could be, as long as it suited him, the facile
16831 echo of Dorothea's vagaries. When was sciolism ever dissociated from
16832 laxity? I utterly distrust his morals, and it is my duty to hinder to
16833 the utmost the fulfilment of his designs."
16834
16835 The arrangements made by Mr. Casaubon on his marriage left strong
16836 measures open to him, but in ruminating on them his mind inevitably
16837 dwelt so much on the probabilities of his own life that the longing to
16838 get the nearest possible calculation had at last overcome his proud
16839 reticence, and had determined him to ask Lydgate's opinion as to the
16840 nature of his illness.
16841
16842 He had mentioned to Dorothea that Lydgate was coming by appointment at
16843 half-past three, and in answer to her anxious question, whether he had
16844 felt ill, replied,--"No, I merely wish to have his opinion concerning
16845 some habitual symptoms. You need not see him, my dear. I shall give
16846 orders that he may be sent to me in the Yew-tree Walk, where I shall be
16847 taking my usual exercise."
16848
16849 When Lydgate entered the Yew-tree Walk he saw Mr. Casaubon slowly
16850 receding with his hands behind him according to his habit, and his head
16851 bent forward. It was a lovely afternoon; the leaves from the lofty
16852 limes were falling silently across the sombre evergreens, while the
16853 lights and shadows slept side by side: there was no sound but the
16854 cawing of the rooks, which to the accustomed ear is a lullaby, or that
16855 last solemn lullaby, a dirge. Lydgate, conscious of an energetic frame
16856 in its prime, felt some compassion when the figure which he was likely
16857 soon to overtake turned round, and in advancing towards him showed more
16858 markedly than ever the signs of premature age--the student's bent
16859 shoulders, the emaciated limbs, and the melancholy lines of the mouth.
16860 "Poor fellow," he thought, "some men with his years are like lions; one
16861 can tell nothing of their age except that they are full grown."
16862
16863 "Mr. Lydgate," said Mr. Casaubon, with his invariably polite air, "I am
16864 exceedingly obliged to you for your punctuality. We will, if you
16865 please, carry on our conversation in walking to and fro."
16866
16867 "I hope your wish to see me is not due to the return of unpleasant
16868 symptoms," said Lydgate, filling up a pause.
16869
16870 "Not immediately--no. In order to account for that wish I must
16871 mention--what it were otherwise needless to refer to--that my life, on
16872 all collateral accounts insignificant, derives a possible importance
16873 from the incompleteness of labors which have extended through all its
16874 best years. In short, I have long had on hand a work which I would
16875 fain leave behind me in such a state, at least, that it might be
16876 committed to the press by--others. Were I assured that this is the
16877 utmost I can reasonably expect, that assurance would be a useful
16878 circumscription of my attempts, and a guide in both the positive and
16879 negative determination of my course."
16880
16881 Here Mr. Casaubon paused, removed one hand from his back and thrust it
16882 between the buttons of his single-breasted coat. To a mind largely
16883 instructed in the human destiny hardly anything could be more
16884 interesting than the inward conflict implied in his formal measured
16885 address, delivered with the usual sing-song and motion of the head.
16886 Nay, are there many situations more sublimely tragic than the struggle
16887 of the soul with the demand to renounce a work which has been all the
16888 significance of its life--a significance which is to vanish as the
16889 waters which come and go where no man has need of them? But there was
16890 nothing to strike others as sublime about Mr. Casaubon, and Lydgate,
16891 who had some contempt at hand for futile scholarship, felt a little
16892 amusement mingling with his pity. He was at present too ill acquainted
16893 with disaster to enter into the pathos of a lot where everything is
16894 below the level of tragedy except the passionate egoism of the sufferer.
16895
16896 "You refer to the possible hindrances from want of health?" he said,
16897 wishing to help forward Mr. Casaubon's purpose, which seemed to be
16898 clogged by some hesitation.
16899
16900 "I do. You have not implied to me that the symptoms which--I am bound
16901 to testify--you watched with scrupulous care, were those of a fatal
16902 disease. But were it so, Mr. Lydgate, I should desire to know the
16903 truth without reservation, and I appeal to you for an exact statement
16904 of your conclusions: I request it as a friendly service. If you can
16905 tell me that my life is not threatened by anything else than ordinary
16906 casualties, I shall rejoice, on grounds which I have already indicated.
16907 If not, knowledge of the truth is even more important to me."
16908
16909 "Then I can no longer hesitate as to my course," said Lydgate; "but the
16910 first thing I must impress on you is that my conclusions are doubly
16911 uncertain--uncertain not only because of my fallibility, but because
16912 diseases of the heart are eminently difficult to found predictions on.
16913 In any case, one can hardly increase appreciably the tremendous
16914 uncertainty of life."
16915
16916 Mr. Casaubon winced perceptibly, but bowed.
16917
16918 "I believe that you are suffering from what is called fatty
16919 degeneration of the heart, a disease which was first divined and
16920 explored by Laennec, the man who gave us the stethoscope, not so very
16921 many years ago. A good deal of experience--a more lengthened
16922 observation--is wanting on the subject. But after what you have said,
16923 it is my duty to tell you that death from this disease is often sudden.
16924 At the same time, no such result can be predicted. Your condition may
16925 be consistent with a tolerably comfortable life for another fifteen
16926 years, or even more. I could add no information to this beyond
16927 anatomical or medical details, which would leave expectation at
16928 precisely the same point." Lydgate's instinct was fine enough to tell
16929 him that plain speech, quite free from ostentatious caution, would be
16930 felt by Mr. Casaubon as a tribute of respect.
16931
16932 "I thank you, Mr. Lydgate," said Mr. Casaubon, after a moment's pause.
16933 "One thing more I have still to ask: did you communicate what you have
16934 now told me to Mrs. Casaubon?"
16935
16936 "Partly--I mean, as to the possible issues." Lydgate was going to
16937 explain why he had told Dorothea, but Mr. Casaubon, with an
16938 unmistakable desire to end the conversation, waved his hand slightly,
16939 and said again, "I thank you," proceeding to remark on the rare beauty
16940 of the day.
16941
16942 Lydgate, certain that his patient wished to be alone, soon left him;
16943 and the black figure with hands behind and head bent forward continued
16944 to pace the walk where the dark yew-trees gave him a mute companionship
16945 in melancholy, and the little shadows of bird or leaf that fleeted
16946 across the isles of sunlight, stole along in silence as in the presence
16947 of a sorrow. Here was a man who now for the first time found himself
16948 looking into the eyes of death--who was passing through one of those
16949 rare moments of experience when we feel the truth of a commonplace,
16950 which is as different from what we call knowing it, as the vision of
16951 waters upon the earth is different from the delirious vision of the
16952 water which cannot be had to cool the burning tongue. When the
16953 commonplace "We must all die" transforms itself suddenly into the acute
16954 consciousness "I must die--and soon," then death grapples us, and his
16955 fingers are cruel; afterwards, he may come to fold us in his arms as
16956 our mother did, and our last moment of dim earthly discerning may be
16957 like the first. To Mr. Casaubon now, it was as if he suddenly found
16958 himself on the dark river-brink and heard the plash of the oncoming
16959 oar, not discerning the forms, but expecting the summons. In such an
16960 hour the mind does not change its lifelong bias, but carries it onward
16961 in imagination to the other side of death, gazing backward--perhaps
16962 with the divine calm of beneficence, perhaps with the petty anxieties
16963 of self-assertion. What was Mr. Casaubon's bias his acts will give us a
16964 clew to. He held himself to be, with some private scholarly
16965 reservations, a believing Christian, as to estimates of the present and
16966 hopes of the future. But what we strive to gratify, though we may call
16967 it a distant hope, is an immediate desire: the future estate for which
16968 men drudge up city alleys exists already in their imagination and love.
16969 And Mr. Casaubon's immediate desire was not for divine communion and
16970 light divested of earthly conditions; his passionate longings, poor
16971 man, clung low and mist-like in very shady places.
16972
16973 Dorothea had been aware when Lydgate had ridden away, and she had
16974 stepped into the garden, with the impulse to go at once to her husband.
16975 But she hesitated, fearing to offend him by obtruding herself; for her
16976 ardor, continually repulsed, served, with her intense memory, to
16977 heighten her dread, as thwarted energy subsides into a shudder; and she
16978 wandered slowly round the nearer clumps of trees until she saw him
16979 advancing. Then she went towards him, and might have represented a
16980 heaven-sent angel coming with a promise that the short hours remaining
16981 should yet be filled with that faithful love which clings the closer to
16982 a comprehended grief. His glance in reply to hers was so chill that
16983 she felt her timidity increased; yet she turned and passed her hand
16984 through his arm.
16985
16986 Mr. Casaubon kept his hands behind him and allowed her pliant arm to
16987 cling with difficulty against his rigid arm.
16988
16989 There was something horrible to Dorothea in the sensation which this
16990 unresponsive hardness inflicted on her. That is a strong word, but not
16991 too strong: it is in these acts called trivialities that the seeds of
16992 joy are forever wasted, until men and women look round with haggard
16993 faces at the devastation their own waste has made, and say, the earth
16994 bears no harvest of sweetness--calling their denial knowledge. You may
16995 ask why, in the name of manliness, Mr. Casaubon should have behaved in
16996 that way. Consider that his was a mind which shrank from pity: have
16997 you ever watched in such a mind the effect of a suspicion that what is
16998 pressing it as a grief may be really a source of contentment, either
16999 actual or future, to the being who already offends by pitying?
17000 Besides, he knew little of Dorothea's sensations, and had not reflected
17001 that on such an occasion as the present they were comparable in
17002 strength to his own sensibilities about Carp's criticisms.
17003
17004 Dorothea did not withdraw her arm, but she could not venture to speak.
17005 Mr. Casaubon did not say, "I wish to be alone," but he directed his
17006 steps in silence towards the house, and as they entered by the glass
17007 door on this eastern side, Dorothea withdrew her arm and lingered on
17008 the matting, that she might leave her husband quite free. He entered
17009 the library and shut himself in, alone with his sorrow.
17010
17011 She went up to her boudoir. The open bow-window let in the serene
17012 glory of the afternoon lying in the avenue, where the lime-trees cast
17013 long shadows. But Dorothea knew nothing of the scene. She threw
17014 herself on a chair, not heeding that she was in the dazzling sun-rays:
17015 if there were discomfort in that, how could she tell that it was not
17016 part of her inward misery?
17017
17018 She was in the reaction of a rebellious anger stronger than any she had
17019 felt since her marriage. Instead of tears there came words:--
17020
17021 "What have I done--what am I--that he should treat me so? He never
17022 knows what is in my mind--he never cares. What is the use of anything
17023 I do? He wishes he had never married me."
17024
17025 She began to hear herself, and was checked into stillness. Like one
17026 who has lost his way and is weary, she sat and saw as in one glance all
17027 the paths of her young hope which she should never find again. And
17028 just as clearly in the miserable light she saw her own and her
17029 husband's solitude--how they walked apart so that she was obliged to
17030 survey him. If he had drawn her towards him, she would never have
17031 surveyed him--never have said, "Is he worth living for?" but would have
17032 felt him simply a part of her own life. Now she said bitterly, "It is
17033 his fault, not mine." In the jar of her whole being, Pity was
17034 overthrown. Was it her fault that she had believed in him--had
17035 believed in his worthiness?--And what, exactly, was he?-- She was able
17036 enough to estimate him--she who waited on his glances with trembling,
17037 and shut her best soul in prison, paying it only hidden visits, that
17038 she might be petty enough to please him. In such a crisis as this,
17039 some women begin to hate.
17040
17041 The sun was low when Dorothea was thinking that she would not go down
17042 again, but would send a message to her husband saying that she was not
17043 well and preferred remaining up-stairs. She had never deliberately
17044 allowed her resentment to govern her in this way before, but she
17045 believed now that she could not see him again without telling him the
17046 truth about her feeling, and she must wait till she could do it without
17047 interruption. He might wonder and be hurt at her message. It was good
17048 that he should wonder and be hurt. Her anger said, as anger is apt to
17049 say, that God was with her--that all heaven, though it were crowded
17050 with spirits watching them, must be on her side. She had determined to
17051 ring her bell, when there came a rap at the door.
17052
17053 Mr. Casaubon had sent to say that he would have his dinner in the
17054 library. He wished to be quite alone this evening, being much occupied.
17055
17056 "I shall not dine, then, Tantripp."
17057
17058 "Oh, madam, let me bring you a little something?"
17059
17060 "No; I am not well. Get everything ready in my dressing room, but pray
17061 do not disturb me again."
17062
17063 Dorothea sat almost motionless in her meditative struggle, while the
17064 evening slowly deepened into night. But the struggle changed
17065 continually, as that of a man who begins with a movement towards
17066 striking and ends with conquering his desire to strike. The energy
17067 that would animate a crime is not more than is wanted to inspire a
17068 resolved submission, when the noble habit of the soul reasserts itself.
17069 That thought with which Dorothea had gone out to meet her husband--her
17070 conviction that he had been asking about the possible arrest of all his
17071 work, and that the answer must have wrung his heart, could not be long
17072 without rising beside the image of him, like a shadowy monitor looking
17073 at her anger with sad remonstrance. It cost her a litany of pictured
17074 sorrows and of silent cries that she might be the mercy for those
17075 sorrows--but the resolved submission did come; and when the house was
17076 still, and she knew that it was near the time when Mr. Casaubon
17077 habitually went to rest, she opened her door gently and stood outside
17078 in the darkness waiting for his coming up-stairs with a light in his
17079 hand. If he did not come soon she thought that she would go down and
17080 even risk incurring another pang. She would never again expect
17081 anything else. But she did hear the library door open, and slowly the
17082 light advanced up the staircase without noise from the footsteps on the
17083 carpet. When her husband stood opposite to her, she saw that his face
17084 was more haggard. He started slightly on seeing her, and she looked up
17085 at him beseechingly, without speaking.
17086
17087 "Dorothea!" he said, with a gentle surprise in his tone. "Were you
17088 waiting for me?"
17089
17090 "Yes, I did not like to disturb you."
17091
17092 "Come, my dear, come. You are young, and need not to extend your life
17093 by watching."
17094
17095 When the kind quiet melancholy of that speech fell on Dorothea's ears,
17096 she felt something like the thankfulness that might well up in us if we
17097 had narrowly escaped hurting a lamed creature. She put her hand into
17098 her husband's, and they went along the broad corridor together.
17099
17100
17101
17102
17103
17104 BOOK V.
17105
17106
17107
17108
17109
17110 THE DEAD HAND.
17111
17112
17113
17114 CHAPTER XLIII.
17115
17116 This figure hath high price: 't was wrought with love
17117 Ages ago in finest ivory;
17118 Nought modish in it, pure and noble lines
17119 Of generous womanhood that fits all time
17120 That too is costly ware; majolica
17121 Of deft design, to please a lordly eye:
17122 The smile, you see, is perfect--wonderful
17123 As mere Faience! a table ornament
17124 To suit the richest mounting."
17125
17126
17127 Dorothea seldom left home without her husband, but she did occasionally
17128 drive into Middlemarch alone, on little errands of shopping or charity
17129 such as occur to every lady of any wealth when she lives within three
17130 miles of a town. Two days after that scene in the Yew-tree Walk, she
17131 determined to use such an opportunity in order if possible to see
17132 Lydgate, and learn from him whether her husband had really felt any
17133 depressing change of symptoms which he was concealing from her, and
17134 whether he had insisted on knowing the utmost about himself. She felt
17135 almost guilty in asking for knowledge about him from another, but the
17136 dread of being without it--the dread of that ignorance which would make
17137 her unjust or hard--overcame every scruple. That there had been some
17138 crisis in her husband's mind she was certain: he had the very next day
17139 begun a new method of arranging his notes, and had associated her quite
17140 newly in carrying out his plan. Poor Dorothea needed to lay up stores
17141 of patience.
17142
17143 It was about four o'clock when she drove to Lydgate's house in Lowick
17144 Gate, wishing, in her immediate doubt of finding him at home, that she
17145 had written beforehand. And he was not at home.
17146
17147 "Is Mrs. Lydgate at home?" said Dorothea, who had never, that she knew
17148 of, seen Rosamond, but now remembered the fact of the marriage. Yes,
17149 Mrs. Lydgate was at home.
17150
17151 "I will go in and speak to her, if she will allow me. Will you ask her
17152 if she can see me--see Mrs. Casaubon, for a few minutes?"
17153
17154 When the servant had gone to deliver that message, Dorothea could hear
17155 sounds of music through an open window--a few notes from a man's voice
17156 and then a piano bursting into roulades. But the roulades broke off
17157 suddenly, and then the servant came back saying that Mrs. Lydgate would
17158 be happy to see Mrs. Casaubon.
17159
17160 When the drawing-room door opened and Dorothea entered, there was a
17161 sort of contrast not infrequent in country life when the habits of the
17162 different ranks were less blent than now. Let those who know, tell us
17163 exactly what stuff it was that Dorothea wore in those days of mild
17164 autumn--that thin white woollen stuff soft to the touch and soft to the
17165 eye. It always seemed to have been lately washed, and to smell of the
17166 sweet hedges--was always in the shape of a pelisse with sleeves hanging
17167 all out of the fashion. Yet if she had entered before a still audience
17168 as Imogene or Cato's daughter, the dress might have seemed right
17169 enough: the grace and dignity were in her limbs and neck; and about her
17170 simply parted hair and candid eyes the large round poke which was then
17171 in the fate of women, seemed no more odd as a head-dress than the gold
17172 trencher we call a halo. By the present audience of two persons, no
17173 dramatic heroine could have been expected with more interest than Mrs.
17174 Casaubon. To Rosamond she was one of those county divinities not
17175 mixing with Middlemarch mortality, whose slightest marks of manner or
17176 appearance were worthy of her study; moreover, Rosamond was not without
17177 satisfaction that Mrs. Casaubon should have an opportunity of studying
17178 _her_. What is the use of being exquisite if you are not seen by the
17179 best judges? and since Rosamond had received the highest compliments at
17180 Sir Godwin Lydgate's, she felt quite confident of the impression she
17181 must make on people of good birth. Dorothea put out her hand with her
17182 usual simple kindness, and looked admiringly at Lydgate's lovely
17183 bride--aware that there was a gentleman standing at a distance, but
17184 seeing him merely as a coated figure at a wide angle. The gentleman
17185 was too much occupied with the presence of the one woman to reflect on
17186 the contrast between the two--a contrast that would certainly have been
17187 striking to a calm observer. They were both tall, and their eyes were
17188 on a level; but imagine Rosamond's infantine blondness and wondrous
17189 crown of hair-plaits, with her pale-blue dress of a fit and fashion so
17190 perfect that no dressmaker could look at it without emotion, a large
17191 embroidered collar which it was to be hoped all beholders would know
17192 the price of, her small hands duly set off with rings, and that
17193 controlled self-consciousness of manner which is the expensive
17194 substitute for simplicity.
17195
17196 "Thank you very much for allowing me to interrupt you," said Dorothea,
17197 immediately. "I am anxious to see Mr. Lydgate, if possible, before I
17198 go home, and I hoped that you might possibly tell me where I could find
17199 him, or even allow me to wait for him, if you expect him soon."
17200
17201 "He is at the New Hospital," said Rosamond; "I am not sure how soon he
17202 will come home. But I can send for him."
17203
17204 "Will you let me go and fetch him?" said Will Ladislaw, coming forward.
17205 He had already taken up his hat before Dorothea entered. She colored
17206 with surprise, but put out her hand with a smile of unmistakable
17207 pleasure, saying--
17208
17209 "I did not know it was you: I had no thought of seeing you here."
17210
17211 "May I go to the Hospital and tell Mr. Lydgate that you wish to see
17212 him?" said Will.
17213
17214 "It would be quicker to send the carriage for him," said Dorothea, "if
17215 you will be kind enough to give the message to the coachman."
17216
17217 Will was moving to the door when Dorothea, whose mind had flashed in an
17218 instant over many connected memories, turned quickly and said, "I will
17219 go myself, thank you. I wish to lose no time before getting home
17220 again. I will drive to the Hospital and see Mr. Lydgate there. Pray
17221 excuse me, Mrs. Lydgate. I am very much obliged to you."
17222
17223 Her mind was evidently arrested by some sudden thought, and she left
17224 the room hardly conscious of what was immediately around her--hardly
17225 conscious that Will opened the door for her and offered her his arm to
17226 lead her to the carriage. She took the arm but said nothing. Will was
17227 feeling rather vexed and miserable, and found nothing to say on his
17228 side. He handed her into the carriage in silence, they said good-by,
17229 and Dorothea drove away.
17230
17231 In the five minutes' drive to the Hospital she had time for some
17232 reflections that were quite new to her. Her decision to go, and her
17233 preoccupation in leaving the room, had come from the sudden sense that
17234 there would be a sort of deception in her voluntarily allowing any
17235 further intercourse between herself and Will which she was unable to
17236 mention to her husband, and already her errand in seeking Lydgate was a
17237 matter of concealment. That was all that had been explicitly in her
17238 mind; but she had been urged also by a vague discomfort. Now that she
17239 was alone in her drive, she heard the notes of the man's voice and the
17240 accompanying piano, which she had not noted much at the time, returning
17241 on her inward sense; and she found herself thinking with some wonder
17242 that Will Ladislaw was passing his time with Mrs. Lydgate in her
17243 husband's absence. And then she could not help remembering that he had
17244 passed some time with her under like circumstances, so why should there
17245 be any unfitness in the fact? But Will was Mr. Casaubon's relative,
17246 and one towards whom she was bound to show kindness. Still there had
17247 been signs which perhaps she ought to have understood as implying that
17248 Mr. Casaubon did not like his cousin's visits during his own absence.
17249 "Perhaps I have been mistaken in many things," said poor Dorothea to
17250 herself, while the tears came rolling and she had to dry them quickly.
17251 She felt confusedly unhappy, and the image of Will which had been so
17252 clear to her before was mysteriously spoiled. But the carriage stopped
17253 at the gate of the Hospital. She was soon walking round the grass
17254 plots with Lydgate, and her feelings recovered the strong bent which
17255 had made her seek for this interview.
17256
17257 Will Ladislaw, meanwhile, was mortified, and knew the reason of it
17258 clearly enough. His chances of meeting Dorothea were rare; and here
17259 for the first time there had come a chance which had set him at a
17260 disadvantage. It was not only, as it had been hitherto, that she was
17261 not supremely occupied with him, but that she had seen him under
17262 circumstances in which he might appear not to be supremely occupied
17263 with her. He felt thrust to a new distance from her, amongst the
17264 circles of Middlemarchers who made no part of her life. But that was
17265 not his fault: of course, since he had taken his lodgings in the town,
17266 he had been making as many acquaintances as he could, his position
17267 requiring that he should know everybody and everything. Lydgate was
17268 really better worth knowing than any one else in the neighborhood, and
17269 he happened to have a wife who was musical and altogether worth calling
17270 upon. Here was the whole history of the situation in which Diana had
17271 descended too unexpectedly on her worshipper. It was mortifying. Will
17272 was conscious that he should not have been at Middlemarch but for
17273 Dorothea; and yet his position there was threatening to divide him from
17274 her with those barriers of habitual sentiment which are more fatal to
17275 the persistence of mutual interest than all the distance between Rome
17276 and Britain. Prejudices about rank and status were easy enough to defy
17277 in the form of a tyrannical letter from Mr. Casaubon; but prejudices,
17278 like odorous bodies, have a double existence both solid and subtle--solid
17279 as the pyramids, subtle as the twentieth echo of an echo, or as
17280 the memory of hyacinths which once scented the darkness. And Will was
17281 of a temperament to feel keenly the presence of subtleties: a man of
17282 clumsier perceptions would not have felt, as he did, that for the first
17283 time some sense of unfitness in perfect freedom with him had sprung up
17284 in Dorothea's mind, and that their silence, as he conducted her to the
17285 carriage, had had a chill in it. Perhaps Casaubon, in his hatred and
17286 jealousy, had been insisting to Dorothea that Will had slid below her
17287 socially. Confound Casaubon!
17288
17289 Will re-entered the drawing-room, took up his hat, and looking
17290 irritated as he advanced towards Mrs. Lydgate, who had seated herself
17291 at her work-table, said--
17292
17293 "It is always fatal to have music or poetry interrupted. May I come
17294 another day and just finish about the rendering of 'Lungi dal caro
17295 bene'?"
17296
17297 "I shall be happy to be taught," said Rosamond. "But I am sure you
17298 admit that the interruption was a very beautiful one. I quite envy
17299 your acquaintance with Mrs. Casaubon. Is she very clever? She looks
17300 as if she were."
17301
17302 "Really, I never thought about it," said Will, sulkily.
17303
17304 "That is just the answer Tertius gave me, when I first asked him if she
17305 were handsome. What is it that you gentlemen are thinking of when you
17306 are with Mrs. Casaubon?"
17307
17308 "Herself," said Will, not indisposed to provoke the charming Mrs.
17309 Lydgate. "When one sees a perfect woman, one never thinks of her
17310 attributes--one is conscious of her presence."
17311
17312 "I shall be jealous when Tertius goes to Lowick," said Rosamond,
17313 dimpling, and speaking with aery lightness. "He will come back and
17314 think nothing of me."
17315
17316 "That does not seem to have been the effect on Lydgate hitherto. Mrs.
17317 Casaubon is too unlike other women for them to be compared with her."
17318
17319 "You are a devout worshipper, I perceive. You often see her, I
17320 suppose."
17321
17322 "No," said Will, almost pettishly. "Worship is usually a matter of
17323 theory rather than of practice. But I am practising it to excess just
17324 at this moment--I must really tear myself away."
17325
17326 "Pray come again some evening: Mr. Lydgate will like to hear the music,
17327 and I cannot enjoy it so well without him."
17328
17329 When her husband was at home again, Rosamond said, standing in front of
17330 him and holding his coat-collar with both her hands, "Mr. Ladislaw was
17331 here singing with me when Mrs. Casaubon came in. He seemed vexed. Do
17332 you think he disliked her seeing him at our house? Surely your
17333 position is more than equal to his--whatever may be his relation to the
17334 Casaubons."
17335
17336 "No, no; it must be something else if he were really vexed, Ladislaw is
17337 a sort of gypsy; he thinks nothing of leather and prunella."
17338
17339 "Music apart, he is not always very agreeable. Do you like him?"
17340
17341 "Yes: I think he is a good fellow: rather miscellaneous and
17342 bric-a-brac, but likable."
17343
17344 "Do you know, I think he adores Mrs. Casaubon."
17345
17346 "Poor devil!" said Lydgate, smiling and pinching his wife's ears.
17347
17348 Rosamond felt herself beginning to know a great deal of the world,
17349 especially in discovering what when she was in her unmarried girlhood
17350 had been inconceivable to her except as a dim tragedy in by-gone
17351 costumes--that women, even after marriage, might make conquests and
17352 enslave men. At that time young ladies in the country, even when
17353 educated at Mrs. Lemon's, read little French literature later than
17354 Racine, and public prints had not cast their present magnificent
17355 illumination over the scandals of life. Still, vanity, with a woman's
17356 whole mind and day to work in, can construct abundantly on slight
17357 hints, especially on such a hint as the possibility of indefinite
17358 conquests. How delightful to make captives from the throne of marriage
17359 with a husband as crown-prince by your side--himself in fact a
17360 subject--while the captives look up forever hopeless, losing their
17361 rest probably, and if their appetite too, so much the better! But
17362 Rosamond's romance turned at present chiefly on her crown-prince, and
17363 it was enough to enjoy his assured subjection. When he said, "Poor
17364 devil!" she asked, with playful curiosity--
17365
17366 "Why so?"
17367
17368 "Why, what can a man do when he takes to adoring one of you mermaids?
17369 He only neglects his work and runs up bills."
17370
17371 "I am sure you do not neglect your work. You are always at the
17372 Hospital, or seeing poor patients, or thinking about some doctor's
17373 quarrel; and then at home you always want to pore over your microscope
17374 and phials. Confess you like those things better than me."
17375
17376 "Haven't you ambition enough to wish that your husband should be
17377 something better than a Middlemarch doctor?" said Lydgate, letting his
17378 hands fall on to his wife's shoulders, and looking at her with
17379 affectionate gravity. "I shall make you learn my favorite bit from an
17380 old poet--
17381
17382 'Why should our pride make such a stir to be
17383 And be forgot? What good is like to this,
17384 To do worthy the writing, and to write
17385 Worthy the reading and the worlds delight?'
17386
17387 What I want, Rosy, is to do worthy the writing,--and to write out
17388 myself what I have done. A man must work, to do that, my pet."
17389
17390 "Of course, I wish you to make discoveries: no one could more wish you
17391 to attain a high position in some better place than Middlemarch. You
17392 cannot say that I have ever tried to hinder you from working. But we
17393 cannot live like hermits. You are not discontented with me, Tertius?"
17394
17395 "No, dear, no. I am too entirely contented."
17396
17397 "But what did Mrs. Casaubon want to say to you?"
17398
17399 "Merely to ask about her husband's health. But I think she is going to
17400 be splendid to our New Hospital: I think she will give us two hundred
17401 a-year."
17402
17403
17404
17405 CHAPTER XLIV.
17406
17407 I would not creep along the coast but steer
17408 Out in mid-sea, by guidance of the stars.
17409
17410
17411 When Dorothea, walking round the laurel-planted plots of the New
17412 Hospital with Lydgate, had learned from him that there were no signs of
17413 change in Mr. Casaubon's bodily condition beyond the mental sign of
17414 anxiety to know the truth about his illness, she was silent for a few
17415 moments, wondering whether she had said or done anything to rouse this
17416 new anxiety. Lydgate, not willing to let slip an opportunity of
17417 furthering a favorite purpose, ventured to say--
17418
17419 "I don't know whether your or Mr.--Casaubon's attention has been drawn
17420 to the needs of our New Hospital. Circumstances have made it seem
17421 rather egotistic in me to urge the subject; but that is not my fault:
17422 it is because there is a fight being made against it by the other
17423 medical men. I think you are generally interested in such things, for
17424 I remember that when I first had the pleasure of seeing you at Tipton
17425 Grange before your marriage, you were asking me some questions about
17426 the way in which the health of the poor was affected by their miserable
17427 housing."
17428
17429 "Yes, indeed," said Dorothea, brightening. "I shall be quite grateful
17430 to you if you will tell me how I can help to make things a little
17431 better. Everything of that sort has slipped away from me since I have
17432 been married. I mean," she said, after a moment's hesitation, "that
17433 the people in our village are tolerably comfortable, and my mind has
17434 been too much taken up for me to inquire further. But here--in such a
17435 place as Middlemarch--there must be a great deal to be done."
17436
17437 "There is everything to be done," said Lydgate, with abrupt energy.
17438 "And this Hospital is a capital piece of work, due entirely to Mr.
17439 Bulstrode's exertions, and in a great degree to his money. But one man
17440 can't do everything in a scheme of this sort. Of course he looked
17441 forward to help. And now there's a mean, petty feud set up against the
17442 thing in the town, by certain persons who want to make it a failure."
17443
17444 "What can be their reasons?" said Dorothea, with naive surprise.
17445
17446 "Chiefly Mr. Bulstrode's unpopularity, to begin with. Half the town
17447 would almost take trouble for the sake of thwarting him. In this
17448 stupid world most people never consider that a thing is good to be done
17449 unless it is done by their own set. I had no connection with Bulstrode
17450 before I came here. I look at him quite impartially, and I see that he
17451 has some notions--that he has set things on foot--which I can turn to
17452 good public purpose. If a fair number of the better educated men went
17453 to work with the belief that their observations might contribute to the
17454 reform of medical doctrine and practice, we should soon see a change
17455 for the better. That's my point of view. I hold that by refusing to
17456 work with Mr. Bulstrode I should be turning my back on an opportunity
17457 of making my profession more generally serviceable."
17458
17459 "I quite agree with you," said Dorothea, at once fascinated by the
17460 situation sketched in Lydgate's words. "But what is there against Mr.
17461 Bulstrode? I know that my uncle is friendly with him."
17462
17463 "People don't like his religious tone," said Lydgate, breaking off
17464 there.
17465
17466 "That is all the stronger reason for despising such an opposition,"
17467 said Dorothea, looking at the affairs of Middlemarch by the light of
17468 the great persecutions.
17469
17470 "To put the matter quite fairly, they have other objections to him:--he
17471 is masterful and rather unsociable, and he is concerned with trade,
17472 which has complaints of its own that I know nothing about. But what
17473 has that to do with the question whether it would not be a fine thing
17474 to establish here a more valuable hospital than any they have in the
17475 county? The immediate motive to the opposition, however, is the fact
17476 that Bulstrode has put the medical direction into my hands. Of course
17477 I am glad of that. It gives me an opportunity of doing some good
17478 work,--and I am aware that I have to justify his choice of me. But the
17479 consequence is, that the whole profession in Middlemarch have set
17480 themselves tooth and nail against the Hospital, and not only refuse to
17481 cooperate themselves, but try to blacken the whole affair and hinder
17482 subscriptions."
17483
17484 "How very petty!" exclaimed Dorothea, indignantly.
17485
17486 "I suppose one must expect to fight one's way: there is hardly anything
17487 to be done without it. And the ignorance of people about here is
17488 stupendous. I don't lay claim to anything else than having used some
17489 opportunities which have not come within everybody's reach; but there
17490 is no stifling the offence of being young, and a new-comer, and
17491 happening to know something more than the old inhabitants. Still, if I
17492 believe that I can set going a better method of treatment--if I
17493 believe that I can pursue certain observations and inquiries which may
17494 be a lasting benefit to medical practice, I should be a base truckler
17495 if I allowed any consideration of personal comfort to hinder me. And
17496 the course is all the clearer from there being no salary in question to
17497 put my persistence in an equivocal light."
17498
17499 "I am glad you have told me this, Mr. Lydgate," said Dorothea,
17500 cordially. "I feel sure I can help a little. I have some money, and
17501 don't know what to do with it--that is often an uncomfortable thought
17502 to me. I am sure I can spare two hundred a-year for a grand purpose
17503 like this. How happy you must be, to know things that you feel sure
17504 will do great good! I wish I could awake with that knowledge every
17505 morning. There seems to be so much trouble taken that one can hardly
17506 see the good of!"
17507
17508 There was a melancholy cadence in Dorothea's voice as she spoke these
17509 last words. But she presently added, more cheerfully, "Pray come to
17510 Lowick and tell us more of this. I will mention the subject to Mr.
17511 Casaubon. I must hasten home now."
17512
17513 She did mention it that evening, and said that she should like to
17514 subscribe two hundred a-year--she had seven hundred a-year as the
17515 equivalent of her own fortune, settled on her at her marriage. Mr.
17516 Casaubon made no objection beyond a passing remark that the sum might
17517 be disproportionate in relation to other good objects, but when
17518 Dorothea in her ignorance resisted that suggestion, he acquiesced. He
17519 did not care himself about spending money, and was not reluctant to
17520 give it. If he ever felt keenly any question of money it was through
17521 the medium of another passion than the love of material property.
17522
17523 Dorothea told him that she had seen Lydgate, and recited the gist of
17524 her conversation with him about the Hospital. Mr. Casaubon did not
17525 question her further, but he felt sure that she had wished to know what
17526 had passed between Lydgate and himself. "She knows that I know," said
17527 the ever-restless voice within; but that increase of tacit knowledge
17528 only thrust further off any confidence between them. He distrusted her
17529 affection; and what loneliness is more lonely than distrust?
17530
17531
17532
17533 CHAPTER XLV.
17534
17535 It is the humor of many heads to extol the days of their
17536 forefathers, and declaim against the wickedness of times
17537 present. Which notwithstanding they cannot handsomely do,
17538 without the borrowed help and satire of times past;
17539 condemning the vices of their own times, by the expressions
17540 of vices in times which they commend, which cannot but argue
17541 the community of vice in both. Horace, therefore, Juvenal,
17542 and Persius, were no prophets, although their lines did seem
17543 to indigitate and point at our times.--SIR THOMAS BROWNE:
17544 Pseudodoxia Epidemica.
17545
17546
17547 That opposition to the New Fever Hospital which Lydgate had sketched to
17548 Dorothea was, like other oppositions, to be viewed in many different
17549 lights. He regarded it as a mixture of jealousy and dunderheaded
17550 prejudice. Mr. Bulstrode saw in it not only medical jealousy but a
17551 determination to thwart himself, prompted mainly by a hatred of that
17552 vital religion of which he had striven to be an effectual lay
17553 representative--a hatred which certainly found pretexts apart from
17554 religion such as were only too easy to find in the entanglements of
17555 human action. These might be called the ministerial views. But
17556 oppositions have the illimitable range of objections at command, which
17557 need never stop short at the boundary of knowledge, but can draw
17558 forever on the vasts of ignorance. What the opposition in Middlemarch
17559 said about the New Hospital and its administration had certainly a
17560 great deal of echo in it, for heaven has taken care that everybody
17561 shall not be an originator; but there were differences which
17562 represented every social shade between the polished moderation of Dr.
17563 Minchin and the trenchant assertion of Mrs. Dollop, the landlady of the
17564 Tankard in Slaughter Lane.
17565
17566 Mrs. Dollop became more and more convinced by her own asseveration,
17567 that Dr. Lydgate meant to let the people die in the Hospital, if not to
17568 poison them, for the sake of cutting them up without saying by your
17569 leave or with your leave; for it was a known "fac" that he had wanted
17570 to cut up Mrs. Goby, as respectable a woman as any in Parley Street,
17571 who had money in trust before her marriage--a poor tale for a doctor,
17572 who if he was good for anything should know what was the matter with
17573 you before you died, and not want to pry into your inside after you
17574 were gone. If that was not reason, Mrs. Dollop wished to know what
17575 was; but there was a prevalent feeling in her audience that her opinion
17576 was a bulwark, and that if it were overthrown there would be no limits
17577 to the cutting-up of bodies, as had been well seen in Burke and Hare
17578 with their pitch-plaisters--such a hanging business as that was not
17579 wanted in Middlemarch!
17580
17581 And let it not be supposed that opinion at the Tankard in Slaughter
17582 Lane was unimportant to the medical profession: that old authentic
17583 public-house--the original Tankard, known by the name of Dollop's--was
17584 the resort of a great Benefit Club, which had some months before put to
17585 the vote whether its long-standing medical man, "Doctor Gambit," should
17586 not be cashiered in favor of "this Doctor Lydgate," who was capable of
17587 performing the most astonishing cures, and rescuing people altogether
17588 given up by other practitioners. But the balance had been turned
17589 against Lydgate by two members, who for some private reasons held that
17590 this power of resuscitating persons as good as dead was an equivocal
17591 recommendation, and might interfere with providential favors. In the
17592 course of the year, however, there had been a change in the public
17593 sentiment, of which the unanimity at Dollop's was an index.
17594
17595 A good deal more than a year ago, before anything was known of
17596 Lydgate's skill, the judgments on it had naturally been divided,
17597 depending on a sense of likelihood, situated perhaps in the pit of the
17598 stomach or in the pineal gland, and differing in its verdicts, but not
17599 the less valuable as a guide in the total deficit of evidence.
17600 Patients who had chronic diseases or whose lives had long been worn
17601 threadbare, like old Featherstone's, had been at once inclined to try
17602 him; also, many who did not like paying their doctor's bills, thought
17603 agreeably of opening an account with a new doctor and sending for him
17604 without stint if the children's temper wanted a dose, occasions when
17605 the old practitioners were often crusty; and all persons thus inclined
17606 to employ Lydgate held it likely that he was clever. Some considered
17607 that he might do more than others "where there was liver;"--at least
17608 there would be no harm in getting a few bottles of "stuff" from him,
17609 since if these proved useless it would still be possible to return to
17610 the Purifying Pills, which kept you alive if they did not remove the
17611 yellowness. But these were people of minor importance. Good
17612 Middlemarch families were of course not going to change their doctor
17613 without reason shown; and everybody who had employed Mr. Peacock did
17614 not feel obliged to accept a new man merely in the character of his
17615 successor, objecting that he was "not likely to be equal to Peacock."
17616
17617 But Lydgate had not been long in the town before there were particulars
17618 enough reported of him to breed much more specific expectations and to
17619 intensify differences into partisanship; some of the particulars being
17620 of that impressive order of which the significance is entirely hidden,
17621 like a statistical amount without a standard of comparison, but with a
17622 note of exclamation at the end. The cubic feet of oxygen yearly
17623 swallowed by a full-grown man--what a shudder they might have created
17624 in some Middlemarch circles! "Oxygen! nobody knows what that may
17625 be--is it any wonder the cholera has got to Dantzic? And yet there are
17626 people who say quarantine is no good!"
17627
17628 One of the facts quickly rumored was that Lydgate did not dispense
17629 drugs. This was offensive both to the physicians whose exclusive
17630 distinction seemed infringed on, and to the surgeon-apothecaries with
17631 whom he ranged himself; and only a little while before, they might have
17632 counted on having the law on their side against a man who without
17633 calling himself a London-made M.D. dared to ask for pay except as a
17634 charge on drugs. But Lydgate had not been experienced enough to
17635 foresee that his new course would be even more offensive to the laity;
17636 and to Mr. Mawmsey, an important grocer in the Top Market, who, though
17637 not one of his patients, questioned him in an affable manner on the
17638 subject, he was injudicious enough to give a hasty popular explanation
17639 of his reasons, pointing out to Mr. Mawmsey that it must lower the
17640 character of practitioners, and be a constant injury to the public, if
17641 their only mode of getting paid for their work was by their making out
17642 long bills for draughts, boluses, and mixtures.
17643
17644 "It is in that way that hard-working medical men may come to be almost
17645 as mischievous as quacks," said Lydgate, rather thoughtlessly. "To get
17646 their own bread they must overdose the king's lieges; and that's a bad
17647 sort of treason, Mr. Mawmsey--undermines the constitution in a fatal
17648 way."
17649
17650 Mr. Mawmsey was not only an overseer (it was about a question of
17651 outdoor pay that he was having an interview with Lydgate), he was also
17652 asthmatic and had an increasing family: thus, from a medical point of
17653 view, as well as from his own, he was an important man; indeed, an
17654 exceptional grocer, whose hair was arranged in a flame-like pyramid,
17655 and whose retail deference was of the cordial, encouraging
17656 kind--jocosely complimentary, and with a certain considerate abstinence
17657 from letting out the full force of his mind. It was Mr. Mawmsey's
17658 friendly jocoseness in questioning him which had set the tone of
17659 Lydgate's reply. But let the wise be warned against too great
17660 readiness at explanation: it multiplies the sources of mistake,
17661 lengthening the sum for reckoners sure to go wrong.
17662
17663 Lydgate smiled as he ended his speech, putting his foot into the
17664 stirrup, and Mr. Mawmsey laughed more than he would have done if he had
17665 known who the king's lieges were, giving his "Good morning, sir,
17666 good-morning, sir," with the air of one who saw everything clearly
17667 enough. But in truth his views were perturbed. For years he had been
17668 paying bills with strictly made items, so that for every half-crown and
17669 eighteen-pence he was certain something measurable had been delivered.
17670 He had done this with satisfaction, including it among his
17671 responsibilities as a husband and father, and regarding a longer bill
17672 than usual as a dignity worth mentioning. Moreover, in addition to the
17673 massive benefit of the drugs to "self and family," he had enjoyed the
17674 pleasure of forming an acute judgment as to their immediate effects, so
17675 as to give an intelligent statement for the guidance of Mr. Gambit--a
17676 practitioner just a little lower in status than Wrench or Toller, and
17677 especially esteemed as an accoucheur, of whose ability Mr. Mawmsey had
17678 the poorest opinion on all other points, but in doctoring, he was wont
17679 to say in an undertone, he placed Gambit above any of them.
17680
17681 Here were deeper reasons than the superficial talk of a new man, which
17682 appeared still flimsier in the drawing-room over the shop, when they
17683 were recited to Mrs. Mawmsey, a woman accustomed to be made much of as
17684 a fertile mother,--generally under attendance more or less frequent
17685 from Mr. Gambit, and occasionally having attacks which required Dr.
17686 Minchin.
17687
17688 "Does this Mr. Lydgate mean to say there is no use in taking medicine?"
17689 said Mrs. Mawmsey, who was slightly given to drawling. "I should like
17690 him to tell me how I could bear up at Fair time, if I didn't take
17691 strengthening medicine for a month beforehand. Think of what I have to
17692 provide for calling customers, my dear!"--here Mrs. Mawmsey turned to
17693 an intimate female friend who sat by--"a large veal pie--a stuffed
17694 fillet--a round of beef--ham, tongue, et cetera, et cetera! But what
17695 keeps me up best is the pink mixture, not the brown. I wonder, Mr.
17696 Mawmsey, with _your_ experience, you could have patience to listen. I
17697 should have told him at once that I knew a little better than that."
17698
17699 "No, no, no," said Mr. Mawmsey; "I was not going to tell him my
17700 opinion. Hear everything and judge for yourself is my motto. But he
17701 didn't know who he was talking to. I was not to be turned on _his_
17702 finger. People often pretend to tell me things, when they might as
17703 well say, 'Mawmsey, you're a fool.' But I smile at it: I humor
17704 everybody's weak place. If physic had done harm to self and family, I
17705 should have found it out by this time."
17706
17707 The next day Mr. Gambit was told that Lydgate went about saying physic
17708 was of no use.
17709
17710 "Indeed!" said he, lifting his eyebrows with cautious surprise. (He
17711 was a stout husky man with a large ring on his fourth finger.) "How
17712 will he cure his patients, then?"
17713
17714 "That is what I say," returned Mrs. Mawmsey, who habitually gave weight
17715 to her speech by loading her pronouns. "Does _he_ suppose that people
17716 will pay him only to come and sit with them and go away again?"
17717
17718 Mrs. Mawmsey had had a great deal of sitting from Mr. Gambit, including
17719 very full accounts of his own habits of body and other affairs; but of
17720 course he knew there was no innuendo in her remark, since his spare
17721 time and personal narrative had never been charged for. So he replied,
17722 humorously--
17723
17724 "Well, Lydgate is a good-looking young fellow, you know."
17725
17726 "Not one that I would employ," said Mrs. Mawmsey. "_Others_ may do as
17727 they please."
17728
17729 Hence Mr. Gambit could go away from the chief grocer's without fear of
17730 rivalry, but not without a sense that Lydgate was one of those
17731 hypocrites who try to discredit others by advertising their own
17732 honesty, and that it might be worth some people's while to show him up.
17733 Mr. Gambit, however, had a satisfactory practice, much pervaded by the
17734 smells of retail trading which suggested the reduction of cash payments
17735 to a balance. And he did not think it worth his while to show Lydgate
17736 up until he knew how. He had not indeed great resources of education,
17737 and had had to work his own way against a good deal of professional
17738 contempt; but he made none the worse accoucheur for calling the
17739 breathing apparatus "longs."
17740
17741 Other medical men felt themselves more capable. Mr. Toller shared the
17742 highest practice in the town and belonged to an old Middlemarch family:
17743 there were Tollers in the law and everything else above the line of
17744 retail trade. Unlike our irascible friend Wrench, he had the easiest
17745 way in the world of taking things which might be supposed to annoy him,
17746 being a well-bred, quietly facetious man, who kept a good house, was
17747 very fond of a little sporting when he could get it, very friendly with
17748 Mr. Hawley, and hostile to Mr. Bulstrode. It may seem odd that with
17749 such pleasant habits he should have been given to the heroic treatment,
17750 bleeding and blistering and starving his patients, with a dispassionate
17751 disregard to his personal example; but the incongruity favored the
17752 opinion of his ability among his patients, who commonly observed that
17753 Mr. Toller had lazy manners, but his treatment was as active as you
17754 could desire: no man, said they, carried more seriousness into his
17755 profession: he was a little slow in coming, but when he came, he _did_
17756 something. He was a great favorite in his own circle, and whatever he
17757 implied to any one's disadvantage told doubly from his careless
17758 ironical tone.
17759
17760 He naturally got tired of smiling and saying, "Ah!" when he was told
17761 that Mr. Peacock's successor did not mean to dispense medicines; and
17762 Mr. Hackbutt one day mentioning it over the wine at a dinner-party, Mr.
17763 Toller said, laughingly, "Dibbitts will get rid of his stale drugs,
17764 then. I'm fond of little Dibbitts--I'm glad he's in luck."
17765
17766 "I see your meaning, Toller," said Mr. Hackbutt, "and I am entirely of
17767 your opinion. I shall take an opportunity of expressing myself to that
17768 effect. A medical man should be responsible for the quality of the
17769 drugs consumed by his patients. That is the rationale of the system of
17770 charging which has hitherto obtained; and nothing is more offensive
17771 than this ostentation of reform, where there is no real amelioration."
17772
17773 "Ostentation, Hackbutt?" said Mr. Toller, ironically. "I don't see
17774 that. A man can't very well be ostentatious of what nobody believes
17775 in. There's no reform in the matter: the question is, whether the
17776 profit on the drugs is paid to the medical man by the druggist or by
17777 the patient, and whether there shall be extra pay under the name of
17778 attendance."
17779
17780 "Ah, to be sure; one of your damned new versions of old humbug," said
17781 Mr. Hawley, passing the decanter to Mr. Wrench.
17782
17783 Mr. Wrench, generally abstemious, often drank wine rather freely at a
17784 party, getting the more irritable in consequence.
17785
17786 "As to humbug, Hawley," he said, "that's a word easy to fling about.
17787 But what I contend against is the way medical men are fouling their own
17788 nest, and setting up a cry about the country as if a general
17789 practitioner who dispenses drugs couldn't be a gentleman. I throw back
17790 the imputation with scorn. I say, the most ungentlemanly trick a man
17791 can be guilty of is to come among the members of his profession with
17792 innovations which are a libel on their time-honored procedure. That is
17793 my opinion, and I am ready to maintain it against any one who
17794 contradicts me." Mr. Wrench's voice had become exceedingly sharp.
17795
17796 "I can't oblige you there, Wrench," said Mr. Hawley, thrusting his
17797 hands into his trouser-pockets.
17798
17799 "My dear fellow," said Mr. Toller, striking in pacifically, and looking
17800 at Mr. Wrench, "the physicians have their toes trodden on more than we
17801 have. If you come to dignity it is a question for Minchin and Sprague."
17802
17803 "Does medical jurisprudence provide nothing against these
17804 infringements?" said Mr. Hackbutt, with a disinterested desire to offer
17805 his lights. "How does the law stand, eh, Hawley?"
17806
17807 "Nothing to be done there," said Mr. Hawley. "I looked into it for
17808 Sprague. You'd only break your nose against a damned judge's decision."
17809
17810 "Pooh! no need of law," said Mr. Toller. "So far as practice is
17811 concerned the attempt is an absurdity. No patient will like
17812 it--certainly not Peacock's, who have been used to depletion. Pass the
17813 wine."
17814
17815 Mr. Toller's prediction was partly verified. If Mr. and Mrs. Mawmsey,
17816 who had no idea of employing Lydgate, were made uneasy by his supposed
17817 declaration against drugs, it was inevitable that those who called him
17818 in should watch a little anxiously to see whether he did "use all the
17819 means he might use" in the case. Even good Mr. Powderell, who in his
17820 constant charity of interpretation was inclined to esteem Lydgate the
17821 more for what seemed a conscientious pursuit of a better plan, had his
17822 mind disturbed with doubts during his wife's attack of erysipelas, and
17823 could not abstain from mentioning to Lydgate that Mr. Peacock on a
17824 similar occasion had administered a series of boluses which were not
17825 otherwise definable than by their remarkable effect in bringing Mrs.
17826 Powderell round before Michaelmas from an illness which had begun in a
17827 remarkably hot August. At last, indeed, in the conflict between his
17828 desire not to hurt Lydgate and his anxiety that no "means" should be
17829 lacking, he induced his wife privately to take Widgeon's Purifying
17830 Pills, an esteemed Middlemarch medicine, which arrested every disease
17831 at the fountain by setting to work at once upon the blood. This
17832 co-operative measure was not to be mentioned to Lydgate, and Mr.
17833 Powderell himself had no certain reliance on it, only hoping that it
17834 might be attended with a blessing.
17835
17836 But in this doubtful stage of Lydgate's introduction he was helped by
17837 what we mortals rashly call good fortune. I suppose no doctor ever
17838 came newly to a place without making cures that surprised somebody--cures
17839 which may be called fortune's testimonials, and deserve as much
17840 credit as the written or printed kind. Various patients got well while
17841 Lydgate was attending them, some even of dangerous illnesses; and it
17842 was remarked that the new doctor with his new ways had at least the
17843 merit of bringing people back from the brink of death. The trash
17844 talked on such occasions was the more vexatious to Lydgate, because it
17845 gave precisely the sort of prestige which an incompetent and
17846 unscrupulous man would desire, and was sure to be imputed to him by the
17847 simmering dislike of the other medical men as an encouragement on his
17848 own part of ignorant puffing. But even his proud outspokenness was
17849 checked by the discernment that it was as useless to fight against the
17850 interpretations of ignorance as to whip the fog; and "good fortune"
17851 insisted on using those interpretations.
17852
17853 Mrs. Larcher having just become charitably concerned about alarming
17854 symptoms in her charwoman, when Dr. Minchin called, asked him to see
17855 her then and there, and to give her a certificate for the Infirmary;
17856 whereupon after examination he wrote a statement of the case as one of
17857 tumor, and recommended the bearer Nancy Nash as an out-patient. Nancy,
17858 calling at home on her way to the Infirmary, allowed the stay maker and
17859 his wife, in whose attic she lodged, to read Dr. Minchin's paper, and
17860 by this means became a subject of compassionate conversation in the
17861 neighboring shops of Churchyard Lane as being afflicted with a tumor at
17862 first declared to be as large and hard as a duck's egg, but later in
17863 the day to be about the size of "your fist." Most hearers agreed that
17864 it would have to be cut out, but one had known of oil and another of
17865 "squitchineal" as adequate to soften and reduce any lump in the body
17866 when taken enough of into the inside--the oil by gradually "soopling,"
17867 the squitchineal by eating away.
17868
17869 Meanwhile when Nancy presented herself at the Infirmary, it happened to
17870 be one of Lydgate's days there. After questioning and examining her,
17871 Lydgate said to the house-surgeon in an undertone, "It's not tumor:
17872 it's cramp." He ordered her a blister and some steel mixture, and told
17873 her to go home and rest, giving her at the same time a note to Mrs.
17874 Larcher, who, she said, was her best employer, to testify that she was
17875 in need of good food.
17876
17877 But by-and-by Nancy, in her attic, became portentously worse, the
17878 supposed tumor having indeed given way to the blister, but only
17879 wandered to another region with angrier pain. The staymaker's wife
17880 went to fetch Lydgate, and he continued for a fortnight to attend Nancy
17881 in her own home, until under his treatment she got quite well and went
17882 to work again. But the case continued to be described as one of tumor
17883 in Churchyard Lane and other streets--nay, by Mrs. Larcher also; for
17884 when Lydgate's remarkable cure was mentioned to Dr. Minchin, he
17885 naturally did not like to say, "The case was not one of tumor, and I
17886 was mistaken in describing it as such," but answered, "Indeed! ah! I
17887 saw it was a surgical case, not of a fatal kind." He had been inwardly
17888 annoyed, however, when he had asked at the Infirmary about the woman he
17889 had recommended two days before, to hear from the house-surgeon, a
17890 youngster who was not sorry to vex Minchin with impunity, exactly what
17891 had occurred: he privately pronounced that it was indecent in a general
17892 practitioner to contradict a physician's diagnosis in that open manner,
17893 and afterwards agreed with Wrench that Lydgate was disagreeably
17894 inattentive to etiquette. Lydgate did not make the affair a ground for
17895 valuing himself or (very particularly) despising Minchin, such
17896 rectification of misjudgments often happening among men of equal
17897 qualifications. But report took up this amazing case of tumor, not
17898 clearly distinguished from cancer, and considered the more awful for
17899 being of the wandering sort; till much prejudice against Lydgate's
17900 method as to drugs was overcome by the proof of his marvellous skill in
17901 the speedy restoration of Nancy Nash after she had been rolling and
17902 rolling in agonies from the presence of a tumor both hard and
17903 obstinate, but nevertheless compelled to yield.
17904
17905 How could Lydgate help himself? It is offensive to tell a lady when
17906 she is expressing her amazement at your skill, that she is altogether
17907 mistaken and rather foolish in her amazement. And to have entered into
17908 the nature of diseases would only have added to his breaches of medical
17909 propriety. Thus he had to wince under a promise of success given by
17910 that ignorant praise which misses every valid quality.
17911
17912 In the case of a more conspicuous patient, Mr. Borthrop Trumbull,
17913 Lydgate was conscious of having shown himself something better than an
17914 every-day doctor, though here too it was an equivocal advantage that he
17915 won. The eloquent auctioneer was seized with pneumonia, and having
17916 been a patient of Mr. Peacock's, sent for Lydgate, whom he had
17917 expressed his intention to patronize. Mr Trumbull was a robust man, a
17918 good subject for trying the expectant theory upon--watching the course
17919 of an interesting disease when left as much as possible to itself, so
17920 that the stages might be noted for future guidance; and from the air
17921 with which he described his sensations Lydgate surmised that he would
17922 like to be taken into his medical man's confidence, and be represented
17923 as a partner in his own cure. The auctioneer heard, without much
17924 surprise, that his was a constitution which (always with due watching)
17925 might be left to itself, so as to offer a beautiful example of a
17926 disease with all its phases seen in clear delineation, and that he
17927 probably had the rare strength of mind voluntarily to become the test
17928 of a rational procedure, and thus make the disorder of his pulmonary
17929 functions a general benefit to society.
17930
17931 Mr. Trumbull acquiesced at once, and entered strongly into the view
17932 that an illness of his was no ordinary occasion for medical science.
17933
17934 "Never fear, sir; you are not speaking to one who is altogether
17935 ignorant of the vis medicatrix," said he, with his usual superiority of
17936 expression, made rather pathetic by difficulty of breathing. And he
17937 went without shrinking through his abstinence from drugs, much
17938 sustained by application of the thermometer which implied the
17939 importance of his temperature, by the sense that he furnished objects
17940 for the microscope, and by learning many new words which seemed suited
17941 to the dignity of his secretions. For Lydgate was acute enough to
17942 indulge him with a little technical talk.
17943
17944 It may be imagined that Mr. Trumbull rose from his couch with a
17945 disposition to speak of an illness in which he had manifested the
17946 strength of his mind as well as constitution; and he was not backward
17947 in awarding credit to the medical man who had discerned the quality of
17948 patient he had to deal with. The auctioneer was not an ungenerous man,
17949 and liked to give others their due, feeling that he could afford it.
17950 He had caught the words "expectant method," and rang chimes on this and
17951 other learned phrases to accompany the assurance that Lydgate "knew a
17952 thing or two more than the rest of the doctors--was far better versed
17953 in the secrets of his profession than the majority of his compeers."
17954
17955 This had happened before the affair of Fred Vincy's illness had given
17956 to Mr. Wrench's enmity towards Lydgate more definite personal ground.
17957 The new-comer already threatened to be a nuisance in the shape of
17958 rivalry, and was certainly a nuisance in the shape of practical
17959 criticism or reflections on his hard-driven elders, who had had
17960 something else to do than to busy themselves with untried notions. His
17961 practice had spread in one or two quarters, and from the first the
17962 report of his high family had led to his being pretty generally
17963 invited, so that the other medical men had to meet him at dinner in the
17964 best houses; and having to meet a man whom you dislike is not observed
17965 always to end in a mutual attachment. There was hardly ever so much
17966 unanimity among them as in the opinion that Lydgate was an arrogant
17967 young fellow, and yet ready for the sake of ultimately predominating to
17968 show a crawling subservience to Bulstrode. That Mr. Farebrother, whose
17969 name was a chief flag of the anti-Bulstrode party, always defended
17970 Lydgate and made a friend of him, was referred to Farebrother's
17971 unaccountable way of fighting on both sides.
17972
17973 Here was plenty of preparation for the outburst of professional disgust
17974 at the announcement of the laws Mr. Bulstrode was laying down for the
17975 direction of the New Hospital, which were the more exasperating because
17976 there was no present possibility of interfering with his will and
17977 pleasure, everybody except Lord Medlicote having refused help towards
17978 the building, on the ground that they preferred giving to the Old
17979 Infirmary. Mr. Bulstrode met all the expenses, and had ceased to be
17980 sorry that he was purchasing the right to carry out his notions of
17981 improvement without hindrance from prejudiced coadjutors; but he had
17982 had to spend large sums, and the building had lingered. Caleb Garth
17983 had undertaken it, had failed during its progress, and before the
17984 interior fittings were begun had retired from the management of the
17985 business; and when referring to the Hospital he often said that however
17986 Bulstrode might ring if you tried him, he liked good solid carpentry
17987 and masonry, and had a notion both of drains and chimneys. In fact,
17988 the Hospital had become an object of intense interest to Bulstrode, and
17989 he would willingly have continued to spare a large yearly sum that he
17990 might rule it dictatorially without any Board; but he had another
17991 favorite object which also required money for its accomplishment: he
17992 wished to buy some land in the neighborhood of Middlemarch, and
17993 therefore he wished to get considerable contributions towards
17994 maintaining the Hospital. Meanwhile he framed his plan of management.
17995 The Hospital was to be reserved for fever in all its forms; Lydgate was
17996 to be chief medical superintendent, that he might have free authority
17997 to pursue all comparative investigations which his studies,
17998 particularly in Paris, had shown him the importance of, the other
17999 medical visitors having a consultative influence, but no power to
18000 contravene Lydgate's ultimate decisions; and the general management was
18001 to be lodged exclusively in the hands of five directors associated with
18002 Mr. Bulstrode, who were to have votes in the ratio of their
18003 contributions, the Board itself filling up any vacancy in its numbers,
18004 and no mob of small contributors being admitted to a share of
18005 government.
18006
18007 There was an immediate refusal on the part of every medical man in the
18008 town to become a visitor at the Fever Hospital.
18009
18010 "Very well," said Lydgate to Mr. Bulstrode, "we have a capital
18011 house-surgeon and dispenser, a clear-headed, neat-handed fellow; we'll
18012 get Webbe from Crabsley, as good a country practitioner as any of them,
18013 to come over twice a-week, and in case of any exceptional operation,
18014 Protheroe will come from Brassing. I must work the harder, that's all,
18015 and I have given up my post at the Infirmary. The plan will flourish
18016 in spite of them, and then they'll be glad to come in. Things can't
18017 last as they are: there must be all sorts of reform soon, and then
18018 young fellows may be glad to come and study here." Lydgate was in high
18019 spirits.
18020
18021 "I shall not flinch, you may depend upon it, Mr. Lydgate," said Mr.
18022 Bulstrode. "While I see you carrying out high intentions with vigor,
18023 you shall have my unfailing support. And I have humble confidence that
18024 the blessing which has hitherto attended my efforts against the spirit
18025 of evil in this town will not be withdrawn. Suitable directors to
18026 assist me I have no doubt of securing. Mr. Brooke of Tipton has
18027 already given me his concurrence, and a pledge to contribute yearly: he
18028 has not specified the sum--probably not a great one. But he will be a
18029 useful member of the board."
18030
18031 A useful member was perhaps to be defined as one who would originate
18032 nothing, and always vote with Mr. Bulstrode.
18033
18034 The medical aversion to Lydgate was hardly disguised now. Neither Dr.
18035 Sprague nor Dr. Minchin said that he disliked Lydgate's knowledge, or
18036 his disposition to improve treatment: what they disliked was his
18037 arrogance, which nobody felt to be altogether deniable. They implied
18038 that he was insolent, pretentious, and given to that reckless
18039 innovation for the sake of noise and show which was the essence of the
18040 charlatan.
18041
18042 The word charlatan once thrown on the air could not be let drop. In
18043 those days the world was agitated about the wondrous doings of Mr. St.
18044 John Long, "noblemen and gentlemen" attesting his extraction of a fluid
18045 like mercury from the temples of a patient.
18046
18047 Mr. Toller remarked one day, smilingly, to Mrs. Taft, that "Bulstrode
18048 had found a man to suit him in Lydgate; a charlatan in religion is sure
18049 to like other sorts of charlatans."
18050
18051 "Yes, indeed, I can imagine," said Mrs. Taft, keeping the number of
18052 thirty stitches carefully in her mind all the while; "there are so many
18053 of that sort. I remember Mr. Cheshire, with his irons, trying to make
18054 people straight when the Almighty had made them crooked."
18055
18056 "No, no," said Mr. Toller, "Cheshire was all right--all fair and above
18057 board. But there's St. John Long--that's the kind of fellow we call a
18058 charlatan, advertising cures in ways nobody knows anything about: a
18059 fellow who wants to make a noise by pretending to go deeper than other
18060 people. The other day he was pretending to tap a man's brain and get
18061 quicksilver out of it."
18062
18063 "Good gracious! what dreadful trifling with people's constitutions!"
18064 said Mrs. Taft.
18065
18066 After this, it came to be held in various quarters that Lydgate played
18067 even with respectable constitutions for his own purposes, and how much
18068 more likely that in his flighty experimenting he should make sixes and
18069 sevens of hospital patients. Especially it was to be expected, as the
18070 landlady of the Tankard had said, that he would recklessly cut up their
18071 dead bodies. For Lydgate having attended Mrs. Goby, who died
18072 apparently of a heart-disease not very clearly expressed in the
18073 symptoms, too daringly asked leave of her relatives to open the body,
18074 and thus gave an offence quickly spreading beyond Parley Street, where
18075 that lady had long resided on an income such as made this association
18076 of her body with the victims of Burke and Hare a flagrant insult to her
18077 memory.
18078
18079 Affairs were in this stage when Lydgate opened the subject of the
18080 Hospital to Dorothea. We see that he was bearing enmity and silly
18081 misconception with much spirit, aware that they were partly created by
18082 his good share of success.
18083
18084 "They will not drive me away," he said, talking confidentially in Mr.
18085 Farebrother's study. "I have got a good opportunity here, for the ends
18086 I care most about; and I am pretty sure to get income enough for our
18087 wants. By-and-by I shall go on as quietly as possible: I have no
18088 seductions now away from home and work. And I am more and more
18089 convinced that it will be possible to demonstrate the homogeneous
18090 origin of all the tissues. Raspail and others are on the same track,
18091 and I have been losing time."
18092
18093 "I have no power of prophecy there," said Mr. Farebrother, who had been
18094 puffing at his pipe thoughtfully while Lydgate talked; "but as to the
18095 hostility in the town, you'll weather it if you are prudent."
18096
18097 "How am I to be prudent?" said Lydgate, "I just do what comes before me
18098 to do. I can't help people's ignorance and spite, any more than
18099 Vesalius could. It isn't possible to square one's conduct to silly
18100 conclusions which nobody can foresee."
18101
18102 "Quite true; I didn't mean that. I meant only two things. One is,
18103 keep yourself as separable from Bulstrode as you can: of course, you
18104 can go on doing good work of your own by his help; but don't get tied.
18105 Perhaps it seems like personal feeling in me to say so--and there's a
18106 good deal of that, I own--but personal feeling is not always in the
18107 wrong if you boil it down to the impressions which make it simply an
18108 opinion."
18109
18110 "Bulstrode is nothing to me," said Lydgate, carelessly, "except on
18111 public grounds. As to getting very closely united to him, I am not
18112 fond enough of him for that. But what was the other thing you meant?"
18113 said Lydgate, who was nursing his leg as comfortably as possible, and
18114 feeling in no great need of advice.
18115
18116 "Why, this. Take care--experto crede--take care not to get hampered
18117 about money matters. I know, by a word you let fall one day, that you
18118 don't like my playing at cards so much for money. You are right enough
18119 there. But try and keep clear of wanting small sums that you haven't
18120 got. I am perhaps talking rather superfluously; but a man likes to
18121 assume superiority over himself, by holding up his bad example and
18122 sermonizing on it."
18123
18124 Lydgate took Mr. Farebrother's hints very cordially, though he would
18125 hardly have borne them from another man. He could not help remembering
18126 that he had lately made some debts, but these had seemed inevitable,
18127 and he had no intention now to do more than keep house in a simple way.
18128 The furniture for which he owed would not want renewing; nor even the
18129 stock of wine for a long while.
18130
18131 Many thoughts cheered him at that time--and justly. A man conscious of
18132 enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty hostilities by the
18133 memory of great workers who had to fight their way not without wounds,
18134 and who hover in his mind as patron saints, invisibly helping. At
18135 home, that same evening when he had been chatting with Mr. Farebrother,
18136 he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and
18137 his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating
18138 attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after
18139 another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he
18140 was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious
18141 sea-breezes.
18142
18143 There was something very fine in Lydgate's look just then, and any one
18144 might have been encouraged to bet on his achievement. In his dark eyes
18145 and on his mouth and brow there was that placidity which comes from the
18146 fulness of contemplative thought--the mind not searching, but
18147 beholding, and the glance seeming to be filled with what is behind it.
18148
18149 Presently Rosamond left the piano and seated herself on a chair close
18150 to the sofa and opposite her husband's face.
18151
18152 "Is that enough music for you, my lord?" she said, folding her hands
18153 before her and putting on a little air of meekness.
18154
18155 "Yes, dear, if you are tired," said Lydgate, gently, turning his eyes
18156 and resting them on her, but not otherwise moving. Rosamond's presence
18157 at that moment was perhaps no more than a spoonful brought to the lake,
18158 and her woman's instinct in this matter was not dull.
18159
18160
18161 "What is absorbing you?" she said, leaning forward and bringing her
18162 face nearer to his.
18163
18164 He moved his hands and placed them gently behind her shoulders.
18165
18166 "I am thinking of a great fellow, who was about as old as I am three
18167 hundred years ago, and had already begun a new era in anatomy."
18168
18169 "I can't guess," said Rosamond, shaking her head. "We used to play at
18170 guessing historical characters at Mrs. Lemon's, but not anatomists."
18171
18172 "I'll tell you. His name was Vesalius. And the only way he could get
18173 to know anatomy as he did, was by going to snatch bodies at night, from
18174 graveyards and places of execution."
18175
18176 "Oh!" said Rosamond, with a look of disgust on her pretty face, "I am
18177 very glad you are not Vesalius. I should have thought he might find
18178 some less horrible way than that."
18179
18180 "No, he couldn't," said Lydgate, going on too earnestly to take much
18181 notice of her answer. "He could only get a complete skeleton by
18182 snatching the whitened bones of a criminal from the gallows, and
18183 burying them, and fetching them away by bits secretly, in the dead of
18184 night."
18185
18186 "I hope he is not one of your great heroes," said Rosamond, half
18187 playfully, half anxiously, "else I shall have you getting up in the
18188 night to go to St. Peter's churchyard. You know how angry you told me
18189 the people were about Mrs. Goby. You have enemies enough already."
18190
18191 "So had Vesalius, Rosy. No wonder the medical fogies in Middlemarch
18192 are jealous, when some of the greatest doctors living were fierce upon
18193 Vesalius because they had believed in Galen, and he showed that Galen
18194 was wrong. They called him a liar and a poisonous monster. But the
18195 facts of the human frame were on his side; and so he got the better of
18196 them."
18197
18198 "And what happened to him afterwards?" said Rosamond, with some
18199 interest.
18200
18201 "Oh, he had a good deal of fighting to the last. And they did
18202 exasperate him enough at one time to make him burn a good deal of his
18203 work. Then he got shipwrecked just as he was coming from Jerusalem to
18204 take a great chair at Padua. He died rather miserably."
18205
18206 There was a moment's pause before Rosamond said, "Do you know, Tertius,
18207 I often wish you had not been a medical man."
18208
18209 "Nay, Rosy, don't say that," said Lydgate, drawing her closer to him.
18210 "That is like saying you wish you had married another man."
18211
18212 "Not at all; you are clever enough for anything: you might easily have
18213 been something else. And your cousins at Quallingham all think that
18214 you have sunk below them in your choice of a profession."
18215
18216 "The cousins at Quallingham may go to the devil!" said Lydgate, with
18217 scorn. "It was like their impudence if they said anything of the sort
18218 to you."
18219
18220 "Still," said Rosamond, "I do _not_ think it is a nice profession,
18221 dear." We know that she had much quiet perseverance in her opinion.
18222
18223 "It is the grandest profession in the world, Rosamond," said Lydgate,
18224 gravely. "And to say that you love me without loving the medical man
18225 in me, is the same sort of thing as to say that you like eating a peach
18226 but don't like its flavor. Don't say that again, dear, it pains me."
18227
18228 "Very well, Doctor Grave-face," said Rosy, dimpling, "I will declare in
18229 future that I dote on skeletons, and body-snatchers, and bits of things
18230 in phials, and quarrels with everybody, that end in your dying
18231 miserably."
18232
18233 "No, no, not so bad as that," said Lydgate, giving up remonstrance and
18234 petting her resignedly.
18235
18236
18237
18238 CHAPTER XLVI.
18239
18240 Pues no podemos haber aquello que queremos, queramos
18241 aquello que podremos.
18242
18243 Since we cannot get what we like, let us like
18244 what we can get.
18245 --Spanish Proverb.
18246
18247
18248 While Lydgate, safely married and with the Hospital under his command,
18249 felt himself struggling for Medical Reform against Middlemarch,
18250 Middlemarch was becoming more and more conscious of the national
18251 struggle for another kind of Reform.
18252
18253 By the time that Lord John Russell's measure was being debated in the
18254 House of Commons, there was a new political animation in Middlemarch,
18255 and a new definition of parties which might show a decided change of
18256 balance if a new election came. And there were some who already
18257 predicted this event, declaring that a Reform Bill would never be
18258 carried by the actual Parliament. This was what Will Ladislaw dwelt on
18259 to Mr. Brooke as a reason for congratulation that he had not yet tried
18260 his strength at the hustings.
18261
18262 "Things will grow and ripen as if it were a comet year," said Will.
18263 "The public temper will soon get to a cometary heat, now the question
18264 of Reform has set in. There is likely to be another election before
18265 long, and by that time Middlemarch will have got more ideas into its
18266 head. What we have to work at now is the 'Pioneer' and political
18267 meetings."
18268
18269 "Quite right, Ladislaw; we shall make a new thing of opinion here,"
18270 said Mr. Brooke. "Only I want to keep myself independent about Reform,
18271 you know; I don't want to go too far. I want to take up
18272 Wilberforce's and Romilly's line, you know, and work at Negro
18273 Emancipation, Criminal Law--that kind of thing. But of course I should
18274 support Grey."
18275
18276 "If you go in for the principle of Reform, you must be prepared to take
18277 what the situation offers," said Will. "If everybody pulled for his
18278 own bit against everybody else, the whole question would go to tatters."
18279
18280 "Yes, yes, I agree with you--I quite take that point of view. I should
18281 put it in that light. I should support Grey, you know. But I don't
18282 want to change the balance of the constitution, and I don't think Grey
18283 would."
18284
18285 "But that is what the country wants," said Will. "Else there would be
18286 no meaning in political unions or any other movement that knows what
18287 it's about. It wants to have a House of Commons which is not weighted
18288 with nominees of the landed class, but with representatives of the
18289 other interests. And as to contending for a reform short of that, it
18290 is like asking for a bit of an avalanche which has already begun to
18291 thunder."
18292
18293 "That is fine, Ladislaw: that is the way to put it. Write that down,
18294 now. We must begin to get documents about the feeling of the country,
18295 as well as the machine-breaking and general distress."
18296
18297 "As to documents," said Will, "a two-inch card will hold plenty. A few
18298 rows of figures are enough to deduce misery from, and a few more will
18299 show the rate at which the political determination of the people is
18300 growing."
18301
18302 "Good: draw that out a little more at length, Ladislaw. That is an
18303 idea, now: write it out in the 'Pioneer.' Put the figures and deduce
18304 the misery, you know; and put the other figures and deduce--and so on.
18305 You have a way of putting things. Burke, now:--when I think of Burke,
18306 I can't help wishing somebody had a pocket-borough to give you,
18307 Ladislaw. You'd never get elected, you know. And we shall always want
18308 talent in the House: reform as we will, we shall always want talent.
18309 That avalanche and the thunder, now, was really a little like Burke. I
18310 want that sort of thing--not ideas, you know, but a way of putting
18311 them."
18312
18313 "Pocket-boroughs would be a fine thing," said Ladislaw, "if they were
18314 always in the right pocket, and there were always a Burke at hand."
18315
18316 Will was not displeased with that complimentary comparison, even from
18317 Mr. Brooke; for it is a little too trying to human flesh to be
18318 conscious of expressing one's self better than others and never to have
18319 it noticed, and in the general dearth of admiration for the right
18320 thing, even a chance bray of applause falling exactly in time is rather
18321 fortifying. Will felt that his literary refinements were usually
18322 beyond the limits of Middlemarch perception; nevertheless, he was
18323 beginning thoroughly to like the work of which when he began he had
18324 said to himself rather languidly, "Why not?"--and he studied the
18325 political situation with as ardent an interest as he had ever given to
18326 poetic metres or mediaevalism. It is undeniable that but for the
18327 desire to be where Dorothea was, and perhaps the want of knowing what
18328 else to do, Will would not at this time have been meditating on the
18329 needs of the English people or criticising English statesmanship: he
18330 would probably have been rambling in Italy sketching plans for several
18331 dramas, trying prose and finding it too jejune, trying verse and
18332 finding it too artificial, beginning to copy "bits" from old pictures,
18333 leaving off because they were "no good," and observing that, after all,
18334 self-culture was the principal point; while in politics he would have
18335 been sympathizing warmly with liberty and progress in general. Our
18336 sense of duty must often wait for some work which shall take the place
18337 of dilettanteism and make us feel that the quality of our action is not
18338 a matter of indifference.
18339
18340 Ladislaw had now accepted his bit of work, though it was not that
18341 indeterminate loftiest thing which he had once dreamed of as alone
18342 worthy of continuous effort. His nature warmed easily in the presence
18343 of subjects which were visibly mixed with life and action, and the
18344 easily stirred rebellion in him helped the glow of public spirit. In
18345 spite of Mr. Casaubon and the banishment from Lowick, he was rather
18346 happy; getting a great deal of fresh knowledge in a vivid way and for
18347 practical purposes, and making the "Pioneer" celebrated as far as
18348 Brassing (never mind the smallness of the area; the writing was not
18349 worse than much that reaches the four corners of the earth).
18350
18351 Mr. Brooke was occasionally irritating; but Will's impatience was
18352 relieved by the division of his time between visits to the Grange and
18353 retreats to his Middlemarch lodgings, which gave variety to his life.
18354
18355 "Shift the pegs a little," he said to himself, "and Mr. Brooke might be
18356 in the Cabinet, while I was Under-Secretary. That is the common order
18357 of things: the little waves make the large ones and are of the same
18358 pattern. I am better here than in the sort of life Mr. Casaubon would
18359 have trained me for, where the doing would be all laid down by a
18360 precedent too rigid for me to react upon. I don't care for prestige or
18361 high pay."
18362
18363 As Lydgate had said of him, he was a sort of gypsy, rather enjoying the
18364 sense of belonging to no class; he had a feeling of romance in his
18365 position, and a pleasant consciousness of creating a little surprise
18366 wherever he went. That sort of enjoyment had been disturbed when he
18367 had felt some new distance between himself and Dorothea in their
18368 accidental meeting at Lydgate's, and his irritation had gone out
18369 towards Mr. Casaubon, who had declared beforehand that Will would lose
18370 caste. "I never had any caste," he would have said, if that prophecy
18371 had been uttered to him, and the quick blood would have come and gone
18372 like breath in his transparent skin. But it is one thing to like
18373 defiance, and another thing to like its consequences.
18374
18375 Meanwhile, the town opinion about the new editor of the "Pioneer" was
18376 tending to confirm Mr. Casaubon's view. Will's relationship in that
18377 distinguished quarter did not, like Lydgate's high connections, serve
18378 as an advantageous introduction: if it was rumored that young Ladislaw
18379 was Mr. Casaubon's nephew or cousin, it was also rumored that "Mr.
18380 Casaubon would have nothing to do with him."
18381
18382 "Brooke has taken him up," said Mr. Hawley, "because that is what no
18383 man in his senses could have expected. Casaubon has devilish good
18384 reasons, you may be sure, for turning the cold shoulder on a young
18385 fellow whose bringing-up he paid for. Just like Brooke--one of those
18386 fellows who would praise a cat to sell a horse."
18387
18388 And some oddities of Will's, more or less poetical, appeared to support
18389 Mr. Keck, the editor of the "Trumpet," in asserting that Ladislaw, if
18390 the truth were known, was not only a Polish emissary but crack-brained,
18391 which accounted for the preternatural quickness and glibness of his
18392 speech when he got on to a platform--as he did whenever he had an
18393 opportunity, speaking with a facility which cast reflections on solid
18394 Englishmen generally. It was disgusting to Keck to see a strip of a
18395 fellow, with light curls round his head, get up and speechify by the
18396 hour against institutions "which had existed when he was in his
18397 cradle." And in a leading article of the "Trumpet," Keck characterized
18398 Ladislaw's speech at a Reform meeting as "the violence of an
18399 energumen--a miserable effort to shroud in the brilliancy of fireworks
18400 the daring of irresponsible statements and the poverty of a knowledge
18401 which was of the cheapest and most recent description."
18402
18403 "That was a rattling article yesterday, Keck," said Dr. Sprague, with
18404 sarcastic intentions. "But what is an energumen?"
18405
18406 "Oh, a term that came up in the French Revolution," said Keck.
18407
18408 This dangerous aspect of Ladislaw was strangely contrasted with other
18409 habits which became matter of remark. He had a fondness, half
18410 artistic, half affectionate, for little children--the smaller they were
18411 on tolerably active legs, and the funnier their clothing, the better
18412 Will liked to surprise and please them. We know that in Rome he was
18413 given to ramble about among the poor people, and the taste did not quit
18414 him in Middlemarch.
18415
18416 He had somehow picked up a troop of droll children, little hatless boys
18417 with their galligaskins much worn and scant shirting to hang out,
18418 little girls who tossed their hair out of their eyes to look at him,
18419 and guardian brothers at the mature age of seven. This troop he had
18420 led out on gypsy excursions to Halsell Wood at nutting-time, and since
18421 the cold weather had set in he had taken them on a clear day to gather
18422 sticks for a bonfire in the hollow of a hillside, where he drew out a
18423 small feast of gingerbread for them, and improvised a Punch-and-Judy
18424 drama with some private home-made puppets. Here was one oddity.
18425 Another was, that in houses where he got friendly, he was given to
18426 stretch himself at full length on the rug while he talked, and was apt
18427 to be discovered in this attitude by occasional callers for whom such
18428 an irregularity was likely to confirm the notions of his dangerously
18429 mixed blood and general laxity.
18430
18431 But Will's articles and speeches naturally recommended him in families
18432 which the new strictness of party division had marked off on the side
18433 of Reform. He was invited to Mr. Bulstrode's; but here he could not
18434 lie down on the rug, and Mrs. Bulstrode felt that his mode of talking
18435 about Catholic countries, as if there were any truce with Antichrist,
18436 illustrated the usual tendency to unsoundness in intellectual men.
18437
18438 At Mr. Farebrother's, however, whom the irony of events had brought on
18439 the same side with Bulstrode in the national movement, Will became a
18440 favorite with the ladies; especially with little Miss Noble, whom it
18441 was one of his oddities to escort when he met her in the street with
18442 her little basket, giving her his arm in the eyes of the town, and
18443 insisting on going with her to pay some call where she distributed her
18444 small filchings from her own share of sweet things.
18445
18446 But the house where he visited oftenest and lay most on the rug was
18447 Lydgate's. The two men were not at all alike, but they agreed none the
18448 worse. Lydgate was abrupt but not irritable, taking little notice of
18449 megrims in healthy people; and Ladislaw did not usually throw away his
18450 susceptibilities on those who took no notice of them. With Rosamond,
18451 on the other hand, he pouted and was wayward--nay, often
18452 uncomplimentary, much to her inward surprise; nevertheless he was
18453 gradually becoming necessary to her entertainment by his companionship
18454 in her music, his varied talk, and his freedom from the grave
18455 preoccupation which, with all her husband's tenderness and indulgence,
18456 often made his manners unsatisfactory to her, and confirmed her dislike
18457 of the medical profession.
18458
18459 Lydgate, inclined to be sarcastic on the superstitious faith of the
18460 people in the efficacy of "the bill," while nobody cared about the low
18461 state of pathology, sometimes assailed Will with troublesome questions.
18462 One evening in March, Rosamond in her cherry-colored dress with
18463 swansdown trimming about the throat sat at the tea-table; Lydgate,
18464 lately come in tired from his outdoor work, was seated sideways on an
18465 easy-chair by the fire with one leg over the elbow, his brow looking a
18466 little troubled as his eyes rambled over the columns of the "Pioneer,"
18467 while Rosamond, having noticed that he was perturbed, avoided looking
18468 at him, and inwardly thanked heaven that she herself had not a moody
18469 disposition. Will Ladislaw was stretched on the rug contemplating the
18470 curtain-pole abstractedly, and humming very low the notes of "When
18471 first I saw thy face;" while the house spaniel, also stretched out with
18472 small choice of room, looked from between his paws at the usurper of
18473 the rug with silent but strong objection.
18474
18475 Rosamond bringing Lydgate his cup of tea, he threw down the paper, and
18476 said to Will, who had started up and gone to the table--
18477
18478 "It's no use your puffing Brooke as a reforming landlord, Ladislaw:
18479 they only pick the more holes in his coat in the 'Trumpet.'"
18480
18481 "No matter; those who read the 'Pioneer' don't read the 'Trumpet,'"
18482 said Will, swallowing his tea and walking about. "Do you suppose the
18483 public reads with a view to its own conversion? We should have a
18484 witches' brewing with a vengeance then--'Mingle, mingle, mingle,
18485 mingle, You that mingle may'--and nobody would know which side he was
18486 going to take."
18487
18488 "Farebrother says, he doesn't believe Brooke would get elected if the
18489 opportunity came: the very men who profess to be for him would bring
18490 another member out of the bag at the right moment."
18491
18492 "There's no harm in trying. It's good to have resident members."
18493
18494 "Why?" said Lydgate, who was much given to use that inconvenient word
18495 in a curt tone.
18496
18497 "They represent the local stupidity better," said Will, laughing, and
18498 shaking his curls; "and they are kept on their best behavior in the
18499 neighborhood. Brooke is not a bad fellow, but he has done some good
18500 things on his estate that he never would have done but for this
18501 Parliamentary bite."
18502
18503 "He's not fitted to be a public man," said Lydgate, with contemptuous
18504 decision. "He would disappoint everybody who counted on him: I can see
18505 that at the Hospital. Only, there Bulstrode holds the reins and drives
18506 him."
18507
18508 "That depends on how you fix your standard of public men," said Will.
18509 "He's good enough for the occasion: when the people have made up their
18510 mind as they are making it up now, they don't want a man--they only
18511 want a vote."
18512
18513 "That is the way with you political writers, Ladislaw--crying up a
18514 measure as if it were a universal cure, and crying up men who are a
18515 part of the very disease that wants curing."
18516
18517 "Why not? Men may help to cure themselves off the face of the land
18518 without knowing it," said Will, who could find reasons impromptu, when
18519 he had not thought of a question beforehand.
18520
18521 "That is no excuse for encouraging the superstitious exaggeration of
18522 hopes about this particular measure, helping the cry to swallow it
18523 whole and to send up voting popinjays who are good for nothing but to
18524 carry it. You go against rottenness, and there is nothing more
18525 thoroughly rotten than making people believe that society can be cured
18526 by a political hocus-pocus."
18527
18528 "That's very fine, my dear fellow. But your cure must begin somewhere,
18529 and put it that a thousand things which debase a population can never
18530 be reformed without this particular reform to begin with. Look what
18531 Stanley said the other day--that the House had been tinkering long
18532 enough at small questions of bribery, inquiring whether this or that
18533 voter has had a guinea when everybody knows that the seats have been
18534 sold wholesale. Wait for wisdom and conscience in public
18535 agents--fiddlestick! The only conscience we can trust to is the
18536 massive sense of wrong in a class, and the best wisdom that will work
18537 is the wisdom of balancing claims. That's my text--which side is
18538 injured? I support the man who supports their claims; not the virtuous
18539 upholder of the wrong."
18540
18541 "That general talk about a particular case is mere question begging,
18542 Ladislaw. When I say, I go in for the dose that cures, it doesn't
18543 follow that I go in for opium in a given case of gout."
18544
18545 "I am not begging the question we are upon--whether we are to try for
18546 nothing till we find immaculate men to work with. Should you go on
18547 that plan? If there were one man who would carry you a medical reform
18548 and another who would oppose it, should you inquire which had the
18549 better motives or even the better brains?"
18550
18551 "Oh, of course," said Lydgate, seeing himself checkmated by a move
18552 which he had often used himself, "if one did not work with such men as
18553 are at hand, things must come to a dead-lock. Suppose the worst opinion
18554 in the town about Bulstrode were a true one, that would not make it
18555 less true that he has the sense and the resolution to do what I think
18556 ought to be done in the matters I know and care most about; but that is
18557 the only ground on which I go with him," Lydgate added rather proudly,
18558 bearing in mind Mr. Farebrother's remarks. "He is nothing to me
18559 otherwise; I would not cry him up on any personal ground--I would keep
18560 clear of that."
18561
18562 "Do you mean that I cry up Brooke on any personal ground?" said Will
18563 Ladislaw, nettled, and turning sharp round. For the first time he felt
18564 offended with Lydgate; not the less so, perhaps, because he would have
18565 declined any close inquiry into the growth of his relation to Mr.
18566 Brooke.
18567
18568 "Not at all," said Lydgate, "I was simply explaining my own action. I
18569 meant that a man may work for a special end with others whose motives
18570 and general course are equivocal, if he is quite sure of his personal
18571 independence, and that he is not working for his private
18572 interest--either place or money."
18573
18574 "Then, why don't you extend your liberality to others?" said Will,
18575 still nettled. "My personal independence is as important to me as
18576 yours is to you. You have no more reason to imagine that I have
18577 personal expectations from Brooke, than I have to imagine that you have
18578 personal expectations from Bulstrode. Motives are points of honor, I
18579 suppose--nobody can prove them. But as to money and place in the
18580 world." Will ended, tossing back his head, "I think it is pretty clear
18581 that I am not determined by considerations of that sort."
18582
18583 "You quite mistake me, Ladislaw," said Lydgate, surprised. He had been
18584 preoccupied with his own vindication, and had been blind to what
18585 Ladislaw might infer on his own account. "I beg your pardon for
18586 unintentionally annoying you. In fact, I should rather attribute to
18587 you a romantic disregard of your own worldly interests. On the
18588 political question, I referred simply to intellectual bias."
18589
18590 "How very unpleasant you both are this evening!" said Rosamond. "I
18591 cannot conceive why money should have been referred to. Polities and
18592 Medicine are sufficiently disagreeable to quarrel upon. You can both
18593 of you go on quarrelling with all the world and with each other on
18594 those two topics."
18595
18596 Rosamond looked mildly neutral as she said this, rising to ring the
18597 bell, and then crossing to her work-table.
18598
18599 "Poor Rosy!" said Lydgate, putting out his hand to her as she was
18600 passing him. "Disputation is not amusing to cherubs. Have some music.
18601 Ask Ladislaw to sing with you."
18602
18603 When Will was gone Rosamond said to her husband, "What put you out of
18604 temper this evening, Tertius?"
18605
18606 "Me? It was Ladislaw who was out of temper. He is like a bit of
18607 tinder."
18608
18609 "But I mean, before that. Something had vexed you before you came in,
18610 you looked cross. And that made you begin to dispute with Mr.
18611 Ladislaw. You hurt me very much when you look so, Tertius."
18612
18613 "Do I? Then I am a brute," said Lydgate, caressing her penitently.
18614
18615 "What vexed you?"
18616
18617 "Oh, outdoor things--business." It was really a letter insisting on
18618 the payment of a bill for furniture. But Rosamond was expecting to
18619 have a baby, and Lydgate wished to save her from any perturbation.
18620
18621
18622
18623 CHAPTER XLVII.
18624
18625 Was never true love loved in vain,
18626 For truest love is highest gain.
18627 No art can make it: it must spring
18628 Where elements are fostering.
18629 So in heaven's spot and hour
18630 Springs the little native flower,
18631 Downward root and upward eye,
18632 Shapen by the earth and sky.
18633
18634
18635 It happened to be on a Saturday evening that Will Ladislaw had that
18636 little discussion with Lydgate. Its effect when he went to his own
18637 rooms was to make him sit up half the night, thinking over again, under
18638 a new irritation, all that he had before thought of his having settled
18639 in Middlemarch and harnessed himself with Mr. Brooke. Hesitations
18640 before he had taken the step had since turned into susceptibility to
18641 every hint that he would have been wiser not to take it; and hence came
18642 his heat towards Lydgate--a heat which still kept him restless. Was he
18643 not making a fool of himself?--and at a time when he was more than
18644 ever conscious of being something better than a fool? And for what end?
18645
18646 Well, for no definite end. True, he had dreamy visions of
18647 possibilities: there is no human being who having both passions and
18648 thoughts does not think in consequence of his passions--does not find
18649 images rising in his mind which soothe the passion with hope or sting
18650 it with dread. But this, which happens to us all, happens to some with
18651 a wide difference; and Will was not one of those whose wit "keeps the
18652 roadway:" he had his bypaths where there were little joys of his own
18653 choosing, such as gentlemen cantering on the highroad might have
18654 thought rather idiotic. The way in which he made a sort of happiness
18655 for himself out of his feeling for Dorothea was an example of this. It
18656 may seem strange, but it is the fact, that the ordinary vulgar vision
18657 of which Mr. Casaubon suspected him--namely, that Dorothea might become
18658 a widow, and that the interest he had established in her mind might
18659 turn into acceptance of him as a husband--had no tempting, arresting
18660 power over him; he did not live in the scenery of such an event, and
18661 follow it out, as we all do with that imagined "otherwise" which is our
18662 practical heaven. It was not only that he was unwilling to entertain
18663 thoughts which could be accused of baseness, and was already uneasy in
18664 the sense that he had to justify himself from the charge of
18665 ingratitude--the latent consciousness of many other barriers between
18666 himself and Dorothea besides the existence of her husband, had helped
18667 to turn away his imagination from speculating on what might befall Mr.
18668 Casaubon. And there were yet other reasons. Will, we know, could not
18669 bear the thought of any flaw appearing in his crystal: he was at once
18670 exasperated and delighted by the calm freedom with which Dorothea
18671 looked at him and spoke to him, and there was something so exquisite in
18672 thinking of her just as she was, that he could not long for a change
18673 which must somehow change her. Do we not shun the street version of a
18674 fine melody?--or shrink from the news that the rarity--some bit of
18675 chiselling or engraving perhaps--which we have dwelt on even with
18676 exultation in the trouble it has cost us to snatch glimpses of it, is
18677 really not an uncommon thing, and may be obtained as an every-day
18678 possession? Our good depends on the quality and breadth of our
18679 emotion; and to Will, a creature who cared little for what are called
18680 the solid things of life and greatly for its subtler influences, to
18681 have within him such a feeling as he had towards Dorothea, was like the
18682 inheritance of a fortune. What others might have called the futility
18683 of his passion, made an additional delight for his imagination: he was
18684 conscious of a generous movement, and of verifying in his own
18685 experience that higher love-poetry which had charmed his fancy.
18686 Dorothea, he said to himself, was forever enthroned in his soul: no
18687 other woman could sit higher than her footstool; and if he could have
18688 written out in immortal syllables the effect she wrought within him, he
18689 might have boasted after the example of old Drayton, that,--
18690
18691 "Queens hereafter might be glad to live
18692 Upon the alms of her superfluous praise."
18693
18694 But this result was questionable. And what else could he do for
18695 Dorothea? What was his devotion worth to her? It was impossible to
18696 tell. He would not go out of her reach. He saw no creature among her
18697 friends to whom he could believe that she spoke with the same simple
18698 confidence as to him. She had once said that she would like him to
18699 stay; and stay he would, whatever fire-breathing dragons might hiss
18700 around her.
18701
18702 This had always been the conclusion of Will's hesitations. But he was
18703 not without contradictoriness and rebellion even towards his own
18704 resolve. He had often got irritated, as he was on this particular
18705 night, by some outside demonstration that his public exertions with Mr.
18706 Brooke as a chief could not seem as heroic as he would like them to be,
18707 and this was always associated with the other ground of
18708 irritation--that notwithstanding his sacrifice of dignity for
18709 Dorothea's sake, he could hardly ever see her. Whereupon, not being
18710 able to contradict these unpleasant facts, he contradicted his own
18711 strongest bias and said, "I am a fool."
18712
18713 Nevertheless, since the inward debate necessarily turned on Dorothea,
18714 he ended, as he had done before, only by getting a livelier sense of
18715 what her presence would be to him; and suddenly reflecting that the
18716 morrow would be Sunday, he determined to go to Lowick Church and see
18717 her. He slept upon that idea, but when he was dressing in the rational
18718 morning light, Objection said--
18719
18720 "That will be a virtual defiance of Mr. Casaubon's prohibition to visit
18721 Lowick, and Dorothea will be displeased."
18722
18723 "Nonsense!" argued Inclination, "it would be too monstrous for him to
18724 hinder me from going out to a pretty country church on a spring
18725 morning. And Dorothea will be glad."
18726
18727 "It will be clear to Mr. Casaubon that you have come either to annoy
18728 him or to see Dorothea."
18729
18730 "It is not true that I go to annoy him, and why should I not go to see
18731 Dorothea? Is he to have everything to himself and be always
18732 comfortable? Let him smart a little, as other people are obliged to
18733 do. I have always liked the quaintness of the church and congregation;
18734 besides, I know the Tuckers: I shall go into their pew."
18735
18736 Having silenced Objection by force of unreason, Will walked to Lowick
18737 as if he had been on the way to Paradise, crossing Halsell Common and
18738 skirting the wood, where the sunlight fell broadly under the budding
18739 boughs, bringing out the beauties of moss and lichen, and fresh green
18740 growths piercing the brown. Everything seemed to know that it was
18741 Sunday, and to approve of his going to Lowick Church. Will easily felt
18742 happy when nothing crossed his humor, and by this time the thought of
18743 vexing Mr. Casaubon had become rather amusing to him, making his face
18744 break into its merry smile, pleasant to see as the breaking of sunshine
18745 on the water--though the occasion was not exemplary. But most of us
18746 are apt to settle within ourselves that the man who blocks our way is
18747 odious, and not to mind causing him a little of the disgust which his
18748 personality excites in ourselves. Will went along with a small book
18749 under his arm and a hand in each side-pocket, never reading, but
18750 chanting a little, as he made scenes of what would happen in church and
18751 coming out. He was experimenting in tunes to suit some words of his
18752 own, sometimes trying a ready-made melody, sometimes improvising. The
18753 words were not exactly a hymn, but they certainly fitted his Sunday
18754 experience:--
18755
18756 "O me, O me, what frugal cheer
18757 My love doth feed upon!
18758 A touch, a ray, that is not here,
18759 A shadow that is gone:
18760
18761 "A dream of breath that might be near,
18762 An inly-echoed tone,
18763 The thought that one may think me dear,
18764 The place where one was known,
18765
18766 "The tremor of a banished fear,
18767 An ill that was not done--
18768 O me, O me, what frugal cheer
18769 My love doth feed upon!"
18770
18771 Sometimes, when he took off his hat, shaking his head backward, and
18772 showing his delicate throat as he sang, he looked like an incarnation
18773 of the spring whose spirit filled the air--a bright creature, abundant
18774 in uncertain promises.
18775
18776 The bells were still ringing when he got to Lowick, and he went into
18777 the curate's pew before any one else arrived there. But he was still
18778 left alone in it when the congregation had assembled. The curate's pew
18779 was opposite the rector's at the entrance of the small chancel, and
18780 Will had time to fear that Dorothea might not come while he looked
18781 round at the group of rural faces which made the congregation from year
18782 to year within the white-washed walls and dark old pews, hardly with
18783 more change than we see in the boughs of a tree which breaks here and
18784 there with age, but yet has young shoots. Mr. Rigg's frog-face was
18785 something alien and unaccountable, but notwithstanding this shock to
18786 the order of things, there were still the Waules and the rural stock of
18787 the Powderells in their pews side by side; brother Samuel's cheek had
18788 the same purple round as ever, and the three generations of decent
18789 cottagers came as of old with a sense of duty to their betters
18790 generally--the smaller children regarding Mr. Casaubon, who wore the
18791 black gown and mounted to the highest box, as probably the chief of all
18792 betters, and the one most awful if offended. Even in 1831 Lowick was
18793 at peace, not more agitated by Reform than by the solemn tenor of the
18794 Sunday sermon. The congregation had been used to seeing Will at church
18795 in former days, and no one took much note of him except the choir, who
18796 expected him to make a figure in the singing.
18797
18798 Dorothea did at last appear on this quaint background, walking up the
18799 short aisle in her white beaver bonnet and gray cloak--the same she had
18800 worn in the Vatican. Her face being, from her entrance, towards the
18801 chancel, even her shortsighted eyes soon discerned Will, but there was
18802 no outward show of her feeling except a slight paleness and a grave bow
18803 as she passed him. To his own surprise Will felt suddenly
18804 uncomfortable, and dared not look at her after they had bowed to each
18805 other. Two minutes later, when Mr. Casaubon came out of the vestry,
18806 and, entering the pew, seated himself in face of Dorothea, Will felt
18807 his paralysis more complete. He could look nowhere except at the choir
18808 in the little gallery over the vestry-door: Dorothea was perhaps
18809 pained, and he had made a wretched blunder. It was no longer amusing
18810 to vex Mr. Casaubon, who had the advantage probably of watching him and
18811 seeing that he dared not turn his head. Why had he not imagined this
18812 beforehand?--but he could not expect that he should sit in that square
18813 pew alone, unrelieved by any Tuckers, who had apparently departed from
18814 Lowick altogether, for a new clergyman was in the desk. Still he
18815 called himself stupid now for not foreseeing that it would be
18816 impossible for him to look towards Dorothea--nay, that she might feel
18817 his coming an impertinence. There was no delivering himself from his
18818 cage, however; and Will found his places and looked at his book as if
18819 he had been a school-mistress, feeling that the morning service had
18820 never been so immeasurably long before, that he was utterly ridiculous,
18821 out of temper, and miserable. This was what a man got by worshipping
18822 the sight of a woman! The clerk observed with surprise that Mr.
18823 Ladislaw did not join in the tune of Hanover, and reflected that he
18824 might have a cold.
18825
18826 Mr. Casaubon did not preach that morning, and there was no change in
18827 Will's situation until the blessing had been pronounced and every one
18828 rose. It was the fashion at Lowick for "the betters" to go out first.
18829 With a sudden determination to break the spell that was upon him, Will
18830 looked straight at Mr. Casaubon. But that gentleman's eyes were on the
18831 button of the pew-door, which he opened, allowing Dorothea to pass, and
18832 following her immediately without raising his eyelids. Will's glance
18833 had caught Dorothea's as she turned out of the pew, and again she
18834 bowed, but this time with a look of agitation, as if she were
18835 repressing tears. Will walked out after them, but they went on towards
18836 the little gate leading out of the churchyard into the shrubbery, never
18837 looking round.
18838
18839 It was impossible for him to follow them, and he could only walk back
18840 sadly at mid-day along the same road which he had trodden hopefully in
18841 the morning. The lights were all changed for him both without and
18842 within.
18843
18844
18845
18846 CHAPTER XLVIII
18847
18848 Surely the golden hours are turning gray
18849 And dance no more, and vainly strive to run:
18850 I see their white locks streaming in the wind--
18851 Each face is haggard as it looks at me,
18852 Slow turning in the constant clasping round
18853 Storm-driven.
18854
18855
18856 Dorothea's distress when she was leaving the church came chiefly from
18857 the perception that Mr. Casaubon was determined not to speak to his
18858 cousin, and that Will's presence at church had served to mark more
18859 strongly the alienation between them. Will's coming seemed to her
18860 quite excusable, nay, she thought it an amiable movement in him towards
18861 a reconciliation which she herself had been constantly wishing for. He
18862 had probably imagined, as she had, that if Mr. Casaubon and he could
18863 meet easily, they would shake hands and friendly intercourse might
18864 return. But now Dorothea felt quite robbed of that hope. Will was
18865 banished further than ever, for Mr. Casaubon must have been newly
18866 embittered by this thrusting upon him of a presence which he refused to
18867 recognize.
18868
18869 He had not been very well that morning, suffering from some difficulty
18870 in breathing, and had not preached in consequence; she was not
18871 surprised, therefore, that he was nearly silent at luncheon, still less
18872 that he made no allusion to Will Ladislaw. For her own part she felt
18873 that she could never again introduce that subject. They usually spent
18874 apart the hours between luncheon and dinner on a Sunday; Mr. Casaubon
18875 in the library dozing chiefly, and Dorothea in her boudoir, where she
18876 was wont to occupy herself with some of her favorite books. There was
18877 a little heap of them on the table in the bow-window--of various sorts,
18878 from Herodotus, which she was learning to read with Mr. Casaubon, to
18879 her old companion Pascal, and Keble's "Christian Year." But to-day
18880 opened one after another, and could read none of them. Everything
18881 seemed dreary: the portents before the birth of Cyrus--Jewish
18882 antiquities--oh dear!--devout epigrams--the sacred chime of favorite
18883 hymns--all alike were as flat as tunes beaten on wood: even the spring
18884 flowers and the grass had a dull shiver in them under the afternoon
18885 clouds that hid the sun fitfully; even the sustaining thoughts which
18886 had become habits seemed to have in them the weariness of long future
18887 days in which she would still live with them for her sole companions.
18888 It was another or rather a fuller sort of companionship that poor
18889 Dorothea was hungering for, and the hunger had grown from the perpetual
18890 effort demanded by her married life. She was always trying to be what
18891 her husband wished, and never able to repose on his delight in what she
18892 was. The thing that she liked, that she spontaneously cared to have,
18893 seemed to be always excluded from her life; for if it was only granted
18894 and not shared by her husband it might as well have been denied. About
18895 Will Ladislaw there had been a difference between them from the first,
18896 and it had ended, since Mr. Casaubon had so severely repulsed
18897 Dorothea's strong feeling about his claims on the family property, by
18898 her being convinced that she was in the right and her husband in the
18899 wrong, but that she was helpless. This afternoon the helplessness was
18900 more wretchedly benumbing than ever: she longed for objects who could
18901 be dear to her, and to whom she could be dear. She longed for work
18902 which would be directly beneficent like the sunshine and the rain, and
18903 now it appeared that she was to live more and more in a virtual tomb,
18904 where there was the apparatus of a ghastly labor producing what would
18905 never see the light. Today she had stood at the door of the tomb and
18906 seen Will Ladislaw receding into the distant world of warm activity and
18907 fellowship--turning his face towards her as he went.
18908
18909 Books were of no use. Thinking was of no use. It was Sunday, and she
18910 could not have the carriage to go to Celia, who had lately had a baby.
18911 There was no refuge now from spiritual emptiness and discontent, and
18912 Dorothea had to bear her bad mood, as she would have borne a headache.
18913
18914 After dinner, at the hour when she usually began to read aloud, Mr.
18915 Casaubon proposed that they should go into the library, where, he said,
18916 he had ordered a fire and lights. He seemed to have revived, and to be
18917 thinking intently.
18918
18919 In the library Dorothea observed that he had newly arranged a row of
18920 his note-books on a table, and now he took up and put into her hand a
18921 well-known volume, which was a table of contents to all the others.
18922
18923 "You will oblige me, my dear," he said, seating himself, "if instead of
18924 other reading this evening, you will go through this aloud, pencil in
18925 hand, and at each point where I say 'mark,' will make a cross with your
18926 pencil. This is the first step in a sifting process which I have long
18927 had in view, and as we go on I shall be able to indicate to you certain
18928 principles of selection whereby you will, I trust, have an intelligent
18929 participation in my purpose."
18930
18931 This proposal was only one more sign added to many since his memorable
18932 interview with Lydgate, that Mr. Casaubon's original reluctance to let
18933 Dorothea work with him had given place to the contrary disposition,
18934 namely, to demand much interest and labor from her.
18935
18936 After she had read and marked for two hours, he said, "We will take the
18937 volume up-stairs--and the pencil, if you please--and in case of
18938 reading in the night, we can pursue this task. It is not wearisome to
18939 you, I trust, Dorothea?"
18940
18941 "I prefer always reading what you like best to hear," said Dorothea,
18942 who told the simple truth; for what she dreaded was to exert herself in
18943 reading or anything else which left him as joyless as ever.
18944
18945 It was a proof of the force with which certain characteristics in
18946 Dorothea impressed those around her, that her husband, with all his
18947 jealousy and suspicion, had gathered implicit trust in the integrity of
18948 her promises, and her power of devoting herself to her idea of the
18949 right and best. Of late he had begun to feel that these qualities were
18950 a peculiar possession for himself, and he wanted to engross them.
18951
18952 The reading in the night did come. Dorothea in her young weariness had
18953 slept soon and fast: she was awakened by a sense of light, which seemed
18954 to her at first like a sudden vision of sunset after she had climbed a
18955 steep hill: she opened her eyes and saw her husband wrapped in his warm
18956 gown seating himself in the arm-chair near the fire-place where the
18957 embers were still glowing. He had lit two candles, expecting that
18958 Dorothea would awake, but not liking to rouse her by more direct means.
18959
18960 "Are you ill, Edward?" she said, rising immediately.
18961
18962 "I felt some uneasiness in a reclining posture. I will sit here for a
18963 time." She threw wood on the fire, wrapped herself up, and said, "You
18964 would like me to read to you?"
18965
18966 "You would oblige me greatly by doing so, Dorothea," said Mr. Casaubon,
18967 with a shade more meekness than usual in his polite manner. "I am
18968 wakeful: my mind is remarkably lucid."
18969
18970 "I fear that the excitement may be too great for you," said Dorothea,
18971 remembering Lydgate's cautions.
18972
18973 "No, I am not conscious of undue excitement. Thought is easy."
18974 Dorothea dared not insist, and she read for an hour or more on the same
18975 plan as she had done in the evening, but getting over the pages with
18976 more quickness. Mr. Casaubon's mind was more alert, and he seemed to
18977 anticipate what was coming after a very slight verbal indication,
18978 saying, "That will do--mark that"--or "Pass on to the next head--I omit
18979 the second excursus on Crete." Dorothea was amazed to think of the
18980 bird-like speed with which his mind was surveying the ground where it
18981 had been creeping for years. At last he said--
18982
18983 "Close the book now, my dear. We will resume our work to-morrow. I
18984 have deferred it too long, and would gladly see it completed. But you
18985 observe that the principle on which my selection is made, is to give
18986 adequate, and not disproportionate illustration to each of the theses
18987 enumerated in my introduction, as at present sketched. You have
18988 perceived that distinctly, Dorothea?"
18989
18990 "Yes," said Dorothea, rather tremulously. She felt sick at heart.
18991
18992 "And now I think that I can take some repose," said Mr. Casaubon. He
18993 laid down again and begged her to put out the lights. When she had
18994 lain down too, and there was a darkness only broken by a dull glow on
18995 the hearth, he said--
18996
18997 "Before I sleep, I have a request to make, Dorothea."
18998
18999 "What is it?" said Dorothea, with dread in her mind.
19000
19001 "It is that you will let me know, deliberately, whether, in case of my
19002 death, you will carry out my wishes: whether you will avoid doing what
19003 I should deprecate, and apply yourself to do what I should desire."
19004
19005 Dorothea was not taken by surprise: many incidents had been leading her
19006 to the conjecture of some intention on her husband's part which might
19007 make a new yoke for her. She did not answer immediately.
19008
19009 "You refuse?" said Mr. Casaubon, with more edge in his tone.
19010
19011 "No, I do not yet refuse," said Dorothea, in a clear voice, the need of
19012 freedom asserting itself within her; "but it is too solemn--I think it
19013 is not right--to make a promise when I am ignorant what it will bind me
19014 to. Whatever affection prompted I would do without promising."
19015
19016 "But you would use your own judgment: I ask you to obey mine; you
19017 refuse."
19018
19019 "No, dear, no!" said Dorothea, beseechingly, crushed by opposing fears.
19020 "But may I wait and reflect a little while? I desire with my whole
19021 soul to do what will comfort you; but I cannot give any pledge
19022 suddenly--still less a pledge to do I know not what."
19023
19024 "You cannot then confide in the nature of my wishes?"
19025
19026 "Grant me till to-morrow," said Dorothea, beseechingly.
19027
19028 "Till to-morrow then," said Mr. Casaubon.
19029
19030 Soon she could hear that he was sleeping, but there was no more sleep
19031 for her. While she constrained herself to lie still lest she should
19032 disturb him, her mind was carrying on a conflict in which imagination
19033 ranged its forces first on one side and then on the other. She had no
19034 presentiment that the power which her husband wished to establish over
19035 her future action had relation to anything else than his work. But it
19036 was clear enough to her that he would expect her to devote herself to
19037 sifting those mixed heaps of material, which were to be the doubtful
19038 illustration of principles still more doubtful. The poor child had
19039 become altogether unbelieving as to the trustworthiness of that Key
19040 which had made the ambition and the labor of her husband's life. It
19041 was not wonderful that, in spite of her small instruction, her judgment
19042 in this matter was truer than his: for she looked with unbiassed
19043 comparison and healthy sense at probabilities on which he had risked
19044 all his egoism. And now she pictured to herself the days, and months,
19045 and years which she must spend in sorting what might be called
19046 shattered mummies, and fragments of a tradition which was itself a
19047 mosaic wrought from crushed ruins--sorting them as food for a theory
19048 which was already withered in the birth like an elfin child. Doubtless
19049 a vigorous error vigorously pursued has kept the embryos of truth
19050 a-breathing: the quest of gold being at the same time a questioning of
19051 substances, the body of chemistry is prepared for its soul, and
19052 Lavoisier is born. But Mr. Casaubon's theory of the elements which
19053 made the seed of all tradition was not likely to bruise itself unawares
19054 against discoveries: it floated among flexible conjectures no more
19055 solid than those etymologies which seemed strong because of likeness in
19056 sound until it was shown that likeness in sound made them impossible:
19057 it was a method of interpretation which was not tested by the necessity
19058 of forming anything which had sharper collisions than an elaborate
19059 notion of Gog and Magog: it was as free from interruption as a plan for
19060 threading the stars together. And Dorothea had so often had to check
19061 her weariness and impatience over this questionable riddle-guessing, as
19062 it revealed itself to her instead of the fellowship in high knowledge
19063 which was to make life worthier! She could understand well enough now
19064 why her husband had come to cling to her, as possibly the only hope
19065 left that his labors would ever take a shape in which they could be
19066 given to the world. At first it had seemed that he wished to keep even
19067 her aloof from any close knowledge of what he was doing; but gradually
19068 the terrible stringency of human need--the prospect of a too speedy
19069 death--
19070
19071 And here Dorothea's pity turned from her own future to her husband's
19072 past--nay, to his present hard struggle with a lot which had grown out
19073 of that past: the lonely labor, the ambition breathing hardly under the
19074 pressure of self-distrust; the goal receding, and the heavier limbs;
19075 and now at last the sword visibly trembling above him! And had she not
19076 wished to marry him that she might help him in his life's labor?--But
19077 she had thought the work was to be something greater, which she could
19078 serve in devoutly for its own sake. Was it right, even to soothe his
19079 grief--would it be possible, even if she promised--to work as in a
19080 treadmill fruitlessly?
19081
19082 And yet, could she deny him? Could she say, "I refuse to content this
19083 pining hunger?" It would be refusing to do for him dead, what she was
19084 almost sure to do for him living. If he lived as Lydgate had said he
19085 might, for fifteen years or more, her life would certainly be spent in
19086 helping him and obeying him.
19087
19088 Still, there was a deep difference between that devotion to the living
19089 and that indefinite promise of devotion to the dead. While he lived,
19090 he could claim nothing that she would not still be free to remonstrate
19091 against, and even to refuse. But--the thought passed through her mind
19092 more than once, though she could not believe in it--might he not mean
19093 to demand something more from her than she had been able to imagine,
19094 since he wanted her pledge to carry out his wishes without telling her
19095 exactly what they were? No; his heart was bound up in his work only:
19096 that was the end for which his failing life was to be eked out by hers.
19097
19098 And now, if she were to say, "No! if you die, I will put no finger to
19099 your work"--it seemed as if she would be crushing that bruised heart.
19100
19101 For four hours Dorothea lay in this conflict, till she felt ill and
19102 bewildered, unable to resolve, praying mutely. Helpless as a child
19103 which has sobbed and sought too long, she fell into a late morning
19104 sleep, and when she waked Mr. Casaubon was already up. Tantripp told
19105 her that he had read prayers, breakfasted, and was in the library.
19106
19107 "I never saw you look so pale, madam," said Tantripp, a solid-figured
19108 woman who had been with the sisters at Lausanne.
19109
19110 "Was I ever high-colored, Tantripp?" said Dorothea, smiling faintly.
19111
19112 "Well, not to say high-colored, but with a bloom like a Chiny rose.
19113 But always smelling those leather books, what can be expected? Do rest
19114 a little this morning, madam. Let me say you are ill and not able to
19115 go into that close library."
19116
19117 "Oh no, no! let me make haste," said Dorothea. "Mr. Casaubon wants me
19118 particularly."
19119
19120 When she went down she felt sure that she should promise to fulfil his
19121 wishes; but that would be later in the day--not yet.
19122
19123 As Dorothea entered the library, Mr. Casaubon turned round from the
19124 table where he had been placing some books, and said--
19125
19126 "I was waiting for your appearance, my dear. I had hoped to set to
19127 work at once this morning, but I find myself under some indisposition,
19128 probably from too much excitement yesterday. I am going now to take a
19129 turn in the shrubbery, since the air is milder."
19130
19131 "I am glad to hear that," said Dorothea. "Your mind, I feared, was too
19132 active last night."
19133
19134 "I would fain have it set at rest on the point I last spoke of,
19135 Dorothea. You can now, I hope, give me an answer."
19136
19137 "May I come out to you in the garden presently?" said Dorothea, winning
19138 a little breathing space in that way.
19139
19140 "I shall be in the Yew-tree Walk for the next half-hour," said Mr.
19141 Casaubon, and then he left her.
19142
19143 Dorothea, feeling very weary, rang and asked Tantripp to bring her some
19144 wraps. She had been sitting still for a few minutes, but not in any
19145 renewal of the former conflict: she simply felt that she was going to
19146 say "Yes" to her own doom: she was too weak, too full of dread at the
19147 thought of inflicting a keen-edged blow on her husband, to do anything
19148 but submit completely. She sat still and let Tantripp put on her
19149 bonnet and shawl, a passivity which was unusual with her, for she liked
19150 to wait on herself.
19151
19152 "God bless you, madam!" said Tantripp, with an irrepressible movement
19153 of love towards the beautiful, gentle creature for whom she felt unable
19154 to do anything more, now that she had finished tying the bonnet.
19155
19156 This was too much for Dorothea's highly-strung feeling, and she burst
19157 into tears, sobbing against Tantripp's arm. But soon she checked
19158 herself, dried her eyes, and went out at the glass door into the
19159 shrubbery.
19160
19161 "I wish every book in that library was built into a caticom for your
19162 master," said Tantripp to Pratt, the butler, finding him in the
19163 breakfast-room. She had been at Rome, and visited the antiquities, as
19164 we know; and she always declined to call Mr. Casaubon anything but
19165 "your master," when speaking to the other servants.
19166
19167 Pratt laughed. He liked his master very well, but he liked Tantripp
19168 better.
19169
19170 When Dorothea was out on the gravel walks, she lingered among the
19171 nearer clumps of trees, hesitating, as she had done once before, though
19172 from a different cause. Then she had feared lest her effort at
19173 fellowship should be unwelcome; now she dreaded going to the spot where
19174 she foresaw that she must bind herself to a fellowship from which she
19175 shrank. Neither law nor the world's opinion compelled her to
19176 this--only her husband's nature and her own compassion, only the ideal
19177 and not the real yoke of marriage. She saw clearly enough the whole
19178 situation, yet she was fettered: she could not smite the stricken soul
19179 that entreated hers. If that were weakness, Dorothea was weak. But
19180 the half-hour was passing, and she must not delay longer. When she
19181 entered the Yew-tree Walk she could not see her husband; but the walk
19182 had bends, and she went, expecting to catch sight of his figure wrapped
19183 in a blue cloak, which, with a warm velvet cap, was his outer garment
19184 on chill days for the garden. It occurred to her that he might be
19185 resting in the summer-house, towards which the path diverged a little.
19186 Turning the angle, she could see him seated on the bench, close to a
19187 stone table. His arms were resting on the table, and his brow was
19188 bowed down on them, the blue cloak being dragged forward and screening
19189 his face on each side.
19190
19191 "He exhausted himself last night," Dorothea said to herself, thinking
19192 at first that he was asleep, and that the summer-house was too damp a
19193 place to rest in. But then she remembered that of late she had seen
19194 him take that attitude when she was reading to him, as if he found it
19195 easier than any other; and that he would sometimes speak, as well as
19196 listen, with his face down in that way. She went into the summerhouse
19197 and said, "I am come, Edward; I am ready."
19198
19199 He took no notice, and she thought that he must be fast asleep. She
19200 laid her hand on his shoulder, and repeated, "I am ready!" Still he was
19201 motionless; and with a sudden confused fear, she leaned down to him,
19202 took off his velvet cap, and leaned her cheek close to his head, crying
19203 in a distressed tone--
19204
19205 "Wake, dear, wake! Listen to me. I am come to answer." But Dorothea
19206 never gave her answer.
19207
19208 Later in the day, Lydgate was seated by her bedside, and she was
19209 talking deliriously, thinking aloud, and recalling what had gone
19210 through her mind the night before. She knew him, and called him by his
19211 name, but appeared to think it right that she should explain everything
19212 to him; and again, and again, begged him to explain everything to her
19213 husband.
19214
19215 "Tell him I shall go to him soon: I am ready to promise. Only,
19216 thinking about it was so dreadful--it has made me ill. Not very ill.
19217 I shall soon be better. Go and tell him."
19218
19219 But the silence in her husband's ear was never more to be broken.
19220
19221
19222
19223 CHAPTER XLIX.
19224
19225 A task too strong for wizard spells
19226 This squire had brought about;
19227 'T is easy dropping stones in wells,
19228 But who shall get them out?"
19229
19230
19231 "I wish to God we could hinder Dorothea from knowing this," said Sir
19232 James Chettam, with a little frown on his brow, and an expression of
19233 intense disgust about his mouth.
19234
19235 He was standing on the hearth-rug in the library at Lowick Grange, and
19236 speaking to Mr. Brooke. It was the day after Mr. Casaubon had been
19237 buried, and Dorothea was not yet able to leave her room.
19238
19239 "That would be difficult, you know, Chettam, as she is an executrix,
19240 and she likes to go into these things--property, land, that kind of
19241 thing. She has her notions, you know," said Mr. Brooke, sticking his
19242 eye-glasses on nervously, and exploring the edges of a folded paper
19243 which he held in his hand; "and she would like to act--depend upon it,
19244 as an executrix Dorothea would want to act. And she was twenty-one
19245 last December, you know. I can hinder nothing."
19246
19247 Sir James looked at the carpet for a minute in silence, and then
19248 lifting his eyes suddenly fixed them on Mr. Brooke, saying, "I will
19249 tell you what we can do. Until Dorothea is well, all business must be
19250 kept from her, and as soon as she is able to be moved she must come to
19251 us. Being with Celia and the baby will be the best thing in the world
19252 for her, and will pass away the time. And meanwhile you must get rid
19253 of Ladislaw: you must send him out of the country." Here Sir James's
19254 look of disgust returned in all its intensity.
19255
19256 Mr. Brooke put his hands behind him, walked to the window and
19257 straightened his back with a little shake before he replied.
19258
19259 "That is easily said, Chettam, easily said, you know."
19260
19261 "My dear sir," persisted Sir James, restraining his indignation within
19262 respectful forms, "it was you who brought him here, and you who keep
19263 him here--I mean by the occupation you give him."
19264
19265 "Yes, but I can't dismiss him in an instant without assigning reasons,
19266 my dear Chettam. Ladislaw has been invaluable, most satisfactory. I
19267 consider that I have done this part of the country a service by
19268 bringing him--by bringing him, you know." Mr. Brooke ended with a nod,
19269 turning round to give it.
19270
19271 "It's a pity this part of the country didn't do without him, that's all
19272 I have to say about it. At any rate, as Dorothea's brother-in-law, I
19273 feel warranted in objecting strongly to his being kept here by any
19274 action on the part of her friends. You admit, I hope, that I have a
19275 right to speak about what concerns the dignity of my wife's sister?"
19276
19277 Sir James was getting warm.
19278
19279 "Of course, my dear Chettam, of course. But you and I have different
19280 ideas--different--"
19281
19282 "Not about this action of Casaubon's, I should hope," interrupted Sir
19283 James. "I say that he has most unfairly compromised Dorothea. I say
19284 that there never was a meaner, more ungentlemanly action than this--a
19285 codicil of this sort to a will which he made at the time of his
19286 marriage with the knowledge and reliance of her family--a positive
19287 insult to Dorothea!"
19288
19289 "Well, you know, Casaubon was a little twisted about Ladislaw.
19290 Ladislaw has told me the reason--dislike of the bent he took, you
19291 know--Ladislaw didn't think much of Casaubon's notions, Thoth and
19292 Dagon--that sort of thing: and I fancy that Casaubon didn't like the
19293 independent position Ladislaw had taken up. I saw the letters between
19294 them, you know. Poor Casaubon was a little buried in books--he didn't
19295 know the world."
19296
19297 "It's all very well for Ladislaw to put that color on it," said Sir
19298 James. "But I believe Casaubon was only jealous of him on Dorothea's
19299 account, and the world will suppose that she gave him some reason; and
19300 that is what makes it so abominable--coupling her name with this young
19301 fellow's."
19302
19303 "My dear Chettam, it won't lead to anything, you know," said Mr.
19304 Brooke, seating himself and sticking on his eye-glass again. "It's all
19305 of a piece with Casaubon's oddity. This paper, now, 'Synoptical
19306 Tabulation' and so on, 'for the use of Mrs. Casaubon,' it was locked up
19307 in the desk with the will. I suppose he meant Dorothea to publish his
19308 researches, eh? and she'll do it, you know; she has gone into his
19309 studies uncommonly."
19310
19311 "My dear sir," said Sir James, impatiently, "that is neither here nor
19312 there. The question is, whether you don't see with me the propriety of
19313 sending young Ladislaw away?"
19314
19315 "Well, no, not the urgency of the thing. By-and-by, perhaps, it may
19316 come round. As to gossip, you know, sending him away won't hinder
19317 gossip. People say what they like to say, not what they have chapter
19318 and verse for," said Mr Brooke, becoming acute about the truths that
19319 lay on the side of his own wishes. "I might get rid of Ladislaw up to
19320 a certain point--take away the 'Pioneer' from him, and that sort of
19321 thing; but I couldn't send him out of the country if he didn't choose
19322 to go--didn't choose, you know."
19323
19324 Mr. Brooke, persisting as quietly as if he were only discussing the
19325 nature of last year's weather, and nodding at the end with his usual
19326 amenity, was an exasperating form of obstinacy.
19327
19328 "Good God!" said Sir James, with as much passion as he ever showed,
19329 "let us get him a post; let us spend money on him. If he could go in
19330 the suite of some Colonial Governor! Grampus might take him--and I
19331 could write to Fulke about it."
19332
19333 "But Ladislaw won't be shipped off like a head of cattle, my dear
19334 fellow; Ladislaw has his ideas. It's my opinion that if he were to
19335 part from me to-morrow, you'd only hear the more of him in the country.
19336 With his talent for speaking and drawing up documents, there are few
19337 men who could come up to him as an agitator--an agitator, you know."
19338
19339 "Agitator!" said Sir James, with bitter emphasis, feeling that the
19340 syllables of this word properly repeated were a sufficient exposure of
19341 its hatefulness.
19342
19343 "But be reasonable, Chettam. Dorothea, now. As you say, she had
19344 better go to Celia as soon as possible. She can stay under your roof,
19345 and in the mean time things may come round quietly. Don't let us be
19346 firing off our guns in a hurry, you know. Standish will keep our
19347 counsel, and the news will be old before it's known. Twenty things may
19348 happen to carry off Ladislaw--without my doing anything, you know."
19349
19350 "Then I am to conclude that you decline to do anything?"
19351
19352 "Decline, Chettam?--no--I didn't say decline. But I really don't see
19353 what I could do. Ladislaw is a gentleman."
19354
19355 "I am glad to hear it!" said Sir James, his irritation making him
19356 forget himself a little. "I am sure Casaubon was not."
19357
19358 "Well, it would have been worse if he had made the codicil to hinder
19359 her from marrying again at all, you know."
19360
19361 "I don't know that," said Sir James. "It would have been less
19362 indelicate."
19363
19364 "One of poor Casaubon's freaks! That attack upset his brain a little.
19365 It all goes for nothing. She doesn't _want_ to marry Ladislaw."
19366
19367 "But this codicil is framed so as to make everybody believe that she
19368 did. I don't believe anything of the sort about Dorothea," said Sir
19369 James--then frowningly, "but I suspect Ladislaw. I tell you frankly,
19370 I suspect Ladislaw."
19371
19372 "I couldn't take any immediate action on that ground, Chettam. In
19373 fact, if it were possible to pack him off--send him to Norfolk
19374 Island--that sort of thing--it would look all the worse for Dorothea
19375 to those who knew about it. It would seem as if we distrusted
19376 her--distrusted her, you know."
19377
19378 That Mr. Brooke had hit on an undeniable argument, did not tend to
19379 soothe Sir James. He put out his hand to reach his hat, implying that
19380 he did not mean to contend further, and said, still with some heat--
19381
19382 "Well, I can only say that I think Dorothea was sacrificed once,
19383 because her friends were too careless. I shall do what I can, as her
19384 brother, to protect her now."
19385
19386 "You can't do better than get her to Freshitt as soon as possible,
19387 Chettam. I approve that plan altogether," said Mr. Brooke, well
19388 pleased that he had won the argument. It would have been highly
19389 inconvenient to him to part with Ladislaw at that time, when a
19390 dissolution might happen any day, and electors were to be convinced of
19391 the course by which the interests of the country would be best served.
19392 Mr. Brooke sincerely believed that this end could be secured by his own
19393 return to Parliament: he offered the forces of his mind honestly to the
19394 nation.
19395
19396
19397
19398 CHAPTER L.
19399
19400 "'This Loller here wol precilen us somewhat.'
19401 'Nay by my father's soule! that schal he nat,'
19402 Sayde the Schipman, 'here schal he not preche,
19403 We schal no gospel glosen here ne teche.
19404 We leven all in the gret God,' quod he.
19405 He wolden sowen some diffcultee."
19406 Canterbury Tales.
19407
19408
19409 Dorothea had been safe at Freshitt Hall nearly a week before she had
19410 asked any dangerous questions. Every morning now she sat with Celia in
19411 the prettiest of up-stairs sitting-rooms, opening into a small
19412 conservatory--Celia all in white and lavender like a bunch of mixed
19413 violets, watching the remarkable acts of the baby, which were so
19414 dubious to her inexperienced mind that all conversation was interrupted
19415 by appeals for their interpretation made to the oracular nurse.
19416 Dorothea sat by in her widow's dress, with an expression which rather
19417 provoked Celia, as being much too sad; for not only was baby quite
19418 well, but really when a husband had been so dull and troublesome while
19419 he lived, and besides that had--well, well! Sir James, of course, had
19420 told Celia everything, with a strong representation how important it
19421 was that Dorothea should not know it sooner than was inevitable.
19422
19423 But Mr. Brooke had been right in predicting that Dorothea would not
19424 long remain passive where action had been assigned to her; she knew the
19425 purport of her husband's will made at the time of their marriage, and
19426 her mind, as soon as she was clearly conscious of her position, was
19427 silently occupied with what she ought to do as the owner of Lowick
19428 Manor with the patronage of the living attached to it.
19429
19430 One morning when her uncle paid his usual visit, though with an unusual
19431 alacrity in his manner which he accounted for by saying that it was now
19432 pretty certain Parliament would be dissolved forthwith, Dorothea said--
19433
19434 "Uncle, it is right now that I should consider who is to have the
19435 living at Lowick. After Mr. Tucker had been provided for, I never
19436 heard my husband say that he had any clergyman in his mind as a
19437 successor to himself. I think I ought to have the keys now and go to
19438 Lowick to examine all my husband's papers. There may be something that
19439 would throw light on his wishes."
19440
19441 "No hurry, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, quietly. "By-and-by, you know,
19442 you can go, if you like. But I cast my eyes over things in the desks
19443 and drawers--there was nothing--nothing but deep subjects, you
19444 know--besides the will. Everything can be done by-and-by. As to the
19445 living, I have had an application for interest already--I should say
19446 rather good. Mr. Tyke has been strongly recommended to me--I had
19447 something to do with getting him an appointment before. An apostolic
19448 man, I believe--the sort of thing that would suit you, my dear."
19449
19450 "I should like to have fuller knowledge about him, uncle, and judge for
19451 myself, if Mr. Casaubon has not left any expression of his wishes. He
19452 has perhaps made some addition to his will--there may be some
19453 instructions for me," said Dorothea, who had all the while had this
19454 conjecture in her mind with relation to her husband's work.
19455
19456 "Nothing about the rectory, my dear--nothing," said Mr. Brooke, rising
19457 to go away, and putting out his hand to his nieces: "nor about his
19458 researches, you know. Nothing in the will."
19459
19460 Dorothea's lip quivered.
19461
19462 "Come, you must not think of these things yet, my dear. By-and-by, you
19463 know."
19464
19465 "I am quite well now, uncle; I wish to exert myself."
19466
19467 "Well, well, we shall see. But I must run away now--I have no end of
19468 work now--it's a crisis--a political crisis, you know. And here is
19469 Celia and her little man--you are an aunt, you know, now, and I am a
19470 sort of grandfather," said Mr. Brooke, with placid hurry, anxious to
19471 get away and tell Chettam that it would not be his (Mr. Brooke's) fault
19472 if Dorothea insisted on looking into everything.
19473
19474 Dorothea sank back in her chair when her uncle had left the room, and
19475 cast her eyes down meditatively on her crossed hands.
19476
19477 "Look, Dodo! look at him! Did you ever see anything like that?" said
19478 Celia, in her comfortable staccato.
19479
19480 "What, Kitty?" said Dorothea, lifting her eyes rather absently.
19481
19482 "What? why, his upper lip; see how he is drawing it down, as if he
19483 meant to make a face. Isn't it wonderful! He may have his little
19484 thoughts. I wish nurse were here. Do look at him."
19485
19486 A large tear which had been for some time gathering, rolled down
19487 Dorothea's cheek as she looked up and tried to smile.
19488
19489 "Don't be sad, Dodo; kiss baby. What are you brooding over so? I am
19490 sure you did everything, and a great deal too much. You should be
19491 happy now."
19492
19493 "I wonder if Sir James would drive me to Lowick. I want to look over
19494 everything--to see if there were any words written for me."
19495
19496 "You are not to go till Mr. Lydgate says you may go. And he has not
19497 said so yet (here you are, nurse; take baby and walk up and down the
19498 gallery). Besides, you have got a wrong notion in your head as usual,
19499 Dodo--I can see that: it vexes me."
19500
19501 "Where am I wrong, Kitty?" said Dorothea, quite meekly. She was almost
19502 ready now to think Celia wiser than herself, and was really wondering
19503 with some fear what her wrong notion was. Celia felt her advantage,
19504 and was determined to use it. None of them knew Dodo as well as she
19505 did, or knew how to manage her. Since Celia's baby was born, she had
19506 had a new sense of her mental solidity and calm wisdom. It seemed
19507 clear that where there was a baby, things were right enough, and that
19508 error, in general, was a mere lack of that central poising force.
19509
19510 "I can see what you are thinking of as well as can be, Dodo," said
19511 Celia. "You are wanting to find out if there is anything uncomfortable
19512 for you to do now, only because Mr. Casaubon wished it. As if you had
19513 not been uncomfortable enough before. And he doesn't deserve it, and
19514 you will find that out. He has behaved very badly. James is as angry
19515 with him as can be. And I had better tell you, to prepare you."
19516
19517 "Celia," said Dorothea, entreatingly, "you distress me. Tell me at
19518 once what you mean." It glanced through her mind that Mr. Casaubon
19519 had left the property away from her--which would not be so very
19520 distressing.
19521
19522 "Why, he has made a codicil to his will, to say the property was all to
19523 go away from you if you married--I mean--"
19524
19525 "That is of no consequence," said Dorothea, breaking in impetuously.
19526
19527 "But if you married Mr. Ladislaw, not anybody else," Celia went on with
19528 persevering quietude. "Of course that is of no consequence in one
19529 way--you never _would_ marry Mr. Ladislaw; but that only makes it worse
19530 of Mr. Casaubon."
19531
19532 The blood rushed to Dorothea's face and neck painfully. But Celia was
19533 administering what she thought a sobering dose of fact. It was taking
19534 up notions that had done Dodo's health so much harm. So she went on in
19535 her neutral tone, as if she had been remarking on baby's robes.
19536
19537 "James says so. He says it is abominable, and not like a gentleman.
19538 And there never was a better judge than James. It is as if Mr.
19539 Casaubon wanted to make people believe that you would wish to marry Mr.
19540 Ladislaw--which is ridiculous. Only James says it was to hinder Mr.
19541 Ladislaw from wanting to marry you for your money--just as if he ever
19542 would think of making you an offer. Mrs. Cadwallader said you might as
19543 well marry an Italian with white mice! But I must just go and look at
19544 baby," Celia added, without the least change of tone, throwing a light
19545 shawl over her, and tripping away.
19546
19547 Dorothea by this time had turned cold again, and now threw herself back
19548 helplessly in her chair. She might have compared her experience at
19549 that moment to the vague, alarmed consciousness that her life was
19550 taking on a new form, that she was undergoing a metamorphosis in which
19551 memory would not adjust itself to the stirring of new organs.
19552 Everything was changing its aspect: her husband's conduct, her own
19553 duteous feeling towards him, every struggle between them--and yet
19554 more, her whole relation to Will Ladislaw. Her world was in a state of
19555 convulsive change; the only thing she could say distinctly to herself
19556 was, that she must wait and think anew. One change terrified her as if
19557 it had been a sin; it was a violent shock of repulsion from her
19558 departed husband, who had had hidden thoughts, perhaps perverting
19559 everything she said and did. Then again she was conscious of another
19560 change which also made her tremulous; it was a sudden strange yearning
19561 of heart towards Will Ladislaw. It had never before entered her mind
19562 that he could, under any circumstances, be her lover: conceive the
19563 effect of the sudden revelation that another had thought of him in that
19564 light--that perhaps he himself had been conscious of such a
19565 possibility,--and this with the hurrying, crowding vision of unfitting
19566 conditions, and questions not soon to be solved.
19567
19568 It seemed a long while--she did not know how long--before she heard
19569 Celia saying, "That will do, nurse; he will be quiet on my lap now.
19570 You can go to lunch, and let Garratt stay in the next room." "What I
19571 think, Dodo," Celia went on, observing nothing more than that Dorothea
19572 was leaning back in her chair, and likely to be passive, "is that Mr.
19573 Casaubon was spiteful. I never did like him, and James never did. I
19574 think the corners of his mouth were dreadfully spiteful. And now he
19575 has behaved in this way, I am sure religion does not require you to
19576 make yourself uncomfortable about him. If he has been taken away, that
19577 is a mercy, and you ought to be grateful. We should not grieve, should
19578 we, baby?" said Celia confidentially to that unconscious centre and
19579 poise of the world, who had the most remarkable fists all complete even
19580 to the nails, and hair enough, really, when you took his cap off, to
19581 make--you didn't know what:--in short, he was Bouddha in a Western
19582 form.
19583
19584 At this crisis Lydgate was announced, and one of the first things he
19585 said was, "I fear you are not so well as you were, Mrs. Casaubon; have
19586 you been agitated? allow me to feel your pulse." Dorothea's hand was
19587 of a marble coldness.
19588
19589 "She wants to go to Lowick, to look over papers," said Celia. "She
19590 ought not, ought she?"
19591
19592 Lydgate did not speak for a few moments. Then he said, looking at
19593 Dorothea. "I hardly know. In my opinion Mrs. Casaubon should do what
19594 would give her the most repose of mind. That repose will not always
19595 come from being forbidden to act."
19596
19597 "Thank you," said Dorothea, exerting herself, "I am sure that is wise.
19598 There are so many things which I ought to attend to. Why should I sit
19599 here idle?" Then, with an effort to recall subjects not connected with
19600 her agitation, she added, abruptly, "You know every one in Middlemarch,
19601 I think, Mr. Lydgate. I shall ask you to tell me a great deal. I have
19602 serious things to do now. I have a living to give away. You know Mr.
19603 Tyke and all the--" But Dorothea's effort was too much for her; she
19604 broke off and burst into sobs. Lydgate made her drink a dose of sal
19605 volatile.
19606
19607 "Let Mrs. Casaubon do as she likes," he said to Sir James, whom he
19608 asked to see before quitting the house. "She wants perfect freedom, I
19609 think, more than any other prescription."
19610
19611 His attendance on Dorothea while her brain was excited, had enabled him
19612 to form some true conclusions concerning the trials of her life. He
19613 felt sure that she had been suffering from the strain and conflict of
19614 self-repression; and that she was likely now to feel herself only in
19615 another sort of pinfold than that from which she had been released.
19616
19617 Lydgate's advice was all the easier for Sir James to follow when he
19618 found that Celia had already told Dorothea the unpleasant fact about
19619 the will. There was no help for it now--no reason for any further
19620 delay in the execution of necessary business. And the next day Sir
19621 James complied at once with her request that he would drive her to
19622 Lowick.
19623
19624 "I have no wish to stay there at present," said Dorothea; "I could
19625 hardly bear it. I am much happier at Freshitt with Celia. I shall be
19626 able to think better about what should be done at Lowick by looking at
19627 it from a distance. And I should like to be at the Grange a little
19628 while with my uncle, and go about in all the old walks and among the
19629 people in the village."
19630
19631 "Not yet, I think. Your uncle is having political company, and you are
19632 better out of the way of such doings," said Sir James, who at that
19633 moment thought of the Grange chiefly as a haunt of young Ladislaw's.
19634 But no word passed between him and Dorothea about the objectionable
19635 part of the will; indeed, both of them felt that the mention of it
19636 between them would be impossible. Sir James was shy, even with men,
19637 about disagreeable subjects; and the one thing that Dorothea would have
19638 chosen to say, if she had spoken on the matter at all, was forbidden to
19639 her at present because it seemed to be a further exposure of her
19640 husband's injustice. Yet she did wish that Sir James could know what
19641 had passed between her and her husband about Will Ladislaw's moral
19642 claim on the property: it would then, she thought, be apparent to him
19643 as it was to her, that her husband's strange indelicate proviso had
19644 been chiefly urged by his bitter resistance to that idea of claim, and
19645 not merely by personal feelings more difficult to talk about. Also, it
19646 must be admitted, Dorothea wished that this could be known for Will's
19647 sake, since her friends seemed to think of him as simply an object of
19648 Mr. Casaubon's charity. Why should he be compared with an Italian
19649 carrying white mice? That word quoted from Mrs. Cadwallader seemed
19650 like a mocking travesty wrought in the dark by an impish finger.
19651
19652 At Lowick Dorothea searched desk and drawer--searched all her husband's
19653 places of deposit for private writing, but found no paper addressed
19654 especially to her, except that "Synoptical Tabulation," which was
19655 probably only the beginning of many intended directions for her
19656 guidance. In carrying out this bequest of labor to Dorothea, as in all
19657 else, Mr. Casaubon had been slow and hesitating, oppressed in the plan
19658 of transmitting his work, as he had been in executing it, by the sense
19659 of moving heavily in a dim and clogging medium: distrust of Dorothea's
19660 competence to arrange what he had prepared was subdued only by distrust
19661 of any other redactor. But he had come at last to create a trust for
19662 himself out of Dorothea's nature: she could do what she resolved to do:
19663 and he willingly imagined her toiling under the fetters of a promise to
19664 erect a tomb with his name upon it. (Not that Mr. Casaubon called the
19665 future volumes a tomb; he called them the Key to all Mythologies.) But
19666 the months gained on him and left his plans belated: he had only had
19667 time to ask for that promise by which he sought to keep his cold grasp
19668 on Dorothea's life.
19669
19670 The grasp had slipped away. Bound by a pledge given from the depths of
19671 her pity, she would have been capable of undertaking a toil which her
19672 judgment whispered was vain for all uses except that consecration of
19673 faithfulness which is a supreme use. But now her judgment, instead of
19674 being controlled by duteous devotion, was made active by the
19675 imbittering discovery that in her past union there had lurked the
19676 hidden alienation of secrecy and suspicion. The living, suffering man
19677 was no longer before her to awaken her pity: there remained only the
19678 retrospect of painful subjection to a husband whose thoughts had been
19679 lower than she had believed, whose exorbitant claims for himself had
19680 even blinded his scrupulous care for his own character, and made him
19681 defeat his own pride by shocking men of ordinary honor. As for the
19682 property which was the sign of that broken tie, she would have been
19683 glad to be free from it and have nothing more than her original fortune
19684 which had been settled on her, if there had not been duties attached to
19685 ownership, which she ought not to flinch from. About this property
19686 many troublous questions insisted on rising: had she not been right in
19687 thinking that the half of it ought to go to Will Ladislaw?--but was it
19688 not impossible now for her to do that act of justice? Mr. Casaubon had
19689 taken a cruelly effective means of hindering her: even with indignation
19690 against him in her heart, any act that seemed a triumphant eluding of
19691 his purpose revolted her.
19692
19693 After collecting papers of business which she wished to examine, she
19694 locked up again the desks and drawers--all empty of personal words for
19695 her--empty of any sign that in her husband's lonely brooding his heart
19696 had gone out to her in excuse or explanation; and she went back to
19697 Freshitt with the sense that around his last hard demand and his last
19698 injurious assertion of his power, the silence was unbroken.
19699
19700 Dorothea tried now to turn her thoughts towards immediate duties, and
19701 one of these was of a kind which others were determined to remind her
19702 of. Lydgate's ear had caught eagerly her mention of the living, and as
19703 soon as he could, he reopened the subject, seeing here a possibility of
19704 making amends for the casting-vote he had once given with an
19705 ill-satisfied conscience. "Instead of telling you anything about Mr.
19706 Tyke," he said, "I should like to speak of another man--Mr.
19707 Farebrother, the Vicar of St. Botolph's. His living is a poor one, and
19708 gives him a stinted provision for himself and his family. His mother,
19709 aunt, and sister all live with him, and depend upon him. I believe he
19710 has never married because of them. I never heard such good preaching
19711 as his--such plain, easy eloquence. He would have done to preach at
19712 St. Paul's Cross after old Latimer. His talk is just as good about all
19713 subjects: original, simple, clear. I think him a remarkable fellow: he
19714 ought to have done more than he has done."
19715
19716 "Why has he not done more?" said Dorothea, interested now in all who
19717 had slipped below their own intention.
19718
19719 "That's a hard question," said Lydgate. "I find myself that it's
19720 uncommonly difficult to make the right thing work: there are so many
19721 strings pulling at once. Farebrother often hints that he has got into
19722 the wrong profession; he wants a wider range than that of a poor
19723 clergyman, and I suppose he has no interest to help him on. He is very
19724 fond of Natural History and various scientific matters, and he is
19725 hampered in reconciling these tastes with his position. He has no
19726 money to spare--hardly enough to use; and that has led him into
19727 card-playing--Middlemarch is a great place for whist. He does play for
19728 money, and he wins a good deal. Of course that takes him into company
19729 a little beneath him, and makes him slack about some things; and yet,
19730 with all that, looking at him as a whole, I think he is one of the most
19731 blameless men I ever knew. He has neither venom nor doubleness in him,
19732 and those often go with a more correct outside."
19733
19734 "I wonder whether he suffers in his conscience because of that habit,"
19735 said Dorothea; "I wonder whether he wishes he could leave it off."
19736
19737 "I have no doubt he would leave it off, if he were transplanted into
19738 plenty: he would be glad of the time for other things."
19739
19740 "My uncle says that Mr. Tyke is spoken of as an apostolic man," said
19741 Dorothea, meditatively. She was wishing it were possible to restore
19742 the times of primitive zeal, and yet thinking of Mr. Farebrother with a
19743 strong desire to rescue him from his chance-gotten money.
19744
19745 "I don't pretend to say that Farebrother is apostolic," said Lydgate.
19746 "His position is not quite like that of the Apostles: he is only a
19747 parson among parishioners whose lives he has to try and make better.
19748 Practically I find that what is called being apostolic now, is an
19749 impatience of everything in which the parson doesn't cut the principal
19750 figure. I see something of that in Mr. Tyke at the Hospital: a good
19751 deal of his doctrine is a sort of pinching hard to make people
19752 uncomfortably aware of him. Besides, an apostolic man at Lowick!--he
19753 ought to think, as St. Francis did, that it is needful to preach to the
19754 birds."
19755
19756 "True," said Dorothea. "It is hard to imagine what sort of notions our
19757 farmers and laborers get from their teaching. I have been looking into
19758 a volume of sermons by Mr. Tyke: such sermons would be of no use at
19759 Lowick--I mean, about imputed righteousness and the prophecies in the
19760 Apocalypse. I have always been thinking of the different ways in which
19761 Christianity is taught, and whenever I find one way that makes it a
19762 wider blessing than any other, I cling to that as the truest--I mean
19763 that which takes in the most good of all kinds, and brings in the most
19764 people as sharers in it. It is surely better to pardon too much, than
19765 to condemn too much. But I should like to see Mr. Farebrother and hear
19766 him preach."
19767
19768 "Do," said Lydgate; "I trust to the effect of that. He is very much
19769 beloved, but he has his enemies too: there are always people who can't
19770 forgive an able man for differing from them. And that money-winning
19771 business is really a blot. You don't, of course, see many Middlemarch
19772 people: but Mr. Ladislaw, who is constantly seeing Mr. Brooke, is a
19773 great friend of Mr. Farebrother's old ladies, and would be glad to sing
19774 the Vicar's praises. One of the old ladies--Miss Noble, the aunt--is a
19775 wonderfully quaint picture of self-forgetful goodness, and Ladislaw
19776 gallants her about sometimes. I met them one day in a back street: you
19777 know Ladislaw's look--a sort of Daphnis in coat and waistcoat; and this
19778 little old maid reaching up to his arm--they looked like a couple
19779 dropped out of a romantic comedy. But the best evidence about
19780 Farebrother is to see him and hear him."
19781
19782 Happily Dorothea was in her private sitting-room when this conversation
19783 occurred, and there was no one present to make Lydgate's innocent
19784 introduction of Ladislaw painful to her. As was usual with him in
19785 matters of personal gossip, Lydgate had quite forgotten Rosamond's
19786 remark that she thought Will adored Mrs. Casaubon. At that moment he
19787 was only caring for what would recommend the Farebrother family; and he
19788 had purposely given emphasis to the worst that could be said about the
19789 Vicar, in order to forestall objections. In the weeks since Mr.
19790 Casaubon's death he had hardly seen Ladislaw, and he had heard no rumor
19791 to warn him that Mr. Brooke's confidential secretary was a dangerous
19792 subject with Mrs. Casaubon. When he was gone, his picture of Ladislaw
19793 lingered in her mind and disputed the ground with that question of the
19794 Lowick living. What was Will Ladislaw thinking about her? Would he
19795 hear of that fact which made her cheeks burn as they never used to do?
19796 And how would he feel when he heard it?--But she could see as well as
19797 possible how he smiled down at the little old maid. An Italian with
19798 white mice!--on the contrary, he was a creature who entered into every
19799 one's feelings, and could take the pressure of their thought instead of
19800 urging his own with iron resistance.
19801
19802
19803
19804 CHAPTER LI.
19805
19806 Party is Nature too, and you shall see
19807 By force of Logic how they both agree:
19808 The Many in the One, the One in Many;
19809 All is not Some, nor Some the same as Any:
19810 Genus holds species, both are great or small;
19811 One genus highest, one not high at all;
19812 Each species has its differentia too,
19813 This is not That, and He was never You,
19814 Though this and that are AYES, and you and he
19815 Are like as one to one, or three to three.
19816
19817
19818 No gossip about Mr. Casaubon's will had yet reached Ladislaw: the air
19819 seemed to be filled with the dissolution of Parliament and the coming
19820 election, as the old wakes and fairs were filled with the rival clatter
19821 of itinerant shows; and more private noises were taken little notice
19822 of. The famous "dry election" was at hand, in which the depths of
19823 public feeling might be measured by the low flood-mark of drink. Will
19824 Ladislaw was one of the busiest at this time; and though Dorothea's
19825 widowhood was continually in his thought, he was so far from wishing to
19826 be spoken to on the subject, that when Lydgate sought him out to tell
19827 him what had passed about the Lowick living, he answered rather
19828 waspishly--
19829
19830 "Why should you bring me into the matter? I never see Mrs. Casaubon,
19831 and am not likely to see her, since she is at Freshitt. I never go
19832 there. It is Tory ground, where I and the 'Pioneer' are no more
19833 welcome than a poacher and his gun."
19834
19835 The fact was that Will had been made the more susceptible by observing
19836 that Mr. Brooke, instead of wishing him, as before, to come to the
19837 Grange oftener than was quite agreeable to himself, seemed now to
19838 contrive that he should go there as little as possible. This was a
19839 shuffling concession of Mr. Brooke's to Sir James Chettam's indignant
19840 remonstrance; and Will, awake to the slightest hint in this direction,
19841 concluded that he was to be kept away from the Grange on Dorothea's
19842 account. Her friends, then, regarded him with some suspicion? Their
19843 fears were quite superfluous: they were very much mistaken if they
19844 imagined that he would put himself forward as a needy adventurer trying
19845 to win the favor of a rich woman.
19846
19847 Until now Will had never fully seen the chasm between himself and
19848 Dorothea--until now that he was come to the brink of it, and saw her on
19849 the other side. He began, not without some inward rage, to think of
19850 going away from the neighborhood: it would be impossible for him to
19851 show any further interest in Dorothea without subjecting himself to
19852 disagreeable imputations--perhaps even in her mind, which others might
19853 try to poison.
19854
19855 "We are forever divided," said Will. "I might as well be at Rome; she
19856 would be no farther from me." But what we call our despair is often
19857 only the painful eagerness of unfed hope. There were plenty of reasons
19858 why he should not go--public reasons why he should not quit his post at
19859 this crisis, leaving Mr. Brooke in the lurch when he needed "coaching"
19860 for the election, and when there was so much canvassing, direct and
19861 indirect, to be carried on. Will could not like to leave his own
19862 chessmen in the heat of a game; and any candidate on the right side,
19863 even if his brain and marrow had been as soft as was consistent with a
19864 gentlemanly bearing, might help to turn a majority. To coach Mr.
19865 Brooke and keep him steadily to the idea that he must pledge himself to
19866 vote for the actual Reform Bill, instead of insisting on his
19867 independence and power of pulling up in time, was not an easy task.
19868 Mr. Farebrother's prophecy of a fourth candidate "in the bag" had not
19869 yet been fulfilled, neither the Parliamentary Candidate Society nor any
19870 other power on the watch to secure a reforming majority seeing a worthy
19871 nodus for interference while there was a second reforming candidate
19872 like Mr. Brooke, who might be returned at his own expense; and the
19873 fight lay entirely between Pinkerton the old Tory member, Bagster the
19874 new Whig member returned at the last election, and Brooke the future
19875 independent member, who was to fetter himself for this occasion only.
19876 Mr. Hawley and his party would bend all their forces to the return of
19877 Pinkerton, and Mr. Brooke's success must depend either on plumpers
19878 which would leave Bagster in the rear, or on the new minting of Tory
19879 votes into reforming votes. The latter means, of course, would be
19880 preferable.
19881
19882 This prospect of converting votes was a dangerous distraction to Mr.
19883 Brooke: his impression that waverers were likely to be allured by
19884 wavering statements, and also the liability of his mind to stick afresh
19885 at opposing arguments as they turned up in his memory, gave Will
19886 Ladislaw much trouble.
19887
19888 "You know there are tactics in these things," said Mr. Brooke; "meeting
19889 people half-way--tempering your ideas--saying, 'Well now, there's
19890 something in that,' and so on. I agree with you that this is a
19891 peculiar occasion--the country with a will of its own--political
19892 unions--that sort of thing--but we sometimes cut with rather too sharp
19893 a knife, Ladislaw. These ten-pound householders, now: why ten? Draw
19894 the line somewhere--yes: but why just at ten? That's a difficult
19895 question, now, if you go into it."
19896
19897 "Of course it is," said Will, impatiently. "But if you are to wait
19898 till we get a logical Bill, you must put yourself forward as a
19899 revolutionist, and then Middlemarch would not elect you, I fancy. As
19900 for trimming, this is not a time for trimming."
19901
19902 Mr. Brooke always ended by agreeing with Ladislaw, who still appeared
19903 to him a sort of Burke with a leaven of Shelley; but after an interval
19904 the wisdom of his own methods reasserted itself, and he was again drawn
19905 into using them with much hopefulness. At this stage of affairs he was
19906 in excellent spirits, which even supported him under large advances of
19907 money; for his powers of convincing and persuading had not yet been
19908 tested by anything more difficult than a chairman's speech introducing
19909 other orators, or a dialogue with a Middlemarch voter, from which he
19910 came away with a sense that he was a tactician by nature, and that it
19911 was a pity he had not gone earlier into this kind of thing. He was a
19912 little conscious of defeat, however, with Mr. Mawmsey, a chief
19913 representative in Middlemarch of that great social power, the retail
19914 trader, and naturally one of the most doubtful voters in the
19915 borough--willing for his own part to supply an equal quality of teas
19916 and sugars to reformer and anti-reformer, as well as to agree
19917 impartially with both, and feeling like the burgesses of old that this
19918 necessity of electing members was a great burthen to a town; for even
19919 if there were no danger in holding out hopes to all parties beforehand,
19920 there would be the painful necessity at last of disappointing
19921 respectable people whose names were on his books. He was accustomed to
19922 receive large orders from Mr. Brooke of Tipton; but then, there were
19923 many of Pinkerton's committee whose opinions had a great weight of
19924 grocery on their side. Mr. Mawmsey thinking that Mr. Brooke, as not
19925 too "clever in his intellects," was the more likely to forgive a grocer
19926 who gave a hostile vote under pressure, had become confidential in his
19927 back parlor.
19928
19929 "As to Reform, sir, put it in a family light," he said, rattling the
19930 small silver in his pocket, and smiling affably. "Will it support Mrs.
19931 Mawmsey, and enable her to bring up six children when I am no more? I
19932 put the question _fictiously_, knowing what must be the answer. Very
19933 well, sir. I ask you what, as a husband and a father, I am to do when
19934 gentlemen come to me and say, 'Do as you like, Mawmsey; but if you vote
19935 against us, I shall get my groceries elsewhere: when I sugar my liquor
19936 I like to feel that I am benefiting the country by maintaining
19937 tradesmen of the right color.' Those very words have been spoken to
19938 me, sir, in the very chair where you are now sitting. I don't mean by
19939 your honorable self, Mr. Brooke."
19940
19941 "No, no, no--that's narrow, you know. Until my butler complains to me
19942 of your goods, Mr. Mawmsey," said Mr. Brooke, soothingly, "until I hear
19943 that you send bad sugars, spices--that sort of thing--I shall never
19944 order him to go elsewhere."
19945
19946 "Sir, I am your humble servant, and greatly obliged," said Mr. Mawmsey,
19947 feeling that politics were clearing up a little. "There would be some
19948 pleasure in voting for a gentleman who speaks in that honorable manner."
19949
19950 "Well, you know, Mr. Mawmsey, you would find it the right thing to put
19951 yourself on our side. This Reform will touch everybody by-and-by--a
19952 thoroughly popular measure--a sort of A, B, C, you know, that must come
19953 first before the rest can follow. I quite agree with you that you've
19954 got to look at the thing in a family light: but public spirit, now.
19955 We're all one family, you know--it's all one cupboard. Such a thing
19956 as a vote, now: why, it may help to make men's fortunes at the
19957 Cape--there's no knowing what may be the effect of a vote," Mr. Brooke
19958 ended, with a sense of being a little out at sea, though finding it
19959 still enjoyable. But Mr. Mawmsey answered in a tone of decisive check.
19960
19961 "I beg your pardon, sir, but I can't afford that. When I give a vote I
19962 must know what I am doing; I must look to what will be the effects on
19963 my till and ledger, speaking respectfully. Prices, I'll admit, are
19964 what nobody can know the merits of; and the sudden falls after you've
19965 bought in currants, which are a goods that will not keep--I've never;
19966 myself seen into the ins and outs there; which is a rebuke to human
19967 pride. But as to one family, there's debtor and creditor, I hope;
19968 they're not going to reform that away; else I should vote for things
19969 staying as they are. Few men have less need to cry for change than I
19970 have, personally speaking--that is, for self and family. I am not one
19971 of those who have nothing to lose: I mean as to respectability both in
19972 parish and private business, and noways in respect of your honorable
19973 self and custom, which you was good enough to say you would not
19974 withdraw from me, vote or no vote, while the article sent in was
19975 satisfactory."
19976
19977 After this conversation Mr. Mawmsey went up and boasted to his wife
19978 that he had been rather too many for Brooke of Tipton, and that he
19979 didn't mind so much now about going to the poll.
19980
19981 Mr. Brooke on this occasion abstained from boasting of his tactics to
19982 Ladislaw, who for his part was glad enough to persuade himself that he
19983 had no concern with any canvassing except the purely argumentative
19984 sort, and that he worked no meaner engine than knowledge. Mr. Brooke,
19985 necessarily, had his agents, who understood the nature of the
19986 Middlemarch voter and the means of enlisting his ignorance on the side
19987 of the Bill--which were remarkably similar to the means of enlisting it
19988 on the side against the Bill. Will stopped his ears. Occasionally
19989 Parliament, like the rest of our lives, even to our eating and apparel,
19990 could hardly go on if our imaginations were too active about processes.
19991 There were plenty of dirty-handed men in the world to do dirty
19992 business; and Will protested to himself that his share in bringing Mr.
19993 Brooke through would be quite innocent.
19994
19995 But whether he should succeed in that mode of contributing to the
19996 majority on the right side was very doubtful to him. He had written
19997 out various speeches and memoranda for speeches, but he had begun to
19998 perceive that Mr. Brooke's mind, if it had the burthen of remembering
19999 any train of thought, would let it drop, run away in search of it, and
20000 not easily come back again. To collect documents is one mode of
20001 serving your country, and to remember the contents of a document is
20002 another. No! the only way in which Mr. Brooke could be coerced into
20003 thinking of the right arguments at the right time was to be well plied
20004 with them till they took up all the room in his brain. But here there
20005 was the difficulty of finding room, so many things having been taken in
20006 beforehand. Mr. Brooke himself observed that his ideas stood rather in
20007 his way when he was speaking.
20008
20009 However, Ladislaw's coaching was forthwith to be put to the test, for
20010 before the day of nomination Mr. Brooke was to explain himself to the
20011 worthy electors of Middlemarch from the balcony of the White Hart,
20012 which looked out advantageously at an angle of the market-place,
20013 commanding a large area in front and two converging streets. It was a
20014 fine May morning, and everything seemed hopeful: there was some
20015 prospect of an understanding between Bagster's committee and Brooke's,
20016 to which Mr. Bulstrode, Mr. Standish as a Liberal lawyer, and such
20017 manufacturers as Mr. Plymdale and Mr. Vincy, gave a solidity which
20018 almost counterbalanced Mr. Hawley and his associates who sat for
20019 Pinkerton at the Green Dragon. Mr. Brooke, conscious of having
20020 weakened the blasts of the "Trumpet" against him, by his reforms as a
20021 landlord in the last half year, and hearing himself cheered a little as
20022 he drove into the town, felt his heart tolerably light under his
20023 buff-colored waistcoat. But with regard to critical occasions, it
20024 often happens that all moments seem comfortably remote until the last.
20025
20026 "This looks well, eh?" said Mr. Brooke as the crowd gathered. "I shall
20027 have a good audience, at any rate. I like this, now--this kind of
20028 public made up of one's own neighbors, you know."
20029
20030 The weavers and tanners of Middlemarch, unlike Mr. Mawmsey, had never
20031 thought of Mr. Brooke as a neighbor, and were not more attached to him
20032 than if he had been sent in a box from London. But they listened
20033 without much disturbance to the speakers who introduced the candidate,
20034 one of them--a political personage from Brassing, who came to tell
20035 Middlemarch its duty--spoke so fully, that it was alarming to think
20036 what the candidate could find to say after him. Meanwhile the crowd
20037 became denser, and as the political personage neared the end of his
20038 speech, Mr. Brooke felt a remarkable change in his sensations while he
20039 still handled his eye-glass, trifled with documents before him, and
20040 exchanged remarks with his committee, as a man to whom the moment of
20041 summons was indifferent.
20042
20043 "I'll take another glass of sherry, Ladislaw," he said, with an easy
20044 air, to Will, who was close behind him, and presently handed him the
20045 supposed fortifier. It was ill-chosen; for Mr. Brooke was an
20046 abstemious man, and to drink a second glass of sherry quickly at no
20047 great interval from the first was a surprise to his system which tended
20048 to scatter his energies instead of collecting them. Pray pity him: so
20049 many English gentlemen make themselves miserable by speechifying on
20050 entirely private grounds! whereas Mr. Brooke wished to serve his
20051 country by standing for Parliament--which, indeed, may also be done on
20052 private grounds, but being once undertaken does absolutely demand some
20053 speechifying.
20054
20055 It was not about the beginning of his speech that Mr. Brooke was at all
20056 anxious; this, he felt sure, would be all right; he should have it
20057 quite pat, cut out as neatly as a set of couplets from Pope. Embarking
20058 would be easy, but the vision of open sea that might come after was
20059 alarming. "And questions, now," hinted the demon just waking up in his
20060 stomach, "somebody may put questions about the schedules.--Ladislaw,"
20061 he continued, aloud, "just hand me the memorandum of the schedules."
20062
20063 When Mr. Brooke presented himself on the balcony, the cheers were quite
20064 loud enough to counterbalance the yells, groans, brayings, and other
20065 expressions of adverse theory, which were so moderate that Mr. Standish
20066 (decidedly an old bird) observed in the ear next to him, "This looks
20067 dangerous, by God! Hawley has got some deeper plan than this." Still,
20068 the cheers were exhilarating, and no candidate could look more amiable
20069 than Mr. Brooke, with the memorandum in his breast-pocket, his left
20070 hand on the rail of the balcony, and his right trifling with his
20071 eye-glass. The striking points in his appearance were his buff
20072 waistcoat, short-clipped blond hair, and neutral physiognomy. He began
20073 with some confidence.
20074
20075 "Gentlemen--Electors of Middlemarch!"
20076
20077 This was so much the right thing that a little pause after it seemed
20078 natural.
20079
20080 "I'm uncommonly glad to be here--I was never so proud and happy in my
20081 life--never so happy, you know."
20082
20083 This was a bold figure of speech, but not exactly the right thing; for,
20084 unhappily, the pat opening had slipped away--even couplets from Pope
20085 may be but "fallings from us, vanishings," when fear clutches us, and a
20086 glass of sherry is hurrying like smoke among our ideas. Ladislaw, who
20087 stood at the window behind the speaker, thought, "it's all up now. The
20088 only chance is that, since the best thing won't always do, floundering
20089 may answer for once." Mr. Brooke, meanwhile, having lost other clews,
20090 fell back on himself and his qualifications--always an appropriate
20091 graceful subject for a candidate.
20092
20093 "I am a close neighbor of yours, my good friends--you've known me on
20094 the bench a good while--I've always gone a good deal into public
20095 questions--machinery, now, and machine-breaking--you're many of you
20096 concerned with machinery, and I've been going into that lately. It
20097 won't do, you know, breaking machines: everything must go on--trade,
20098 manufactures, commerce, interchange of staples--that kind of
20099 thing--since Adam Smith, that must go on. We must look all over the
20100 globe:--'Observation with extensive view,' must look everywhere, 'from
20101 China to Peru,' as somebody says--Johnson, I think, 'The Rambler,' you
20102 know. That is what I have done up to a certain point--not as far as
20103 Peru; but I've not always stayed at home--I saw it wouldn't do. I've
20104 been in the Levant, where some of your Middlemarch goods go--and then,
20105 again, in the Baltic. The Baltic, now."
20106
20107 Plying among his recollections in this way, Mr. Brooke might have got
20108 along, easily to himself, and would have come back from the remotest
20109 seas without trouble; but a diabolical procedure had been set up by the
20110 enemy. At one and the same moment there had risen above the shoulders
20111 of the crowd, nearly opposite Mr. Brooke, and within ten yards of him,
20112 the effigy of himself: buff-colored waistcoat, eye-glass, and neutral
20113 physiognomy, painted on rag; and there had arisen, apparently in the
20114 air, like the note of the cuckoo, a parrot-like, Punch-voiced echo of
20115 his words. Everybody looked up at the open windows in the houses at
20116 the opposite angles of the converging streets; but they were either
20117 blank, or filled by laughing listeners. The most innocent echo has an
20118 impish mockery in it when it follows a gravely persistent speaker, and
20119 this echo was not at all innocent; if it did not follow with the
20120 precision of a natural echo, it had a wicked choice of the words it
20121 overtook. By the time it said, "The Baltic, now," the laugh which had
20122 been running through the audience became a general shout, and but for
20123 the sobering effects of party and that great public cause which the
20124 entanglement of things had identified with "Brooke of Tipton," the
20125 laugh might have caught his committee. Mr. Bulstrode asked,
20126 reprehensively, what the new police was doing; but a voice could not
20127 well be collared, and an attack on the effigy of the candidate would
20128 have been too equivocal, since Hawley probably meant it to be pelted.
20129
20130 Mr. Brooke himself was not in a position to be quickly conscious of
20131 anything except a general slipping away of ideas within himself: he had
20132 even a little singing in the ears, and he was the only person who had
20133 not yet taken distinct account of the echo or discerned the image of
20134 himself. Few things hold the perceptions more thoroughly captive than
20135 anxiety about what we have got to say. Mr. Brooke heard the laughter;
20136 but he had expected some Tory efforts at disturbance, and he was at
20137 this moment additionally excited by the tickling, stinging sense that
20138 his lost exordium was coming back to fetch him from the Baltic.
20139
20140 "That reminds me," he went on, thrusting a hand into his side-pocket,
20141 with an easy air, "if I wanted a precedent, you know--but we never want
20142 a precedent for the right thing--but there is Chatham, now; I can't say
20143 I should have supported Chatham, or Pitt, the younger Pitt--he was not
20144 a man of ideas, and we want ideas, you know."
20145
20146 "Blast your ideas! we want the Bill," said a loud rough voice from the
20147 crowd below.
20148
20149 Immediately the invisible Punch, who had hitherto followed Mr. Brooke,
20150 repeated, "Blast your ideas! we want the Bill." The laugh was louder
20151 than ever, and for the first time Mr. Brooke being himself silent,
20152 heard distinctly the mocking echo. But it seemed to ridicule his
20153 interrupter, and in that light was encouraging; so he replied with
20154 amenity--
20155
20156 "There is something in what you say, my good friend, and what do we
20157 meet for but to speak our minds--freedom of opinion, freedom of the
20158 press, liberty--that kind of thing? The Bill, now--you shall have the
20159 Bill"--here Mr. Brooke paused a moment to fix on his eye-glass and take
20160 the paper from his breast-pocket, with a sense of being practical and
20161 coming to particulars. The invisible Punch followed:--
20162
20163 "You shall have the Bill, Mr. Brooke, per electioneering contest, and a
20164 seat outside Parliament as delivered, five thousand pounds, seven
20165 shillings, and fourpence."
20166
20167 Mr. Brooke, amid the roars of laughter, turned red, let his eye-glass
20168 fall, and looking about him confusedly, saw the image of himself, which
20169 had come nearer. The next moment he saw it dolorously bespattered with
20170 eggs. His spirit rose a little, and his voice too.
20171
20172 "Buffoonery, tricks, ridicule the test of truth--all that is very
20173 well"--here an unpleasant egg broke on Mr. Brooke's shoulder, as the
20174 echo said, "All that is very well;" then came a hail of eggs, chiefly
20175 aimed at the image, but occasionally hitting the original, as if by
20176 chance. There was a stream of new men pushing among the crowd;
20177 whistles, yells, bellowings, and fifes made all the greater hubbub
20178 because there was shouting and struggling to put them down. No voice
20179 would have had wing enough to rise above the uproar, and Mr. Brooke,
20180 disagreeably anointed, stood his ground no longer. The frustration
20181 would have been less exasperating if it had been less gamesome and
20182 boyish: a serious assault of which the newspaper reporter "can aver
20183 that it endangered the learned gentleman's ribs," or can respectfully
20184 bear witness to "the soles of that gentleman's boots having been
20185 visible above the railing," has perhaps more consolations attached to
20186 it.
20187
20188 Mr. Brooke re-entered the committee-room, saying, as carelessly as he
20189 could, "This is a little too bad, you know. I should have got the ear
20190 of the people by-and-by--but they didn't give me time. I should have
20191 gone into the Bill by-and-by, you know," he added, glancing at
20192 Ladislaw. "However, things will come all right at the nomination."
20193
20194 But it was not resolved unanimously that things would come right; on
20195 the contrary, the committee looked rather grim, and the political
20196 personage from Brassing was writing busily, as if he were brewing new
20197 devices.
20198
20199 "It was Bowyer who did it," said Mr. Standish, evasively. "I know it
20200 as well as if he had been advertised. He's uncommonly good at
20201 ventriloquism, and he did it uncommonly well, by God! Hawley has been
20202 having him to dinner lately: there's a fund of talent in Bowyer."
20203
20204 "Well, you know, you never mentioned him to me, Standish, else I would
20205 have invited him to dine," said poor Mr. Brooke, who had gone through a
20206 great deal of inviting for the good of his country.
20207
20208 "There's not a more paltry fellow in Middlemarch than Bowyer," said
20209 Ladislaw, indignantly, "but it seems as if the paltry fellows were
20210 always to turn the scale."
20211
20212 Will was thoroughly out of temper with himself as well as with his
20213 "principal," and he went to shut himself in his rooms with a
20214 half-formed resolve to throw up the "Pioneer" and Mr. Brooke together.
20215 Why should he stay? If the impassable gulf between himself and
20216 Dorothea were ever to be filled up, it must rather be by his going away
20217 and getting into a thoroughly different position than by staying here
20218 and slipping into deserved contempt as an understrapper of Brooke's.
20219 Then came the young dream of wonders that he might do--in five years,
20220 for example: political writing, political speaking, would get a higher
20221 value now public life was going to be wider and more national, and they
20222 might give him such distinction that he would not seem to be asking
20223 Dorothea to step down to him. Five years:--if he could only be sure
20224 that she cared for him more than for others; if he could only make her
20225 aware that he stood aloof until he could tell his love without lowering
20226 himself--then he could go away easily, and begin a career which at
20227 five-and-twenty seemed probable enough in the inward order of things,
20228 where talent brings fame, and fame everything else which is delightful.
20229 He could speak and he could write; he could master any subject if he
20230 chose, and he meant always to take the side of reason and justice, on
20231 which he would carry all his ardor. Why should he not one day be
20232 lifted above the shoulders of the crowd, and feel that he had won that
20233 eminence well? Without doubt he would leave Middlemarch, go to town,
20234 and make himself fit for celebrity by "eating his dinners."
20235
20236 But not immediately: not until some kind of sign had passed between him
20237 and Dorothea. He could not be satisfied until she knew why, even if he
20238 were the man she would choose to marry, he would not marry her. Hence
20239 he must keep his post and bear with Mr. Brooke a little longer.
20240
20241 But he soon had reason to suspect that Mr. Brooke had anticipated him
20242 in the wish to break up their connection. Deputations without and
20243 voices within had concurred in inducing that philanthropist to take a
20244 stronger measure than usual for the good of mankind; namely, to
20245 withdraw in favor of another candidate, to whom he left the advantages
20246 of his canvassing machinery. He himself called this a strong measure,
20247 but observed that his health was less capable of sustaining excitement
20248 than he had imagined.
20249
20250 "I have felt uneasy about the chest--it won't do to carry that too
20251 far," he said to Ladislaw in explaining the affair. "I must pull up.
20252 Poor Casaubon was a warning, you know. I've made some heavy advances,
20253 but I've dug a channel. It's rather coarse work--this electioneering,
20254 eh, Ladislaw? dare say you are tired of it. However, we have dug a
20255 channel with the 'Pioneer'--put things in a track, and so on. A more
20256 ordinary man than you might carry it on now--more ordinary, you know."
20257
20258 "Do you wish me to give it up?" said Will, the quick color coming in
20259 his face, as he rose from the writing-table, and took a turn of three
20260 steps with his hands in his pockets. "I am ready to do so whenever you
20261 wish it."
20262
20263 "As to wishing, my dear Ladislaw, I have the highest opinion of your
20264 powers, you know. But about the 'Pioneer,' I have been consulting a
20265 little with some of the men on our side, and they are inclined to take
20266 it into their hands--indemnify me to a certain extent--carry it on, in
20267 fact. And under the circumstances, you might like to give up--might
20268 find a better field. These people might not take that high view of you
20269 which I have always taken, as an alter ego, a right hand--though I
20270 always looked forward to your doing something else. I think of having
20271 a run into France. But I'll write you any letters, you know--to
20272 Althorpe and people of that kind. I've met Althorpe."
20273
20274 "I am exceedingly obliged to you," said Ladislaw, proudly. "Since you
20275 are going to part with the 'Pioneer,' I need not trouble you about the
20276 steps I shall take. I may choose to continue here for the present."
20277
20278 After Mr. Brooke had left him Will said to himself, "The rest of the
20279 family have been urging him to get rid of me, and he doesn't care now
20280 about my going. I shall stay as long as I like. I shall go of my own
20281 movements and not because they are afraid of me."
20282
20283
20284
20285 CHAPTER LII.
20286
20287 "His heart
20288 The lowliest duties on itself did lay."
20289 --WORDSWORTH.
20290
20291
20292 On that June evening when Mr. Farebrother knew that he was to have the
20293 Lowick living, there was joy in the old fashioned parlor, and even the
20294 portraits of the great lawyers seemed to look on with satisfaction.
20295 His mother left her tea and toast untouched, but sat with her usual
20296 pretty primness, only showing her emotion by that flush in the cheeks
20297 and brightness in the eyes which give an old woman a touching momentary
20298 identity with her far-off youthful self, and saying decisively--
20299
20300 "The greatest comfort, Camden, is that you have deserved it."
20301
20302 "When a man gets a good berth, mother, half the deserving must come
20303 after," said the son, brimful of pleasure, and not trying to conceal
20304 it. The gladness in his face was of that active kind which seems to
20305 have energy enough not only to flash outwardly, but to light up busy
20306 vision within: one seemed to see thoughts, as well as delight, in his
20307 glances.
20308
20309 "Now, aunt," he went on, rubbing his hands and looking at Miss Noble,
20310 who was making tender little beaver-like noises, "There shall be
20311 sugar-candy always on the table for you to steal and give to the
20312 children, and you shall have a great many new stockings to make
20313 presents of, and you shall darn your own more than ever!"
20314
20315 Miss Noble nodded at her nephew with a subdued half-frightened laugh,
20316 conscious of having already dropped an additional lump of sugar into
20317 her basket on the strength of the new preferment.
20318
20319 "As for you, Winny"--the Vicar went on--"I shall make no difficulty
20320 about your marrying any Lowick bachelor--Mr. Solomon Featherstone, for
20321 example, as soon as I find you are in love with him."
20322
20323 Miss Winifred, who had been looking at her brother all the while and
20324 crying heartily, which was her way of rejoicing, smiled through her
20325 tears and said, "You must set me the example, Cam: _you_ must marry
20326 now."
20327
20328 "With all my heart. But who is in love with me? I am a seedy old
20329 fellow," said the Vicar, rising, pushing his chair away and looking
20330 down at himself. "What do you say, mother?"
20331
20332 "You are a handsome man, Camden: though not so fine a figure of a man
20333 as your father," said the old lady.
20334
20335 "I wish you would marry Miss Garth, brother," said Miss Winifred. "She
20336 would make us so lively at Lowick."
20337
20338 "Very fine! You talk as if young women were tied up to be chosen, like
20339 poultry at market; as if I had only to ask and everybody would have
20340 me," said the Vicar, not caring to specify.
20341
20342 "We don't want everybody," said Miss Winifred. "But _you_ would like
20343 Miss Garth, mother, shouldn't you?"
20344
20345 "My son's choice shall be mine," said Mrs. Farebrother, with majestic
20346 discretion, "and a wife would be most welcome, Camden. You will want
20347 your whist at home when we go to Lowick, and Henrietta Noble never was
20348 a whist-player." (Mrs. Farebrother always called her tiny old sister by
20349 that magnificent name.)
20350
20351 "I shall do without whist now, mother."
20352
20353 "Why so, Camden? In my time whist was thought an undeniable amusement
20354 for a good churchman," said Mrs. Farebrother, innocent of the meaning
20355 that whist had for her son, and speaking rather sharply, as at some
20356 dangerous countenancing of new doctrine.
20357
20358 "I shall be too busy for whist; I shall have two parishes," said the
20359 Vicar, preferring not to discuss the virtues of that game.
20360
20361 He had already said to Dorothea, "I don't feel bound to give up St.
20362 Botolph's. It is protest enough against the pluralism they want to
20363 reform if I give somebody else most of the money. The stronger thing
20364 is not to give up power, but to use it well."
20365
20366 "I have thought of that," said Dorothea. "So far as self is concerned,
20367 I think it would be easier to give up power and money than to keep
20368 them. It seems very unfitting that I should have this patronage, yet I
20369 felt that I ought not to let it be used by some one else instead of me."
20370
20371 "It is I who am bound to act so that you will not regret your power,"
20372 said Mr. Farebrother.
20373
20374 His was one of the natures in which conscience gets the more active
20375 when the yoke of life ceases to gall them. He made no display of
20376 humility on the subject, but in his heart he felt rather ashamed that
20377 his conduct had shown laches which others who did not get benefices
20378 were free from.
20379
20380 "I used often to wish I had been something else than a clergyman," he
20381 said to Lydgate, "but perhaps it will be better to try and make as good
20382 a clergyman out of myself as I can. That is the well-beneficed point
20383 of view, you perceive, from which difficulties are much simplified," he
20384 ended, smiling.
20385
20386 The Vicar did feel then as if his share of duties would be easy. But
20387 Duty has a trick of behaving unexpectedly--something like a heavy
20388 friend whom we have amiably asked to visit us, and who breaks his leg
20389 within our gates.
20390
20391 Hardly a week later, Duty presented itself in his study under the
20392 disguise of Fred Vincy, now returned from Omnibus College with his
20393 bachelor's degree.
20394
20395 "I am ashamed to trouble you, Mr. Farebrother," said Fred, whose fair
20396 open face was propitiating, "but you are the only friend I can consult.
20397 I told you everything once before, and you were so good that I can't
20398 help coming to you again."
20399
20400 "Sit down, Fred, I'm ready to hear and do anything I can," said the
20401 Vicar, who was busy packing some small objects for removal, and went on
20402 with his work.
20403
20404 "I wanted to tell you--" Fred hesitated an instant and then went on
20405 plungingly, "I might go into the Church now; and really, look where I
20406 may, I can't see anything else to do. I don't like it, but I know it's
20407 uncommonly hard on my father to say so, after he has spent a good deal
20408 of money in educating me for it." Fred paused again an instant, and
20409 then repeated, "and I can't see anything else to do."
20410
20411 "I did talk to your father about it, Fred, but I made little way with
20412 him. He said it was too late. But you have got over one bridge now:
20413 what are your other difficulties?"
20414
20415 "Merely that I don't like it. I don't like divinity, and preaching,
20416 and feeling obliged to look serious. I like riding across country, and
20417 doing as other men do. I don't mean that I want to be a bad fellow in
20418 any way; but I've no taste for the sort of thing people expect of a
20419 clergyman. And yet what else am I to do? My father can't spare me any
20420 capital, else I might go into farming. And he has no room for me in
20421 his trade. And of course I can't begin to study for law or physic now,
20422 when my father wants me to earn something. It's all very well to say
20423 I'm wrong to go into the Church; but those who say so might as well
20424 tell me to go into the backwoods."
20425
20426 Fred's voice had taken a tone of grumbling remonstrance, and Mr.
20427 Farebrother might have been inclined to smile if his mind had not been
20428 too busy in imagining more than Fred told him.
20429
20430 "Have you any difficulties about doctrines--about the Articles?" he
20431 said, trying hard to think of the question simply for Fred's sake.
20432
20433 "No; I suppose the Articles are right. I am not prepared with any
20434 arguments to disprove them, and much better, cleverer fellows than I am
20435 go in for them entirely. I think it would be rather ridiculous in me
20436 to urge scruples of that sort, as if I were a judge," said Fred, quite
20437 simply.
20438
20439 "I suppose, then, it has occurred to you that you might be a fair
20440 parish priest without being much of a divine?"
20441
20442 "Of course, if I am obliged to be a clergyman, I shall try and do my
20443 duty, though I mayn't like it. Do you think any body ought to blame
20444 me?"
20445
20446 "For going into the Church under the circumstances? That depends on
20447 your conscience, Fred--how far you have counted the cost, and seen what
20448 your position will require of you. I can only tell you about myself,
20449 that I have always been too lax, and have been uneasy in consequence."
20450
20451 "But there is another hindrance," said Fred, coloring. "I did not tell
20452 you before, though perhaps I may have said things that made you guess
20453 it. There is somebody I am very fond of: I have loved her ever since
20454 we were children."
20455
20456 "Miss Garth, I suppose?" said the Vicar, examining some labels very
20457 closely.
20458
20459 "Yes. I shouldn't mind anything if she would have me. And I know I
20460 could be a good fellow then."
20461
20462 "And you think she returns the feeling?"
20463
20464 "She never will say so; and a good while ago she made me promise not to
20465 speak to her about it again. And she has set her mind especially
20466 against my being a clergyman; I know that. But I can't give her up. I
20467 do think she cares about me. I saw Mrs. Garth last night, and she said
20468 that Mary was staying at Lowick Rectory with Miss Farebrother."
20469
20470 "Yes, she is very kindly helping my sister. Do you wish to go there?"
20471
20472 "No, I want to ask a great favor of you. I am ashamed to bother you in
20473 this way; but Mary might listen to what you said, if you mentioned the
20474 subject to her--I mean about my going into the Church."
20475
20476 "That is rather a delicate task, my dear Fred. I shall have to
20477 presuppose your attachment to her; and to enter on the subject as you
20478 wish me to do, will be asking her to tell me whether she returns it."
20479
20480 "That is what I want her to tell you," said Fred, bluntly. "I don't
20481 know what to do, unless I can get at her feeling."
20482
20483 "You mean that you would be guided by that as to your going into the
20484 Church?"
20485
20486 "If Mary said she would never have me I might as well go wrong in one
20487 way as another."
20488
20489 "That is nonsense, Fred. Men outlive their love, but they don't
20490 outlive the consequences of their recklessness."
20491
20492 "Not my sort of love: I have never been without loving Mary. If I had
20493 to give her up, it would be like beginning to live on wooden legs."
20494
20495 "Will she not be hurt at my intrusion?"
20496
20497 "No, I feel sure she will not. She respects you more than any one, and
20498 she would not put you off with fun as she does me. Of course I could
20499 not have told any one else, or asked any one else to speak to her, but
20500 you. There is no one else who could be such a friend to both of us."
20501 Fred paused a moment, and then said, rather complainingly, "And she
20502 ought to acknowledge that I have worked in order to pass. She ought to
20503 believe that I would exert myself for her sake."
20504
20505 There was a moment's silence before Mr. Farebrother laid down his work,
20506 and putting out his hand to Fred said--
20507
20508 "Very well, my boy. I will do what you wish."
20509
20510 That very day Mr. Farebrother went to Lowick parsonage on the nag which
20511 he had just set up. "Decidedly I am an old stalk," he thought, "the
20512 young growths are pushing me aside."
20513
20514 He found Mary in the garden gathering roses and sprinkling the petals
20515 on a sheet. The sun was low, and tall trees sent their shadows across
20516 the grassy walks where Mary was moving without bonnet or parasol. She
20517 did not observe Mr. Farebrother's approach along the grass, and had
20518 just stooped down to lecture a small black-and-tan terrier, which would
20519 persist in walking on the sheet and smelling at the rose-leaves as Mary
20520 sprinkled them. She took his fore-paws in one hand, and lifted up the
20521 forefinger of the other, while the dog wrinkled his brows and looked
20522 embarrassed. "Fly, Fly, I am ashamed of you," Mary was saying in a
20523 grave contralto. "This is not becoming in a sensible dog; anybody
20524 would think you were a silly young gentleman."
20525
20526 "You are unmerciful to young gentlemen, Miss Garth," said the Vicar,
20527 within two yards of her.
20528
20529 Mary started up and blushed. "It always answers to reason with Fly,"
20530 she said, laughingly.
20531
20532 "But not with young gentlemen?"
20533
20534 "Oh, with some, I suppose; since some of them turn into excellent men."
20535
20536 "I am glad of that admission, because I want at this very moment to
20537 interest you in a young gentleman."
20538
20539 "Not a silly one, I hope," said Mary, beginning to pluck the roses
20540 again, and feeling her heart beat uncomfortably.
20541
20542 "No; though perhaps wisdom is not his strong point, but rather
20543 affection and sincerity. However, wisdom lies more in those two
20544 qualities than people are apt to imagine. I hope you know by those
20545 marks what young gentleman I mean."
20546
20547 "Yes, I think I do," said Mary, bravely, her face getting more serious,
20548 and her hands cold; "it must be Fred Vincy."
20549
20550 "He has asked me to consult you about his going into the Church. I
20551 hope you will not think that I consented to take a liberty in promising
20552 to do so."
20553
20554 "On the contrary, Mr. Farebrother," said Mary, giving up the roses, and
20555 folding her arms, but unable to look up, "whenever you have anything to
20556 say to me I feel honored."
20557
20558 "But before I enter on that question, let me just touch a point on
20559 which your father took me into confidence; by the way, it was that very
20560 evening on which I once before fulfilled a mission from Fred, just
20561 after he had gone to college. Mr. Garth told me what happened on the
20562 night of Featherstone's death--how you refused to burn the will; and he
20563 said that you had some heart-prickings on that subject, because you had
20564 been the innocent means of hindering Fred from getting his ten thousand
20565 pounds. I have kept that in mind, and I have heard something that may
20566 relieve you on that score--may show you that no sin-offering is
20567 demanded from you there."
20568
20569 Mr. Farebrother paused a moment and looked at Mary. He meant to give
20570 Fred his full advantage, but it would be well, he thought, to clear her
20571 mind of any superstitions, such as women sometimes follow when they do
20572 a man the wrong of marrying him as an act of atonement. Mary's cheeks
20573 had begun to burn a little, and she was mute.
20574
20575 "I mean, that your action made no real difference to Fred's lot. I
20576 find that the first will would not have been legally good after the
20577 burning of the last; it would not have stood if it had been disputed,
20578 and you may be sure it would have been disputed. So, on that score,
20579 you may feel your mind free."
20580
20581 "Thank you, Mr. Farebrother," said Mary, earnestly. "I am grateful to
20582 you for remembering my feelings."
20583
20584 "Well, now I may go on. Fred, you know, has taken his degree. He has
20585 worked his way so far, and now the question is, what is he to do? That
20586 question is so difficult that he is inclined to follow his father's
20587 wishes and enter the Church, though you know better than I do that he
20588 was quite set against that formerly. I have questioned him on the
20589 subject, and I confess I see no insuperable objection to his being a
20590 clergyman, as things go. He says that he could turn his mind to doing
20591 his best in that vocation, on one condition. If that condition were
20592 fulfilled I would do my utmost in helping Fred on. After a time--not,
20593 of course, at first--he might be with me as my curate, and he would
20594 have so much to do that his stipend would be nearly what I used to get
20595 as vicar. But I repeat that there is a condition without which all
20596 this good cannot come to pass. He has opened his heart to me, Miss
20597 Garth, and asked me to plead for him. The condition lies entirely in
20598 your feeling."
20599
20600 Mary looked so much moved, that he said after a moment, "Let us walk a
20601 little;" and when they were walking he added, "To speak quite plainly,
20602 Fred will not take any course which would lessen the chance that you
20603 would consent to be his wife; but with that prospect, he will try his
20604 best at anything you approve."
20605
20606 "I cannot possibly say that I will ever be his wife, Mr. Farebrother:
20607 but I certainly never will be his wife if he becomes a clergyman. What
20608 you say is most generous and kind; I don't mean for a moment to correct
20609 your judgment. It is only that I have my girlish, mocking way of
20610 looking at things," said Mary, with a returning sparkle of playfulness
20611 in her answer which only made its modesty more charming.
20612
20613 "He wishes me to report exactly what you think," said Mr. Farebrother.
20614
20615 "I could not love a man who is ridiculous," said Mary, not choosing to
20616 go deeper. "Fred has sense and knowledge enough to make him
20617 respectable, if he likes, in some good worldly business, but I can
20618 never imagine him preaching and exhorting, and pronouncing blessings,
20619 and praying by the sick, without feeling as if I were looking at a
20620 caricature. His being a clergyman would be only for gentility's sake,
20621 and I think there is nothing more contemptible than such imbecile
20622 gentility. I used to think that of Mr. Crowse, with his empty face and
20623 neat umbrella, and mincing little speeches. What right have such men
20624 to represent Christianity--as if it were an institution for getting up
20625 idiots genteelly--as if--" Mary checked herself. She had been carried
20626 along as if she had been speaking to Fred instead of Mr. Farebrother.
20627
20628 "Young women are severe: they don't feel the stress of action as men
20629 do, though perhaps I ought to make you an exception there. But you
20630 don't put Fred Vincy on so low a level as that?"
20631
20632 "No, indeed, he has plenty of sense, but I think he would not show it
20633 as a clergyman. He would be a piece of professional affectation."
20634
20635 "Then the answer is quite decided. As a clergyman he could have no
20636 hope?"
20637
20638 Mary shook her head.
20639
20640 "But if he braved all the difficulties of getting his bread in some
20641 other way--will you give him the support of hope? May he count on
20642 winning you?"
20643
20644 "I think Fred ought not to need telling again what I have already said
20645 to him," Mary answered, with a slight resentment in her manner. "I
20646 mean that he ought not to put such questions until he has done
20647 something worthy, instead of saying that he could do it."
20648
20649 Mr. Farebrother was silent for a minute or more, and then, as they
20650 turned and paused under the shadow of a maple at the end of a grassy
20651 walk, said, "I understand that you resist any attempt to fetter you,
20652 but either your feeling for Fred Vincy excludes your entertaining
20653 another attachment, or it does not: either he may count on your
20654 remaining single until he shall have earned your hand, or he may in any
20655 case be disappointed. Pardon me, Mary--you know I used to catechise
20656 you under that name--but when the state of a woman's affections touches
20657 the happiness of another life--of more lives than one--I think it would
20658 be the nobler course for her to be perfectly direct and open."
20659
20660 Mary in her turn was silent, wondering not at Mr. Farebrother's manner
20661 but at his tone, which had a grave restrained emotion in it. When the
20662 strange idea flashed across her that his words had reference to
20663 himself, she was incredulous, and ashamed of entertaining it. She had
20664 never thought that any man could love her except Fred, who had espoused
20665 her with the umbrella ring, when she wore socks and little strapped
20666 shoes; still less that she could be of any importance to Mr.
20667 Farebrother, the cleverest man in her narrow circle. She had only time
20668 to feel that all this was hazy and perhaps illusory; but one thing was
20669 clear and determined--her answer.
20670
20671 "Since you think it my duty, Mr. Farebrother, I will tell you that I
20672 have too strong a feeling for Fred to give him up for any one else. I
20673 should never be quite happy if I thought he was unhappy for the loss of
20674 me. It has taken such deep root in me--my gratitude to him for always
20675 loving me best, and minding so much if I hurt myself, from the time
20676 when we were very little. I cannot imagine any new feeling coming to
20677 make that weaker. I should like better than anything to see him worthy
20678 of every one's respect. But please tell him I will not promise to
20679 marry him till then: I should shame and grieve my father and mother.
20680 He is free to choose some one else."
20681
20682 "Then I have fulfilled my commission thoroughly," said Mr. Farebrother,
20683 putting out his hand to Mary, "and I shall ride back to Middlemarch
20684 forthwith. With this prospect before him, we shall get Fred into the
20685 right niche somehow, and I hope I shall live to join your hands. God
20686 bless you!"
20687
20688 "Oh, please stay, and let me give you some tea," said Mary. Her eyes
20689 filled with tears, for something indefinable, something like the
20690 resolute suppression of a pain in Mr. Farebrother's manner, made her
20691 feel suddenly miserable, as she had once felt when she saw her father's
20692 hands trembling in a moment of trouble.
20693
20694 "No, my dear, no. I must get back."
20695
20696 In three minutes the Vicar was on horseback again, having gone
20697 magnanimously through a duty much harder than the renunciation of
20698 whist, or even than the writing of penitential meditations.
20699
20700
20701
20702 CHAPTER LIII.
20703
20704 It is but a shallow haste which concludeth insincerity from
20705 what outsiders call inconsistency--putting a dead mechanism
20706 of "ifs" and "therefores" for the living myriad of hidden
20707 suckers whereby the belief and the conduct are wrought into
20708 mutual sustainment.
20709
20710
20711 Mr. Bulstrode, when he was hoping to acquire a new interest in Lowick,
20712 had naturally had an especial wish that the new clergyman should be one
20713 whom he thoroughly approved; and he believed it to be a chastisement
20714 and admonition directed to his own shortcomings and those of the nation
20715 at large, that just about the time when he came in possession of the
20716 deeds which made him the proprietor of Stone Court, Mr. Farebrother
20717 "read himself" into the quaint little church and preached his first
20718 sermon to the congregation of farmers, laborers, and village artisans.
20719 It was not that Mr. Bulstrode intended to frequent Lowick Church or to
20720 reside at Stone Court for a good while to come: he had bought the
20721 excellent farm and fine homestead simply as a retreat which he might
20722 gradually enlarge as to the land and beautify as to the dwelling, until
20723 it should be conducive to the divine glory that he should enter on it
20724 as a residence, partially withdrawing from his present exertions in the
20725 administration of business, and throwing more conspicuously on the side
20726 of Gospel truth the weight of local landed proprietorship, which
20727 Providence might increase by unforeseen occasions of purchase. A
20728 strong leading in this direction seemed to have been given in the
20729 surprising facility of getting Stone Court, when every one had expected
20730 that Mr. Rigg Featherstone would have clung to it as the Garden of
20731 Eden. That was what poor old Peter himself had expected; having often,
20732 in imagination, looked up through the sods above him, and, unobstructed
20733 by perspective, seen his frog-faced legatee enjoying the fine old
20734 place to the perpetual surprise and disappointment of other survivors.
20735
20736 But how little we know what would make paradise for our neighbors! We
20737 judge from our own desires, and our neighbors themselves are not always
20738 open enough even to throw out a hint of theirs. The cool and judicious
20739 Joshua Rigg had not allowed his parent to perceive that Stone Court was
20740 anything less than the chief good in his estimation, and he had
20741 certainly wished to call it his own. But as Warren Hastings looked at
20742 gold and thought of buying Daylesford, so Joshua Rigg looked at Stone
20743 Court and thought of buying gold. He had a very distinct and intense
20744 vision of his chief good, the vigorous greed which he had inherited
20745 having taken a special form by dint of circumstance: and his chief good
20746 was to be a moneychanger. From his earliest employment as an
20747 errand-boy in a seaport, he had looked through the windows of the
20748 moneychangers as other boys look through the windows of the
20749 pastry-cooks; the fascination had wrought itself gradually into a deep
20750 special passion; he meant, when he had property, to do many things, one
20751 of them being to marry a genteel young person; but these were all
20752 accidents and joys that imagination could dispense with. The one joy
20753 after which his soul thirsted was to have a money-changer's shop on a
20754 much-frequented quay, to have locks all round him of which he held the
20755 keys, and to look sublimely cool as he handled the breeding coins of
20756 all nations, while helpless Cupidity looked at him enviously from the
20757 other side of an iron lattice. The strength of that passion had been a
20758 power enabling him to master all the knowledge necessary to gratify it.
20759 And when others were thinking that he had settled at Stone Court for
20760 life, Joshua himself was thinking that the moment now was not far off
20761 when he should settle on the North Quay with the best appointments in
20762 safes and locks.
20763
20764 Enough. We are concerned with looking at Joshua Rigg's sale of his
20765 land from Mr. Bulstrode's point of view, and he interpreted it as a
20766 cheering dispensation conveying perhaps a sanction to a purpose which
20767 he had for some time entertained without external encouragement; he
20768 interpreted it thus, but not too confidently, offering up his
20769 thanksgiving in guarded phraseology. His doubts did not arise from the
20770 possible relations of the event to Joshua Rigg's destiny, which
20771 belonged to the unmapped regions not taken under the providential
20772 government, except perhaps in an imperfect colonial way; but they arose
20773 from reflecting that this dispensation too might be a chastisement for
20774 himself, as Mr. Farebrother's induction to the living clearly was.
20775
20776 This was not what Mr. Bulstrode said to any man for the sake of
20777 deceiving him: it was what he said to himself--it was as genuinely his
20778 mode of explaining events as any theory of yours may be, if you happen
20779 to disagree with him. For the egoism which enters into our theories
20780 does not affect their sincerity; rather, the more our egoism is
20781 satisfied, the more robust is our belief.
20782
20783 However, whether for sanction or for chastisement, Mr. Bulstrode,
20784 hardly fifteen months after the death of Peter Featherstone, had become
20785 the proprietor of Stone Court, and what Peter would say "if he were
20786 worthy to know," had become an inexhaustible and consolatory subject of
20787 conversation to his disappointed relatives. The tables were now turned
20788 on that dear brother departed, and to contemplate the frustration of
20789 his cunning by the superior cunning of things in general was a cud of
20790 delight to Solomon. Mrs. Waule had a melancholy triumph in the proof
20791 that it did not answer to make false Featherstones and cut off the
20792 genuine; and Sister Martha receiving the news in the Chalky Flats said,
20793 "Dear, dear! then the Almighty could have been none so pleased with the
20794 almshouses after all."
20795
20796 Affectionate Mrs. Bulstrode was particularly glad of the advantage
20797 which her husband's health was likely to get from the purchase of Stone
20798 Court. Few days passed without his riding thither and looking over
20799 some part of the farm with the bailiff, and the evenings were delicious
20800 in that quiet spot, when the new hay-ricks lately set up were sending
20801 forth odors to mingle with the breath of the rich old garden. One
20802 evening, while the sun was still above the horizon and burning in
20803 golden lamps among the great walnut boughs, Mr. Bulstrode was pausing
20804 on horseback outside the front gate waiting for Caleb Garth, who had
20805 met him by appointment to give an opinion on a question of stable
20806 drainage, and was now advising the bailiff in the rick-yard.
20807
20808 Mr. Bulstrode was conscious of being in a good spiritual frame and more
20809 than usually serene, under the influence of his innocent recreation.
20810 He was doctrinally convinced that there was a total absence of merit in
20811 himself; but that doctrinal conviction may be held without pain when
20812 the sense of demerit does not take a distinct shape in memory and
20813 revive the tingling of shame or the pang of remorse. Nay, it may be
20814 held with intense satisfaction when the depth of our sinning is but a
20815 measure for the depth of forgiveness, and a clenching proof that we are
20816 peculiar instruments of the divine intention. The memory has as many
20817 moods as the temper, and shifts its scenery like a diorama. At this
20818 moment Mr. Bulstrode felt as if the sunshine were all one with that of
20819 far-off evenings when he was a very young man and used to go out
20820 preaching beyond Highbury. And he would willingly have had that
20821 service of exhortation in prospect now. The texts were there still,
20822 and so was his own facility in expounding them. His brief reverie was
20823 interrupted by the return of Caleb Garth, who also was on horseback,
20824 and was just shaking his bridle before starting, when he exclaimed--
20825
20826 "Bless my heart! what's this fellow in black coming along the lane?
20827 He's like one of those men one sees about after the races."
20828
20829 Mr. Bulstrode turned his horse and looked along the lane, but made no
20830 reply. The comer was our slight acquaintance Mr. Raffles, whose
20831 appearance presented no other change than such as was due to a suit of
20832 black and a crape hat-band. He was within three yards of the horseman
20833 now, and they could see the flash of recognition in his face as he
20834 whirled his stick upward, looking all the while at Mr. Bulstrode, and
20835 at last exclaiming:--
20836
20837 "By Jove, Nick, it's you! I couldn't be mistaken, though the
20838 five-and-twenty years have played old Boguy with us both! How are you,
20839 eh? you didn't expect to see _me_ here. Come, shake us by the hand."
20840 To say that Mr. Raffles' manner was rather excited would be only one
20841 mode of saying that it was evening. Caleb Garth could see that there
20842 was a moment of struggle and hesitation in Mr. Bulstrode, but it ended
20843 in his putting out his hand coldly to Raffles and saying--
20844
20845 "I did not indeed expect to see you in this remote country place."
20846
20847 "Well, it belongs to a stepson of mine," said Raffles, adjusting
20848 himself in a swaggering attitude. "I came to see him here before. I'm
20849 not so surprised at seeing you, old fellow, because I picked up a
20850 letter--what you may call a providential thing. It's uncommonly
20851 fortunate I met you, though; for I don't care about seeing my stepson:
20852 he's not affectionate, and his poor mother's gone now. To tell the
20853 truth, I came out of love to you, Nick: I came to get your address,
20854 for--look here!" Raffles drew a crumpled paper from his pocket.
20855
20856 Almost any other man than Caleb Garth might have been tempted to linger
20857 on the spot for the sake of hearing all he could about a man whose
20858 acquaintance with Bulstrode seemed to imply passages in the banker's
20859 life so unlike anything that was known of him in Middlemarch that they
20860 must have the nature of a secret to pique curiosity. But Caleb was
20861 peculiar: certain human tendencies which are commonly strong were
20862 almost absent from his mind; and one of these was curiosity about
20863 personal affairs. Especially if there was anything discreditable to be
20864 found out concerning another man, Caleb preferred not to know it; and
20865 if he had to tell anybody under him that his evil doings were
20866 discovered, he was more embarrassed than the culprit. He now spurred
20867 his horse, and saying, "I wish you good evening, Mr. Bulstrode; I must
20868 be getting home," set off at a trot.
20869
20870 "You didn't put your full address to this letter," Raffles continued.
20871 "That was not like the first-rate man of business you used to be. 'The
20872 Shrubs,'--they may be anywhere: you live near at hand, eh?--have cut
20873 the London concern altogether--perhaps turned country squire--have a
20874 rural mansion to invite me to. Lord, how many years it is ago! The
20875 old lady must have been dead a pretty long while--gone to glory without
20876 the pain of knowing how poor her daughter was, eh? But, by Jove!
20877 you're very pale and pasty, Nick. Come, if you're going home, I'll
20878 walk by your side."
20879
20880 Mr. Bulstrode's usual paleness had in fact taken an almost deathly hue.
20881 Five minutes before, the expanse of his life had been submerged in its
20882 evening sunshine which shone backward to its remembered morning: sin
20883 seemed to be a question of doctrine and inward penitence, humiliation
20884 an exercise of the closet, the bearing of his deeds a matter of private
20885 vision adjusted solely by spiritual relations and conceptions of the
20886 divine purposes. And now, as if by some hideous magic, this loud red
20887 figure had risen before him in unmanageable solidity--an incorporate
20888 past which had not entered into his imagination of chastisements. But
20889 Mr. Bulstrode's thought was busy, and he was not a man to act or speak
20890 rashly.
20891
20892 "I was going home," he said, "but I can defer my ride a little. And
20893 you can, if you please, rest here."
20894
20895 "Thank you," said Raffles, making a grimace. "I don't care now about
20896 seeing my stepson. I'd rather go home with you."
20897
20898 "Your stepson, if Mr. Rigg Featherstone was he, is here no longer. I
20899 am master here now."
20900
20901 Raffles opened wide eyes, and gave a long whistle of surprise, before
20902 he said, "Well then, I've no objection. I've had enough walking from
20903 the coach-road. I never was much of a walker, or rider either. What I
20904 like is a smart vehicle and a spirited cob. I was always a little
20905 heavy in the saddle. What a pleasant surprise it must be to you to see
20906 me, old fellow!" he continued, as they turned towards the house. "You
20907 don't say so; but you never took your luck heartily--you were always
20908 thinking of improving the occasion--you'd such a gift for improving
20909 your luck."
20910
20911 Mr. Raffles seemed greatly to enjoy his own wit, and swung his leg in a
20912 swaggering manner which was rather too much for his companion's
20913 judicious patience.
20914
20915 "If I remember rightly," Mr. Bulstrode observed, with chill anger, "our
20916 acquaintance many years ago had not the sort of intimacy which you are
20917 now assuming, Mr. Raffles. Any services you desire of me will be the
20918 more readily rendered if you will avoid a tone of familiarity which did
20919 not lie in our former intercourse, and can hardly be warranted by more
20920 than twenty years of separation."
20921
20922 "You don't like being called Nick? Why, I always called you Nick in my
20923 heart, and though lost to sight, to memory dear. By Jove! my feelings
20924 have ripened for you like fine old cognac. I hope you've got some in
20925 the house now. Josh filled my flask well the last time."
20926
20927 Mr. Bulstrode had not yet fully learned that even the desire for cognac
20928 was not stronger in Raffles than the desire to torment, and that a hint
20929 of annoyance always served him as a fresh cue. But it was at least
20930 clear that further objection was useless, and Mr. Bulstrode, in giving
20931 orders to the housekeeper for the accommodation of the guest, had a
20932 resolute air of quietude.
20933
20934 There was the comfort of thinking that this housekeeper had been in the
20935 service of Rigg also, and might accept the idea that Mr. Bulstrode
20936 entertained Raffles merely as a friend of her former master.
20937
20938 When there was food and drink spread before his visitor in the
20939 wainscoted parlor, and no witness in the room, Mr. Bulstrode said--
20940
20941 "Your habits and mine are so different, Mr. Raffles, that we can hardly
20942 enjoy each other's society. The wisest plan for both of us will
20943 therefore be to part as soon as possible. Since you say that you
20944 wished to meet me, you probably considered that you had some business
20945 to transact with me. But under the circumstances I will invite you to
20946 remain here for the night, and I will myself ride over here early
20947 to-morrow morning--before breakfast, in fact, when I can receive any
20948 Communication you have to make to me."
20949
20950 "With all my heart," said Raffles; "this is a comfortable place--a
20951 little dull for a continuance; but I can put up with it for a night,
20952 with this good liquor and the prospect of seeing you again in the
20953 morning. You're a much better host than my stepson was; but Josh owed
20954 me a bit of a grudge for marrying his mother; and between you and me
20955 there was never anything but kindness."
20956
20957 Mr. Bulstrode, hoping that the peculiar mixture of joviality and
20958 sneering in Raffles' manner was a good deal the effect of drink, had
20959 determined to wait till he was quite sober before he spent more words
20960 upon him. But he rode home with a terribly lucid vision of the
20961 difficulty there would be in arranging any result that could be
20962 permanently counted on with this man. It was inevitable that he should
20963 wish to get rid of John Raffles, though his reappearance could not be
20964 regarded as lying outside the divine plan. The spirit of evil might
20965 have sent him to threaten Mr. Bulstrode's subversion as an instrument
20966 of good; but the threat must have been permitted, and was a
20967 chastisement of a new kind. It was an hour of anguish for him very
20968 different from the hours in which his struggle had been securely
20969 private, and which had ended with a sense that his secret misdeeds were
20970 pardoned and his services accepted. Those misdeeds even when
20971 committed--had they not been half sanctified by the singleness of his
20972 desire to devote himself and all he possessed to the furtherance of the
20973 divine scheme? And was he after all to become a mere stone of
20974 stumbling and a rock of offence? For who would understand the work
20975 within him? Who would not, when there was the pretext of casting
20976 disgrace upon him, confound his whole life and the truths he had
20977 espoused, in one heap of obloquy?
20978
20979 In his closest meditations the life-long habit of Mr. Bulstrode's mind
20980 clad his most egoistic terrors in doctrinal references to superhuman
20981 ends. But even while we are talking and meditating about the earth's
20982 orbit and the solar system, what we feel and adjust our movements to is
20983 the stable earth and the changing day. And now within all the
20984 automatic succession of theoretic phrases--distinct and inmost as the
20985 shiver and the ache of oncoming fever when we are discussing abstract
20986 pain, was the forecast of disgrace in the presence of his neighbors and
20987 of his own wife. For the pain, as well as the public estimate of
20988 disgrace, depends on the amount of previous profession. To men who
20989 only aim at escaping felony, nothing short of the prisoner's dock is
20990 disgrace. But Mr. Bulstrode had aimed at being an eminent Christian.
20991
20992 It was not more than half-past seven in the morning when he again
20993 reached Stone Court. The fine old place never looked more like a
20994 delightful home than at that moment; the great white lilies were in
20995 flower, the nasturtiums, their pretty leaves all silvered with dew,
20996 were running away over the low stone wall; the very noises all around
20997 had a heart of peace within them. But everything was spoiled for the
20998 owner as he walked on the gravel in front and awaited the descent of
20999 Mr. Raffles, with whom he was condemned to breakfast.
21000
21001 It was not long before they were seated together in the wainscoted
21002 parlor over their tea and toast, which was as much as Raffles cared to
21003 take at that early hour. The difference between his morning and
21004 evening self was not so great as his companion had imagined that it
21005 might be; the delight in tormenting was perhaps even the stronger
21006 because his spirits were rather less highly pitched. Certainly his
21007 manners seemed more disagreeable by the morning light.
21008
21009 "As I have little time to spare, Mr. Raffles," said the banker, who
21010 could hardly do more than sip his tea and break his toast without
21011 eating it, "I shall be obliged if you will mention at once the ground
21012 on which you wished to meet with me. I presume that you have a home
21013 elsewhere and will be glad to return to it."
21014
21015 "Why, if a man has got any heart, doesn't he want to see an old friend,
21016 Nick?--I must call you Nick--we always did call you young Nick when we
21017 knew you meant to marry the old widow. Some said you had a handsome
21018 family likeness to old Nick, but that was your mother's fault, calling
21019 you Nicholas. Aren't you glad to see me again? I expected an invite
21020 to stay with you at some pretty place. My own establishment is broken
21021 up now my wife's dead. I've no particular attachment to any spot; I
21022 would as soon settle hereabout as anywhere."
21023
21024 "May I ask why you returned from America? I considered that the strong
21025 wish you expressed to go there, when an adequate sum was furnished, was
21026 tantamount to an engagement that you would remain there for life."
21027
21028 "Never knew that a wish to go to a place was the same thing as a wish
21029 to stay. But I did stay a matter of ten years; it didn't suit me to
21030 stay any longer. And I'm not going again, Nick." Here Mr. Raffles
21031 winked slowly as he looked at Mr. Bulstrode.
21032
21033 "Do you wish to be settled in any business? What is your calling now?"
21034
21035 "Thank you, my calling is to enjoy myself as much as I can. I don't
21036 care about working any more. If I did anything it would be a little
21037 travelling in the tobacco line--or something of that sort, which takes
21038 a man into agreeable company. But not without an independence to fall
21039 back upon. That's what I want: I'm not so strong as I was, Nick,
21040 though I've got more color than you. I want an independence."
21041
21042 "That could be supplied to you, if you would engage to keep at a
21043 distance," said Mr. Bulstrode, perhaps with a little too much eagerness
21044 in his undertone.
21045
21046 "That must be as it suits my convenience," said Raffles coolly. "I see
21047 no reason why I shouldn't make a few acquaintances hereabout. I'm not
21048 ashamed of myself as company for anybody. I dropped my portmanteau at
21049 the turnpike when I got down--change of linen--genuine--honor bright--more
21050 than fronts and wristbands; and with this suit of mourning, straps
21051 and everything, I should do you credit among the nobs here." Mr.
21052 Raffles had pushed away his chair and looked down at himself,
21053 particularly at his straps. His chief intention was to annoy
21054 Bulstrode, but he really thought that his appearance now would produce
21055 a good effect, and that he was not only handsome and witty, but clad in
21056 a mourning style which implied solid connections.
21057
21058 "If you intend to rely on me in any way, Mr. Raffles," said Bulstrode,
21059 after a moment's pause, "you will expect to meet my wishes."
21060
21061 "Ah, to be sure," said Raffles, with a mocking cordiality. "Didn't I
21062 always do it? Lord, you made a pretty thing out of me, and I got but
21063 little. I've often thought since, I might have done better by telling
21064 the old woman that I'd found her daughter and her grandchild: it would
21065 have suited my feelings better; I've got a soft place in my heart. But
21066 you've buried the old lady by this time, I suppose--it's all one to her
21067 now. And you've got your fortune out of that profitable business which
21068 had such a blessing on it. You've taken to being a nob, buying land,
21069 being a country bashaw. Still in the Dissenting line, eh? Still
21070 godly? Or taken to the Church as more genteel?"
21071
21072 This time Mr. Raffles' slow wink and slight protrusion of his tongue
21073 was worse than a nightmare, because it held the certitude that it was
21074 not a nightmare, but a waking misery. Mr. Bulstrode felt a shuddering
21075 nausea, and did not speak, but was considering diligently whether he
21076 should not leave Raffles to do as he would, and simply defy him as a
21077 slanderer. The man would soon show himself disreputable enough to make
21078 people disbelieve him. "But not when he tells any ugly-looking truth
21079 about _you_," said discerning consciousness. And again: it seemed no
21080 wrong to keep Raffles at a distance, but Mr. Bulstrode shrank from the
21081 direct falsehood of denying true statements. It was one thing to look
21082 back on forgiven sins, nay, to explain questionable conformity to lax
21083 customs, and another to enter deliberately on the necessity of
21084 falsehood.
21085
21086 But since Bulstrode did not speak, Raffles ran on, by way of using time
21087 to the utmost.
21088
21089 "I've not had such fine luck as you, by Jove! Things went confoundedly
21090 with me in New York; those Yankees are cool hands, and a man of
21091 gentlemanly feelings has no chance with them. I married when I came
21092 back--a nice woman in the tobacco trade--very fond of me--but the
21093 trade was restricted, as we say. She had been settled there a good
21094 many years by a friend; but there was a son too much in the case. Josh
21095 and I never hit it off. However, I made the most of the position, and
21096 I've always taken my glass in good company. It's been all on the
21097 square with me; I'm as open as the day. You won't take it ill of me
21098 that I didn't look you up before. I've got a complaint that makes me a
21099 little dilatory. I thought you were trading and praying away in London
21100 still, and didn't find you there. But you see I was sent to you,
21101 Nick--perhaps for a blessing to both of us."
21102
21103 Mr. Raffles ended with a jocose snuffle: no man felt his intellect more
21104 superior to religious cant. And if the cunning which calculates on the
21105 meanest feelings in men could be called intellect, he had his share,
21106 for under the blurting rallying tone with which he spoke to Bulstrode,
21107 there was an evident selection of statements, as if they had been so
21108 many moves at chess. Meanwhile Bulstrode had determined on his move,
21109 and he said, with gathered resolution--
21110
21111 "You will do well to reflect, Mr. Raffles, that it is possible for a
21112 man to overreach himself in the effort to secure undue advantage.
21113 Although I am not in any way bound to you, I am willing to supply you
21114 with a regular annuity--in quarterly payments--so long as you fulfil a
21115 promise to remain at a distance from this neighborhood. It is in your
21116 power to choose. If you insist on remaining here, even for a short
21117 time, you will get nothing from me. I shall decline to know you."
21118
21119 "Ha, ha!" said Raffles, with an affected explosion, "that reminds me of
21120 a droll dog of a thief who declined to know the constable."
21121
21122 "Your allusions are lost on me sir," said Bulstrode, with white heat;
21123 "the law has no hold on me either through your agency or any other."
21124
21125 "You can't understand a joke, my good fellow. I only meant that I
21126 should never decline to know you. But let us be serious. Your
21127 quarterly payment won't quite suit me. I like my freedom."
21128
21129 Here Raffles rose and stalked once or twice up and down the room,
21130 swinging his leg, and assuming an air of masterly meditation. At last
21131 he stopped opposite Bulstrode, and said, "I'll tell you what! Give us
21132 a couple of hundreds--come, that's modest--and I'll go away--honor
21133 bright!--pick up my portmanteau and go away. But I shall not give up
21134 my Liberty for a dirty annuity. I shall come and go where I like.
21135 Perhaps it may suit me to stay away, and correspond with a friend;
21136 perhaps not. Have you the money with you?"
21137
21138 "No, I have one hundred," said Bulstrode, feeling the immediate
21139 riddance too great a relief to be rejected on the ground of future
21140 uncertainties. "I will forward you the other if you will mention an
21141 address."
21142
21143 "No, I'll wait here till you bring it," said Raffles. "I'll take a
21144 stroll and have a snack, and you'll be back by that time."
21145
21146 Mr. Bulstrode's sickly body, shattered by the agitations he had gone
21147 through since the last evening, made him feel abjectly in the power of
21148 this loud invulnerable man. At that moment he snatched at a temporary
21149 repose to be won on any terms. He was rising to do what Raffles
21150 suggested, when the latter said, lifting up his finger as if with a
21151 sudden recollection--
21152
21153 "I did have another look after Sarah again, though I didn't tell you;
21154 I'd a tender conscience about that pretty young woman. I didn't find
21155 her, but I found out her husband's name, and I made a note of it. But
21156 hang it, I lost my pocketbook. However, if I heard it, I should know
21157 it again. I've got my faculties as if I was in my prime, but names
21158 wear out, by Jove! Sometimes I'm no better than a confounded tax-paper
21159 before the names are filled in. However, if I hear of her and her
21160 family, you shall know, Nick. You'd like to do something for her, now
21161 she's your step-daughter."
21162
21163 "Doubtless," said Mr. Bulstrode, with the usual steady look of his
21164 light-gray eyes; "though that might reduce my power of assisting you."
21165
21166 As he walked out of the room, Raffles winked slowly at his back, and
21167 then turned towards the window to watch the banker riding away--virtually
21168 at his command. His lips first curled with a smile and then opened
21169 with a short triumphant laugh.
21170
21171 "But what the deuce was the name?" he presently said, half aloud,
21172 scratching his head, and wrinkling his brows horizontally. He had not
21173 really cared or thought about this point of forgetfulness until it
21174 occurred to him in his invention of annoyances for Bulstrode.
21175
21176 "It began with L; it was almost all l's I fancy," he went on, with a
21177 sense that he was getting hold of the slippery name. But the hold was
21178 too slight, and he soon got tired of this mental chase; for few men
21179 were more impatient of private occupation or more in need of making
21180 themselves continually heard than Mr. Raffles. He preferred using his
21181 time in pleasant conversation with the bailiff and the housekeeper,
21182 from whom he gathered as much as he wanted to know about Mr.
21183 Bulstrode's position in Middlemarch.
21184
21185 After all, however, there was a dull space of time which needed
21186 relieving with bread and cheese and ale, and when he was seated alone
21187 with these resources in the wainscoted parlor, he suddenly slapped his
21188 knee, and exclaimed, "Ladislaw!" That action of memory which he had
21189 tried to set going, and had abandoned in despair, had suddenly
21190 completed itself without conscious effort--a common experience,
21191 agreeable as a completed sneeze, even if the name remembered is of no
21192 value. Raffles immediately took out his pocket-book, and wrote down
21193 the name, not because he expected to use it, but merely for the sake of
21194 not being at a loss if he ever did happen to want it. He was not going
21195 to tell Bulstrode: there was no actual good in telling, and to a mind
21196 like that of Mr. Raffles there is always probable good in a secret.
21197
21198 He was satisfied with his present success, and by three o'clock that
21199 day he had taken up his portmanteau at the turnpike and mounted the
21200 coach, relieving Mr. Bulstrode's eyes of an ugly black spot on the
21201 landscape at Stone Court, but not relieving him of the dread that the
21202 black spot might reappear and become inseparable even from the vision
21203 of his hearth.
21204
21205
21206
21207
21208
21209 BOOK VI.
21210
21211
21212
21213
21214
21215 THE WIDOW AND THE WIFE.
21216
21217
21218
21219 CHAPTER LIV.
21220
21221 "Negli occhi porta la mia donna Amore;
21222 Per che si fa gentil ciò ch'ella mira:
21223 Ov'ella passa, ogni uom ver lei si gira,
21224 E cui saluta fa tremar lo core.
21225
21226 Sicchè, bassando il viso, tutto smore,
21227 E d'ogni suo difetto allor sospira:
21228 Fuggon dinanzi a lei Superbia ed Ira:
21229 Aiutatemi, donne, a farle onore.
21230
21231 Ogni dolcezza, ogni pensiero umile
21232 Nasce nel core a chi parlar la sente;
21233 Ond'è beato chi prima la vide.
21234 Quel ch'ella par quand' un poco sorride,
21235 Non si può dicer, nè tener a mente,
21236 Si è nuovo miracolo gentile."
21237 --DANTE: la Vita Nuova.
21238
21239
21240 By that delightful morning when the hay-ricks at Stone Court were
21241 scenting the air quite impartially, as if Mr. Raffles had been a guest
21242 worthy of finest incense, Dorothea had again taken up her abode at
21243 Lowick Manor. After three months Freshitt had become rather
21244 oppressive: to sit like a model for Saint Catherine looking rapturously
21245 at Celia's baby would not do for many hours in the day, and to remain
21246 in that momentous babe's presence with persistent disregard was a
21247 course that could not have been tolerated in a childless sister.
21248 Dorothea would have been capable of carrying baby joyfully for a mile
21249 if there had been need, and of loving it the more tenderly for that
21250 labor; but to an aunt who does not recognize her infant nephew as
21251 Bouddha, and has nothing to do for him but to admire, his behavior is
21252 apt to appear monotonous, and the interest of watching him exhaustible.
21253 This possibility was quite hidden from Celia, who felt that Dorothea's
21254 childless widowhood fell in quite prettily with the birth of little
21255 Arthur (baby was named after Mr. Brooke).
21256
21257 "Dodo is just the creature not to mind about having anything of her
21258 own--children or anything!" said Celia to her husband. "And if she
21259 had had a baby, it never could have been such a dear as Arthur. Could
21260 it, James?
21261
21262 "Not if it had been like Casaubon," said Sir James, conscious of some
21263 indirectness in his answer, and of holding a strictly private opinion
21264 as to the perfections of his first-born.
21265
21266 "No! just imagine! Really it was a mercy," said Celia; "and I think it
21267 is very nice for Dodo to be a widow. She can be just as fond of our
21268 baby as if it were her own, and she can have as many notions of her own
21269 as she likes."
21270
21271 "It is a pity she was not a queen," said the devout Sir James.
21272
21273 "But what should we have been then? We must have been something else,"
21274 said Celia, objecting to so laborious a flight of imagination. "I like
21275 her better as she is."
21276
21277 Hence, when she found that Dorothea was making arrangements for her
21278 final departure to Lowick, Celia raised her eyebrows with
21279 disappointment, and in her quiet unemphatic way shot a needle-arrow of
21280 sarcasm.
21281
21282 "What will you do at Lowick, Dodo? You say yourself there is nothing
21283 to be done there: everybody is so clean and well off, it makes you
21284 quite melancholy. And here you have been so happy going all about
21285 Tipton with Mr. Garth into the worst backyards. And now uncle is
21286 abroad, you and Mr. Garth can have it all your own way; and I am sure
21287 James does everything you tell him."
21288
21289 "I shall often come here, and I shall see how baby grows all the
21290 better," said Dorothea.
21291
21292 "But you will never see him washed," said Celia; "and that is quite the
21293 best part of the day." She was almost pouting: it did seem to her very
21294 hard in Dodo to go away from the baby when she might stay.
21295
21296 "Dear Kitty, I will come and stay all night on purpose," said Dorothea;
21297 "but I want to be alone now, and in my own home. I wish to know the
21298 Farebrothers better, and to talk to Mr. Farebrother about what there is
21299 to be done in Middlemarch."
21300
21301 Dorothea's native strength of will was no longer all converted into
21302 resolute submission. She had a great yearning to be at Lowick, and was
21303 simply determined to go, not feeling bound to tell all her reasons.
21304 But every one around her disapproved. Sir James was much pained, and
21305 offered that they should all migrate to Cheltenham for a few months
21306 with the sacred ark, otherwise called a cradle: at that period a man
21307 could hardly know what to propose if Cheltenham were rejected.
21308
21309 The Dowager Lady Chettam, just returned from a visit to her daughter in
21310 town, wished, at least, that Mrs. Vigo should be written to, and
21311 invited to accept the office of companion to Mrs. Casaubon: it was not
21312 credible that Dorothea as a young widow would think of living alone in
21313 the house at Lowick. Mrs. Vigo had been reader and secretary to royal
21314 personages, and in point of knowledge and sentiments even Dorothea
21315 could have nothing to object to her.
21316
21317 Mrs. Cadwallader said, privately, "You will certainly go mad in that
21318 house alone, my dear. You will see visions. We have all got to exert
21319 ourselves a little to keep sane, and call things by the same names as
21320 other people call them by. To be sure, for younger sons and women who
21321 have no money, it is a sort of provision to go mad: they are taken care
21322 of then. But you must not run into that. I dare say you are a little
21323 bored here with our good dowager; but think what a bore you might
21324 become yourself to your fellow-creatures if you were always playing
21325 tragedy queen and taking things sublimely. Sitting alone in that
21326 library at Lowick you may fancy yourself ruling the weather; you must
21327 get a few people round you who wouldn't believe you if you told them.
21328 That is a good lowering medicine."
21329
21330 "I never called everything by the same name that all the people about
21331 me did," said Dorothea, stoutly.
21332
21333 "But I suppose you have found out your mistake, my dear," said Mrs.
21334 Cadwallader, "and that is a proof of sanity."
21335
21336 Dorothea was aware of the sting, but it did not hurt her. "No," she
21337 said, "I still think that the greater part of the world is mistaken
21338 about many things. Surely one may be sane and yet think so, since the
21339 greater part of the world has often had to come round from its opinion."
21340
21341 Mrs. Cadwallader said no more on that point to Dorothea, but to her
21342 husband she remarked, "It will be well for her to marry again as soon
21343 as it is proper, if one could get her among the right people. Of
21344 course the Chettams would not wish it. But I see clearly a husband is
21345 the best thing to keep her in order. If we were not so poor I would
21346 invite Lord Triton. He will be marquis some day, and there is no
21347 denying that she would make a good marchioness: she looks handsomer
21348 than ever in her mourning."
21349
21350 "My dear Elinor, do let the poor woman alone. Such contrivances are of
21351 no use," said the easy Rector.
21352
21353 "No use? How are matches made, except by bringing men and women
21354 together? And it is a shame that her uncle should have run away and
21355 shut up the Grange just now. There ought to be plenty of eligible
21356 matches invited to Freshitt and the Grange. Lord Triton is precisely
21357 the man: full of plans for making the people happy in a soft-headed
21358 sort of way. That would just suit Mrs. Casaubon."
21359
21360 "Let Mrs. Casaubon choose for herself, Elinor."
21361
21362 "That is the nonsense you wise men talk! How can she choose if she has
21363 no variety to choose from? A woman's choice usually means taking the
21364 only man she can get. Mark my words, Humphrey. If her friends don't
21365 exert themselves, there will be a worse business than the Casaubon
21366 business yet."
21367
21368 "For heaven's sake don't touch on that topic, Elinor! It is a very sore
21369 point with Sir James. He would be deeply offended if you entered on it
21370 to him unnecessarily."
21371
21372 "I have never entered on it," said Mrs Cadwallader, opening her hands.
21373 "Celia told me all about the will at the beginning, without any asking
21374 of mine."
21375
21376 "Yes, yes; but they want the thing hushed up, and I understand that the
21377 young fellow is going out of the neighborhood."
21378
21379 Mrs. Cadwallader said nothing, but gave her husband three significant
21380 nods, with a very sarcastic expression in her dark eyes.
21381
21382 Dorothea quietly persisted in spite of remonstrance and persuasion. So
21383 by the end of June the shutters were all opened at Lowick Manor, and
21384 the morning gazed calmly into the library, shining on the rows of
21385 note-books as it shines on the weary waste planted with huge stones,
21386 the mute memorial of a forgotten faith; and the evening laden with
21387 roses entered silently into the blue-green boudoir where Dorothea chose
21388 oftenest to sit. At first she walked into every room, questioning the
21389 eighteen months of her married life, and carrying on her thoughts as if
21390 they were a speech to be heard by her husband. Then, she lingered in
21391 the library and could not be at rest till she had carefully ranged all
21392 the note-books as she imagined that he would wish to see them, in
21393 orderly sequence. The pity which had been the restraining compelling
21394 motive in her life with him still clung about his image, even while she
21395 remonstrated with him in indignant thought and told him that he was
21396 unjust. One little act of hers may perhaps be smiled at as
21397 superstitious. The Synoptical Tabulation for the use of Mrs. Casaubon,
21398 she carefully enclosed and sealed, writing within the envelope, "I
21399 could not use it. Do you not see now that I could not submit my soul
21400 to yours, by working hopelessly at what I have no belief in--Dorothea?"
21401 Then she deposited the paper in her own desk.
21402
21403 That silent colloquy was perhaps only the more earnest because
21404 underneath and through it all there was always the deep longing which
21405 had really determined her to come to Lowick. The longing was to see
21406 Will Ladislaw. She did not know any good that could come of their
21407 meeting: she was helpless; her hands had been tied from making up to
21408 him for any unfairness in his lot. But her soul thirsted to see him.
21409 How could it be otherwise? If a princess in the days of enchantment
21410 had seen a four-footed creature from among those which live in herds
21411 come to her once and again with a human gaze which rested upon her with
21412 choice and beseeching, what would she think of in her journeying, what
21413 would she look for when the herds passed her? Surely for the gaze
21414 which had found her, and which she would know again. Life would be no
21415 better than candle-light tinsel and daylight rubbish if our spirits
21416 were not touched by what has been, to issues of longing and constancy.
21417 It was true that Dorothea wanted to know the Farebrothers better, and
21418 especially to talk to the new rector, but also true that remembering
21419 what Lydgate had told her about Will Ladislaw and little Miss Noble,
21420 she counted on Will's coming to Lowick to see the Farebrother family.
21421 The very first Sunday, _before_ she entered the church, she saw him as
21422 she had seen him the last time she was there, alone in the clergyman's
21423 pew; but _when_ she entered his figure was gone.
21424
21425 In the week-days when she went to see the ladies at the Rectory, she
21426 listened in vain for some word that they might let fall about Will; but
21427 it seemed to her that Mrs. Farebrother talked of every one else in the
21428 neighborhood and out of it.
21429
21430 "Probably some of Mr. Farebrother's Middlemarch hearers may follow him
21431 to Lowick sometimes. Do you not think so?" said Dorothea, rather
21432 despising herself for having a secret motive in asking the question.
21433
21434 "If they are wise they will, Mrs. Casaubon," said the old lady. "I see
21435 that you set a right value on my son's preaching. His grandfather on
21436 my side was an excellent clergyman, but his father was in the law:--most
21437 exemplary and honest nevertheless, which is a reason for our never
21438 being rich. They say Fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes
21439 she is a good woman and gives to those who merit, which has been the
21440 case with you, Mrs. Casaubon, who have given a living to my son."
21441
21442 Mrs. Farebrother recurred to her knitting with a dignified satisfaction
21443 in her neat little effort at oratory, but this was not what Dorothea
21444 wanted to hear. Poor thing! she did not even know whether Will
21445 Ladislaw was still at Middlemarch, and there was no one whom she dared
21446 to ask, unless it were Lydgate. But just now she could not see Lydgate
21447 without sending for him or going to seek him. Perhaps Will Ladislaw,
21448 having heard of that strange ban against him left by Mr. Casaubon, had
21449 felt it better that he and she should not meet again, and perhaps she
21450 was wrong to wish for a meeting that others might find many good
21451 reasons against. Still "I do wish it" came at the end of those wise
21452 reflections as naturally as a sob after holding the breath. And the
21453 meeting did happen, but in a formal way quite unexpected by her.
21454
21455 One morning, about eleven, Dorothea was seated in her boudoir with a
21456 map of the land attached to the manor and other papers before her,
21457 which were to help her in making an exact statement for herself of her
21458 income and affairs. She had not yet applied herself to her work, but
21459 was seated with her hands folded on her lap, looking out along the
21460 avenue of limes to the distant fields. Every leaf was at rest in the
21461 sunshine, the familiar scene was changeless, and seemed to represent
21462 the prospect of her life, full of motiveless ease--motiveless, if her
21463 own energy could not seek out reasons for ardent action. The widow's
21464 cap of those times made an oval frame for the face, and had a crown
21465 standing up; the dress was an experiment in the utmost laying on of
21466 crape; but this heavy solemnity of clothing made her face look all the
21467 younger, with its recovered bloom, and the sweet, inquiring candor of
21468 her eyes.
21469
21470 Her reverie was broken by Tantripp, who came to say that Mr. Ladislaw
21471 was below, and begged permission to see Madam if it were not too early.
21472
21473 "I will see him," said Dorothea, rising immediately. "Let him be shown
21474 into the drawing-room."
21475
21476 The drawing-room was the most neutral room in the house to her--the
21477 one least associated with the trials of her married life: the damask
21478 matched the wood-work, which was all white and gold; there were two
21479 tall mirrors and tables with nothing on them--in brief, it was a room
21480 where you had no reason for sitting in one place rather than in
21481 another. It was below the boudoir, and had also a bow-window looking
21482 out on the avenue. But when Pratt showed Will Ladislaw into it the
21483 window was open; and a winged visitor, buzzing in and out now and then
21484 without minding the furniture, made the room look less formal and
21485 uninhabited.
21486
21487 "Glad to see you here again, sir," said Pratt, lingering to adjust a
21488 blind.
21489
21490 "I am only come to say good-by, Pratt," said Will, who wished even the
21491 butler to know that he was too proud to hang about Mrs. Casaubon now
21492 she was a rich widow.
21493
21494 "Very sorry to hear it, sir," said Pratt, retiring. Of course, as a
21495 servant who was to be told nothing, he knew the fact of which Ladislaw
21496 was still ignorant, and had drawn his inferences; indeed, had not
21497 differed from his betrothed Tantripp when she said, "Your master was as
21498 jealous as a fiend--and no reason. Madam would look higher than Mr.
21499 Ladislaw, else I don't know her. Mrs. Cadwallader's maid says there's
21500 a lord coming who is to marry her when the mourning's over."
21501
21502 There were not many moments for Will to walk about with his hat in his
21503 hand before Dorothea entered. The meeting was very different from that
21504 first meeting in Rome when Will had been embarrassed and Dorothea calm.
21505 This time he felt miserable but determined, while she was in a state of
21506 agitation which could not be hidden. Just outside the door she had
21507 felt that this longed-for meeting was after all too difficult, and when
21508 she saw Will advancing towards her, the deep blush which was rare in
21509 her came with painful suddenness. Neither of them knew how it was, but
21510 neither of them spoke. She gave her hand for a moment, and then they
21511 went to sit down near the window, she on one settee and he on another
21512 opposite. Will was peculiarly uneasy: it seemed to him not like
21513 Dorothea that the mere fact of her being a widow should cause such a
21514 change in her manner of receiving him; and he knew of no other
21515 condition which could have affected their previous relation to each
21516 other--except that, as his imagination at once told him, her friends
21517 might have been poisoning her mind with their suspicions of him.
21518
21519 "I hope I have not presumed too much in calling," said Will; "I could
21520 not bear to leave the neighborhood and begin a new life without seeing
21521 you to say good-by."
21522
21523 "Presumed? Surely not. I should have thought it unkind if you had not
21524 wished to see me," said Dorothea, her habit of speaking with perfect
21525 genuineness asserting itself through all her uncertainty and agitation.
21526 "Are you going away immediately?"
21527
21528 "Very soon, I think. I intend to go to town and eat my dinners as a
21529 barrister, since, they say, that is the preparation for all public
21530 business. There will be a great deal of political work to be done
21531 by-and-by, and I mean to try and do some of it. Other men have managed
21532 to win an honorable position for themselves without family or money."
21533
21534 "And that will make it all the more honorable," said Dorothea,
21535 ardently. "Besides, you have so many talents. I have heard from my
21536 uncle how well you speak in public, so that every one is sorry when you
21537 leave off, and how clearly you can explain things. And you care that
21538 justice should be done to every one. I am so glad. When we were in
21539 Rome, I thought you only cared for poetry and art, and the things that
21540 adorn life for us who are well off. But now I know you think about the
21541 rest of the world."
21542
21543 While she was speaking Dorothea had lost her personal embarrassment,
21544 and had become like her former self. She looked at Will with a direct
21545 glance, full of delighted confidence.
21546
21547 "You approve of my going away for years, then, and never coming here
21548 again till I have made myself of some mark in the world?" said Will,
21549 trying hard to reconcile the utmost pride with the utmost effort to get
21550 an expression of strong feeling from Dorothea.
21551
21552 She was not aware how long it was before she answered. She had turned
21553 her head and was looking out of the window on the rose-bushes, which
21554 seemed to have in them the summers of all the years when Will would be
21555 away. This was not judicious behavior. But Dorothea never thought of
21556 studying her manners: she thought only of bowing to a sad necessity
21557 which divided her from Will. Those first words of his about his
21558 intentions had seemed to make everything clear to her: he knew, she
21559 supposed, all about Mr. Casaubon's final conduct in relation to him,
21560 and it had come to him with the same sort of shock as to herself. He
21561 had never felt more than friendship for her--had never had anything in
21562 his mind to justify what she felt to be her husband's outrage on the
21563 feelings of both: and that friendship he still felt. Something which
21564 may be called an inward silent sob had gone on in Dorothea before she
21565 said with a pure voice, just trembling in the last words as if only
21566 from its liquid flexibility--
21567
21568 "Yes, it must be right for you to do as you say. I shall be very happy
21569 when I hear that you have made your value felt. But you must have
21570 patience. It will perhaps be a long while."
21571
21572 Will never quite knew how it was that he saved himself from falling
21573 down at her feet, when the "long while" came forth with its gentle
21574 tremor. He used to say that the horrible hue and surface of her crape
21575 dress was most likely the sufficient controlling force. He sat still,
21576 however, and only said--
21577
21578 "I shall never hear from you. And you will forget all about me."
21579
21580 "No," said Dorothea, "I shall never forget you. I have never forgotten
21581 any one whom I once knew. My life has never been crowded, and seems
21582 not likely to be so. And I have a great deal of space for memory at
21583 Lowick, haven't I?" She smiled.
21584
21585 "Good God!" Will burst out passionately, rising, with his hat still in
21586 his hand, and walking away to a marble table, where he suddenly turned
21587 and leaned his back against it. The blood had mounted to his face and
21588 neck, and he looked almost angry. It had seemed to him as if they were
21589 like two creatures slowly turning to marble in each other's presence,
21590 while their hearts were conscious and their eyes were yearning. But
21591 there was no help for it. It should never be true of him that in this
21592 meeting to which he had come with bitter resolution he had ended by a
21593 confession which might be interpreted into asking for her fortune.
21594 Moreover, it was actually true that he was fearful of the effect which
21595 such confessions might have on Dorothea herself.
21596
21597 She looked at him from that distance in some trouble, imagining that
21598 there might have been an offence in her words. But all the while there
21599 was a current of thought in her about his probable want of money, and
21600 the impossibility of her helping him. If her uncle had been at home,
21601 something might have been done through him! It was this preoccupation
21602 with the hardship of Will's wanting money, while she had what ought to
21603 have been his share, which led her to say, seeing that he remained
21604 silent and looked away from her--
21605
21606 "I wonder whether you would like to have that miniature which hangs
21607 up-stairs--I mean that beautiful miniature of your grandmother. I
21608 think it is not right for me to keep it, if you would wish to have it.
21609 It is wonderfully like you."
21610
21611 "You are very good," said Will, irritably. "No; I don't mind about it.
21612 It is not very consoling to have one's own likeness. It would be more
21613 consoling if others wanted to have it."
21614
21615 "I thought you would like to cherish her memory--I thought--" Dorothea
21616 broke off an instant, her imagination suddenly warning her away from
21617 Aunt Julia's history--"you would surely like to have the miniature as a
21618 family memorial."
21619
21620 "Why should I have that, when I have nothing else! A man with only a
21621 portmanteau for his stowage must keep his memorials in his head."
21622
21623 Will spoke at random: he was merely venting his petulance; it was a
21624 little too exasperating to have his grandmother's portrait offered him
21625 at that moment. But to Dorothea's feeling his words had a peculiar
21626 sting. She rose and said with a touch of indignation as well as
21627 hauteur--
21628
21629 "You are much the happier of us two, Mr. Ladislaw, to have nothing."
21630
21631 Will was startled. Whatever the words might be, the tone seemed like a
21632 dismissal; and quitting his leaning posture, he walked a little way
21633 towards her. Their eyes met, but with a strange questioning gravity.
21634 Something was keeping their minds aloof, and each was left to
21635 conjecture what was in the other. Will had really never thought of
21636 himself as having a claim of inheritance on the property which was held
21637 by Dorothea, and would have required a narrative to make him understand
21638 her present feeling.
21639
21640 "I never felt it a misfortune to have nothing till now," he said. "But
21641 poverty may be as bad as leprosy, if it divides us from what we most
21642 care for."
21643
21644 The words cut Dorothea to the heart, and made her relent. She answered
21645 in a tone of sad fellowship.
21646
21647 "Sorrow comes in so many ways. Two years ago I had no notion of
21648 that--I mean of the unexpected way in which trouble comes, and ties our
21649 hands, and makes us silent when we long to speak. I used to despise
21650 women a little for not shaping their lives more, and doing better
21651 things. I was very fond of doing as I liked, but I have almost given
21652 it up," she ended, smiling playfully.
21653
21654 "I have not given up doing as I like, but I can very seldom do it,"
21655 said Will. He was standing two yards from her with his mind full of
21656 contradictory desires and resolves--desiring some unmistakable proof
21657 that she loved him, and yet dreading the position into which such a
21658 proof might bring him. "The thing one most longs for may be surrounded
21659 with conditions that would be intolerable."
21660
21661 At this moment Pratt entered and said, "Sir James Chettam is in the
21662 library, madam."
21663
21664 "Ask Sir James to come in here," said Dorothea, immediately. It was as
21665 if the same electric shock had passed through her and Will. Each of
21666 them felt proudly resistant, and neither looked at the other, while
21667 they awaited Sir James's entrance.
21668
21669 After shaking hands with Dorothea, he bowed as slightly as possible to
21670 Ladislaw, who repaid the slightness exactly, and then going towards
21671 Dorothea, said--
21672
21673 "I must say good-by, Mrs. Casaubon; and probably for a long while."
21674
21675 Dorothea put out her hand and said her good-by cordially. The sense
21676 that Sir James was depreciating Will, and behaving rudely to him,
21677 roused her resolution and dignity: there was no touch of confusion in
21678 her manner. And when Will had left the room, she looked with such calm
21679 self-possession at Sir James, saying, "How is Celia?" that he was
21680 obliged to behave as if nothing had annoyed him. And what would be the
21681 use of behaving otherwise? Indeed, Sir James shrank with so much
21682 dislike from the association even in thought of Dorothea with Ladislaw
21683 as her possible lover, that he would himself have wished to avoid an
21684 outward show of displeasure which would have recognized the
21685 disagreeable possibility. If any one had asked him why he shrank in
21686 that way, I am not sure that he would at first have said anything
21687 fuller or more precise than "_That_ Ladislaw!"--though on reflection
21688 he might have urged that Mr. Casaubon's codicil, barring Dorothea's
21689 marriage with Will, except under a penalty, was enough to cast
21690 unfitness over any relation at all between them. His aversion was all
21691 the stronger because he felt himself unable to interfere.
21692
21693 But Sir James was a power in a way unguessed by himself. Entering at
21694 that moment, he was an incorporation of the strongest reasons through
21695 which Will's pride became a repellent force, keeping him asunder from
21696 Dorothea.
21697
21698
21699
21700 CHAPTER LV.
21701
21702 Hath she her faults? I would you had them too.
21703 They are the fruity must of soundest wine;
21704 Or say, they are regenerating fire
21705 Such as hath turned the dense black element
21706 Into a crystal pathway for the sun.
21707
21708
21709 If youth is the season of hope, it is often so only in the sense that
21710 our elders are hopeful about us; for no age is so apt as youth to think
21711 its emotions, partings, and resolves are the last of their kind. Each
21712 crisis seems final, simply because it is new. We are told that the
21713 oldest inhabitants in Peru do not cease to be agitated by the
21714 earthquakes, but they probably see beyond each shock, and reflect that
21715 there are plenty more to come.
21716
21717 To Dorothea, still in that time of youth when the eyes with their long
21718 full lashes look out after their rain of tears unsoiled and unwearied
21719 as a freshly opened passion-flower, that morning's parting with Will
21720 Ladislaw seemed to be the close of their personal relations. He was
21721 going away into the distance of unknown years, and if ever he came back
21722 he would be another man. The actual state of his mind--his proud
21723 resolve to give the lie beforehand to any suspicion that he would play
21724 the needy adventurer seeking a rich woman--lay quite out of her
21725 imagination, and she had interpreted all his behavior easily enough by
21726 her supposition that Mr. Casaubon's codicil seemed to him, as it did to
21727 her, a gross and cruel interdict on any active friendship between them.
21728 Their young delight in speaking to each other, and saying what no one
21729 else would care to hear, was forever ended, and become a treasure of
21730 the past. For this very reason she dwelt on it without inward check.
21731 That unique happiness too was dead, and in its shadowed silent chamber
21732 she might vent the passionate grief which she herself wondered at. For
21733 the first time she took down the miniature from the wall and kept it
21734 before her, liking to blend the woman who had been too hardly judged
21735 with the grandson whom her own heart and judgment defended. Can any
21736 one who has rejoiced in woman's tenderness think it a reproach to her
21737 that she took the little oval picture in her palm and made a bed for it
21738 there, and leaned her cheek upon it, as if that would soothe the
21739 creatures who had suffered unjust condemnation? She did not know then
21740 that it was Love who had come to her briefly, as in a dream before
21741 awaking, with the hues of morning on his wings--that it was Love to
21742 whom she was sobbing her farewell as his image was banished by the
21743 blameless rigor of irresistible day. She only felt that there was
21744 something irrevocably amiss and lost in her lot, and her thoughts about
21745 the future were the more readily shapen into resolve. Ardent souls,
21746 ready to construct their coming lives, are apt to commit themselves to
21747 the fulfilment of their own visions.
21748
21749 One day that she went to Freshitt to fulfil her promise of staying all
21750 night and seeing baby washed, Mrs. Cadwallader came to dine, the Rector
21751 being gone on a fishing excursion. It was a warm evening, and even in
21752 the delightful drawing-room, where the fine old turf sloped from the
21753 open window towards a lilied pool and well-planted mounds, the heat was
21754 enough to make Celia in her white muslin and light curls reflect with
21755 pity on what Dodo must feel in her black dress and close cap. But this
21756 was not until some episodes with baby were over, and had left her mind
21757 at leisure. She had seated herself and taken up a fan for some time
21758 before she said, in her quiet guttural--
21759
21760 "Dear Dodo, do throw off that cap. I am sure your dress must make you
21761 feel ill."
21762
21763 "I am so used to the cap--it has become a sort of shell," said
21764 Dorothea, smiling. "I feel rather bare and exposed when it is off."
21765
21766 "I must see you without it; it makes us all warm," said Celia, throwing
21767 down her fan, and going to Dorothea. It was a pretty picture to see
21768 this little lady in white muslin unfastening the widow's cap from her
21769 more majestic sister, and tossing it on to a chair. Just as the coils
21770 and braids of dark-brown hair had been set free, Sir James entered the
21771 room. He looked at the released head, and said, "Ah!" in a tone of
21772 satisfaction.
21773
21774 "It was I who did it, James," said Celia. "Dodo need not make such a
21775 slavery of her mourning; she need not wear that cap any more among her
21776 friends."
21777
21778 "My dear Celia," said Lady Chettam, "a widow must wear her mourning at
21779 least a year."
21780
21781 "Not if she marries again before the end of it," said Mrs. Cadwallader,
21782 who had some pleasure in startling her good friend the Dowager. Sir
21783 James was annoyed, and leaned forward to play with Celia's Maltese dog.
21784
21785 "That is very rare, I hope," said Lady Chettam, in a tone intended to
21786 guard against such events. "No friend of ours ever committed herself
21787 in that way except Mrs. Beevor, and it was very painful to Lord
21788 Grinsell when she did so. Her first husband was objectionable, which
21789 made it the greater wonder. And severely she was punished for it.
21790 They said Captain Beevor dragged her about by the hair, and held up
21791 loaded pistols at her."
21792
21793 "Oh, if she took the wrong man!" said Mrs. Cadwallader, who was in a
21794 decidedly wicked mood. "Marriage is always bad then, first or second.
21795 Priority is a poor recommendation in a husband if he has got no other.
21796 I would rather have a good second husband than an indifferent first."
21797
21798 "My dear, your clever tongue runs away with you," said Lady Chettam.
21799 "I am sure you would be the last woman to marry again prematurely, if
21800 our dear Rector were taken away."
21801
21802 "Oh, I make no vows; it might be a necessary economy. It is lawful to
21803 marry again, I suppose; else we might as well be Hindoos instead of
21804 Christians. Of course if a woman accepts the wrong man, she must take
21805 the consequences, and one who does it twice over deserves her fate.
21806 But if she can marry blood, beauty, and bravery--the sooner the
21807 better."
21808
21809 "I think the subject of our conversation is very ill-chosen," said Sir
21810 James, with a look of disgust. "Suppose we change it."
21811
21812 "Not on my account, Sir James," said Dorothea, determined not to lose
21813 the opportunity of freeing herself from certain oblique references to
21814 excellent matches. "If you are speaking on my behalf, I can assure you
21815 that no question can be more indifferent and impersonal to me than
21816 second marriage. It is no more to me than if you talked of women going
21817 fox-hunting: whether it is admirable in them or not, I shall not follow
21818 them. Pray let Mrs. Cadwallader amuse herself on that subject as much
21819 as on any other."
21820
21821 "My dear Mrs. Casaubon," said Lady Chettam, in her stateliest way, "you
21822 do not, I hope, think there was any allusion to you in my mentioning
21823 Mrs. Beevor. It was only an instance that occurred to me. She was
21824 step-daughter to Lord Grinsell: he married Mrs. Teveroy for his second
21825 wife. There could be no possible allusion to you."
21826
21827 "Oh no," said Celia. "Nobody chose the subject; it all came out of
21828 Dodo's cap. Mrs. Cadwallader only said what was quite true. A woman
21829 could not be married in a widow's cap, James."
21830
21831 "Hush, my dear!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "I will not offend again. I
21832 will not even refer to Dido or Zenobia. Only what are we to talk
21833 about? I, for my part, object to the discussion of Human Nature,
21834 because that is the nature of rectors' wives."
21835
21836 Later in the evening, after Mrs. Cadwallader was gone, Celia said
21837 privately to Dorothea, "Really, Dodo, taking your cap off made you like
21838 yourself again in more ways than one. You spoke up just as you used to
21839 do, when anything was said to displease you. But I could hardly make
21840 out whether it was James that you thought wrong, or Mrs. Cadwallader."
21841
21842 "Neither," said Dorothea. "James spoke out of delicacy to me, but he
21843 was mistaken in supposing that I minded what Mrs. Cadwallader said. I
21844 should only mind if there were a law obliging me to take any piece of
21845 blood and beauty that she or anybody else recommended."
21846
21847 "But you know, Dodo, if you ever did marry, it would be all the better
21848 to have blood and beauty," said Celia, reflecting that Mr. Casaubon had
21849 not been richly endowed with those gifts, and that it would be well to
21850 caution Dorothea in time.
21851
21852 "Don't be anxious, Kitty; I have quite other thoughts about my life. I
21853 shall never marry again," said Dorothea, touching her sister's chin,
21854 and looking at her with indulgent affection. Celia was nursing her
21855 baby, and Dorothea had come to say good-night to her.
21856
21857 "Really--quite?" said Celia. "Not anybody at all--if he were very
21858 wonderful indeed?"
21859
21860 Dorothea shook her head slowly. "Not anybody at all. I have
21861 delightful plans. I should like to take a great deal of land, and
21862 drain it, and make a little colony, where everybody should work, and
21863 all the work should be done well. I should know every one of the
21864 people and be their friend. I am going to have great consultations
21865 with Mr. Garth: he can tell me almost everything I want to know."
21866
21867 "Then you _will_ be happy, if you have a plan, Dodo?" said Celia.
21868 "Perhaps little Arthur will like plans when he grows up, and then he
21869 can help you."
21870
21871 Sir James was informed that same night that Dorothea was really quite
21872 set against marrying anybody at all, and was going to take to "all
21873 sorts of plans," just like what she used to have. Sir James made no
21874 remark. To his secret feeling there was something repulsive in a
21875 woman's second marriage, and no match would prevent him from feeling it
21876 a sort of desecration for Dorothea. He was aware that the world would
21877 regard such a sentiment as preposterous, especially in relation to a
21878 woman of one-and-twenty; the practice of "the world" being to treat of
21879 a young widow's second marriage as certain and probably near, and to
21880 smile with meaning if the widow acts accordingly. But if Dorothea did
21881 choose to espouse her solitude, he felt that the resolution would well
21882 become her.
21883
21884
21885
21886 CHAPTER LVI.
21887
21888 "How happy is he born and taught
21889 That serveth not another's will;
21890 Whose armor is his honest thought,
21891 And simple truth his only skill!
21892 . . . . . . .
21893 This man is freed from servile bands
21894 Of hope to rise or fear to fall;
21895 Lord of himself though not of lands;
21896 And having nothing yet hath all."
21897 --SIR HENRY WOTTON.
21898
21899
21900 Dorothea's confidence in Caleb Garth's knowledge, which had begun on
21901 her hearing that he approved of her cottages, had grown fast during her
21902 stay at Freshitt, Sir James having induced her to take rides over the
21903 two estates in company with himself and Caleb, who quite returned her
21904 admiration, and told his wife that Mrs. Casaubon had a head for
21905 business most uncommon in a woman. It must be remembered that by
21906 "business" Caleb never meant money transactions, but the skilful
21907 application of labor.
21908
21909 "Most uncommon!" repeated Caleb. "She said a thing I often used to
21910 think myself when I was a lad:--'Mr. Garth, I should like to feel, if I
21911 lived to be old, that I had improved a great piece of land and built a
21912 great many good cottages, because the work is of a healthy kind while
21913 it is being done, and after it is done, men are the better for it.'
21914 Those were the very words: she sees into things in that way."
21915
21916 "But womanly, I hope," said Mrs. Garth, half suspecting that Mrs.
21917 Casaubon might not hold the true principle of subordination.
21918
21919 "Oh, you can't think!" said Caleb, shaking his head. "You would like
21920 to hear her speak, Susan. She speaks in such plain words, and a voice
21921 like music. Bless me! it reminds me of bits in the 'Messiah'--'and
21922 straightway there appeared a multitude of the heavenly host, praising
21923 God and saying;' it has a tone with it that satisfies your ear."
21924
21925 Caleb was very fond of music, and when he could afford it went to hear
21926 an oratorio that came within his reach, returning from it with a
21927 profound reverence for this mighty structure of tones, which made him
21928 sit meditatively, looking on the floor and throwing much unutterable
21929 language into his outstretched hands.
21930
21931 With this good understanding between them, it was natural that Dorothea
21932 asked Mr. Garth to undertake any business connected with the three
21933 farms and the numerous tenements attached to Lowick Manor; indeed, his
21934 expectation of getting work for two was being fast fulfilled. As he
21935 said, "Business breeds." And one form of business which was beginning
21936 to breed just then was the construction of railways. A projected line
21937 was to run through Lowick parish where the cattle had hitherto grazed
21938 in a peace unbroken by astonishment; and thus it happened that the
21939 infant struggles of the railway system entered into the affairs of
21940 Caleb Garth, and determined the course of this history with regard to
21941 two persons who were dear to him. The submarine railway may have its
21942 difficulties; but the bed of the sea is not divided among various
21943 landed proprietors with claims for damages not only measurable but
21944 sentimental. In the hundred to which Middlemarch belonged railways
21945 were as exciting a topic as the Reform Bill or the imminent horrors of
21946 Cholera, and those who held the most decided views on the subject were
21947 women and landholders. Women both old and young regarded travelling by
21948 steam as presumptuous and dangerous, and argued against it by saying
21949 that nothing should induce them to get into a railway carriage; while
21950 proprietors, differing from each other in their arguments as much as
21951 Mr. Solomon Featherstone differed from Lord Medlicote, were yet
21952 unanimous in the opinion that in selling land, whether to the Enemy of
21953 mankind or to a company obliged to purchase, these pernicious agencies
21954 must be made to pay a very high price to landowners for permission to
21955 injure mankind.
21956
21957 But the slower wits, such as Mr. Solomon and Mrs. Waule, who both
21958 occupied land of their own, took a long time to arrive at this
21959 conclusion, their minds halting at the vivid conception of what it
21960 would be to cut the Big Pasture in two, and turn it into three-cornered
21961 bits, which would be "nohow;" while accommodation-bridges and high
21962 payments were remote and incredible.
21963
21964 "The cows will all cast their calves, brother," said Mrs. Waule, in a
21965 tone of deep melancholy, "if the railway comes across the Near Close;
21966 and I shouldn't wonder at the mare too, if she was in foal. It's a
21967 poor tale if a widow's property is to be spaded away, and the law say
21968 nothing to it. What's to hinder 'em from cutting right and left if
21969 they begin? It's well known, _I_ can't fight."
21970
21971 "The best way would be to say nothing, and set somebody on to send 'em
21972 away with a flea in their ear, when they came spying and measuring,"
21973 said Solomon. "Folks did that about Brassing, by what I can
21974 understand. It's all a pretence, if the truth was known, about their
21975 being forced to take one way. Let 'em go cutting in another parish.
21976 And I don't believe in any pay to make amends for bringing a lot of
21977 ruffians to trample your crops. Where's a company's pocket?"
21978
21979 "Brother Peter, God forgive him, got money out of a company," said Mrs.
21980 Waule. "But that was for the manganese. That wasn't for railways to
21981 blow you to pieces right and left."
21982
21983 "Well, there's this to be said, Jane," Mr. Solomon concluded, lowering
21984 his voice in a cautious manner--"the more spokes we put in their wheel,
21985 the more they'll pay us to let 'em go on, if they must come whether or
21986 not."
21987
21988 This reasoning of Mr. Solomon's was perhaps less thorough than he
21989 imagined, his cunning bearing about the same relation to the course of
21990 railways as the cunning of a diplomatist bears to the general chill or
21991 catarrh of the solar system. But he set about acting on his views in a
21992 thoroughly diplomatic manner, by stimulating suspicion. His side of
21993 Lowick was the most remote from the village, and the houses of the
21994 laboring people were either lone cottages or were collected in a hamlet
21995 called Frick, where a water-mill and some stone-pits made a little
21996 centre of slow, heavy-shouldered industry.
21997
21998 In the absence of any precise idea as to what railways were, public
21999 opinion in Frick was against them; for the human mind in that grassy
22000 corner had not the proverbial tendency to admire the unknown, holding
22001 rather that it was likely to be against the poor man, and that
22002 suspicion was the only wise attitude with regard to it. Even the rumor
22003 of Reform had not yet excited any millennial expectations in Frick,
22004 there being no definite promise in it, as of gratuitous grains to
22005 fatten Hiram Ford's pig, or of a publican at the "Weights and Scales"
22006 who would brew beer for nothing, or of an offer on the part of the
22007 three neighboring farmers to raise wages during winter. And without
22008 distinct good of this kind in its promises, Reform seemed on a footing
22009 with the bragging of pedlers, which was a hint for distrust to every
22010 knowing person. The men of Frick were not ill-fed, and were less given
22011 to fanaticism than to a strong muscular suspicion; less inclined to
22012 believe that they were peculiarly cared for by heaven, than to regard
22013 heaven itself as rather disposed to take them in--a disposition
22014 observable in the weather.
22015
22016 Thus the mind of Frick was exactly of the sort for Mr. Solomon
22017 Featherstone to work upon, he having more plenteous ideas of the same
22018 order, with a suspicion of heaven and earth which was better fed and
22019 more entirely at leisure. Solomon was overseer of the roads at that
22020 time, and on his slow-paced cob often took his rounds by Frick to look
22021 at the workmen getting the stones there, pausing with a mysterious
22022 deliberation, which might have misled you into supposing that he had
22023 some other reason for staying than the mere want of impulse to move.
22024 After looking for a long while at any work that was going on, he would
22025 raise his eyes a little and look at the horizon; finally he would shake
22026 his bridle, touch his horse with the whip, and get it to move slowly
22027 onward. The hour-hand of a clock was quick by comparison with Mr.
22028 Solomon, who had an agreeable sense that he could afford to be slow.
22029 He was in the habit of pausing for a cautious, vaguely designing chat
22030 with every hedger or ditcher on his way, and was especially willing to
22031 listen even to news which he had heard before, feeling himself at an
22032 advantage over all narrators in partially disbelieving them. One day,
22033 however, he got into a dialogue with Hiram Ford, a wagoner, in which he
22034 himself contributed information. He wished to know whether Hiram had
22035 seen fellows with staves and instruments spying about: they called
22036 themselves railroad people, but there was no telling what they were or
22037 what they meant to do. The least they pretended was that they were
22038 going to cut Lowick Parish into sixes and sevens.
22039
22040 "Why, there'll be no stirrin' from one pla-ace to another," said Hiram,
22041 thinking of his wagon and horses.
22042
22043 "Not a bit," said Mr. Solomon. "And cutting up fine land such as this
22044 parish! Let 'em go into Tipton, say I. But there's no knowing what
22045 there is at the bottom of it. Traffic is what they put for'ard; but
22046 it's to do harm to the land and the poor man in the long-run."
22047
22048 "Why, they're Lunnon chaps, I reckon," said Hiram, who had a dim notion
22049 of London as a centre of hostility to the country.
22050
22051 "Ay, to be sure. And in some parts against Brassing, by what I've
22052 heard say, the folks fell on 'em when they were spying, and broke their
22053 peep-holes as they carry, and drove 'em away, so as they knew better
22054 than come again."
22055
22056 "It war good foon, I'd be bound," said Hiram, whose fun was much
22057 restricted by circumstances.
22058
22059 "Well, I wouldn't meddle with 'em myself," said Solomon. "But some say
22060 this country's seen its best days, and the sign is, as it's being
22061 overrun with these fellows trampling right and left, and wanting to cut
22062 it up into railways; and all for the big traffic to swallow up the
22063 little, so as there shan't be a team left on the land, nor a whip to
22064 crack."
22065
22066 "I'll crack _my_ whip about their ear'n, afore they bring it to that,
22067 though," said Hiram, while Mr. Solomon, shaking his bridle, moved
22068 onward.
22069
22070 Nettle-seed needs no digging. The ruin of this countryside by
22071 railroads was discussed, not only at the "Weights and Scales," but in
22072 the hay-field, where the muster of working hands gave opportunities for
22073 talk such as were rarely had through the rural year.
22074
22075 One morning, not long after that interview between Mr. Farebrother and
22076 Mary Garth, in which she confessed to him her feeling for Fred Vincy,
22077 it happened that her father had some business which took him to
22078 Yoddrell's farm in the direction of Frick: it was to measure and value
22079 an outlying piece of land belonging to Lowick Manor, which Caleb
22080 expected to dispose of advantageously for Dorothea (it must be
22081 confessed that his bias was towards getting the best possible terms
22082 from railroad companies). He put up his gig at Yoddrell's, and in
22083 walking with his assistant and measuring-chain to the scene of his
22084 work, he encountered the party of the company's agents, who were
22085 adjusting their spirit-level. After a little chat he left them,
22086 observing that by-and-by they would reach him again where he was going
22087 to measure. It was one of those gray mornings after light rains, which
22088 become delicious about twelve o'clock, when the clouds part a little,
22089 and the scent of the earth is sweet along the lanes and by the
22090 hedgerows.
22091
22092 The scent would have been sweeter to Fred Vincy, who was coming along
22093 the lanes on horseback, if his mind had not been worried by
22094 unsuccessful efforts to imagine what he was to do, with his father on
22095 one side expecting him straightway to enter the Church, with Mary on
22096 the other threatening to forsake him if he did enter it, and with the
22097 working-day world showing no eager need whatever of a young gentleman
22098 without capital and generally unskilled. It was the harder to Fred's
22099 disposition because his father, satisfied that he was no longer
22100 rebellious, was in good humor with him, and had sent him on this
22101 pleasant ride to see after some greyhounds. Even when he had fixed on
22102 what he should do, there would be the task of telling his father. But
22103 it must be admitted that the fixing, which had to come first, was the
22104 more difficult task:--what secular avocation on earth was there for a
22105 young man (whose friends could not get him an "appointment") which was
22106 at once gentlemanly, lucrative, and to be followed without special
22107 knowledge? Riding along the lanes by Frick in this mood, and
22108 slackening his pace while he reflected whether he should venture to go
22109 round by Lowick Parsonage to call on Mary, he could see over the hedges
22110 from one field to another. Suddenly a noise roused his attention, and
22111 on the far side of a field on his left hand he could see six or seven
22112 men in smock-frocks with hay-forks in their hands making an offensive
22113 approach towards the four railway agents who were facing them, while
22114 Caleb Garth and his assistant were hastening across the field to join
22115 the threatened group. Fred, delayed a few moments by having to find
22116 the gate, could not gallop up to the spot before the party in
22117 smock-frocks, whose work of turning the hay had not been too pressing
22118 after swallowing their mid-day beer, were driving the men in coats
22119 before them with their hay-forks; while Caleb Garth's assistant, a lad
22120 of seventeen, who had snatched up the spirit-level at Caleb's order,
22121 had been knocked down and seemed to be lying helpless. The coated men
22122 had the advantage as runners, and Fred covered their retreat by getting
22123 in front of the smock-frocks and charging them suddenly enough to throw
22124 their chase into confusion. "What do you confounded fools mean?"
22125 shouted Fred, pursuing the divided group in a zigzag, and cutting right
22126 and left with his whip. "I'll swear to every one of you before the
22127 magistrate. You've knocked the lad down and killed him, for what I
22128 know. You'll every one of you be hanged at the next assizes, if you
22129 don't mind," said Fred, who afterwards laughed heartily as he
22130 remembered his own phrases.
22131
22132 The laborers had been driven through the gate-way into their hay-field,
22133 and Fred had checked his horse, when Hiram Ford, observing himself at a
22134 safe challenging distance, turned back and shouted a defiance which he
22135 did not know to be Homeric.
22136
22137 "Yo're a coward, yo are. Yo git off your horse, young measter, and
22138 I'll have a round wi' ye, I wull. Yo daredn't come on wi'out your hoss
22139 an' whip. I'd soon knock the breath out on ye, I would."
22140
22141 "Wait a minute, and I'll come back presently, and have a round with you
22142 all in turn, if you like," said Fred, who felt confidence in his power
22143 of boxing with his dearly beloved brethren. But just now he wanted to
22144 hasten back to Caleb and the prostrate youth.
22145
22146 The lad's ankle was strained, and he was in much pain from it, but he
22147 was no further hurt, and Fred placed him on the horse that he might
22148 ride to Yoddrell's and be taken care of there.
22149
22150 "Let them put the horse in the stable, and tell the surveyors they can
22151 come back for their traps," said Fred. "The ground is clear now."
22152
22153 "No, no," said Caleb, "here's a breakage. They'll have to give up for
22154 to-day, and it will be as well. Here, take the things before you on
22155 the horse, Tom. They'll see you coming, and they'll turn back."
22156
22157 "I'm glad I happened to be here at the right moment, Mr. Garth," said
22158 Fred, as Tom rode away. "No knowing what might have happened if the
22159 cavalry had not come up in time."
22160
22161 "Ay, ay, it was lucky," said Caleb, speaking rather absently, and
22162 looking towards the spot where he had been at work at the moment of
22163 interruption. "But--deuce take it--this is what comes of men being
22164 fools--I'm hindered of my day's work. I can't get along without
22165 somebody to help me with the measuring-chain. However!" He was
22166 beginning to move towards the spot with a look of vexation, as if he
22167 had forgotten Fred's presence, but suddenly he turned round and said
22168 quickly, "What have you got to do to-day, young fellow?"
22169
22170 "Nothing, Mr. Garth. I'll help you with pleasure--can I?" said Fred,
22171 with a sense that he should be courting Mary when he was helping her
22172 father.
22173
22174 "Well, you mustn't mind stooping and getting hot."
22175
22176 "I don't mind anything. Only I want to go first and have a round with
22177 that hulky fellow who turned to challenge me. It would be a good
22178 lesson for him. I shall not be five minutes."
22179
22180 "Nonsense!" said Caleb, with his most peremptory intonation. "I shall
22181 go and speak to the men myself. It's all ignorance. Somebody has been
22182 telling them lies. The poor fools don't know any better."
22183
22184 "I shall go with you, then," said Fred.
22185
22186 "No, no; stay where you are. I don't want your young blood. I can
22187 take care of myself."
22188
22189 Caleb was a powerful man and knew little of any fear except the fear of
22190 hurting others and the fear of having to speechify. But he felt it his
22191 duty at this moment to try and give a little harangue. There was a
22192 striking mixture in him--which came from his having always been a
22193 hard-working man himself--of rigorous notions about workmen and
22194 practical indulgence towards them. To do a good day's work and to do
22195 it well, he held to be part of their welfare, as it was the chief part
22196 of his own happiness; but he had a strong sense of fellowship with
22197 them. When he advanced towards the laborers they had not gone to work
22198 again, but were standing in that form of rural grouping which consists
22199 in each turning a shoulder towards the other, at a distance of two or
22200 three yards. They looked rather sulkily at Caleb, who walked quickly
22201 with one hand in his pocket and the other thrust between the buttons of
22202 his waistcoat, and had his every-day mild air when he paused among them.
22203
22204 "Why, my lads, how's this?" he began, taking as usual to brief phrases,
22205 which seemed pregnant to himself, because he had many thoughts lying
22206 under them, like the abundant roots of a plant that just manages to
22207 peep above the water. "How came you to make such a mistake as this?
22208 Somebody has been telling you lies. You thought those men up there
22209 wanted to do mischief."
22210
22211 "Aw!" was the answer, dropped at intervals by each according to his
22212 degree of unreadiness.
22213
22214 "Nonsense! No such thing! They're looking out to see which way the
22215 railroad is to take. Now, my lads, you can't hinder the railroad: it
22216 will be made whether you like it or not. And if you go fighting
22217 against it, you'll get yourselves into trouble. The law gives those
22218 men leave to come here on the land. The owner has nothing to say
22219 against it, and if you meddle with them you'll have to do with the
22220 constable and Justice Blakesley, and with the handcuffs and Middlemarch
22221 jail. And you might be in for it now, if anybody informed against you."
22222
22223 Caleb paused here, and perhaps the greatest orator could not have
22224 chosen either his pause or his images better for the occasion.
22225
22226 "But come, you didn't mean any harm. Somebody told you the railroad
22227 was a bad thing. That was a lie. It may do a bit of harm here and
22228 there, to this and to that; and so does the sun in heaven. But the
22229 railway's a good thing."
22230
22231 "Aw! good for the big folks to make money out on," said old Timothy
22232 Cooper, who had stayed behind turning his hay while the others had been
22233 gone on their spree;--"I'n seen lots o' things turn up sin' I war a
22234 young un--the war an' the peace, and the canells, an' the oald King
22235 George, an' the Regen', an' the new King George, an' the new un as has
22236 got a new ne-ame--an' it's been all aloike to the poor mon. What's the
22237 canells been t' him? They'n brought him neyther me-at nor be-acon, nor
22238 wage to lay by, if he didn't save it wi' clemmin' his own inside.
22239 Times ha' got wusser for him sin' I war a young un. An' so it'll be
22240 wi' the railroads. They'll on'y leave the poor mon furder behind. But
22241 them are fools as meddle, and so I told the chaps here. This is the
22242 big folks's world, this is. But yo're for the big folks, Muster Garth,
22243 yo are."
22244
22245 Timothy was a wiry old laborer, of a type lingering in those times--who
22246 had his savings in a stocking-foot, lived in a lone cottage, and was
22247 not to be wrought on by any oratory, having as little of the feudal
22248 spirit, and believing as little, as if he had not been totally
22249 unacquainted with the Age of Reason and the Rights of Man. Caleb was
22250 in a difficulty known to any person attempting in dark times and
22251 unassisted by miracle to reason with rustics who are in possession of
22252 an undeniable truth which they know through a hard process of feeling,
22253 and can let it fall like a giant's club on your neatly carved argument
22254 for a social benefit which they do not feel. Caleb had no cant at
22255 command, even if he could have chosen to use it; and he had been
22256 accustomed to meet all such difficulties in no other way than by doing
22257 his "business" faithfully. He answered--
22258
22259 "If you don't think well of me, Tim, never mind; that's neither here
22260 nor there now. Things may be bad for the poor man--bad they are; but I
22261 want the lads here not to do what will make things worse for
22262 themselves. The cattle may have a heavy load, but it won't help 'em to
22263 throw it over into the roadside pit, when it's partly their own fodder."
22264
22265 "We war on'y for a bit o' foon," said Hiram, who was beginning to see
22266 consequences. "That war all we war arter."
22267
22268 "Well, promise me not to meddle again, and I'll see that nobody informs
22269 against you."
22270
22271 "I'n ne'er meddled, an' I'n no call to promise," said Timothy.
22272
22273 "No, but the rest. Come, I'm as hard at work as any of you to-day, and
22274 I can't spare much time. Say you'll be quiet without the constable."
22275
22276 "Aw, we wooant meddle--they may do as they loike for oos"--were the
22277 forms in which Caleb got his pledges; and then he hastened back to
22278 Fred, who had followed him, and watched him in the gateway.
22279
22280 They went to work, and Fred helped vigorously. His spirits had risen,
22281 and he heartily enjoyed a good slip in the moist earth under the
22282 hedgerow, which soiled his perfect summer trousers. Was it his
22283 successful onset which had elated him, or the satisfaction of helping
22284 Mary's father? Something more. The accidents of the morning had
22285 helped his frustrated imagination to shape an employment for himself
22286 which had several attractions. I am not sure that certain fibres in
22287 Mr. Garth's mind had not resumed their old vibration towards the very
22288 end which now revealed itself to Fred. For the effective accident is
22289 but the touch of fire where there is oil and tow; and it always
22290 appeared to Fred that the railway brought the needed touch. But they
22291 went on in silence except when their business demanded speech. At
22292 last, when they had finished and were walking away, Mr. Garth said--
22293
22294 "A young fellow needn't be a B. A. to do this sort of work, eh, Fred?"
22295
22296 "I wish I had taken to it before I had thought of being a B. A.," said
22297 Fred. He paused a moment, and then added, more hesitatingly, "Do you
22298 think I am too old to learn your business, Mr. Garth?"
22299
22300 "My business is of many sorts, my boy," said Mr. Garth, smiling. "A
22301 good deal of what I know can only come from experience: you can't learn
22302 it off as you learn things out of a book. But you are young enough to
22303 lay a foundation yet." Caleb pronounced the last sentence
22304 emphatically, but paused in some uncertainty. He had been under the
22305 impression lately that Fred had made up his mind to enter the Church.
22306
22307 "You do think I could do some good at it, if I were to try?" said Fred,
22308 more eagerly.
22309
22310 "That depends," said Caleb, turning his head on one side and lowering
22311 his voice, with the air of a man who felt himself to be saying
22312 something deeply religious. "You must be sure of two things: you must
22313 love your work, and not be always looking over the edge of it, wanting
22314 your play to begin. And the other is, you must not be ashamed of your
22315 work, and think it would be more honorable to you to be doing something
22316 else. You must have a pride in your own work and in learning to do it
22317 well, and not be always saying, There's this and there's that--if I had
22318 this or that to do, I might make something of it. No matter what a man
22319 is--I wouldn't give twopence for him"--here Caleb's mouth looked
22320 bitter, and he snapped his fingers--"whether he was the prime minister
22321 or the rick-thatcher, if he didn't do well what he undertook to do."
22322
22323 "I can never feel that I should do that in being a clergyman," said
22324 Fred, meaning to take a step in argument.
22325
22326 "Then let it alone, my boy," said Caleb, abruptly, "else you'll never
22327 be easy. Or, if you _are_ easy, you'll be a poor stick."
22328
22329 "That is very nearly what Mary thinks about it," said Fred, coloring.
22330 "I think you must know what I feel for Mary, Mr. Garth: I hope it does
22331 not displease you that I have always loved her better than any one
22332 else, and that I shall never love any one as I love her."
22333
22334 The expression of Caleb's face was visibly softening while Fred spoke.
22335 But he swung his head with a solemn slowness, and said--
22336
22337 "That makes things more serious, Fred, if you want to take Mary's
22338 happiness into your keeping."
22339
22340 "I know that, Mr. Garth," said Fred, eagerly, "and I would do anything
22341 for _her_. She says she will never have me if I go into the Church;
22342 and I shall be the most miserable devil in the world if I lose all hope
22343 of Mary. Really, if I could get some other profession,
22344 business--anything that I am at all fit for, I would work hard, I would
22345 deserve your good opinion. I should like to have to do with outdoor
22346 things. I know a good deal about land and cattle already. I used to
22347 believe, you know--though you will think me rather foolish for it--that
22348 I should have land of my own. I am sure knowledge of that sort would
22349 come easily to me, especially if I could be under you in any way."
22350
22351 "Softly, my boy," said Caleb, having the image of "Susan" before his
22352 eyes. "What have you said to your father about all this?"
22353
22354 "Nothing, yet; but I must tell him. I am only waiting to know what I
22355 can do instead of entering the Church. I am very sorry to disappoint
22356 him, but a man ought to be allowed to judge for himself when he is
22357 four-and-twenty. How could I know when I was fifteen, what it would be
22358 right for me to do now? My education was a mistake."
22359
22360 "But hearken to this, Fred," said Caleb. "Are you sure Mary is fond of
22361 you, or would ever have you?"
22362
22363 "I asked Mr. Farebrother to talk to her, because she had forbidden
22364 me--I didn't know what else to do," said Fred, apologetically. "And he
22365 says that I have every reason to hope, if I can put myself in an
22366 honorable position--I mean, out of the Church. I dare say you think it
22367 unwarrantable in me, Mr. Garth, to be troubling you and obtruding my
22368 own wishes about Mary, before I have done anything at all for myself.
22369 Of course I have not the least claim--indeed, I have already a debt to
22370 you which will never be discharged, even when I have been, able to pay
22371 it in the shape of money."
22372
22373 "Yes, my boy, you have a claim," said Caleb, with much feeling in his
22374 voice. "The young ones have always a claim on the old to help them
22375 forward. I was young myself once and had to do without much help; but
22376 help would have been welcome to me, if it had been only for the
22377 fellow-feeling's sake. But I must consider. Come to me to-morrow at
22378 the office, at nine o'clock. At the office, mind."
22379
22380 Mr. Garth would take no important step without consulting Susan, but it
22381 must be confessed that before he reached home he had taken his
22382 resolution. With regard to a large number of matters about which other
22383 men are decided or obstinate, he was the most easily manageable man in
22384 the world. He never knew what meat he would choose, and if Susan had
22385 said that they ought to live in a four-roomed cottage, in order to
22386 save, he would have said, "Let us go," without inquiring into details.
22387 But where Caleb's feeling and judgment strongly pronounced, he was a
22388 ruler; and in spite of his mildness and timidity in reproving, every
22389 one about him knew that on the exceptional occasions when he chose, he
22390 was absolute. He never, indeed, chose to be absolute except on some
22391 one else's behalf. On ninety-nine points Mrs. Garth decided, but on
22392 the hundredth she was often aware that she would have to perform the
22393 singularly difficult task of carrying out her own principle, and to
22394 make herself subordinate.
22395
22396 "It is come round as I thought, Susan," said Caleb, when they were
22397 seated alone in the evening. He had already narrated the adventure
22398 which had brought about Fred's sharing in his work, but had kept back
22399 the further result. "The children _are_ fond of each other--I mean,
22400 Fred and Mary."
22401
22402 Mrs. Garth laid her work on her knee, and fixed her penetrating eyes
22403 anxiously on her husband.
22404
22405 "After we'd done our work, Fred poured it all out to me. He can't bear
22406 to be a clergyman, and Mary says she won't have him if he is one; and
22407 the lad would like to be under me and give his mind to business. And
22408 I've determined to take him and make a man of him."
22409
22410 "Caleb!" said Mrs. Garth, in a deep contralto, expressive of resigned
22411 astonishment.
22412
22413 "It's a fine thing to do," said Mr. Garth, settling himself firmly
22414 against the back of his chair, and grasping the elbows. "I shall have
22415 trouble with him, but I think I shall carry it through. The lad loves
22416 Mary, and a true love for a good woman is a great thing, Susan. It
22417 shapes many a rough fellow."
22418
22419 "Has Mary spoken to you on the subject?" said Mrs Garth, secretly a
22420 little hurt that she had to be informed on it herself.
22421
22422 "Not a word. I asked her about Fred once; I gave her a bit of a
22423 warning. But she assured me she would never marry an idle
22424 self-indulgent man--nothing since. But it seems Fred set on Mr.
22425 Farebrother to talk to her, because she had forbidden him to speak
22426 himself, and Mr. Farebrother has found out that she is fond of Fred,
22427 but says he must not be a clergyman. Fred's heart is fixed on Mary,
22428 that I can see: it gives me a good opinion of the lad--and we always
22429 liked him, Susan."
22430
22431 "It is a pity for Mary, I think," said Mrs. Garth.
22432
22433 "Why--a pity?"
22434
22435 "Because, Caleb, she might have had a man who is worth twenty Fred
22436 Vincy's."
22437
22438 "Ah?" said Caleb, with surprise.
22439
22440 "I firmly believe that Mr. Farebrother is attached to her, and meant to
22441 make her an offer; but of course, now that Fred has used him as an
22442 envoy, there is an end to that better prospect." There was a severe
22443 precision in Mrs. Garth's utterance. She was vexed and disappointed,
22444 but she was bent on abstaining from useless words.
22445
22446 Caleb was silent a few moments under a conflict of feelings. He looked
22447 at the floor and moved his head and hands in accompaniment to some
22448 inward argumentation. At last he said--
22449
22450 "That would have made me very proud and happy, Susan, and I should have
22451 been glad for your sake. I've always felt that your belongings have
22452 never been on a level with you. But you took me, though I was a plain
22453 man."
22454
22455 "I took the best and cleverest man I had ever known," said Mrs. Garth,
22456 convinced that _she_ would never have loved any one who came short of
22457 that mark.
22458
22459 "Well, perhaps others thought you might have done better. But it would
22460 have been worse for me. And that is what touches me close about Fred.
22461 The lad is good at bottom, and clever enough to do, if he's put in the
22462 right way; and he loves and honors my daughter beyond anything, and she
22463 has given him a sort of promise according to what he turns out. I say,
22464 that young man's soul is in my hand; and I'll do the best I can for
22465 him, so help me God! It's my duty, Susan."
22466
22467 Mrs. Garth was not given to tears, but there was a large one rolling
22468 down her face before her husband had finished. It came from the
22469 pressure of various feelings, in which there was much affection and
22470 some vexation. She wiped it away quickly, saying--
22471
22472 "Few men besides you would think it a duty to add to their anxieties in
22473 that way, Caleb."
22474
22475 "That signifies nothing--what other men would think. I've got a clear
22476 feeling inside me, and that I shall follow; and I hope your heart will
22477 go with me, Susan, in making everything as light as can be to Mary,
22478 poor child."
22479
22480 Caleb, leaning back in his chair, looked with anxious appeal towards
22481 his wife. She rose and kissed him, saying, "God bless you, Caleb! Our
22482 children have a good father."
22483
22484 But she went out and had a hearty cry to make up for the suppression of
22485 her words. She felt sure that her husband's conduct would be
22486 misunderstood, and about Fred she was rational and unhopeful. Which
22487 would turn out to have the more foresight in it--her rationality or
22488 Caleb's ardent generosity?
22489
22490 When Fred went to the office the next morning, there was a test to be
22491 gone through which he was not prepared for.
22492
22493 "Now Fred," said Caleb, "you will have some desk-work. I have always
22494 done a good deal of writing myself, but I can't do without help, and as
22495 I want you to understand the accounts and get the values into your
22496 head, I mean to do without another clerk. So you must buckle to. How
22497 are you at writing and arithmetic?"
22498
22499 Fred felt an awkward movement of the heart; he had not thought of
22500 desk-work; but he was in a resolute mood, and not going to shrink.
22501 "I'm not afraid of arithmetic, Mr. Garth: it always came easily to me.
22502 I think you know my writing."
22503
22504 "Let us see," said Caleb, taking up a pen, examining it carefully and
22505 handing it, well dipped, to Fred with a sheet of ruled paper. "Copy me
22506 a line or two of that valuation, with the figures at the end."
22507
22508 At that time the opinion existed that it was beneath a gentleman to
22509 write legibly, or with a hand in the least suitable to a clerk. Fred
22510 wrote the lines demanded in a hand as gentlemanly as that of any
22511 viscount or bishop of the day: the vowels were all alike and the
22512 consonants only distinguishable as turning up or down, the strokes had
22513 a blotted solidity and the letters disdained to keep the line--in
22514 short, it was a manuscript of that venerable kind easy to interpret
22515 when you know beforehand what the writer means.
22516
22517 As Caleb looked on, his visage showed a growing depression, but when
22518 Fred handed him the paper he gave something like a snarl, and rapped
22519 the paper passionately with the back of his hand. Bad work like this
22520 dispelled all Caleb's mildness.
22521
22522 "The deuce!" he exclaimed, snarlingly. "To think that this is a
22523 country where a man's education may cost hundreds and hundreds, and it
22524 turns you out this!" Then in a more pathetic tone, pushing up his
22525 spectacles and looking at the unfortunate scribe, "The Lord have mercy
22526 on us, Fred, I can't put up with this!"
22527
22528 "What can I do, Mr. Garth?" said Fred, whose spirits had sunk very low,
22529 not only at the estimate of his handwriting, but at the vision of
22530 himself as liable to be ranked with office clerks.
22531
22532 "Do? Why, you must learn to form your letters and keep the line.
22533 What's the use of writing at all if nobody can understand it?" asked
22534 Caleb, energetically, quite preoccupied with the bad quality of the
22535 work. "Is there so little business in the world that you must be
22536 sending puzzles over the country? But that's the way people are
22537 brought up. I should lose no end of time with the letters some people
22538 send me, if Susan did not make them out for me. It's disgusting." Here
22539 Caleb tossed the paper from him.
22540
22541 Any stranger peeping into the office at that moment might have wondered
22542 what was the drama between the indignant man of business, and the
22543 fine-looking young fellow whose blond complexion was getting rather
22544 patchy as he bit his lip with mortification. Fred was struggling with
22545 many thoughts. Mr. Garth had been so kind and encouraging at the
22546 beginning of their interview, that gratitude and hopefulness had been
22547 at a high pitch, and the downfall was proportionate. He had not
22548 thought of desk-work--in fact, like the majority of young gentlemen, he
22549 wanted an occupation which should be free from disagreeables. I cannot
22550 tell what might have been the consequences if he had not distinctly
22551 promised himself that he would go to Lowick to see Mary and tell her
22552 that he was engaged to work under her father. He did not like to
22553 disappoint himself there.
22554
22555 "I am very sorry," were all the words that he could muster. But Mr.
22556 Garth was already relenting.
22557
22558 "We must make the best of it, Fred," he began, with a return to his
22559 usual quiet tone. "Every man can learn to write. I taught myself. Go
22560 at it with a will, and sit up at night if the day-time isn't enough.
22561 We'll be patient, my boy. Callum shall go on with the books for a bit,
22562 while you are learning. But now I must be off," said Caleb, rising.
22563 "You must let your father know our agreement. You'll save me Callum's
22564 salary, you know, when you can write; and I can afford to give you
22565 eighty pounds for the first year, and more after."
22566
22567 When Fred made the necessary disclosure to his parents, the relative
22568 effect on the two was a surprise which entered very deeply into his
22569 memory. He went straight from Mr. Garth's office to the warehouse,
22570 rightly feeling that the most respectful way in which he could behave
22571 to his father was to make the painful communication as gravely and
22572 formally as possible. Moreover, the decision would be more certainly
22573 understood to be final, if the interview took place in his father's
22574 gravest hours, which were always those spent in his private room at the
22575 warehouse.
22576
22577 Fred entered on the subject directly, and declared briefly what he had
22578 done and was resolved to do, expressing at the end his regret that he
22579 should be the cause of disappointment to his father, and taking the
22580 blame on his own deficiencies. The regret was genuine, and inspired
22581 Fred with strong, simple words.
22582
22583 Mr. Vincy listened in profound surprise without uttering even an
22584 exclamation, a silence which in his impatient temperament was a sign of
22585 unusual emotion. He had not been in good spirits about trade that
22586 morning, and the slight bitterness in his lips grew intense as he
22587 listened. When Fred had ended, there was a pause of nearly a minute,
22588 during which Mr. Vincy replaced a book in his desk and turned the key
22589 emphatically. Then he looked at his son steadily, and said--
22590
22591 "So you've made up your mind at last, sir?"
22592
22593 "Yes, father."
22594
22595 "Very well; stick to it. I've no more to say. You've thrown away your
22596 education, and gone down a step in life, when I had given you the means
22597 of rising, that's all."
22598
22599 "I am very sorry that we differ, father. I think I can be quite as
22600 much of a gentleman at the work I have undertaken, as if I had been a
22601 curate. But I am grateful to you for wishing to do the best for me."
22602
22603 "Very well; I have no more to say. I wash my hands of you. I only
22604 hope, when you have a son of your own he will make a better return for
22605 the pains you spend on him."
22606
22607 This was very cutting to Fred. His father was using that unfair
22608 advantage possessed by us all when we are in a pathetic situation and
22609 see our own past as if it were simply part of the pathos. In reality,
22610 Mr. Vincy's wishes about his son had had a great deal of pride,
22611 inconsiderateness, and egoistic folly in them. But still the
22612 disappointed father held a strong lever; and Fred felt as if he were
22613 being banished with a malediction.
22614
22615 "I hope you will not object to my remaining at home, sir?" he said,
22616 after rising to go; "I shall have a sufficient salary to pay for my
22617 board, as of course I should wish to do."
22618
22619 "Board be hanged!" said Mr. Vincy, recovering himself in his disgust at
22620 the notion that Fred's keep would be missed at his table. "Of course
22621 your mother will want you to stay. But I shall keep no horse for you,
22622 you understand; and you will pay your own tailor. You will do with a
22623 suit or two less, I fancy, when you have to pay for 'em."
22624
22625 Fred lingered; there was still something to be said. At last it came.
22626
22627 "I hope you will shake hands with me, father, and forgive me the
22628 vexation I have caused you."
22629
22630 Mr. Vincy from his chair threw a quick glance upward at his son, who
22631 had advanced near to him, and then gave his hand, saying hurriedly,
22632 "Yes, yes, let us say no more."
22633
22634 Fred went through much more narrative and explanation with his mother,
22635 but she was inconsolable, having before her eyes what perhaps her
22636 husband had never thought of, the certainty that Fred would marry Mary
22637 Garth, that her life would henceforth be spoiled by a perpetual
22638 infusion of Garths and their ways, and that her darling boy, with his
22639 beautiful face and stylish air "beyond anybody else's son in
22640 Middlemarch," would be sure to get like that family in plainness of
22641 appearance and carelessness about his clothes. To her it seemed that
22642 there was a Garth conspiracy to get possession of the desirable Fred,
22643 but she dared not enlarge on this opinion, because a slight hint of it
22644 had made him "fly out" at her as he had never done before. Her temper
22645 was too sweet for her to show any anger, but she felt that her
22646 happiness had received a bruise, and for several days merely to look at
22647 Fred made her cry a little as if he were the subject of some baleful
22648 prophecy. Perhaps she was the slower to recover her usual cheerfulness
22649 because Fred had warned her that she must not reopen the sore question
22650 with his father, who had accepted his decision and forgiven him. If
22651 her husband had been vehement against Fred, she would have been urged
22652 into defence of her darling. It was the end of the fourth day when Mr.
22653 Vincy said to her--
22654
22655 "Come, Lucy, my dear, don't be so down-hearted. You always have spoiled
22656 the boy, and you must go on spoiling him."
22657
22658 "Nothing ever did cut me so before, Vincy," said the wife, her fair
22659 throat and chin beginning to tremble again, "only his illness."
22660
22661 "Pooh, pooh, never mind! We must expect to have trouble with our
22662 children. Don't make it worse by letting me see you out of spirits."
22663
22664 "Well, I won't," said Mrs. Vincy, roused by this appeal and adjusting
22665 herself with a little shake as of a bird which lays down its ruffled
22666 plumage.
22667
22668 "It won't do to begin making a fuss about one," said Mr. Vincy, wishing
22669 to combine a little grumbling with domestic cheerfulness. "There's
22670 Rosamond as well as Fred."
22671
22672 "Yes, poor thing. I'm sure I felt for her being disappointed of her
22673 baby; but she got over it nicely."
22674
22675 "Baby, pooh! I can see Lydgate is making a mess of his practice, and
22676 getting into debt too, by what I hear. I shall have Rosamond coming to
22677 me with a pretty tale one of these days. But they'll get no money from
22678 me, I know. Let _his_ family help him. I never did like that
22679 marriage. But it's no use talking. Ring the bell for lemons, and
22680 don't look dull any more, Lucy. I'll drive you and Louisa to Riverston
22681 to-morrow."
22682
22683
22684
22685 CHAPTER LVII.
22686
22687 They numbered scarce eight summers when a name
22688 Rose on their souls and stirred such motions there
22689 As thrill the buds and shape their hidden frame
22690 At penetration of the quickening air:
22691 His name who told of loyal Evan Dhu,
22692 Of quaint Bradwardine, and Vich Ian Vor,
22693 Making the little world their childhood knew
22694 Large with a land of mountain lake and scaur,
22695 And larger yet with wonder love belief
22696 Toward Walter Scott who living far away
22697 Sent them this wealth of joy and noble grief.
22698 The book and they must part, but day by day,
22699 In lines that thwart like portly spiders ran
22700 They wrote the tale, from Tully Veolan.
22701
22702
22703 The evening that Fred Vincy walked to Lowick parsonage (he had begun to
22704 see that this was a world in which even a spirited young man must
22705 sometimes walk for want of a horse to carry him) he set out at five
22706 o'clock and called on Mrs. Garth by the way, wishing to assure himself
22707 that she accepted their new relations willingly.
22708
22709 He found the family group, dogs and cats included, under the great
22710 apple-tree in the orchard. It was a festival with Mrs. Garth, for her
22711 eldest son, Christy, her peculiar joy and pride, had come home for a
22712 short holiday--Christy, who held it the most desirable thing in the
22713 world to be a tutor, to study all literatures and be a regenerate
22714 Porson, and who was an incorporate criticism on poor Fred, a sort of
22715 object-lesson given to him by the educational mother. Christy himself,
22716 a square-browed, broad-shouldered masculine edition of his mother not
22717 much higher than Fred's shoulder--which made it the harder that he
22718 should be held superior--was always as simple as possible, and thought
22719 no more of Fred's disinclination to scholarship than of a giraffe's,
22720 wishing that he himself were more of the same height. He was lying on
22721 the ground now by his mother's chair, with his straw hat laid flat over
22722 his eyes, while Jim on the other side was reading aloud from that
22723 beloved writer who has made a chief part in the happiness of many young
22724 lives. The volume was "Ivanhoe," and Jim was in the great archery
22725 scene at the tournament, but suffered much interruption from Ben, who
22726 had fetched his own old bow and arrows, and was making himself
22727 dreadfully disagreeable, Letty thought, by begging all present to
22728 observe his random shots, which no one wished to do except Brownie, the
22729 active-minded but probably shallow mongrel, while the grizzled
22730 Newfoundland lying in the sun looked on with the dull-eyed neutrality
22731 of extreme old age. Letty herself, showing as to her mouth and
22732 pinafore some slight signs that she had been assisting at the gathering
22733 of the cherries which stood in a coral-heap on the tea-table, was now
22734 seated on the grass, listening open-eyed to the reading.
22735
22736 But the centre of interest was changed for all by the arrival of Fred
22737 Vincy. When, seating himself on a garden-stool, he said that he was on
22738 his way to Lowick Parsonage, Ben, who had thrown down his bow, and
22739 snatched up a reluctant half-grown kitten instead, strode across Fred's
22740 outstretched leg, and said "Take me!"
22741
22742 "Oh, and me too," said Letty.
22743
22744 "You can't keep up with Fred and me," said Ben.
22745
22746 "Yes, I can. Mother, please say that I am to go," urged Letty, whose
22747 life was much checkered by resistance to her depreciation as a girl.
22748
22749 "I shall stay with Christy," observed Jim; as much as to say that he
22750 had the advantage of those simpletons; whereupon Letty put her hand up
22751 to her head and looked with jealous indecision from the one to the
22752 other.
22753
22754 "Let us all go and see Mary," said Christy, opening his arms.
22755
22756 "No, my dear child, we must not go in a swarm to the parsonage. And
22757 that old Glasgow suit of yours would never do. Besides, your father
22758 will come home. We must let Fred go alone. He can tell Mary that you
22759 are here, and she will come back to-morrow."
22760
22761 Christy glanced at his own threadbare knees, and then at Fred's
22762 beautiful white trousers. Certainly Fred's tailoring suggested the
22763 advantages of an English university, and he had a graceful way even of
22764 looking warm and of pushing his hair back with his handkerchief.
22765
22766 "Children, run away," said Mrs. Garth; "it is too warm to hang about
22767 your friends. Take your brother and show him the rabbits."
22768
22769 The eldest understood, and led off the children immediately. Fred felt
22770 that Mrs. Garth wished to give him an opportunity of saying anything he
22771 had to say, but he could only begin by observing--
22772
22773 "How glad you must be to have Christy here!"
22774
22775 "Yes; he has come sooner than I expected. He got down from the coach
22776 at nine o'clock, just after his father went out. I am longing for
22777 Caleb to come and hear what wonderful progress Christy is making. He
22778 has paid his expenses for the last year by giving lessons, carrying on
22779 hard study at the same time. He hopes soon to get a private tutorship
22780 and go abroad."
22781
22782 "He is a great fellow," said Fred, to whom these cheerful truths had a
22783 medicinal taste, "and no trouble to anybody." After a slight pause, he
22784 added, "But I fear you will think that I am going to be a great deal of
22785 trouble to Mr. Garth."
22786
22787 "Caleb likes taking trouble: he is one of those men who always do more
22788 than any one would have thought of asking them to do," answered Mrs.
22789 Garth. She was knitting, and could either look at Fred or not, as she
22790 chose--always an advantage when one is bent on loading speech with
22791 salutary meaning; and though Mrs. Garth intended to be duly reserved,
22792 she did wish to say something that Fred might be the better for.
22793
22794 "I know you think me very undeserving, Mrs. Garth, and with good
22795 reason," said Fred, his spirit rising a little at the perception of
22796 something like a disposition to lecture him. "I happen to have behaved
22797 just the worst to the people I can't help wishing for the most from.
22798 But while two men like Mr. Garth and Mr. Farebrother have not given me
22799 up, I don't see why I should give myself up." Fred thought it might be
22800 well to suggest these masculine examples to Mrs. Garth.
22801
22802 "Assuredly," said she, with gathering emphasis. "A young man for whom
22803 two such elders had devoted themselves would indeed be culpable if he
22804 threw himself away and made their sacrifices vain."
22805
22806 Fred wondered a little at this strong language, but only said, "I hope
22807 it will not be so with me, Mrs. Garth, since I have some encouragement
22808 to believe that I may win Mary. Mr. Garth has told you about that?
22809 You were not surprised, I dare say?" Fred ended, innocently referring
22810 only to his own love as probably evident enough.
22811
22812 "Not surprised that Mary has given you encouragement?" returned Mrs.
22813 Garth, who thought it would be well for Fred to be more alive to the
22814 fact that Mary's friends could not possibly have wished this
22815 beforehand, whatever the Vincys might suppose. "Yes, I confess I was
22816 surprised."
22817
22818 "She never did give me any--not the least in the world, when I talked
22819 to her myself," said Fred, eager to vindicate Mary. "But when I asked
22820 Mr. Farebrother to speak for me, she allowed him to tell me there was a
22821 hope."
22822
22823 The power of admonition which had begun to stir in Mrs. Garth had not
22824 yet discharged itself. It was a little too provoking even for _her_
22825 self-control that this blooming youngster should flourish on the
22826 disappointments of sadder and wiser people--making a meal of a
22827 nightingale and never knowing it--and that all the while his family
22828 should suppose that hers was in eager need of this sprig; and her
22829 vexation had fermented the more actively because of its total
22830 repression towards her husband. Exemplary wives will sometimes find
22831 scapegoats in this way. She now said with energetic decision, "You
22832 made a great mistake, Fred, in asking Mr. Farebrother to speak for you."
22833
22834 "Did I?" said Fred, reddening instantaneously. He was alarmed, but at
22835 a loss to know what Mrs. Garth meant, and added, in an apologetic tone,
22836 "Mr. Farebrother has always been such a friend of ours; and Mary, I
22837 knew, would listen to him gravely; and he took it on himself quite
22838 readily."
22839
22840 "Yes, young people are usually blind to everything but their own
22841 wishes, and seldom imagine how much those wishes cost others," said
22842 Mrs. Garth. She did not mean to go beyond this salutary general
22843 doctrine, and threw her indignation into a needless unwinding of her
22844 worsted, knitting her brow at it with a grand air.
22845
22846 "I cannot conceive how it could be any pain to Mr. Farebrother," said
22847 Fred, who nevertheless felt that surprising conceptions were beginning
22848 to form themselves.
22849
22850 "Precisely; you cannot conceive," said Mrs. Garth, cutting her words as
22851 neatly as possible.
22852
22853 For a moment Fred looked at the horizon with a dismayed anxiety, and
22854 then turning with a quick movement said almost sharply--
22855
22856 "Do you mean to say, Mrs. Garth, that Mr. Farebrother is in love with
22857 Mary?"
22858
22859 "And if it were so, Fred, I think you are the last person who ought to
22860 be surprised," returned Mrs. Garth, laying her knitting down beside her
22861 and folding her arms. It was an unwonted sign of emotion in her that
22862 she should put her work out of her hands. In fact her feelings were
22863 divided between the satisfaction of giving Fred his discipline and the
22864 sense of having gone a little too far. Fred took his hat and stick and
22865 rose quickly.
22866
22867 "Then you think I am standing in his way, and in Mary's too?" he said,
22868 in a tone which seemed to demand an answer.
22869
22870 Mrs. Garth could not speak immediately. She had brought herself into
22871 the unpleasant position of being called on to say what she really felt,
22872 yet what she knew there were strong reasons for concealing. And to her
22873 the consciousness of having exceeded in words was peculiarly
22874 mortifying. Besides, Fred had given out unexpected electricity, and he
22875 now added, "Mr. Garth seemed pleased that Mary should be attached to
22876 me. He could not have known anything of this."
22877
22878 Mrs. Garth felt a severe twinge at this mention of her husband, the
22879 fear that Caleb might think her in the wrong not being easily
22880 endurable. She answered, wanting to check unintended consequences--
22881
22882 "I spoke from inference only. I am not aware that Mary knows anything
22883 of the matter."
22884
22885 But she hesitated to beg that he would keep entire silence on a subject
22886 which she had herself unnecessarily mentioned, not being used to stoop
22887 in that way; and while she was hesitating there was already a rush of
22888 unintended consequences under the apple-tree where the tea-things
22889 stood. Ben, bouncing across the grass with Brownie at his heels, and
22890 seeing the kitten dragging the knitting by a lengthening line of wool,
22891 shouted and clapped his hands; Brownie barked, the kitten, desperate,
22892 jumped on the tea-table and upset the milk, then jumped down again and
22893 swept half the cherries with it; and Ben, snatching up the half-knitted
22894 sock-top, fitted it over the kitten's head as a new source of madness,
22895 while Letty arriving cried out to her mother against this cruelty--it
22896 was a history as full of sensation as "This is the house that Jack
22897 built." Mrs. Garth was obliged to interfere, the other young ones came
22898 up and the tete-a-tete with Fred was ended. He got away as soon as he
22899 could, and Mrs. Garth could only imply some retractation of her
22900 severity by saying "God bless you" when she shook hands with him.
22901
22902 She was unpleasantly conscious that she had been on the verge of
22903 speaking as "one of the foolish women speaketh"--telling first and
22904 entreating silence after. But she had not entreated silence, and to
22905 prevent Caleb's blame she determined to blame herself and confess all
22906 to him that very night. It was curious what an awful tribunal the mild
22907 Caleb's was to her, whenever he set it up. But she meant to point out
22908 to him that the revelation might do Fred Vincy a great deal of good.
22909
22910 No doubt it was having a strong effect on him as he walked to Lowick.
22911 Fred's light hopeful nature had perhaps never had so much of a bruise
22912 as from this suggestion that if he had been out of the way Mary might
22913 have made a thoroughly good match. Also he was piqued that he had been
22914 what he called such a stupid lout as to ask that intervention from Mr.
22915 Farebrother. But it was not in a lover's nature--it was not in
22916 Fred's, that the new anxiety raised about Mary's feeling should not
22917 surmount every other. Notwithstanding his trust in Mr. Farebrother's
22918 generosity, notwithstanding what Mary had said to him, Fred could not
22919 help feeling that he had a rival: it was a new consciousness, and he
22920 objected to it extremely, not being in the least ready to give up Mary
22921 for her good, being ready rather to fight for her with any man
22922 whatsoever. But the fighting with Mr. Farebrother must be of a
22923 metaphorical kind, which was much more difficult to Fred than the
22924 muscular. Certainly this experience was a discipline for Fred hardly
22925 less sharp than his disappointment about his uncle's will. The iron
22926 had not entered into his soul, but he had begun to imagine what the
22927 sharp edge would be. It did not once occur to Fred that Mrs. Garth
22928 might be mistaken about Mr. Farebrother, but he suspected that she
22929 might be wrong about Mary. Mary had been staying at the parsonage
22930 lately, and her mother might know very little of what had been passing
22931 in her mind.
22932
22933 He did not feel easier when he found her looking cheerful with the
22934 three ladies in the drawing-room. They were in animated discussion on
22935 some subject which was dropped when he entered, and Mary was copying
22936 the labels from a heap of shallow cabinet drawers, in a minute
22937 handwriting which she was skilled in. Mr. Farebrother was somewhere in
22938 the village, and the three ladies knew nothing of Fred's peculiar
22939 relation to Mary: it was impossible for either of them to propose that
22940 they should walk round the garden, and Fred predicted to himself that
22941 he should have to go away without saying a word to her in private. He
22942 told her first of Christy's arrival and then of his own engagement with
22943 her father; and he was comforted by seeing that this latter news
22944 touched her keenly. She said hurriedly, "I am so glad," and then bent
22945 over her writing to hinder any one from noticing her face. But here
22946 was a subject which Mrs. Farebrother could not let pass.
22947
22948 "You don't mean, my dear Miss Garth, that you are glad to hear of a
22949 young man giving up the Church for which he was educated: you only mean
22950 that things being so, you are glad that he should be under an excellent
22951 man like your father."
22952
22953 "No, really, Mrs. Farebrother, I am glad of both, I fear," said Mary,
22954 cleverly getting rid of one rebellious tear. "I have a dreadfully
22955 secular mind. I never liked any clergyman except the Vicar of
22956 Wakefield and Mr. Farebrother."
22957
22958 "Now why, my dear?" said Mrs. Farebrother, pausing on her large wooden
22959 knitting-needles and looking at Mary. "You have always a good reason
22960 for your opinions, but this astonishes me. Of course I put out of the
22961 question those who preach new doctrine. But why should you dislike
22962 clergymen?"
22963
22964 "Oh dear," said Mary, her face breaking into merriment as she seemed to
22965 consider a moment, "I don't like their neckcloths."
22966
22967 "Why, you don't like Camden's, then," said Miss Winifred, in some
22968 anxiety.
22969
22970 "Yes, I do," said Mary. "I don't like the other clergymen's
22971 neckcloths, because it is they who wear them."
22972
22973 "How very puzzling!" said Miss Noble, feeling that her own intellect
22974 was probably deficient.
22975
22976 "My dear, you are joking. You would have better reasons than these for
22977 slighting so respectable a class of men," said Mrs. Farebrother,
22978 majestically.
22979
22980 "Miss Garth has such severe notions of what people should be that it is
22981 difficult to satisfy her," said Fred.
22982
22983 "Well, I am glad at least that she makes an exception in favor of my
22984 son," said the old lady.
22985
22986 Mary was wondering at Fred's piqued tone, when Mr. Farebrother came in
22987 and had to hear the news about the engagement under Mr. Garth. At the
22988 end he said with quiet satisfaction, "_That_ is right;" and then bent
22989 to look at Mary's labels and praise her handwriting. Fred felt
22990 horribly jealous--was glad, of course, that Mr. Farebrother was so
22991 estimable, but wished that he had been ugly and fat as men at forty
22992 sometimes are. It was clear what the end would be, since Mary openly
22993 placed Farebrother above everybody, and these women were all evidently
22994 encouraging the affair. He was feeling sure that he should have no
22995 chance of speaking to Mary, when Mr. Farebrother said--
22996
22997 "Fred, help me to carry these drawers back into my study--you have
22998 never seen my fine new study. Pray come too, Miss Garth. I want you
22999 to see a stupendous spider I found this morning."
23000
23001 Mary at once saw the Vicar's intention. He had never since the
23002 memorable evening deviated from his old pastoral kindness towards her,
23003 and her momentary wonder and doubt had quite gone to sleep. Mary was
23004 accustomed to think rather rigorously of what was probable, and if a
23005 belief flattered her vanity she felt warned to dismiss it as
23006 ridiculous, having early had much exercise in such dismissals. It was
23007 as she had foreseen: when Fred had been asked to admire the fittings of
23008 the study, and she had been asked to admire the spider, Mr. Farebrother
23009 said--
23010
23011 "Wait here a minute or two. I am going to look out an engraving which
23012 Fred is tall enough to hang for me. I shall be back in a few minutes."
23013 And then he went out. Nevertheless, the first word Fred said to Mary
23014 was--
23015
23016 "It is of no use, whatever I do, Mary. You are sure to marry
23017 Farebrother at last." There was some rage in his tone.
23018
23019 "What do you mean, Fred?" Mary exclaimed indignantly, blushing deeply,
23020 and surprised out of all her readiness in reply.
23021
23022 "It is impossible that you should not see it all clearly enough--you
23023 who see everything."
23024
23025 "I only see that you are behaving very ill, Fred, in speaking so of Mr.
23026 Farebrother after he has pleaded your cause in every way. How can you
23027 have taken up such an idea?"
23028
23029 Fred was rather deep, in spite of his irritation. If Mary had really
23030 been unsuspicious, there was no good in telling her what Mrs. Garth had
23031 said.
23032
23033 "It follows as a matter of course," he replied. "When you are
23034 continually seeing a man who beats me in everything, and whom you set
23035 up above everybody, I can have no fair chance."
23036
23037 "You are very ungrateful, Fred," said Mary. "I wish I had never told
23038 Mr. Farebrother that I cared for you in the least."
23039
23040 "No, I am not ungrateful; I should be the happiest fellow in the world
23041 if it were not for this. I told your father everything, and he was
23042 very kind; he treated me as if I were his son. I could go at the work
23043 with a will, writing and everything, if it were not for this."
23044
23045 "For this? for what?" said Mary, imagining now that something specific
23046 must have been said or done.
23047
23048 "This dreadful certainty that I shall be bowled out by Farebrother."
23049 Mary was appeased by her inclination to laugh.
23050
23051 "Fred," she said, peeping round to catch his eyes, which were sulkily
23052 turned away from her, "you are too delightfully ridiculous. If you
23053 were not such a charming simpleton, what a temptation this would be to
23054 play the wicked coquette, and let you suppose that somebody besides you
23055 has made love to me."
23056
23057 "Do you really like me best, Mary?" said Fred, turning eyes full of
23058 affection on her, and trying to take her hand.
23059
23060 "I don't like you at all at this moment," said Mary, retreating, and
23061 putting her hands behind her. "I only said that no mortal ever made
23062 love to me besides you. And that is no argument that a very wise man
23063 ever will," she ended, merrily.
23064
23065 "I wish you would tell me that you could not possibly ever think of
23066 him," said Fred.
23067
23068 "Never dare to mention this any more to me, Fred," said Mary, getting
23069 serious again. "I don't know whether it is more stupid or ungenerous
23070 in you not to see that Mr. Farebrother has left us together on purpose
23071 that we might speak freely. I am disappointed that you should be so
23072 blind to his delicate feeling."
23073
23074 There was no time to say any more before Mr. Farebrother came back with
23075 the engraving; and Fred had to return to the drawing-room still with a
23076 jealous dread in his heart, but yet with comforting arguments from
23077 Mary's words and manner. The result of the conversation was on the
23078 whole more painful to Mary: inevitably her attention had taken a new
23079 attitude, and she saw the possibility of new interpretations. She was
23080 in a position in which she seemed to herself to be slighting Mr.
23081 Farebrother, and this, in relation to a man who is much honored, is
23082 always dangerous to the firmness of a grateful woman. To have a reason
23083 for going home the next day was a relief, for Mary earnestly desired to
23084 be always clear that she loved Fred best. When a tender affection has
23085 been storing itself in us through many of our years, the idea that we
23086 could accept any exchange for it seems to be a cheapening of our lives.
23087 And we can set a watch over our affections and our constancy as we can
23088 over other treasures.
23089
23090 "Fred has lost all his other expectations; he must keep this," Mary
23091 said to herself, with a smile curling her lips. It was impossible to
23092 help fleeting visions of another kind--new dignities and an
23093 acknowledged value of which she had often felt the absence. But these
23094 things with Fred outside them, Fred forsaken and looking sad for the
23095 want of her, could never tempt her deliberate thought.
23096
23097
23098
23099 CHAPTER LVIII.
23100
23101 "For there can live no hatred in thine eye,
23102 Therefore in that I cannot know thy change:
23103 In many's looks the false heart's history
23104 Is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange:
23105 But Heaven in thy creation did decree
23106 That in thy face sweet love should ever dwell:
23107 Whate'er thy thoughts or thy heart's workings be
23108 Thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness tell."
23109 --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets.
23110
23111
23112 At the time when Mr. Vincy uttered that presentiment about Rosamond,
23113 she herself had never had the idea that she should be driven to make
23114 the sort of appeal which he foresaw. She had not yet had any anxiety
23115 about ways and means, although her domestic life had been expensive as
23116 well as eventful. Her baby had been born prematurely, and all the
23117 embroidered robes and caps had to be laid by in darkness. This
23118 misfortune was attributed entirely to her having persisted in going out
23119 on horseback one day when her husband had desired her not to do so; but
23120 it must not be supposed that she had shown temper on the occasion, or
23121 rudely told him that she would do as she liked.
23122
23123 What led her particularly to desire horse-exercise was a visit from
23124 Captain Lydgate, the baronet's third son, who, I am sorry to say, was
23125 detested by our Tertius of that name as a vapid fop "parting his hair
23126 from brow to nape in a despicable fashion" (not followed by Tertius
23127 himself), and showing an ignorant security that he knew the proper
23128 thing to say on every topic. Lydgate inwardly cursed his own folly
23129 that he had drawn down this visit by consenting to go to his uncle's on
23130 the wedding-tour, and he made himself rather disagreeable to Rosamond
23131 by saying so in private. For to Rosamond this visit was a source of
23132 unprecedented but gracefully concealed exultation. She was so
23133 intensely conscious of having a cousin who was a baronet's son staying
23134 in the house, that she imagined the knowledge of what was implied by
23135 his presence to be diffused through all other minds; and when she
23136 introduced Captain Lydgate to her guests, she had a placid sense that
23137 his rank penetrated them as if it had been an odor. The satisfaction
23138 was enough for the time to melt away some disappointment in the
23139 conditions of marriage with a medical man even of good birth: it seemed
23140 now that her marriage was visibly as well as ideally floating her above
23141 the Middlemarch level, and the future looked bright with letters and
23142 visits to and from Quallingham, and vague advancement in consequence
23143 for Tertius. Especially as, probably at the Captain's suggestion, his
23144 married sister, Mrs. Mengan, had come with her maid, and stayed two
23145 nights on her way from town. Hence it was clearly worth while for
23146 Rosamond to take pains with her music and the careful selection of her
23147 lace.
23148
23149 As to Captain Lydgate himself, his low brow, his aquiline nose bent on
23150 one side, and his rather heavy utterance, might have been
23151 disadvantageous in any young gentleman who had not a military bearing
23152 and mustache to give him what is doted on by some flower-like blond
23153 heads as "style." He had, moreover, that sort of high-breeding which
23154 consists in being free from the petty solicitudes of middle-class
23155 gentility, and he was a great critic of feminine charms. Rosamond
23156 delighted in his admiration now even more than she had done at
23157 Quallingham, and he found it easy to spend several hours of the day in
23158 flirting with her. The visit altogether was one of the pleasantest
23159 larks he had ever had, not the less so perhaps because he suspected
23160 that his queer cousin Tertius wished him away: though Lydgate, who
23161 would rather (hyperbolically speaking) have died than have failed in
23162 polite hospitality, suppressed his dislike, and only pretended
23163 generally not to hear what the gallant officer said, consigning the
23164 task of answering him to Rosamond. For he was not at all a jealous
23165 husband, and preferred leaving a feather-headed young gentleman alone
23166 with his wife to bearing him company.
23167
23168 "I wish you would talk more to the Captain at dinner, Tertius," said
23169 Rosamond, one evening when the important guest was gone to Loamford to
23170 see some brother officers stationed there. "You really look so absent
23171 sometimes--you seem to be seeing through his head into something behind
23172 it, instead of looking at him."
23173
23174 "My dear Rosy, you don't expect me to talk much to such a conceited ass
23175 as that, I hope," said Lydgate, brusquely. "If he got his head broken,
23176 I might look at it with interest, not before."
23177
23178 "I cannot conceive why you should speak of your cousin so
23179 contemptuously," said Rosamond, her fingers moving at her work while
23180 she spoke with a mild gravity which had a touch of disdain in it.
23181
23182 "Ask Ladislaw if he doesn't think your Captain the greatest bore he
23183 ever met with. Ladislaw has almost forsaken the house since he came."
23184
23185 Rosamond thought she knew perfectly well why Mr. Ladislaw disliked the
23186 Captain: he was jealous, and she liked his being jealous.
23187
23188 "It is impossible to say what will suit eccentric persons," she
23189 answered, "but in my opinion Captain Lydgate is a thorough gentleman,
23190 and I think you ought not, out of respect to Sir Godwin, to treat him
23191 with neglect."
23192
23193 "No, dear; but we have had dinners for him. And he comes in and goes
23194 out as he likes. He doesn't want me."
23195
23196 "Still, when he is in the room, you might show him more attention. He
23197 may not be a phoenix of cleverness in your sense; his profession is
23198 different; but it would be all the better for you to talk a little on
23199 his subjects. _I_ think his conversation is quite agreeable. And he
23200 is anything but an unprincipled man."
23201
23202 "The fact is, you would wish me to be a little more like him, Rosy,"
23203 said Lydgate, in a sort of resigned murmur, with a smile which was not
23204 exactly tender, and certainly not merry. Rosamond was silent and did
23205 not smile again; but the lovely curves of her face looked good-tempered
23206 enough without smiling.
23207
23208 Those words of Lydgate's were like a sad milestone marking how far he
23209 had travelled from his old dreamland, in which Rosamond Vincy appeared
23210 to be that perfect piece of womanhood who would reverence her husband's
23211 mind after the fashion of an accomplished mermaid, using her comb and
23212 looking-glass and singing her song for the relaxation of his adored
23213 wisdom alone. He had begun to distinguish between that imagined
23214 adoration and the attraction towards a man's talent because it gives
23215 him prestige, and is like an order in his button-hole or an Honorable
23216 before his name.
23217
23218 It might have been supposed that Rosamond had travelled too, since she
23219 had found the pointless conversation of Mr. Ned Plymdale perfectly
23220 wearisome; but to most mortals there is a stupidity which is
23221 unendurable and a stupidity which is altogether acceptable--else,
23222 indeed, what would become of social bonds? Captain Lydgate's stupidity
23223 was delicately scented, carried itself with "style," talked with a good
23224 accent, and was closely related to Sir Godwin. Rosamond found it quite
23225 agreeable and caught many of its phrases.
23226
23227 Therefore since Rosamond, as we know, was fond of horseback, there were
23228 plenty of reasons why she should be tempted to resume her riding when
23229 Captain Lydgate, who had ordered his man with two horses to follow him
23230 and put up at the "Green Dragon," begged her to go out on the gray
23231 which he warranted to be gentle and trained to carry a lady--indeed, he
23232 had bought it for his sister, and was taking it to Quallingham.
23233 Rosamond went out the first time without telling her husband, and came
23234 back before his return; but the ride had been so thorough a success,
23235 and she declared herself so much the better in consequence, that he was
23236 informed of it with full reliance on his consent that she should go
23237 riding again.
23238
23239 On the contrary Lydgate was more than hurt--he was utterly confounded
23240 that she had risked herself on a strange horse without referring the
23241 matter to his wish. After the first almost thundering exclamations of
23242 astonishment, which sufficiently warned Rosamond of what was coming, he
23243 was silent for some moments.
23244
23245 "However, you have come back safely," he said, at last, in a decisive
23246 tone. "You will not go again, Rosy; that is understood. If it were
23247 the quietest, most familiar horse in the world, there would always be
23248 the chance of accident. And you know very well that I wished you to
23249 give up riding the roan on that account."
23250
23251 "But there is the chance of accident indoors, Tertius."
23252
23253 "My darling, don't talk nonsense," said Lydgate, in an imploring tone;
23254 "surely I am the person to judge for you. I think it is enough that I
23255 say you are not to go again."
23256
23257 Rosamond was arranging her hair before dinner, and the reflection of
23258 her head in the glass showed no change in its loveliness except a
23259 little turning aside of the long neck. Lydgate had been moving about
23260 with his hands in his pockets, and now paused near her, as if he
23261 awaited some assurance.
23262
23263 "I wish you would fasten up my plaits, dear," said Rosamond, letting
23264 her arms fall with a little sigh, so as to make a husband ashamed of
23265 standing there like a brute. Lydgate had often fastened the plaits
23266 before, being among the deftest of men with his large finely formed
23267 fingers. He swept up the soft festoons of plaits and fastened in the
23268 tall comb (to such uses do men come!); and what could he do then but
23269 kiss the exquisite nape which was shown in all its delicate curves?
23270 But when we do what we have done before, it is often with a difference.
23271 Lydgate was still angry, and had not forgotten his point.
23272
23273 "I shall tell the Captain that he ought to have known better than offer
23274 you his horse," he said, as he moved away.
23275
23276 "I beg you will not do anything of the kind, Tertius," said Rosamond,
23277 looking at him with something more marked than usual in her speech.
23278 "It will be treating me as if I were a child. Promise that you will
23279 leave the subject to me."
23280
23281 There did seem to be some truth in her objection. Lydgate said, "Very
23282 well," with a surly obedience, and thus the discussion ended with his
23283 promising Rosamond, and not with her promising him.
23284
23285 In fact, she had been determined not to promise. Rosamond had that
23286 victorious obstinacy which never wastes its energy in impetuous
23287 resistance. What she liked to do was to her the right thing, and all
23288 her cleverness was directed to getting the means of doing it. She
23289 meant to go out riding again on the gray, and she did go on the next
23290 opportunity of her husband's absence, not intending that he should know
23291 until it was late enough not to signify to her. The temptation was
23292 certainly great: she was very fond of the exercise, and the
23293 gratification of riding on a fine horse, with Captain Lydgate, Sir
23294 Godwin's son, on another fine horse by her side, and of being met in
23295 this position by any one but her husband, was something as good as her
23296 dreams before marriage: moreover she was riveting the connection with
23297 the family at Quallingham, which must be a wise thing to do.
23298
23299 But the gentle gray, unprepared for the crash of a tree that was being
23300 felled on the edge of Halsell wood, took fright, and caused a worse
23301 fright to Rosamond, leading finally to the loss of her baby. Lydgate
23302 could not show his anger towards her, but he was rather bearish to the
23303 Captain, whose visit naturally soon came to an end.
23304
23305 In all future conversations on the subject, Rosamond was mildly certain
23306 that the ride had made no difference, and that if she had stayed at
23307 home the same symptoms would have come on and would have ended in the
23308 same way, because she had felt something like them before.
23309
23310 Lydgate could only say, "Poor, poor darling!"--but he secretly wondered
23311 over the terrible tenacity of this mild creature. There was gathering
23312 within him an amazed sense of his powerlessness over Rosamond. His
23313 superior knowledge and mental force, instead of being, as he had
23314 imagined, a shrine to consult on all occasions, was simply set aside on
23315 every practical question. He had regarded Rosamond's cleverness as
23316 precisely of the receptive kind which became a woman. He was now
23317 beginning to find out what that cleverness was--what was the shape into
23318 which it had run as into a close network aloof and independent. No one
23319 quicker than Rosamond to see causes and effects which lay within the
23320 track of her own tastes and interests: she had seen clearly Lydgate's
23321 preeminence in Middlemarch society, and could go on imaginatively
23322 tracing still more agreeable social effects when his talent should have
23323 advanced him; but for her, his professional and scientific ambition had
23324 no other relation to these desirable effects than if they had been the
23325 fortunate discovery of an ill-smelling oil. And that oil apart, with
23326 which she had nothing to do, of course she believed in her own opinion
23327 more than she did in his. Lydgate was astounded to find in numberless
23328 trifling matters, as well as in this last serious case of the riding,
23329 that affection did not make her compliant. He had no doubt that the
23330 affection was there, and had no presentiment that he had done anything
23331 to repel it. For his own part he said to himself that he loved her as
23332 tenderly as ever, and could make up his mind to her negations;
23333 but--well! Lydgate was much worried, and conscious of new elements in
23334 his life as noxious to him as an inlet of mud to a creature that has
23335 been used to breathe and bathe and dart after its illuminated prey in
23336 the clearest of waters.
23337
23338 Rosamond was soon looking lovelier than ever at her worktable, enjoying
23339 drives in her father's phaeton and thinking it likely that she might be
23340 invited to Quallingham. She knew that she was a much more exquisite
23341 ornament to the drawing-room there than any daughter of the family, and
23342 in reflecting that the gentlemen were aware of that, did not perhaps
23343 sufficiently consider whether the ladies would be eager to see
23344 themselves surpassed.
23345
23346 Lydgate, relieved from anxiety about her, relapsed into what she
23347 inwardly called his moodiness--a name which to her covered his
23348 thoughtful preoccupation with other subjects than herself, as well as
23349 that uneasy look of the brow and distaste for all ordinary things as if
23350 they were mixed with bitter herbs, which really made a sort of
23351 weather-glass to his vexation and foreboding. These latter states of
23352 mind had one cause amongst others, which he had generously but
23353 mistakenly avoided mentioning to Rosamond, lest it should affect her
23354 health and spirits. Between him and her indeed there was that total
23355 missing of each other's mental track, which is too evidently possible
23356 even between persons who are continually thinking of each other. To
23357 Lydgate it seemed that he had been spending month after month in
23358 sacrificing more than half of his best intent and best power to his
23359 tenderness for Rosamond; bearing her little claims and interruptions
23360 without impatience, and, above all, bearing without betrayal of
23361 bitterness to look through less and less of interfering illusion at the
23362 blank unreflecting surface her mind presented to his ardor for the more
23363 impersonal ends of his profession and his scientific study, an ardor
23364 which he had fancied that the ideal wife must somehow worship as
23365 sublime, though not in the least knowing why. But his endurance was
23366 mingled with a self-discontent which, if we know how to be candid, we
23367 shall confess to make more than half our bitterness under grievances,
23368 wife or husband included. It always remains true that if we had been
23369 greater, circumstance would have been less strong against us. Lydgate
23370 was aware that his concessions to Rosamond were often little more than
23371 the lapse of slackening resolution, the creeping paralysis apt to seize
23372 an enthusiasm which is out of adjustment to a constant portion of our
23373 lives. And on Lydgate's enthusiasm there was constantly pressing not a
23374 simple weight of sorrow, but the biting presence of a petty degrading
23375 care, such as casts the blight of irony over all higher effort.
23376
23377 This was the care which he had hitherto abstained from mentioning to
23378 Rosamond; and he believed, with some wonder, that it had never entered
23379 her mind, though certainly no difficulty could be less mysterious. It
23380 was an inference with a conspicuous handle to it, and had been easily
23381 drawn by indifferent observers, that Lydgate was in debt; and he could
23382 not succeed in keeping out of his mind for long together that he was
23383 every day getting deeper into that swamp, which tempts men towards it
23384 with such a pretty covering of flowers and verdure. It is wonderful
23385 how soon a man gets up to his chin there--in a condition in which,
23386 in spite of himself, he is forced to think chiefly of release, though he
23387 had a scheme of the universe in his soul.
23388
23389 Eighteen months ago Lydgate was poor, but had never known the eager
23390 want of small sums, and felt rather a burning contempt for any one who
23391 descended a step in order to gain them. He was now experiencing
23392 something worse than a simple deficit: he was assailed by the vulgar
23393 hateful trials of a man who has bought and used a great many things
23394 which might have been done without, and which he is unable to pay for,
23395 though the demand for payment has become pressing.
23396
23397 How this came about may be easily seen without much arithmetic or
23398 knowledge of prices. When a man in setting up a house and preparing
23399 for marriage finds that his furniture and other initial expenses come
23400 to between four and five hundred pounds more than he has capital to pay
23401 for; when at the end of a year it appears that his household expenses,
23402 horses and et caeteras, amount to nearly a thousand, while the proceeds
23403 of the practice reckoned from the old books to be worth eight hundred
23404 per annum have sunk like a summer pond and make hardly five hundred,
23405 chiefly in unpaid entries, the plain inference is that, whether he
23406 minds it or not, he is in debt. Those were less expensive times than
23407 our own, and provincial life was comparatively modest; but the ease
23408 with which a medical man who had lately bought a practice, who thought
23409 that he was obliged to keep two horses, whose table was supplied
23410 without stint, and who paid an insurance on his life and a high rent
23411 for house and garden, might find his expenses doubling his receipts,
23412 can be conceived by any one who does not think these details beneath
23413 his consideration. Rosamond, accustomed from her childhood to an extravagant
23414 household, thought that good housekeeping consisted simply in ordering
23415 the best of everything--nothing else "answered;" and Lydgate supposed
23416 that "if things were done at all, they must be done properly"--he did
23417 not see how they were to live otherwise. If each head of household
23418 expenditure had been mentioned to him beforehand, he would have
23419 probably observed that "it could hardly come to much," and if any one
23420 had suggested a saving on a particular article--for example, the
23421 substitution of cheap fish for dear--it would have appeared to him
23422 simply a penny-wise, mean notion. Rosamond, even without such an
23423 occasion as Captain Lydgate's visit, was fond of giving invitations,
23424 and Lydgate, though he often thought the guests tiresome, did not
23425 interfere. This sociability seemed a necessary part of professional
23426 prudence, and the entertainment must be suitable. It is true Lydgate
23427 was constantly visiting the homes of the poor and adjusting his
23428 prescriptions of diet to their small means; but, dear me! has it not by
23429 this time ceased to be remarkable--is it not rather that we expect in
23430 men, that they should have numerous strands of experience lying side by
23431 side and never compare them with each other? Expenditure--like
23432 ugliness and errors--becomes a totally new thing when we attach our own
23433 personality to it, and measure it by that wide difference which is
23434 manifest (in our own sensations) between ourselves and others. Lydgate
23435 believed himself to be careless about his dress, and he despised a man
23436 who calculated the effects of his costume; it seemed to him only a
23437 matter of course that he had abundance of fresh garments--such things
23438 were naturally ordered in sheaves. It must be remembered that he had
23439 never hitherto felt the check of importunate debt, and he walked by
23440 habit, not by self-criticism. But the check had come.
23441
23442 Its novelty made it the more irritating. He was amazed, disgusted that
23443 conditions so foreign to all his purposes, so hatefully disconnected
23444 with the objects he cared to occupy himself with, should have lain in
23445 ambush and clutched him when he was unaware. And there was not only
23446 the actual debt; there was the certainty that in his present position
23447 he must go on deepening it. Two furnishing tradesmen at Brassing,
23448 whose bills had been incurred before his marriage, and whom
23449 uncalculated current expenses had ever since prevented him from paying,
23450 had repeatedly sent him unpleasant letters which had forced themselves
23451 on his attention. This could hardly have been more galling to any
23452 disposition than to Lydgate's, with his intense pride--his dislike of
23453 asking a favor or being under an obligation to any one. He had scorned
23454 even to form conjectures about Mr. Vincy's intentions on money matters,
23455 and nothing but extremity could have induced him to apply to his
23456 father-in-law, even if he had not been made aware in various indirect
23457 ways since his marriage that Mr. Vincy's own affairs were not
23458 flourishing, and that the expectation of help from him would be
23459 resented. Some men easily trust in the readiness of friends; it had
23460 never in the former part of his life occurred to Lydgate that he should
23461 need to do so: he had never thought what borrowing would be to him; but
23462 now that the idea had entered his mind, he felt that he would rather
23463 incur any other hardship. In the mean time he had no money or
23464 prospects of money; and his practice was not getting more lucrative.
23465
23466 No wonder that Lydgate had been unable to suppress all signs of inward
23467 trouble during the last few months, and now that Rosamond was regaining
23468 brilliant health, he meditated taking her entirely into confidence on
23469 his difficulties. New conversance with tradesmen's bills had forced
23470 his reasoning into a new channel of comparison: he had begun to
23471 consider from a new point of view what was necessary and unnecessary in
23472 goods ordered, and to see that there must be some change of habits.
23473 How could such a change be made without Rosamond's concurrence? The
23474 immediate occasion of opening the disagreeable fact to her was forced
23475 upon him.
23476
23477 Having no money, and having privately sought advice as to what security
23478 could possibly be given by a man in his position, Lydgate had offered
23479 the one good security in his power to the less peremptory creditor, who
23480 was a silversmith and jeweller, and who consented to take on himself
23481 the upholsterer's credit also, accepting interest for a given term.
23482 The security necessary was a bill of sale on the furniture of his
23483 house, which might make a creditor easy for a reasonable time about a
23484 debt amounting to less than four hundred pounds; and the silversmith,
23485 Mr. Dover, was willing to reduce it by taking back a portion of the
23486 plate and any other article which was as good as new. "Any other
23487 article" was a phrase delicately implying jewellery, and more
23488 particularly some purple amethysts costing thirty pounds, which Lydgate
23489 had bought as a bridal present.
23490
23491 Opinions may be divided as to his wisdom in making this present: some
23492 may think that it was a graceful attention to be expected from a man
23493 like Lydgate, and that the fault of any troublesome consequences lay in
23494 the pinched narrowness of provincial life at that time, which offered
23495 no conveniences for professional people whose fortune was not
23496 proportioned to their tastes; also, in Lydgate's ridiculous
23497 fastidiousness about asking his friends for money.
23498
23499 However, it had seemed a question of no moment to him on that fine
23500 morning when he went to give a final order for plate: in the presence
23501 of other jewels enormously expensive, and as an addition to orders of
23502 which the amount had not been exactly calculated, thirty pounds for
23503 ornaments so exquisitely suited to Rosamond's neck and arms could
23504 hardly appear excessive when there was no ready cash for it to exceed.
23505 But at this crisis Lydgate's imagination could not help dwelling on the
23506 possibility of letting the amethysts take their place again among Mr.
23507 Dover's stock, though he shrank from the idea of proposing this to
23508 Rosamond. Having been roused to discern consequences which he had
23509 never been in the habit of tracing, he was preparing to act on this
23510 discernment with some of the rigor (by no means all) that he would have
23511 applied in pursuing experiment. He was nerving himself to this rigor
23512 as he rode from Brassing, and meditated on the representations he must
23513 make to Rosamond.
23514
23515 It was evening when he got home. He was intensely miserable, this
23516 strong man of nine-and-twenty and of many gifts. He was not saying
23517 angrily within himself that he had made a profound mistake; but the
23518 mistake was at work in him like a recognized chronic disease, mingling
23519 its uneasy importunities with every prospect, and enfeebling every
23520 thought. As he went along the passage to the drawing-room, he heard
23521 the piano and singing. Of course, Ladislaw was there. It was some
23522 weeks since Will had parted from Dorothea, yet he was still at the old
23523 post in Middlemarch. Lydgate had no objection in general to Ladislaw's
23524 coming, but just now he was annoyed that he could not find his hearth
23525 free. When he opened the door the two singers went on towards the
23526 key-note, raising their eyes and looking at him indeed, but not
23527 regarding his entrance as an interruption. To a man galled with his
23528 harness as poor Lydgate was, it is not soothing to see two people
23529 warbling at him, as he comes in with the sense that the painful day has
23530 still pains in store. His face, already paler than usual, took on a
23531 scowl as he walked across the room and flung himself into a chair.
23532
23533 The singers feeling themselves excused by the fact that they had only
23534 three bars to sing, now turned round.
23535
23536 "How are you, Lydgate?" said Will, coming forward to shake hands.
23537
23538 Lydgate took his hand, but did not think it necessary to speak.
23539
23540 "Have you dined, Tertius? I expected you much earlier," said Rosamond,
23541 who had already seen that her husband was in a "horrible humor." She
23542 seated herself in her usual place as she spoke.
23543
23544 "I have dined. I should like some tea, please," said Lydgate, curtly,
23545 still scowling and looking markedly at his legs stretched out before
23546 him.
23547
23548 Will was too quick to need more. "I shall be off," he said, reaching
23549 his hat.
23550
23551 "Tea is coming," said Rosamond; "pray don't go."
23552
23553 "Yes, Lydgate is bored," said Will, who had more comprehension of
23554 Lydgate than Rosamond had, and was not offended by his manner, easily
23555 imagining outdoor causes of annoyance.
23556
23557 "There is the more need for you to stay," said Rosamond, playfully, and
23558 in her lightest accent; "he will not speak to me all the evening."
23559
23560 "Yes, Rosamond, I shall," said Lydgate, in his strong baritone. "I
23561 have some serious business to speak to you about."
23562
23563 No introduction of the business could have been less like that which
23564 Lydgate had intended; but her indifferent manner had been too provoking.
23565
23566 "There! you see," said Will. "I'm going to the meeting about the
23567 Mechanics' Institute. Good-by;" and he went quickly out of the room.
23568
23569 Rosamond did not look at her husband, but presently rose and took her
23570 place before the tea-tray. She was thinking that she had never seen him
23571 so disagreeable. Lydgate turned his dark eyes on her and watched her
23572 as she delicately handled the tea-service with her taper fingers, and
23573 looked at the objects immediately before her with no curve in her face
23574 disturbed, and yet with an ineffable protest in her air against all
23575 people with unpleasant manners. For the moment he lost the sense of
23576 his wound in a sudden speculation about this new form of feminine
23577 impassibility revealing itself in the sylph-like frame which he had
23578 once interpreted as the sign of a ready intelligent sensitiveness. His
23579 mind glancing back to Laure while he looked at Rosamond, he said
23580 inwardly, "Would _she_ kill me because I wearied her?" and then, "It is
23581 the way with all women." But this power of generalizing which gives men
23582 so much the superiority in mistake over the dumb animals, was
23583 immediately thwarted by Lydgate's memory of wondering impressions from
23584 the behavior of another woman--from Dorothea's looks and tones of
23585 emotion about her husband when Lydgate began to attend him--from her
23586 passionate cry to be taught what would best comfort that man for whose
23587 sake it seemed as if she must quell every impulse in her except the
23588 yearnings of faithfulness and compassion. These revived impressions
23589 succeeded each other quickly and dreamily in Lydgate's mind while the
23590 tea was being brewed. He had shut his eyes in the last instant of
23591 reverie while he heard Dorothea saying, "Advise me--think what I can
23592 do--he has been all his life laboring and looking forward. He minds
23593 about nothing else--and I mind about nothing else."
23594
23595 That voice of deep-souled womanhood had remained within him as the
23596 enkindling conceptions of dead and sceptred genius had remained within
23597 him (is there not a genius for feeling nobly which also reigns over
23598 human spirits and their conclusions?); the tones were a music from
23599 which he was falling away--he had really fallen into a momentary doze,
23600 when Rosamond said in her silvery neutral way, "Here is your tea,
23601 Tertius," setting it on the small table by his side, and then moved
23602 back to her place without looking at him. Lydgate was too hasty in
23603 attributing insensibility to her; after her own fashion, she was
23604 sensitive enough, and took lasting impressions. Her impression now was
23605 one of offence and repulsion. But then, Rosamond had no scowls and had
23606 never raised her voice: she was quite sure that no one could justly
23607 find fault with her.
23608
23609 Perhaps Lydgate and she had never felt so far off each other before;
23610 but there were strong reasons for not deferring his revelation, even if
23611 he had not already begun it by that abrupt announcement; indeed some of
23612 the angry desire to rouse her into more sensibility on his account
23613 which had prompted him to speak prematurely, still mingled with his
23614 pain in the prospect of her pain. But he waited till the tray was
23615 gone, the candles were lit, and the evening quiet might be counted on:
23616 the interval had left time for repelled tenderness to return into the
23617 old course. He spoke kindly.
23618
23619 "Dear Rosy, lay down your work and come to sit by me," he said, gently,
23620 pushing away the table, and stretching out his arm to draw a chair near
23621 his own.
23622
23623 Rosamond obeyed. As she came towards him in her drapery of transparent
23624 faintly tinted muslin, her slim yet round figure never looked more
23625 graceful; as she sat down by him and laid one hand on the elbow of his
23626 chair, at last looking at him and meeting his eyes, her delicate neck
23627 and cheek and purely cut lips never had more of that untarnished beauty
23628 which touches as in spring-time and infancy and all sweet freshness.
23629 It touched Lydgate now, and mingled the early moments of his love for
23630 her with all the other memories which were stirred in this crisis of
23631 deep trouble. He laid his ample hand softly on hers, saying--
23632
23633 "Dear!" with the lingering utterance which affection gives to the word.
23634 Rosamond too was still under the power of that same past, and her
23635 husband was still in part the Lydgate whose approval had stirred
23636 delight. She put his hair lightly away from his forehead, then laid
23637 her other hand on his, and was conscious of forgiving him.
23638
23639 "I am obliged to tell you what will hurt you, Rosy. But there are
23640 things which husband and wife must think of together. I dare say it
23641 has occurred to you already that I am short of money."
23642
23643 Lydgate paused; but Rosamond turned her neck and looked at a vase on
23644 the mantel-piece.
23645
23646 "I was not able to pay for all the things we had to get before we were
23647 married, and there have been expenses since which I have been obliged
23648 to meet. The consequence is, there is a large debt at Brassing--three
23649 hundred and eighty pounds--which has been pressing on me a good while,
23650 and in fact we are getting deeper every day, for people don't pay me
23651 the faster because others want the money. I took pains to keep it from
23652 you while you were not well; but now we must think together about it,
23653 and you must help me."
23654
23655 "What can--I--do, Tertius?" said Rosamond, turning her eyes on him
23656 again. That little speech of four words, like so many others in all
23657 languages, is capable by varied vocal inflections of expressing all
23658 states of mind from helpless dimness to exhaustive argumentative
23659 perception, from the completest self-devoting fellowship to the most
23660 neutral aloofness. Rosamond's thin utterance threw into the words
23661 "What can--I--do!" as much neutrality as they could hold. They fell
23662 like a mortal chill on Lydgate's roused tenderness. He did not storm
23663 in indignation--he felt too sad a sinking of the heart. And when he
23664 spoke again it was more in the tone of a man who forces himself to
23665 fulfil a task.
23666
23667 "It is necessary for you to know, because I have to give security for a
23668 time, and a man must come to make an inventory of the furniture."
23669
23670 Rosamond colored deeply. "Have you not asked papa for money?" she
23671 said, as soon as she could speak.
23672
23673 "No."
23674
23675 "Then I must ask him!" she said, releasing her hands from Lydgate's,
23676 and rising to stand at two yards' distance from him.
23677
23678 "No, Rosy," said Lydgate, decisively. "It is too late to do that. The
23679 inventory will be begun to-morrow. Remember it is a mere security: it
23680 will make no difference: it is a temporary affair. I insist upon it
23681 that your father shall not know, unless I choose to tell him," added
23682 Lydgate, with a more peremptory emphasis.
23683
23684 This certainly was unkind, but Rosamond had thrown him back on evil
23685 expectation as to what she would do in the way of quiet steady
23686 disobedience. The unkindness seemed unpardonable to her: she was not
23687 given to weeping and disliked it, but now her chin and lips began to
23688 tremble and the tears welled up. Perhaps it was not possible for
23689 Lydgate, under the double stress of outward material difficulty and of
23690 his own proud resistance to humiliating consequences, to imagine fully
23691 what this sudden trial was to a young creature who had known nothing
23692 but indulgence, and whose dreams had all been of new indulgence, more
23693 exactly to her taste. But he did wish to spare her as much as he
23694 could, and her tears cut him to the heart. He could not speak again
23695 immediately; but Rosamond did not go on sobbing: she tried to conquer
23696 her agitation and wiped away her tears, continuing to look before her
23697 at the mantel-piece.
23698
23699 "Try not to grieve, darling," said Lydgate, turning his eyes up towards
23700 her. That she had chosen to move away from him in this moment of her
23701 trouble made everything harder to say, but he must absolutely go on.
23702 "We must brace ourselves to do what is necessary. It is I who have
23703 been in fault: I ought to have seen that I could not afford to live in
23704 this way. But many things have told against me in my practice, and it
23705 really just now has ebbed to a low point. I may recover it, but in the
23706 mean time we must pull up--we must change our way of living. We shall
23707 weather it. When I have given this security I shall have time to look
23708 about me; and you are so clever that if you turn your mind to managing
23709 you will school me into carefulness. I have been a thoughtless rascal
23710 about squaring prices--but come, dear, sit down and forgive me."
23711
23712 Lydgate was bowing his neck under the yoke like a creature who had
23713 talons, but who had Reason too, which often reduces us to meekness.
23714 When he had spoken the last words in an imploring tone, Rosamond
23715 returned to the chair by his side. His self-blame gave her some hope
23716 that he would attend to her opinion, and she said--
23717
23718 "Why can you not put off having the inventory made? You can send the
23719 men away to-morrow when they come."
23720
23721 "I shall not send them away," said Lydgate, the peremptoriness rising
23722 again. Was it of any use to explain?
23723
23724 "If we left Middlemarch? there would of course be a sale, and that
23725 would do as well."
23726
23727 "But we are not going to leave Middlemarch."
23728
23729 "I am sure, Tertius, it would be much better to do so. Why can we not
23730 go to London? Or near Durham, where your family is known?"
23731
23732 "We can go nowhere without money, Rosamond."
23733
23734 "Your friends would not wish you to be without money. And surely these
23735 odious tradesmen might be made to understand that, and to wait, if you
23736 would make proper representations to them."
23737
23738 "This is idle Rosamond," said Lydgate, angrily. "You must learn to
23739 take my judgment on questions you don't understand. I have made
23740 necessary arrangements, and they must be carried out. As to friends, I
23741 have no expectations whatever from them, and shall not ask them for
23742 anything."
23743
23744 Rosamond sat perfectly still. The thought in her mind was that if she
23745 had known how Lydgate would behave, she would never have married him.
23746
23747 "We have no time to waste now on unnecessary words, dear," said
23748 Lydgate, trying to be gentle again. "There are some details that I
23749 want to consider with you. Dover says he will take a good deal of the
23750 plate back again, and any of the jewellery we like. He really behaves
23751 very well."
23752
23753 "Are we to go without spoons and forks then?" said Rosamond, whose very
23754 lips seemed to get thinner with the thinness of her utterance. She was
23755 determined to make no further resistance or suggestions.
23756
23757 "Oh no, dear!" said Lydgate. "But look here," he continued, drawing a
23758 paper from his pocket and opening it; "here is Dover's account. See, I
23759 have marked a number of articles, which if we returned them would
23760 reduce the amount by thirty pounds and more. I have not marked any
23761 of the jewellery." Lydgate had really felt this point of the jewellery
23762 very bitter to himself; but he had overcome the feeling by severe
23763 argument. He could not propose to Rosamond that she should return any
23764 particular present of his, but he had told himself that he was bound to
23765 put Dover's offer before her, and her inward prompting might make the
23766 affair easy.
23767
23768 "It is useless for me to look, Tertius," said Rosamond, calmly; "you
23769 will return what you please." She would not turn her eyes on the
23770 paper, and Lydgate, flushing up to the roots of his hair, drew it back
23771 and let it fall on his knee. Meanwhile Rosamond quietly went out of
23772 the room, leaving Lydgate helpless and wondering. Was she not coming
23773 back? It seemed that she had no more identified herself with him than
23774 if they had been creatures of different species and opposing interests.
23775 He tossed his head and thrust his hands deep into his pockets with a
23776 sort of vengeance. There was still science--there were still good
23777 objects to work for. He must give a tug still--all the stronger
23778 because other satisfactions were going.
23779
23780 But the door opened and Rosamond re-entered. She carried the leather
23781 box containing the amethysts, and a tiny ornamental basket which
23782 contained other boxes, and laying them on the chair where she had been
23783 sitting, she said, with perfect propriety in her air--
23784
23785 "This is all the jewellery you ever gave me. You can return what you
23786 like of it, and of the plate also. You will not, of course, expect me
23787 to stay at home to-morrow. I shall go to papa's."
23788
23789 To many women the look Lydgate cast at her would have been more
23790 terrible than one of anger: it had in it a despairing acceptance of the
23791 distance she was placing between them.
23792
23793 "And when shall you come back again?" he said, with a bitter edge on
23794 his accent.
23795
23796 "Oh, in the evening. Of course I shall not mention the subject to
23797 mamma." Rosamond was convinced that no woman could behave more
23798 irreproachably than she was behaving; and she went to sit down at her
23799 work-table. Lydgate sat meditating a minute or two, and the result was
23800 that he said, with some of the old emotion in his tone--
23801
23802 "Now we have been united, Rosy, you should not leave me to myself in
23803 the first trouble that has come."
23804
23805 "Certainly not," said Rosamond; "I shall do everything it becomes me to
23806 do."
23807
23808 "It is not right that the thing should be left to servants, or that I
23809 should have to speak to them about it. And I shall be obliged to go
23810 out--I don't know how early. I understand your shrinking from the
23811 humiliation of these money affairs. But, my dear Rosamond, as a
23812 question of pride, which I feel just as much as you can, it is surely
23813 better to manage the thing ourselves, and let the servants see as
23814 little of it as possible; and since you are my wife, there is no
23815 hindering your share in my disgraces--if there were disgraces."
23816
23817 Rosamond did not answer immediately, but at last she said, "Very well,
23818 I will stay at home."
23819
23820 "I shall not touch these jewels, Rosy. Take them away again. But I
23821 will write out a list of plate that we may return, and that can be
23822 packed up and sent at once."
23823
23824 "The servants will know _that_," said Rosamond, with the slightest
23825 touch of sarcasm.
23826
23827 "Well, we must meet some disagreeables as necessities. Where is the
23828 ink, I wonder?" said Lydgate, rising, and throwing the account on the
23829 larger table where he meant to write.
23830
23831 Rosamond went to reach the inkstand, and after setting it on the table
23832 was going to turn away, when Lydgate, who was standing close by, put
23833 his arm round her and drew her towards him, saying--
23834
23835 "Come, darling, let us make the best of things. It will only be for a
23836 time, I hope, that we shall have to be stingy and particular. Kiss me."
23837
23838 His native warm-heartedness took a great deal of quenching, and it is a
23839 part of manliness for a husband to feel keenly the fact that an
23840 inexperienced girl has got into trouble by marrying him. She received
23841 his kiss and returned it faintly, and in this way an appearance of
23842 accord was recovered for the time. But Lydgate could not help looking
23843 forward with dread to the inevitable future discussions about
23844 expenditure and the necessity for a complete change in their way of
23845 living.
23846
23847
23848
23849 CHAPTER LIX.
23850
23851 They said of old the Soul had human shape,
23852 But smaller, subtler than the fleshly self,
23853 So wandered forth for airing when it pleased.
23854 And see! beside her cherub-face there floats
23855 A pale-lipped form aerial whispering
23856 Its promptings in that little shell her ear."
23857
23858
23859 News is often dispersed as thoughtlessly and effectively as that pollen
23860 which the bees carry off (having no idea how powdery they are) when
23861 they are buzzing in search of their particular nectar. This fine
23862 comparison has reference to Fred Vincy, who on that evening at Lowick
23863 Parsonage heard a lively discussion among the ladies on the news which
23864 their old servant had got from Tantripp concerning Mr. Casaubon's
23865 strange mention of Mr. Ladislaw in a codicil to his will made not long
23866 before his death. Miss Winifred was astounded to find that her brother
23867 had known the fact before, and observed that Camden was the most
23868 wonderful man for knowing things and not telling them; whereupon Mary
23869 Garth said that the codicil had perhaps got mixed up with the habits of
23870 spiders, which Miss Winifred never would listen to. Mrs. Farebrother
23871 considered that the news had something to do with their having only
23872 once seen Mr. Ladislaw at Lowick, and Miss Noble made many small
23873 compassionate mewings.
23874
23875 Fred knew little and cared less about Ladislaw and the Casaubons, and
23876 his mind never recurred to that discussion till one day calling on
23877 Rosamond at his mother's request to deliver a message as he passed, he
23878 happened to see Ladislaw going away. Fred and Rosamond had little to
23879 say to each other now that marriage had removed her from collision with
23880 the unpleasantness of brothers, and especially now that he had taken
23881 what she held the stupid and even reprehensible step of giving up the
23882 Church to take to such a business as Mr. Garth's. Hence Fred talked by
23883 preference of what he considered indifferent news, and "a propos of
23884 that young Ladislaw" mentioned what he had heard at Lowick Parsonage.
23885
23886 Now Lydgate, like Mr. Farebrother, knew a great deal more than he told,
23887 and when he had once been set thinking about the relation between Will
23888 and Dorothea his conjectures had gone beyond the fact. He imagined
23889 that there was a passionate attachment on both sides, and this struck
23890 him as much too serious to gossip about. He remembered Will's
23891 irritability when he had mentioned Mrs. Casaubon, and was the more
23892 circumspect. On the whole his surmises, in addition to what he knew of
23893 the fact, increased his friendliness and tolerance towards Ladislaw,
23894 and made him understand the vacillation which kept him at Middlemarch
23895 after he had said that he should go away. It was significant of the
23896 separateness between Lydgate's mind and Rosamond's that he had no
23897 impulse to speak to her on the subject; indeed, he did not quite trust
23898 her reticence towards Will. And he was right there; though he had no
23899 vision of the way in which her mind would act in urging her to speak.
23900
23901 When she repeated Fred's news to Lydgate, he said, "Take care you don't
23902 drop the faintest hint to Ladislaw, Rosy. He is likely to fly out as
23903 if you insulted him. Of course it is a painful affair."
23904
23905 Rosamond turned her neck and patted her hair, looking the image of
23906 placid indifference. But the next time Will came when Lydgate was
23907 away, she spoke archly about his not going to London as he had
23908 threatened.
23909
23910 "I know all about it. I have a confidential little bird," said she,
23911 showing very pretty airs of her head over the bit of work held high
23912 between her active fingers. "There is a powerful magnet in this
23913 neighborhood."
23914
23915 "To be sure there is. Nobody knows that better than you," said Will,
23916 with light gallantry, but inwardly prepared to be angry.
23917
23918 "It is really the most charming romance: Mr. Casaubon jealous, and
23919 foreseeing that there was no one else whom Mrs. Casaubon would so much
23920 like to marry, and no one who would so much like to marry her as a
23921 certain gentleman; and then laying a plan to spoil all by making her
23922 forfeit her property if she did marry that gentleman--and then--and
23923 then--and then--oh, I have no doubt the end will be thoroughly
23924 romantic."
23925
23926 "Great God! what do you mean?" said Will, flushing over face and ears,
23927 his features seeming to change as if he had had a violent shake.
23928 "Don't joke; tell me what you mean."
23929
23930 "You don't really know?" said Rosamond, no longer playful, and desiring
23931 nothing better than to tell in order that she might evoke effects.
23932
23933 "No!" he returned, impatiently.
23934
23935 "Don't know that Mr. Casaubon has left it in his will that if Mrs.
23936 Casaubon marries you she is to forfeit all her property?"
23937
23938 "How do you know that it is true?" said Will, eagerly.
23939
23940 "My brother Fred heard it from the Farebrothers." Will started up from
23941 his chair and reached his hat.
23942
23943 "I dare say she likes you better than the property," said Rosamond,
23944 looking at him from a distance.
23945
23946 "Pray don't say any more about it," said Will, in a hoarse undertone
23947 extremely unlike his usual light voice. "It is a foul insult to her
23948 and to me." Then he sat down absently, looking before him, but seeing
23949 nothing.
23950
23951 "Now you are angry with _me_," said Rosamond. "It is too bad to bear
23952 _me_ malice. You ought to be obliged to me for telling you."
23953
23954 "So I am," said Will, abruptly, speaking with that kind of double soul
23955 which belongs to dreamers who answer questions.
23956
23957 "I expect to hear of the marriage," said Rosamond, playfully.
23958
23959 "Never! You will never hear of the marriage!"
23960
23961 With those words uttered impetuously, Will rose, put out his hand to
23962 Rosamond, still with the air of a somnambulist, and went away.
23963
23964 When he was gone, Rosamond left her chair and walked to the other end
23965 of the room, leaning when she got there against a chiffonniere, and
23966 looking out of the window wearily. She was oppressed by ennui, and by
23967 that dissatisfaction which in women's minds is continually turning into
23968 a trivial jealousy, referring to no real claims, springing from no
23969 deeper passion than the vague exactingness of egoism, and yet capable
23970 of impelling action as well as speech. "There really is nothing to
23971 care for much," said poor Rosamond inwardly, thinking of the family at
23972 Quallingham, who did not write to her; and that perhaps Tertius when he
23973 came home would tease her about expenses. She had already secretly
23974 disobeyed him by asking her father to help them, and he had ended
23975 decisively by saying, "I am more likely to want help myself."
23976
23977
23978
23979 CHAPTER LX.
23980
23981 Good phrases are surely, and ever were, very commendable.
23982 --Justice Shallow.
23983
23984
23985 A few days afterwards--it was already the end of August--there was an
23986 occasion which caused some excitement in Middlemarch: the public, if it
23987 chose, was to have the advantage of buying, under the distinguished
23988 auspices of Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, the furniture, books, and pictures
23989 which anybody might see by the handbills to be the best in every kind,
23990 belonging to Edwin Larcher, Esq. This was not one of the sales
23991 indicating the depression of trade; on the contrary, it was due to Mr.
23992 Larcher's great success in the carrying business, which warranted his
23993 purchase of a mansion near Riverston already furnished in high style by
23994 an illustrious Spa physician--furnished indeed with such large
23995 framefuls of expensive flesh-painting in the dining-room, that Mrs.
23996 Larcher was nervous until reassured by finding the subjects to be
23997 Scriptural. Hence the fine opportunity to purchasers which was well
23998 pointed out in the handbills of Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, whose
23999 acquaintance with the history of art enabled him to state that the hall
24000 furniture, to be sold without reserve, comprised a piece of carving by
24001 a contemporary of Gibbons.
24002
24003 At Middlemarch in those times a large sale was regarded as a kind of
24004 festival. There was a table spread with the best cold eatables, as at
24005 a superior funeral; and facilities were offered for that
24006 generous-drinking of cheerful glasses which might lead to generous and
24007 cheerful bidding for undesirable articles. Mr. Larcher's sale was the
24008 more attractive in the fine weather because the house stood just at the
24009 end of the town, with a garden and stables attached, in that pleasant
24010 issue from Middlemarch called the London Road, which was also the road
24011 to the New Hospital and to Mr. Bulstrode's retired residence, known as
24012 the Shrubs. In short, the auction was as good as a fair, and drew all
24013 classes with leisure at command: to some, who risked making bids in
24014 order simply to raise prices, it was almost equal to betting at the
24015 races. The second day, when the best furniture was to be sold,
24016 "everybody" was there; even Mr. Thesiger, the rector of St. Peter's,
24017 had looked in for a short time, wishing to buy the carved table, and
24018 had rubbed elbows with Mr. Bambridge and Mr. Horrock. There was a
24019 wreath of Middlemarch ladies accommodated with seats round the large
24020 table in the dining-room, where Mr. Borthrop Trumbull was mounted with
24021 desk and hammer; but the rows chiefly of masculine faces behind were
24022 often varied by incomings and outgoings both from the door and the
24023 large bow-window opening on to the lawn.
24024
24025 "Everybody" that day did not include Mr. Bulstrode, whose health could
24026 not well endure crowds and draughts. But Mrs. Bulstrode had
24027 particularly wished to have a certain picture--a "Supper at Emmaus,"
24028 attributed in the catalogue to Guido; and at the last moment before the
24029 day of the sale Mr. Bulstrode had called at the office of the
24030 "Pioneer," of which he was now one of the proprietors, to beg of Mr.
24031 Ladislaw as a great favor that he would obligingly use his remarkable
24032 knowledge of pictures on behalf of Mrs. Bulstrode, and judge of the
24033 value of this particular painting--"if," added the scrupulously polite
24034 banker, "attendance at the sale would not interfere with the
24035 arrangements for your departure, which I know is imminent."
24036
24037 This proviso might have sounded rather satirically in Will's ear if he
24038 had been in a mood to care about such satire. It referred to an
24039 understanding entered into many weeks before with the proprietors of
24040 the paper, that he should be at liberty any day he pleased to hand over
24041 the management to the subeditor whom he had been training; since he
24042 wished finally to quit Middlemarch. But indefinite visions of ambition
24043 are weak against the ease of doing what is habitual or beguilingly
24044 agreeable; and we all know the difficulty of carrying out a resolve
24045 when we secretly long that it may turn out to be unnecessary. In such
24046 states of mind the most incredulous person has a private leaning
24047 towards miracle: impossible to conceive how our wish could be
24048 fulfilled, still--very wonderful things have happened! Will did not
24049 confess this weakness to himself, but he lingered. What was the use of
24050 going to London at that time of the year? The Rugby men who would
24051 remember him were not there; and so far as political writing was
24052 concerned, he would rather for a few weeks go on with the "Pioneer."
24053 At the present moment, however, when Mr. Bulstrode was speaking to him,
24054 he had both a strengthened resolve to go and an equally strong resolve
24055 not to go till he had once more seen Dorothea. Hence he replied that
24056 he had reasons for deferring his departure a little, and would be happy
24057 to go to the sale.
24058
24059 Will was in a defiant mood, his consciousness being deeply stung with
24060 the thought that the people who looked at him probably knew a fact
24061 tantamount to an accusation against him as a fellow with low designs
24062 which were to be frustrated by a disposal of property. Like most
24063 people who assert their freedom with regard to conventional
24064 distinction, he was prepared to be sudden and quick at quarrel with any
24065 one who might hint that he had personal reasons for that assertion--that
24066 there was anything in his blood, his bearing, or his character to
24067 which he gave the mask of an opinion. When he was under an irritating
24068 impression of this kind he would go about for days with a defiant look,
24069 the color changing in his transparent skin as if he were on the qui
24070 vive, watching for something which he had to dart upon.
24071
24072 This expression was peculiarly noticeable in him at the sale, and those
24073 who had only seen him in his moods of gentle oddity or of bright
24074 enjoyment would have been struck with a contrast. He was not sorry to
24075 have this occasion for appearing in public before the Middlemarch
24076 tribes of Toller, Hackbutt, and the rest, who looked down on him as an
24077 adventurer, and were in a state of brutal ignorance about Dante--who
24078 sneered at his Polish blood, and were themselves of a breed very much
24079 in need of crossing. He stood in a conspicuous place not far from the
24080 auctioneer, with a fore-finger in each side-pocket and his head thrown
24081 backward, not caring to speak to anybody, though he had been cordially
24082 welcomed as a connoiss_ure_ by Mr. Trumbull, who was enjoying the
24083 utmost activity of his great faculties.
24084
24085 And surely among all men whose vocation requires them to exhibit their
24086 powers of speech, the happiest is a prosperous provincial auctioneer
24087 keenly alive to his own jokes and sensible of his encyclopedic
24088 knowledge. Some saturnine, sour-blooded persons might object to be
24089 constantly insisting on the merits of all articles from boot-jacks to
24090 "Berghems;" but Mr. Borthrop Trumbull had a kindly liquid in his veins;
24091 he was an admirer by nature, and would have liked to have the universe
24092 under his hammer, feeling that it would go at a higher figure for his
24093 recommendation.
24094
24095 Meanwhile Mrs. Larcher's drawing-room furniture was enough for him.
24096 When Will Ladislaw had come in, a second fender, said to have been
24097 forgotten in its right place, suddenly claimed the auctioneer's
24098 enthusiasm, which he distributed on the equitable principle of praising
24099 those things most which were most in need of praise. The fender was of
24100 polished steel, with much lancet-shaped open-work and a sharp edge.
24101
24102 "Now, ladies," said he, "I shall appeal to you. Here is a fender which
24103 at any other sale would hardly be offered with out reserve, being, as I
24104 may say, for quality of steel and quaintness of design, a kind of
24105 thing"--here Mr. Trumbull dropped his voice and became slightly nasal,
24106 trimming his outlines with his left finger--"that might not fall in
24107 with ordinary tastes. Allow me to tell you that by-and-by this style
24108 of workmanship will be the only one in vogue--half-a-crown, you said?
24109 thank you--going at half-a-crown, this characteristic fender; and I
24110 have particular information that the antique style is very much sought
24111 after in high quarters. Three shillings--three-and-sixpence--hold it
24112 well up, Joseph! Look, ladies, at the chastity of the design--I have
24113 no doubt myself that it was turned out in the last century! Four
24114 shillings, Mr. Mawmsey?--four shillings."
24115
24116 "It's not a thing I would put in _my_ drawing-room," said Mrs. Mawmsey,
24117 audibly, for the warning of the rash husband. "I wonder _at_ Mrs.
24118 Larcher. Every blessed child's head that fell against it would be cut
24119 in two. The edge is like a knife."
24120
24121 "Quite true," rejoined Mr. Trumbull, quickly, "and most uncommonly
24122 useful to have a fender at hand that will cut, if you have a leather
24123 shoe-tie or a bit of string that wants cutting and no knife at hand:
24124 many a man has been left hanging because there was no knife to cut him
24125 down. Gentlemen, here's a fender that if you had the misfortune to
24126 hang yourselves would cut you down in no time--with astonishing
24127 celerity--four-and-sixpence--five--five-and-sixpence--an appropriate
24128 thing for a spare bedroom where there was a four-poster and a guest a
24129 little out of his mind--six shillings--thank you, Mr. Clintup--going
24130 at six shillings--going--gone!" The auctioneer's glance, which had
24131 been searching round him with a preternatural susceptibility to all
24132 signs of bidding, here dropped on the paper before him, and his voice
24133 too dropped into a tone of indifferent despatch as he said, "Mr.
24134 Clintup. Be handy, Joseph."
24135
24136 "It was worth six shillings to have a fender you could always tell that
24137 joke on," said Mr. Clintup, laughing low and apologetically to his next
24138 neighbor. He was a diffident though distinguished nurseryman, and
24139 feared that the audience might regard his bid as a foolish one.
24140
24141 Meanwhile Joseph had brought a trayful of small articles. "Now,
24142 ladies," said Mr. Trumbull, taking up one of the articles, "this tray
24143 contains a very recherchy lot--a collection of trifles for the
24144 drawing-room table--and trifles make the sum _of_ human things--nothing
24145 more important than trifles--(yes, Mr. Ladislaw, yes, by-and-by)--but
24146 pass the tray round, Joseph--these bijoux must be examined, ladies.
24147 This I have in my hand is an ingenious contrivance--a sort of
24148 practical rebus, I may call it: here, you see, it looks like an elegant
24149 heart-shaped box, portable--for the pocket; there, again, it becomes
24150 like a splendid double flower--an ornament for the table; and now"--Mr.
24151 Trumbull allowed the flower to fall alarmingly into strings of
24152 heart-shaped leaves--"a book of riddles! No less than five hundred
24153 printed in a beautiful red. Gentlemen, if I had less of a conscience,
24154 I should not wish you to bid high for this lot--I have a longing for
24155 it myself. What can promote innocent mirth, and I may say virtue, more
24156 than a good riddle?--it hinders profane language, and attaches a man to
24157 the society of refined females. This ingenious article itself, without
24158 the elegant domino-box, card-basket, &c., ought alone to give a high
24159 price to the lot. Carried in the pocket it might make an individual
24160 welcome in any society. Four shillings, sir?--four shillings for this
24161 remarkable collection of riddles with the et caeteras. Here is a
24162 sample: 'How must you spell honey to make it catch lady-birds?
24163 Answer--money.' You hear?--lady-birds--honey money. This is an
24164 amusement to sharpen the intellect; it has a sting--it has what we call
24165 satire, and wit without indecency. Four-and-sixpence--five shillings."
24166
24167 The bidding ran on with warming rivalry. Mr. Bowyer was a bidder, and
24168 this was too exasperating. Bowyer couldn't afford it, and only wanted
24169 to hinder every other man from making a figure. The current carried
24170 even Mr. Horrock with it, but this committal of himself to an opinion
24171 fell from him with so little sacrifice of his neutral expression, that
24172 the bid might not have been detected as his but for the friendly oaths
24173 of Mr. Bambridge, who wanted to know what Horrock would do with blasted
24174 stuff only fit for haberdashers given over to that state of perdition
24175 which the horse-dealer so cordially recognized in the majority of
24176 earthly existences. The lot was finally knocked down at a guinea to
24177 Mr. Spilkins, a young Slender of the neighborhood, who was reckless
24178 with his pocket-money and felt his want of memory for riddles.
24179
24180 "Come, Trumbull, this is too bad--you've been putting some old maid's
24181 rubbish into the sale," murmured Mr. Toller, getting close to the
24182 auctioneer. "I want to see how the prints go, and I must be off soon."
24183
24184 "_Im_mediately, Mr. Toller. It was only an act of benevolence which
24185 your noble heart would approve. Joseph! quick with the prints--Lot
24186 235. Now, gentlemen, you who are connoiss_ures_, you are going to have
24187 a treat. Here is an engraving of the Duke of Wellington surrounded by
24188 his staff on the Field of Waterloo; and notwithstanding recent events
24189 which have, as it were, enveloped our great Hero in a cloud, I will be
24190 bold to say--for a man in my line must not be blown about by political
24191 winds--that a finer subject--of the modern order, belonging to our own
24192 time and epoch--the understanding of man could hardly conceive: angels
24193 might, perhaps, but not men, sirs, not men."
24194
24195 "Who painted it?" said Mr. Powderell, much impressed.
24196
24197 "It is a proof before the letter, Mr. Powderell--the painter is not
24198 known," answered Trumbull, with a certain gaspingness in his last
24199 words, after which he pursed up his lips and stared round him.
24200
24201 "I'll bid a pound!" said Mr. Powderell, in a tone of resolved emotion,
24202 as of a man ready to put himself in the breach. Whether from awe or
24203 pity, nobody raised the price on him.
24204
24205 Next came two Dutch prints which Mr. Toller had been eager for, and
24206 after he had secured them he went away. Other prints, and afterwards
24207 some paintings, were sold to leading Middlemarchers who had come with a
24208 special desire for them, and there was a more active movement of the
24209 audience in and out; some, who had bought what they wanted, going away,
24210 others coming in either quite newly or from a temporary visit to the
24211 refreshments which were spread under the marquee on the lawn. It was
24212 this marquee that Mr. Bambridge was bent on buying, and he appeared to
24213 like looking inside it frequently, as a foretaste of its possession.
24214 On the last occasion of his return from it he was observed to bring
24215 with him a new companion, a stranger to Mr. Trumbull and every one
24216 else, whose appearance, however, led to the supposition that he might
24217 be a relative of the horse-dealer's--also "given to indulgence." His
24218 large whiskers, imposing swagger, and swing of the leg, made him a
24219 striking figure; but his suit of black, rather shabby at the edges,
24220 caused the prejudicial inference that he was not able to afford himself
24221 as much indulgence as he liked.
24222
24223 "Who is it you've picked up, Bam?" said Mr. Horrock, aside.
24224
24225 "Ask him yourself," returned Mr. Bambridge. "He said he'd just turned
24226 in from the road."
24227
24228 Mr. Horrock eyed the stranger, who was leaning back against his stick
24229 with one hand, using his toothpick with the other, and looking about
24230 him with a certain restlessness apparently under the silence imposed on
24231 him by circumstances.
24232
24233 At length the "Supper at Emmaus" was brought forward, to Will's immense
24234 relief, for he was getting so tired of the proceedings that he had
24235 drawn back a little and leaned his shoulder against the wall just
24236 behind the auctioneer. He now came forward again, and his eye caught
24237 the conspicuous stranger, who, rather to his surprise, was staring at
24238 him markedly. But Will was immediately appealed to by Mr. Trumbull.
24239
24240 "Yes, Mr. Ladislaw, yes; this interests you as a connoiss_ure_, I
24241 think. It is some pleasure," the auctioneer went on with a rising
24242 fervor, "to have a picture like this to show to a company of ladies and
24243 gentlemen--a picture worth any sum to an individual whose means were on
24244 a level with his judgment. It is a painting of the Italian school--by
24245 the celebrated Guydo, the greatest painter in the world, the chief of
24246 the Old Masters, as they are called--I take it, because they were up
24247 to a thing or two beyond most of us--in possession of secrets now lost
24248 to the bulk of mankind. Let me tell you, gentlemen, I have seen a
24249 great many pictures by the Old Masters, and they are not all up to this
24250 mark--some of them are darker than you might like and not family
24251 subjects. But here is a Guydo--the frame alone is worth pounds--which
24252 any lady might be proud to hang up--a suitable thing for what we call a
24253 refectory in a charitable institution, if any gentleman of the
24254 Corporation wished to show his munifi_cence_. Turn it a little, sir?
24255 yes. Joseph, turn it a little towards Mr. Ladislaw--Mr. Ladislaw,
24256 having been abroad, understands the merit of these things, you observe."
24257
24258 All eyes were for a moment turned towards Will, who said, coolly, "Five
24259 pounds." The auctioneer burst out in deep remonstrance.
24260
24261 "Ah! Mr. Ladislaw! the frame alone is worth that. Ladies and
24262 gentlemen, for the credit of the town! Suppose it should be discovered
24263 hereafter that a gem of art has been amongst us in this town, and
24264 nobody in Middlemarch awake to it. Five guineas--five seven-six--five
24265 ten. Still, ladies, still! It is a gem, and 'Full many a gem,' as the
24266 poet says, has been allowed to go at a nominal price because the public
24267 knew no better, because it was offered in circles where there was--I
24268 was going to say a low feeling, but no!--Six pounds--six guineas--a
24269 Guydo of the first order going at six guineas--it is an insult to
24270 religion, ladies; it touches us all as Christians, gentlemen, that a
24271 subject like this should go at such a low figure--six pounds
24272 ten--seven--"
24273
24274 The bidding was brisk, and Will continued to share in it, remembering
24275 that Mrs. Bulstrode had a strong wish for the picture, and thinking
24276 that he might stretch the price to twelve pounds. But it was knocked
24277 down to him at ten guineas, whereupon he pushed his way towards the
24278 bow-window and went out. He chose to go under the marquee to get a
24279 glass of water, being hot and thirsty: it was empty of other visitors,
24280 and he asked the woman in attendance to fetch him some fresh water; but
24281 before she was well gone he was annoyed to see entering the florid
24282 stranger who had stared at him. It struck Will at this moment that the
24283 man might be one of those political parasitic insects of the bloated
24284 kind who had once or twice claimed acquaintance with him as having
24285 heard him speak on the Reform question, and who might think of getting
24286 a shilling by news. In this light his person, already rather heating
24287 to behold on a summer's day, appeared the more disagreeable; and Will,
24288 half-seated on the elbow of a garden-chair, turned his eyes carefully
24289 away from the comer. But this signified little to our acquaintance Mr.
24290 Raffles, who never hesitated to thrust himself on unwilling
24291 observation, if it suited his purpose to do so. He moved a step or two
24292 till he was in front of Will, and said with full-mouthed haste, "Excuse
24293 me, Mr. Ladislaw--was your mother's name Sarah Dunkirk?"
24294
24295 Will, starting to his feet, moved backward a step, frowning, and saying
24296 with some fierceness, "Yes, sir, it was. And what is that to you?"
24297
24298 It was in Will's nature that the first spark it threw out was a direct
24299 answer of the question and a challenge of the consequences. To have
24300 said, "What is that to you?" in the first instance, would have seemed
24301 like shuffling--as if he minded who knew anything about his origin!
24302
24303 Raffles on his side had not the same eagerness for a collision which
24304 was implied in Ladislaw's threatening air. The slim young fellow with
24305 his girl's complexion looked like a tiger-cat ready to spring on him.
24306 Under such circumstances Mr. Raffles's pleasure in annoying his company
24307 was kept in abeyance.
24308
24309 "No offence, my good sir, no offence! I only remember your mother--knew
24310 her when she was a girl. But it is your father that you feature,
24311 sir. I had the pleasure of seeing your father too. Parents alive, Mr.
24312 Ladislaw?"
24313
24314 "No!" thundered Will, in the same attitude as before.
24315
24316 "Should be glad to do you a service, Mr. Ladislaw--by Jove, I should!
24317 Hope to meet again."
24318
24319 Hereupon Raffles, who had lifted his hat with the last words, turned
24320 himself round with a swing of his leg and walked away. Will looked
24321 after him a moment, and could see that he did not re-enter the
24322 auction-room, but appeared to be walking towards the road. For an
24323 instant he thought that he had been foolish not to let the man go on
24324 talking;--but no! on the whole he preferred doing without knowledge
24325 from that source.
24326
24327 Later in the evening, however, Raffles overtook him in the street, and
24328 appearing either to have forgotten the roughness of his former
24329 reception or to intend avenging it by a forgiving familiarity, greeted
24330 him jovially and walked by his side, remarking at first on the
24331 pleasantness of the town and neighborhood. Will suspected that the man
24332 had been drinking and was considering how to shake him off when Raffles
24333 said--
24334
24335 "I've been abroad myself, Mr. Ladislaw--I've seen the world--used to
24336 parley-vous a little. It was at Boulogne I saw your father--a most
24337 uncommon likeness you are of him, by Jove! mouth--nose--eyes--hair
24338 turned off your brow just like his--a little in the foreign style.
24339 John Bull doesn't do much of that. But your father was very ill when I
24340 saw him. Lord, lord! hands you might see through. You were a small
24341 youngster then. Did he get well?"
24342
24343 "No," said Will, curtly.
24344
24345 "Ah! Well! I've often wondered what became of your mother. She ran
24346 away from her friends when she was a young lass--a proud-spirited
24347 lass, and pretty, by Jove! I knew the reason why she ran away," said
24348 Raffles, winking slowly as he looked sideways at Will.
24349
24350 "You know nothing dishonorable of her, sir," said Will, turning on him
24351 rather savagely. But Mr. Raffles just now was not sensitive to shades
24352 of manner.
24353
24354 "Not a bit!" said he, tossing his head decisively "She was a little too
24355 honorable to like her friends--that was it!" Here Raffles again winked
24356 slowly. "Lord bless you, I knew all about 'em--a little in what you
24357 may call the respectable thieving line--the high style of
24358 receiving-house--none of your holes and corners--first-rate. Slap-up
24359 shop, high profits and no mistake. But Lord! Sarah would have known
24360 nothing about it--a dashing young lady she was--fine
24361 boarding-school--fit for a lord's wife--only Archie Duncan threw it at
24362 her out of spite, because she would have nothing to do with him. And
24363 so she ran away from the whole concern. I travelled for 'em, sir, in a
24364 gentlemanly way--at a high salary. They didn't mind her running away
24365 at first--godly folks, sir, very godly--and she was for the stage. The
24366 son was alive then, and the daughter was at a discount. Hallo! here we
24367 are at the Blue Bull. What do you say, Mr. Ladislaw?--shall we turn in
24368 and have a glass?"
24369
24370 "No, I must say good evening," said Will, dashing up a passage which
24371 led into Lowick Gate, and almost running to get out of Raffles's reach.
24372
24373 He walked a long while on the Lowick road away from the town, glad of
24374 the starlit darkness when it came. He felt as if he had had dirt cast
24375 on him amidst shouts of scorn. There was this to confirm the fellow's
24376 statement--that his mother never would tell him the reason why she had
24377 run away from her family.
24378
24379 Well! what was he, Will Ladislaw, the worse, supposing the truth about
24380 that family to be the ugliest? His mother had braved hardship in order
24381 to separate herself from it. But if Dorothea's friends had known this
24382 story--if the Chettams had known it--they would have had a fine color
24383 to give their suspicions a welcome ground for thinking him unfit to
24384 come near her. However, let them suspect what they pleased, they would
24385 find themselves in the wrong. They would find out that the blood in
24386 his veins was as free from the taint of meanness as theirs.
24387
24388
24389
24390 CHAPTER LXI.
24391
24392 "Inconsistencies," answered Imlac, "cannot both be right,
24393 but imputed to man they may both be true."--Rasselas.
24394
24395
24396 The same night, when Mr. Bulstrode returned from a journey to Brassing
24397 on business, his good wife met him in the entrance-hall and drew him
24398 into his private sitting-room.
24399
24400 "Nicholas," she said, fixing her honest eyes upon him anxiously, "there
24401 has been such a disagreeable man here asking for you--it has made me
24402 quite uncomfortable."
24403
24404 "What kind of man, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, dreadfully certain of
24405 the answer.
24406
24407 "A red-faced man with large whiskers, and most impudent in his manner.
24408 He declared he was an old friend of yours, and said you would be sorry
24409 not to see him. He wanted to wait for you here, but I told him he
24410 could see you at the Bank to-morrow morning. Most impudent he
24411 was!--stared at me, and said his friend Nick had luck in wives. I
24412 don't believe he would have gone away, if Blucher had not happened to
24413 break his chain and come running round on the gravel--for I was in the
24414 garden; so I said, 'You'd better go away--the dog is very fierce, and I
24415 can't hold him.' Do you really know anything of such a man?"
24416
24417 "I believe I know who he is, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, in his usual
24418 subdued voice, "an unfortunate dissolute wretch, whom I helped too much
24419 in days gone by. However, I presume you will not be troubled by him
24420 again. He will probably come to the Bank--to beg, doubtless."
24421
24422 No more was said on the subject until the next day, when Mr. Bulstrode
24423 had returned from the town and was dressing for dinner. His wife, not
24424 sure that he was come home, looked into his dressing-room and saw him
24425 with his coat and cravat off, leaning one arm on a chest of drawers and
24426 staring absently at the ground. He started nervously and looked up as
24427 she entered.
24428
24429 "You look very ill, Nicholas. Is there anything the matter?"
24430
24431 "I have a good deal of pain in my head," said Mr. Bulstrode, who was so
24432 frequently ailing that his wife was always ready to believe in this
24433 cause of depression.
24434
24435 "Sit down and let me sponge it with vinegar."
24436
24437 Physically Mr. Bulstrode did not want the vinegar, but morally the
24438 affectionate attention soothed him. Though always polite, it was his
24439 habit to receive such services with marital coolness, as his wife's
24440 duty. But to-day, while she was bending over him, he said, "You are
24441 very good, Harriet," in a tone which had something new in it to her
24442 ear; she did not know exactly what the novelty was, but her woman's
24443 solicitude shaped itself into a darting thought that he might be going
24444 to have an illness.
24445
24446 "Has anything worried you?" she said. "Did that man come to you at the
24447 Bank?"
24448
24449 "Yes; it was as I had supposed. He is a man who at one time might have
24450 done better. But he has sunk into a drunken debauched creature."
24451
24452 "Is he quite gone away?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, anxiously but for certain
24453 reasons she refrained from adding, "It was very disagreeable to hear
24454 him calling himself a friend of yours." At that moment she would not
24455 have liked to say anything which implied her habitual consciousness
24456 that her husband's earlier connections were not quite on a level with
24457 her own. Not that she knew much about them. That her husband had at
24458 first been employed in a bank, that he had afterwards entered into what
24459 he called city business and gained a fortune before he was
24460 three-and-thirty, that he had married a widow who was much older than
24461 himself--a Dissenter, and in other ways probably of that
24462 disadvantageous quality usually perceptible in a first wife if inquired
24463 into with the dispassionate judgment of a second--was almost as much as
24464 she had cared to learn beyond the glimpses which Mr. Bulstrode's
24465 narrative occasionally gave of his early bent towards religion, his
24466 inclination to be a preacher, and his association with missionary and
24467 philanthropic efforts. She believed in him as an excellent man whose
24468 piety carried a peculiar eminence in belonging to a layman, whose
24469 influence had turned her own mind toward seriousness, and whose share
24470 of perishable good had been the means of raising her own position. But
24471 she also liked to think that it was well in every sense for Mr.
24472 Bulstrode to have won the hand of Harriet Vincy; whose family was
24473 undeniable in a Middlemarch light--a better light surely than any
24474 thrown in London thoroughfares or dissenting chapel-yards. The
24475 unreformed provincial mind distrusted London; and while true religion
24476 was everywhere saving, honest Mrs. Bulstrode was convinced that to be
24477 saved in the Church was more respectable. She so much wished to ignore
24478 towards others that her husband had ever been a London Dissenter, that
24479 she liked to keep it out of sight even in talking to him. He was quite
24480 aware of this; indeed in some respects he was rather afraid of this
24481 ingenuous wife, whose imitative piety and native worldliness were
24482 equally sincere, who had nothing to be ashamed of, and whom he had
24483 married out of a thorough inclination still subsisting. But his fears
24484 were such as belong to a man who cares to maintain his recognized
24485 supremacy: the loss of high consideration from his wife, as from every
24486 one else who did not clearly hate him out of enmity to the truth, would
24487 be as the beginning of death to him. When she said--
24488
24489 "Is he quite gone away?"
24490
24491 "Oh, I trust so," he answered, with an effort to throw as much sober
24492 unconcern into his tone as possible!
24493
24494 But in truth Mr. Bulstrode was very far from a state of quiet trust.
24495 In the interview at the Bank, Raffles had made it evident that his
24496 eagerness to torment was almost as strong in him as any other greed.
24497 He had frankly said that he had turned out of the way to come to
24498 Middlemarch, just to look about him and see whether the neighborhood
24499 would suit him to live in. He had certainly had a few debts to pay
24500 more than he expected, but the two hundred pounds were not gone yet: a
24501 cool five-and-twenty would suffice him to go away with for the present.
24502 What he had wanted chiefly was to see his friend Nick and family, and
24503 know all about the prosperity of a man to whom he was so much attached.
24504 By-and-by he might come back for a longer stay. This time Raffles
24505 declined to be "seen off the premises," as he expressed it--declined to
24506 quit Middlemarch under Bulstrode's eyes. He meant to go by coach the
24507 next day--if he chose.
24508
24509 Bulstrode felt himself helpless. Neither threats nor coaxing could
24510 avail: he could not count on any persistent fear nor on any promise.
24511 On the contrary, he felt a cold certainty at his heart that
24512 Raffles--unless providence sent death to hinder him--would come back
24513 to Middlemarch before long. And that certainty was a terror.
24514
24515 It was not that he was in danger of legal punishment or of beggary: he
24516 was in danger only of seeing disclosed to the judgment of his neighbors
24517 and the mournful perception of his wife certain facts of his past life
24518 which would render him an object of scorn and an opprobrium of the
24519 religion with which he had diligently associated himself. The terror
24520 of being judged sharpens the memory: it sends an inevitable glare over
24521 that long-unvisited past which has been habitually recalled only in
24522 general phrases. Even without memory, the life is bound into one by a
24523 zone of dependence in growth and decay; but intense memory forces a man
24524 to own his blameworthy past. With memory set smarting like a reopened
24525 wound, a man's past is not simply a dead history, an outworn
24526 preparation of the present: it is not a repented error shaken loose
24527 from the life: it is a still quivering part of himself, bringing
24528 shudders and bitter flavors and the tinglings of a merited shame.
24529
24530 Into this second life Bulstrode's past had now risen, only the
24531 pleasures of it seeming to have lost their quality. Night and day,
24532 without interruption save of brief sleep which only wove retrospect and
24533 fear into a fantastic present, he felt the scenes of his earlier life
24534 coming between him and everything else, as obstinately as when we look
24535 through the window from a lighted room, the objects we turn our backs
24536 on are still before us, instead of the grass and the trees. The
24537 successive events inward and outward were there in one view: though
24538 each might be dwelt on in turn, the rest still kept their hold in the
24539 consciousness.
24540
24541 Once more he saw himself the young banker's clerk, with an agreeable
24542 person, as clever in figures as he was fluent in speech and fond of
24543 theological definition: an eminent though young member of a Calvinistic
24544 dissenting church at Highbury, having had striking experience in
24545 conviction of sin and sense of pardon. Again he heard himself called
24546 for as Brother Bulstrode in prayer meetings, speaking on religious
24547 platforms, preaching in private houses. Again he felt himself thinking
24548 of the ministry as possibly his vocation, and inclined towards
24549 missionary labor. That was the happiest time of his life: that was the
24550 spot he would have chosen now to awake in and find the rest a dream.
24551 The people among whom Brother Bulstrode was distinguished were very
24552 few, but they were very near to him, and stirred his satisfaction the
24553 more; his power stretched through a narrow space, but he felt its
24554 effect the more intensely. He believed without effort in the peculiar
24555 work of grace within him, and in the signs that God intended him for
24556 special instrumentality.
24557
24558 Then came the moment of transition; it was with the sense of promotion
24559 he had when he, an orphan educated at a commercial charity-school, was
24560 invited to a fine villa belonging to Mr. Dunkirk, the richest man in
24561 the congregation. Soon he became an intimate there, honored for his
24562 piety by the wife, marked out for his ability by the husband, whose
24563 wealth was due to a flourishing city and west-end trade. That was the
24564 setting-in of a new current for his ambition, directing his prospects
24565 of "instrumentality" towards the uniting of distinguished religious
24566 gifts with successful business.
24567
24568 By-and-by came a decided external leading: a confidential subordinate
24569 partner died, and nobody seemed to the principal so well fitted to fill
24570 the severely felt vacancy as his young friend Bulstrode, if he would
24571 become confidential accountant. The offer was accepted. The business
24572 was a pawnbroker's, of the most magnificent sort both in extent and
24573 profits; and on a short acquaintance with it Bulstrode became aware
24574 that one source of magnificent profit was the easy reception of any
24575 goods offered, without strict inquiry as to where they came from. But
24576 there was a branch house at the west end, and no pettiness or dinginess
24577 to give suggestions of shame.
24578
24579 He remembered his first moments of shrinking. They were private, and
24580 were filled with arguments; some of these taking the form of prayer.
24581 The business was established and had old roots; is it not one thing to
24582 set up a new gin-palace and another to accept an investment in an old
24583 one? The profits made out of lost souls--where can the line be drawn
24584 at which they begin in human transactions? Was it not even God's way
24585 of saving His chosen? "Thou knowest,"--the young Bulstrode had said
24586 then, as the older Bulstrode was saying now--"Thou knowest how loose
24587 my soul sits from these things--how I view them all as implements for
24588 tilling Thy garden rescued here and there from the wilderness."
24589
24590 Metaphors and precedents were not wanting; peculiar spiritual
24591 experiences were not wanting which at last made the retention of his
24592 position seem a service demanded of him: the vista of a fortune had
24593 already opened itself, and Bulstrode's shrinking remained private. Mr.
24594 Dunkirk had never expected that there would be any shrinking at all: he
24595 had never conceived that trade had anything to do with the scheme of
24596 salvation. And it was true that Bulstrode found himself carrying on
24597 two distinct lives; his religious activity could not be incompatible
24598 with his business as soon as he had argued himself into not feeling it
24599 incompatible.
24600
24601 Mentally surrounded with that past again, Bulstrode had the same
24602 pleas--indeed, the years had been perpetually spinning them into
24603 intricate thickness, like masses of spider-web, padding the moral
24604 sensibility; nay, as age made egoism more eager but less enjoying, his
24605 soul had become more saturated with the belief that he did everything
24606 for God's sake, being indifferent to it for his own. And yet--if he
24607 could be back in that far-off spot with his youthful poverty--why, then
24608 he would choose to be a missionary.
24609
24610 But the train of causes in which he had locked himself went on. There
24611 was trouble in the fine villa at Highbury. Years before, the only
24612 daughter had run away, defied her parents, and gone on the stage; and
24613 now the only boy died, and after a short time Mr. Dunkirk died also.
24614 The wife, a simple pious woman, left with all the wealth in and out of
24615 the magnificent trade, of which she never knew the precise nature, had
24616 come to believe in Bulstrode, and innocently adore him as women often
24617 adore their priest or "man-made" minister. It was natural that after a
24618 time marriage should have been thought of between them. But Mrs.
24619 Dunkirk had qualms and yearnings about her daughter, who had long been
24620 regarded as lost both to God and her parents. It was known that the
24621 daughter had married, but she was utterly gone out of sight. The
24622 mother, having lost her boy, imagined a grandson, and wished in a
24623 double sense to reclaim her daughter. If she were found, there would
24624 be a channel for property--perhaps a wide one--in the provision for
24625 several grandchildren. Efforts to find her must be made before Mrs.
24626 Dunkirk would marry again. Bulstrode concurred; but after
24627 advertisement as well as other modes of inquiry had been tried, the
24628 mother believed that her daughter was not to be found, and consented to
24629 marry without reservation of property.
24630
24631 The daughter had been found; but only one man besides Bulstrode knew
24632 it, and he was paid for keeping silence and carrying himself away.
24633
24634 That was the bare fact which Bulstrode was now forced to see in the
24635 rigid outline with which acts present themselves onlookers. But for
24636 himself at that distant time, and even now in burning memory, the fact
24637 was broken into little sequences, each justified as it came by
24638 reasonings which seemed to prove it righteous. Bulstrode's course up
24639 to that time had, he thought, been sanctioned by remarkable
24640 providences, appearing to point the way for him to be the agent in
24641 making the best use of a large property and withdrawing it from
24642 perversion. Death and other striking dispositions, such as feminine
24643 trustfulness, had come; and Bulstrode would have adopted Cromwell's
24644 words--"Do you call these bare events? The Lord pity you!" The
24645 events were comparatively small, but the essential condition was
24646 there--namely, that they were in favor of his own ends. It was easy
24647 for him to settle what was due from him to others by inquiring what
24648 were God's intentions with regard to himself. Could it be for God's
24649 service that this fortune should in any considerable proportion go to a
24650 young woman and her husband who were given up to the lightest pursuits,
24651 and might scatter it abroad in triviality--people who seemed to lie
24652 outside the path of remarkable providences? Bulstrode had never said
24653 to himself beforehand, "The daughter shall not be found"--nevertheless
24654 when the moment came he kept her existence hidden; and when other
24655 moments followed, he soothed the mother with consolation in the
24656 probability that the unhappy young woman might be no more.
24657
24658 There were hours in which Bulstrode felt that his action was
24659 unrighteous; but how could he go back? He had mental exercises, called
24660 himself nought, laid hold on redemption, and went on in his course of
24661 instrumentality. And after five years Death again came to widen his
24662 path, by taking away his wife. He did gradually withdraw his capital,
24663 but he did not make the sacrifices requisite to put an end to the
24664 business, which was carried on for thirteen years afterwards before it
24665 finally collapsed. Meanwhile Nicholas Bulstrode had used his hundred
24666 thousand discreetly, and was become provincially, solidly important--a
24667 banker, a Churchman, a public benefactor; also a sleeping partner in
24668 trading concerns, in which his ability was directed to economy in the
24669 raw material, as in the case of the dyes which rotted Mr. Vincy's silk.
24670 And now, when this respectability had lasted undisturbed for nearly
24671 thirty years--when all that preceded it had long lain benumbed in the
24672 consciousness--that past had risen and immersed his thought as if with
24673 the terrible irruption of a new sense overburthening the feeble being.
24674
24675 Meanwhile, in his conversation with Raffles, he had learned something
24676 momentous, something which entered actively into the struggle of his
24677 longings and terrors. There, he thought, lay an opening towards
24678 spiritual, perhaps towards material rescue.
24679
24680 The spiritual kind of rescue was a genuine need with him. There may be
24681 coarse hypocrites, who consciously affect beliefs and emotions for the
24682 sake of gulling the world, but Bulstrode was not one of them. He was
24683 simply a man whose desires had been stronger than his theoretic
24684 beliefs, and who had gradually explained the gratification of his
24685 desires into satisfactory agreement with those beliefs. If this be
24686 hypocrisy, it is a process which shows itself occasionally in us all,
24687 to whatever confession we belong, and whether we believe in the future
24688 perfection of our race or in the nearest date fixed for the end of the
24689 world; whether we regard the earth as a putrefying nidus for a saved
24690 remnant, including ourselves, or have a passionate belief in the
24691 solidarity of mankind.
24692
24693 The service he could do to the cause of religion had been through life
24694 the ground he alleged to himself for his choice of action: it had been
24695 the motive which he had poured out in his prayers. Who would use money
24696 and position better than he meant to use them? Who could surpass him
24697 in self-abhorrence and exaltation of God's cause? And to Mr. Bulstrode
24698 God's cause was something distinct from his own rectitude of conduct:
24699 it enforced a discrimination of God's enemies, who were to be used
24700 merely as instruments, and whom it would be as well if possible to keep
24701 out of money and consequent influence. Also, profitable investments in
24702 trades where the power of the prince of this world showed its most
24703 active devices, became sanctified by a right application of the profits
24704 in the hands of God's servant.
24705
24706 This implicit reasoning is essentially no more peculiar to evangelical
24707 belief than the use of wide phrases for narrow motives is peculiar to
24708 Englishmen. There is no general doctrine which is not capable of
24709 eating out our morality if unchecked by the deep-seated habit of direct
24710 fellow-feeling with individual fellow-men.
24711
24712 But a man who believes in something else than his own greed, has
24713 necessarily a conscience or standard to which he more or less adapts
24714 himself. Bulstrode's standard had been his serviceableness to God's
24715 cause: "I am sinful and nought--a vessel to be consecrated by use--but
24716 use me!"--had been the mould into which he had constrained his immense
24717 need of being something important and predominating. And now had come
24718 a moment in which that mould seemed in danger of being broken and
24719 utterly cast away.
24720
24721 What if the acts he had reconciled himself to because they made him a
24722 stronger instrument of the divine glory, were to become the pretext of
24723 the scoffer, and a darkening of that glory? If this were to be the
24724 ruling of Providence, he was cast out from the temple as one who had
24725 brought unclean offerings.
24726
24727 He had long poured out utterances of repentance. But today a
24728 repentance had come which was of a bitterer flavor, and a threatening
24729 Providence urged him to a kind of propitiation which was not simply a
24730 doctrinal transaction. The divine tribunal had changed its aspect for
24731 him; self-prostration was no longer enough, and he must bring
24732 restitution in his hand. It was really before his God that Bulstrode
24733 was about to attempt such restitution as seemed possible: a great dread
24734 had seized his susceptible frame, and the scorching approach of shame
24735 wrought in him a new spiritual need. Night and day, while the
24736 resurgent threatening past was making a conscience within him, he was
24737 thinking by what means he could recover peace and trust--by what
24738 sacrifice he could stay the rod. His belief in these moments of dread
24739 was, that if he spontaneously did something right, God would save him
24740 from the consequences of wrong-doing. For religion can only change when
24741 the emotions which fill it are changed; and the religion of personal
24742 fear remains nearly at the level of the savage.
24743
24744 He had seen Raffles actually going away on the Brassing coach, and this
24745 was a temporary relief; it removed the pressure of an immediate dread,
24746 but did not put an end to the spiritual conflict and the need to win
24747 protection. At last he came to a difficult resolve, and wrote a letter
24748 to Will Ladislaw, begging him to be at the Shrubs that evening for a
24749 private interview at nine o'clock. Will had felt no particular surprise
24750 at the request, and connected it with some new notions about the
24751 "Pioneer;" but when he was shown into Mr. Bulstrode's private room, he
24752 was struck with the painfully worn look on the banker's face, and was
24753 going to say, "Are you ill?" when, checking himself in that abruptness,
24754 he only inquired after Mrs. Bulstrode, and her satisfaction with the
24755 picture bought for her.
24756
24757 "Thank you, she is quite satisfied; she has gone out with her daughters
24758 this evening. I begged you to come, Mr. Ladislaw, because I have a
24759 communication of a very private--indeed, I will say, of a sacredly
24760 confidential nature, which I desire to make to you. Nothing, I dare
24761 say, has been farther from your thoughts than that there had been
24762 important ties in the past which could connect your history with mine."
24763
24764 Will felt something like an electric shock. He was already in a state
24765 of keen sensitiveness and hardly allayed agitation on the subject of
24766 ties in the past, and his presentiments were not agreeable. It seemed
24767 like the fluctuations of a dream--as if the action begun by that loud
24768 bloated stranger were being carried on by this pale-eyed sickly looking
24769 piece of respectability, whose subdued tone and glib formality of
24770 speech were at this moment almost as repulsive to him as their
24771 remembered contrast. He answered, with a marked change of color--
24772
24773 "No, indeed, nothing."
24774
24775 "You see before you, Mr. Ladislaw, a man who is deeply stricken. But
24776 for the urgency of conscience and the knowledge that I am before the
24777 bar of One who seeth not as man seeth, I should be under no compulsion
24778 to make the disclosure which has been my object in asking you to come
24779 here to-night. So far as human laws go, you have no claim on me
24780 whatever."
24781
24782 Will was even more uncomfortable than wondering. Mr. Bulstrode had
24783 paused, leaning his head on his hand, and looking at the floor. But he
24784 now fixed his examining glance on Will and said--
24785
24786 "I am told that your mother's name was Sarah Dunkirk, and that she ran
24787 away from her friends to go on the stage. Also, that your father was
24788 at one time much emaciated by illness. May I ask if you can confirm
24789 these statements?"
24790
24791 "Yes, they are all true," said Will, struck with the order in which an
24792 inquiry had come, that might have been expected to be preliminary to
24793 the banker's previous hints. But Mr. Bulstrode had to-night followed
24794 the order of his emotions; he entertained no doubt that the opportunity
24795 for restitution had come, and he had an overpowering impulse towards
24796 the penitential expression by which he was deprecating chastisement.
24797
24798 "Do you know any particulars of your mother's family?" he continued.
24799
24800 "No; she never liked to speak of them. She was a very generous,
24801 honorable woman," said Will, almost angrily.
24802
24803 "I do not wish to allege anything against her. Did she never mention
24804 her mother to you at all?"
24805
24806 "I have heard her say that she thought her mother did not know the
24807 reason of her running away. She said 'poor mother' in a pitying tone."
24808
24809 "That mother became my wife," said Bulstrode, and then paused a moment
24810 before he added, "you have a claim on me, Mr. Ladislaw: as I said
24811 before, not a legal claim, but one which my conscience recognizes. I
24812 was enriched by that marriage--a result which would probably not have
24813 taken place--certainly not to the same extent--if your grandmother
24814 could have discovered her daughter. That daughter, I gather, is no
24815 longer living!"
24816
24817 "No," said Will, feeling suspicion and repugnance rising so strongly
24818 within him, that without quite knowing what he did, he took his hat
24819 from the floor and stood up. The impulse within him was to reject the
24820 disclosed connection.
24821
24822 "Pray be seated, Mr. Ladislaw," said Bulstrode, anxiously. "Doubtless
24823 you are startled by the suddenness of this discovery. But I entreat
24824 your patience with one who is already bowed down by inward trial."
24825
24826 Will reseated himself, feeling some pity which was half contempt for
24827 this voluntary self-abasement of an elderly man.
24828
24829 "It is my wish, Mr. Ladislaw, to make amends for the deprivation which
24830 befell your mother. I know that you are without fortune, and I wish to
24831 supply you adequately from a store which would have probably already
24832 been yours had your grandmother been certain of your mother's existence
24833 and been able to find her."
24834
24835 Mr. Bulstrode paused. He felt that he was performing a striking piece
24836 of scrupulosity in the judgment of his auditor, and a penitential act
24837 in the eyes of God. He had no clew to the state of Will Ladislaw's
24838 mind, smarting as it was from the clear hints of Raffles, and with its
24839 natural quickness in construction stimulated by the expectation of
24840 discoveries which he would have been glad to conjure back into
24841 darkness. Will made no answer for several moments, till Mr. Bulstrode,
24842 who at the end of his speech had cast his eyes on the floor, now raised
24843 them with an examining glance, which Will met fully, saying--
24844
24845 "I suppose you did know of my mother's existence, and knew where she
24846 might have been found."
24847
24848 Bulstrode shrank--there was a visible quivering in his face and hands.
24849 He was totally unprepared to have his advances met in this way, or to
24850 find himself urged into more revelation than he had beforehand set down
24851 as needful. But at that moment he dared not tell a lie, and he felt
24852 suddenly uncertain of his ground which he had trodden with some
24853 confidence before.
24854
24855 "I will not deny that you conjecture rightly," he answered, with a
24856 faltering in his tone. "And I wish to make atonement to you as the one
24857 still remaining who has suffered a loss through me. You enter, I
24858 trust, into my purpose, Mr. Ladislaw, which has a reference to higher
24859 than merely human claims, and as I have already said, is entirely
24860 independent of any legal compulsion. I am ready to narrow my own
24861 resources and the prospects of my family by binding myself to allow you
24862 five hundred pounds yearly during my life, and to leave you a
24863 proportional capital at my death--nay, to do still more, if more should
24864 be definitely necessary to any laudable project on your part." Mr.
24865 Bulstrode had gone on to particulars in the expectation that these
24866 would work strongly on Ladislaw, and merge other feelings in grateful
24867 acceptance.
24868
24869 But Will was looking as stubborn as possible, with his lip pouting and
24870 his fingers in his side-pockets. He was not in the least touched, and
24871 said firmly,--
24872
24873 "Before I make any reply to your proposition, Mr. Bulstrode, I must beg
24874 you to answer a question or two. Were you connected with the business
24875 by which that fortune you speak of was originally made?"
24876
24877 Mr. Bulstrode's thought was, "Raffles has told him." How could he
24878 refuse to answer when he had volunteered what drew forth the question?
24879 He answered, "Yes."
24880
24881 "And was that business--or was it not--a thoroughly dishonorable
24882 one--nay, one that, if its nature had been made public, might have
24883 ranked those concerned in it with thieves and convicts?"
24884
24885 Will's tone had a cutting bitterness: he was moved to put his question
24886 as nakedly as he could.
24887
24888 Bulstrode reddened with irrepressible anger. He had been prepared for
24889 a scene of self-abasement, but his intense pride and his habit of
24890 supremacy overpowered penitence, and even dread, when this young man,
24891 whom he had meant to benefit, turned on him with the air of a judge.
24892
24893 "The business was established before I became connected with it, sir;
24894 nor is it for you to institute an inquiry of that kind," he answered,
24895 not raising his voice, but speaking with quick defiantness.
24896
24897 "Yes, it is," said Will, starting up again with his hat in his hand.
24898 "It is eminently mine to ask such questions, when I have to decide
24899 whether I will have transactions with you and accept your money. My
24900 unblemished honor is important to me. It is important to me to have no
24901 stain on my birth and connections. And now I find there is a stain
24902 which I can't help. My mother felt it, and tried to keep as clear of
24903 it as she could, and so will I. You shall keep your ill-gotten money.
24904 If I had any fortune of my own, I would willingly pay it to any one who
24905 could disprove what you have told me. What I have to thank you for is
24906 that you kept the money till now, when I can refuse it. It ought to
24907 lie with a man's self that he is a gentleman. Good-night, sir."
24908
24909 Bulstrode was going to speak, but Will, with determined quickness, was
24910 out of the room in an instant, and in another the hall-door had closed
24911 behind him. He was too strongly possessed with passionate rebellion
24912 against this inherited blot which had been thrust on his knowledge to
24913 reflect at present whether he had not been too hard on Bulstrode--too
24914 arrogantly merciless towards a man of sixty, who was making efforts at
24915 retrieval when time had rendered them vain.
24916
24917 No third person listening could have thoroughly understood the
24918 impetuosity of Will's repulse or the bitterness of his words. No one
24919 but himself then knew how everything connected with the sentiment of
24920 his own dignity had an immediate bearing for him on his relation to
24921 Dorothea and to Mr. Casaubon's treatment of him. And in the rush of
24922 impulses by which he flung back that offer of Bulstrode's there was
24923 mingled the sense that it would have been impossible for him ever to
24924 tell Dorothea that he had accepted it.
24925
24926 As for Bulstrode--when Will was gone he suffered a violent reaction,
24927 and wept like a woman. It was the first time he had encountered an
24928 open expression of scorn from any man higher than Raffles; and with
24929 that scorn hurrying like venom through his system, there was no
24930 sensibility left to consolations. But the relief of weeping had to be
24931 checked. His wife and daughters soon came home from hearing the
24932 address of an Oriental missionary, and were full of regret that papa
24933 had not heard, in the first instance, the interesting things which they
24934 tried to repeat to him.
24935
24936 Perhaps, through all other hidden thoughts, the one that breathed most
24937 comfort was, that Will Ladislaw at least was not likely to publish what
24938 had taken place that evening.
24939
24940
24941
24942 CHAPTER LXII.
24943
24944 "He was a squyer of lowe degre,
24945 That loved the king's daughter of Hungrie.
24946 --Old Romance.
24947
24948
24949 Will Ladislaw's mind was now wholly bent on seeing Dorothea again, and
24950 forthwith quitting Middlemarch. The morning after his agitating scene
24951 with Bulstrode he wrote a brief letter to her, saying that various
24952 causes had detained him in the neighborhood longer than he had
24953 expected, and asking her permission to call again at Lowick at some
24954 hour which she would mention on the earliest possible day, he being
24955 anxious to depart, but unwilling to do so until she had granted him an
24956 interview. He left the letter at the office, ordering the messenger to
24957 carry it to Lowick Manor, and wait for an answer.
24958
24959 Ladislaw felt the awkwardness of asking for more last words. His
24960 former farewell had been made in the hearing of Sir James Chettam, and
24961 had been announced as final even to the butler. It is certainly trying
24962 to a man's dignity to reappear when he is not expected to do so: a
24963 first farewell has pathos in it, but to come back for a second lends an
24964 opening to comedy, and it was possible even that there might be bitter
24965 sneers afloat about Will's motives for lingering. Still it was on the
24966 whole more satisfactory to his feeling to take the directest means of
24967 seeing Dorothea, than to use any device which might give an air of
24968 chance to a meeting of which he wished her to understand that it was
24969 what he earnestly sought. When he had parted from her before, he had
24970 been in ignorance of facts which gave a new aspect to the relation
24971 between them, and made a more absolute severance than he had then
24972 believed in. He knew nothing of Dorothea's private fortune, and being
24973 little used to reflect on such matters, took it for granted that
24974 according to Mr. Casaubon's arrangement marriage to him, Will Ladislaw,
24975 would mean that she consented to be penniless. That was not what he
24976 could wish for even in his secret heart, or even if she had been ready
24977 to meet such hard contrast for his sake. And then, too, there was the
24978 fresh smart of that disclosure about his mother's family, which if
24979 known would be an added reason why Dorothea's friends should look down
24980 upon him as utterly below her. The secret hope that after some years
24981 he might come back with the sense that he had at least a personal value
24982 equal to her wealth, seemed now the dreamy continuation of a dream.
24983 This change would surely justify him in asking Dorothea to receive him
24984 once more.
24985
24986 But Dorothea on that morning was not at home to receive Will's note.
24987 In consequence of a letter from her uncle announcing his intention to
24988 be at home in a week, she had driven first to Freshitt to carry the
24989 news, meaning to go on to the Grange to deliver some orders with which
24990 her uncle had intrusted her--thinking, as he said, "a little mental
24991 occupation of this sort good for a widow."
24992
24993 If Will Ladislaw could have overheard some of the talk at Freshitt that
24994 morning, he would have felt all his suppositions confirmed as to the
24995 readiness of certain people to sneer at his lingering in the
24996 neighborhood. Sir James, indeed, though much relieved concerning
24997 Dorothea, had been on the watch to learn Ladislaw's movements, and had
24998 an instructed informant in Mr. Standish, who was necessarily in his
24999 confidence on this matter. That Ladislaw had stayed in Middlemarch
25000 nearly two months after he had declared that he was going immediately,
25001 was a fact to embitter Sir James's suspicions, or at least to justify
25002 his aversion to a "young fellow" whom he represented to himself as
25003 slight, volatile, and likely enough to show such recklessness as
25004 naturally went along with a position unriveted by family ties or a
25005 strict profession. But he had just heard something from Standish
25006 which, while it justified these surmises about Will, offered a means of
25007 nullifying all danger with regard to Dorothea.
25008
25009 Unwonted circumstances may make us all rather unlike ourselves: there
25010 are conditions under which the most majestic person is obliged to
25011 sneeze, and our emotions are liable to be acted on in the same
25012 incongruous manner. Good Sir James was this morning so far unlike
25013 himself that he was irritably anxious to say something to Dorothea on a
25014 subject which he usually avoided as if it had been a matter of shame to
25015 them both. He could not use Celia as a medium, because he did not
25016 choose that she should know the kind of gossip he had in his mind; and
25017 before Dorothea happened to arrive he had been trying to imagine how,
25018 with his shyness and unready tongue, he could ever manage to introduce
25019 his communication. Her unexpected presence brought him to utter
25020 hopelessness in his own power of saying anything unpleasant; but
25021 desperation suggested a resource; he sent the groom on an unsaddled
25022 horse across the park with a pencilled note to Mrs. Cadwallader, who
25023 already knew the gossip, and would think it no compromise of herself to
25024 repeat it as often as required.
25025
25026 Dorothea was detained on the good pretext that Mr. Garth, whom she
25027 wanted to see, was expected at the hall within the hour, and she was
25028 still talking to Caleb on the gravel when Sir James, on the watch for
25029 the rector's wife, saw her coming and met her with the needful hints.
25030
25031 "Enough! I understand,"--said Mrs. Cadwallader. "You shall be
25032 innocent. I am such a blackamoor that I cannot smirch myself."
25033
25034 "I don't mean that it's of any consequence," said Sir James, disliking
25035 that Mrs. Cadwallader should understand too much. "Only it is
25036 desirable that Dorothea should know there are reasons why she should
25037 not receive him again; and I really can't say so to her. It will come
25038 lightly from you."
25039
25040 It came very lightly indeed. When Dorothea quitted Caleb and turned to
25041 meet them, it appeared that Mrs. Cadwallader had stepped across the
25042 park by the merest chance in the world, just to chat with Celia in a
25043 matronly way about the baby. And so Mr. Brooke was coming back?
25044 Delightful!--coming back, it was to be hoped, quite cured of
25045 Parliamentary fever and pioneering. Apropos of the "Pioneer"--somebody
25046 had prophesied that it would soon be like a dying dolphin, and turn all
25047 colors for want of knowing how to help itself, because Mr. Brooke's
25048 protege, the brilliant young Ladislaw, was gone or going. Had Sir
25049 James heard that?
25050
25051 The three were walking along the gravel slowly, and Sir James, turning
25052 aside to whip a shrub, said he had heard something of that sort.
25053
25054 "All false!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "He is not gone, or going,
25055 apparently; the 'Pioneer' keeps its color, and Mr. Orlando Ladislaw is
25056 making a sad dark-blue scandal by warbling continually with your Mr.
25057 Lydgate's wife, who they tell me is as pretty as pretty can be. It
25058 seems nobody ever goes into the house without finding this young
25059 gentleman lying on the rug or warbling at the piano. But the people in
25060 manufacturing towns are always disreputable."
25061
25062 "You began by saying that one report was false, Mrs. Cadwallader, and I
25063 believe this is false too," said Dorothea, with indignant energy; "at
25064 least, I feel sure it is a misrepresentation. I will not hear any evil
25065 spoken of Mr. Ladislaw; he has already suffered too much injustice."
25066
25067 Dorothea when thoroughly moved cared little what any one thought of her
25068 feelings; and even if she had been able to reflect, she would have held
25069 it petty to keep silence at injurious words about Will from fear of
25070 being herself misunderstood. Her face was flushed and her lip trembled.
25071
25072 Sir James, glancing at her, repented of his stratagem; but Mrs.
25073 Cadwallader, equal to all occasions, spread the palms of her hands
25074 outward and said--"Heaven grant it, my dear!--I mean that all bad tales
25075 about anybody may be false. But it is a pity that young Lydgate should
25076 have married one of these Middlemarch girls. Considering he's a son of
25077 somebody, he might have got a woman with good blood in her veins, and
25078 not too young, who would have put up with his profession. There's
25079 Clara Harfager, for instance, whose friends don't know what to do with
25080 her; and she has a portion. Then we might have had her among us.
25081 However!--it's no use being wise for other people. Where is Celia?
25082 Pray let us go in."
25083
25084 "I am going on immediately to Tipton," said Dorothea, rather haughtily.
25085 "Good-by."
25086
25087 Sir James could say nothing as he accompanied her to the carriage. He
25088 was altogether discontented with the result of a contrivance which had
25089 cost him some secret humiliation beforehand.
25090
25091 Dorothea drove along between the berried hedgerows and the shorn
25092 corn-fields, not seeing or hearing anything around. The tears came and
25093 rolled down her cheeks, but she did not know it. The world, it seemed,
25094 was turning ugly and hateful, and there was no place for her
25095 trustfulness. "It is not true--it is not true!" was the voice within
25096 her that she listened to; but all the while a remembrance to which
25097 there had always clung a vague uneasiness would thrust itself on her
25098 attention--the remembrance of that day when she had found Will Ladislaw
25099 with Mrs. Lydgate, and had heard his voice accompanied by the piano.
25100
25101 "He said he would never do anything that I disapproved--I wish I could
25102 have told him that I disapproved of that," said poor Dorothea,
25103 inwardly, feeling a strange alternation between anger with Will and the
25104 passionate defence of him. "They all try to blacken him before me; but
25105 I will care for no pain, if he is not to blame. I always believed he
25106 was good."--These were her last thoughts before she felt that the
25107 carriage was passing under the archway of the lodge-gate at the Grange,
25108 when she hurriedly pressed her handkerchief to her face and began to
25109 think of her errands. The coachman begged leave to take out the horses
25110 for half an hour as there was something wrong with a shoe; and
25111 Dorothea, having the sense that she was going to rest, took off her
25112 gloves and bonnet, while she was leaning against a statue in the
25113 entrance-hall, and talking to the housekeeper. At last she said--
25114
25115 "I must stay here a little, Mrs. Kell. I will go into the library and
25116 write you some memoranda from my uncle's letter, if you will open the
25117 shutters for me."
25118
25119 "The shutters are open, madam," said Mrs. Kell, following Dorothea, who
25120 had walked along as she spoke. "Mr. Ladislaw is there, looking for
25121 something."
25122
25123 (Will had come to fetch a portfolio of his own sketches which he had
25124 missed in the act of packing his movables, and did not choose to leave
25125 behind.)
25126
25127 Dorothea's heart seemed to turn over as if it had had a blow, but she
25128 was not perceptibly checked: in truth, the sense that Will was there
25129 was for the moment all-satisfying to her, like the sight of something
25130 precious that one has lost. When she reached the door she said to Mrs.
25131 Kell--
25132
25133 "Go in first, and tell him that I am here."
25134
25135 Will had found his portfolio, and had laid it on the table at the far
25136 end of the room, to turn over the sketches and please himself by
25137 looking at the memorable piece of art which had a relation to nature
25138 too mysterious for Dorothea. He was smiling at it still, and shaking
25139 the sketches into order with the thought that he might find a letter
25140 from her awaiting him at Middlemarch, when Mrs. Kell close to his elbow
25141 said--
25142
25143 "Mrs. Casaubon is coming in, sir."
25144
25145 Will turned round quickly, and the next moment Dorothea was entering.
25146 As Mrs. Kell closed the door behind her they met: each was looking at
25147 the other, and consciousness was overflowed by something that
25148 suppressed utterance. It was not confusion that kept them silent, for
25149 they both felt that parting was near, and there is no shamefacedness in
25150 a sad parting.
25151
25152 She moved automatically towards her uncle's chair against the
25153 writing-table, and Will, after drawing it out a little for her, went a
25154 few paces off and stood opposite to her.
25155
25156 "Pray sit down," said Dorothea, crossing her hands on her lap; "I am
25157 very glad you were here." Will thought that her face looked just as it
25158 did when she first shook hands with him in Rome; for her widow's cap,
25159 fixed in her bonnet, had gone off with it, and he could see that she
25160 had lately been shedding tears. But the mixture of anger in her
25161 agitation had vanished at the sight of him; she had been used, when
25162 they were face to face, always to feel confidence and the happy freedom
25163 which comes with mutual understanding, and how could other people's
25164 words hinder that effect on a sudden? Let the music which can take
25165 possession of our frame and fill the air with joy for us, sound once
25166 more--what does it signify that we heard it found fault with in its
25167 absence?
25168
25169 "I have sent a letter to Lowick Manor to-day, asking leave to see you,"
25170 said Will, seating himself opposite to her. "I am going away
25171 immediately, and I could not go without speaking to you again."
25172
25173 "I thought we had parted when you came to Lowick many weeks ago--you
25174 thought you were going then," said Dorothea, her voice trembling a
25175 little.
25176
25177 "Yes; but I was in ignorance then of things which I know now--things
25178 which have altered my feelings about the future. When I saw you
25179 before, I was dreaming that I might come back some day. I don't think
25180 I ever shall--now." Will paused here.
25181
25182 "You wished me to know the reasons?" said Dorothea, timidly.
25183
25184 "Yes," said Will, impetuously, shaking his head backward, and looking
25185 away from her with irritation in his face. "Of course I must wish it.
25186 I have been grossly insulted in your eyes and in the eyes of others.
25187 There has been a mean implication against my character. I wish you to
25188 know that under no circumstances would I have lowered myself by--under
25189 no circumstances would I have given men the chance of saying that I
25190 sought money under the pretext of seeking--something else. There was
25191 no need of other safeguard against me--the safeguard of wealth was
25192 enough."
25193
25194 Will rose from his chair with the last word and went--he hardly knew
25195 where; but it was to the projecting window nearest him, which had been
25196 open as now about the same season a year ago, when he and Dorothea had
25197 stood within it and talked together. Her whole heart was going out at
25198 this moment in sympathy with Will's indignation: she only wanted to
25199 convince him that she had never done him injustice, and he seemed to
25200 have turned away from her as if she too had been part of the unfriendly
25201 world.
25202
25203 "It would be very unkind of you to suppose that I ever attributed any
25204 meanness to you," she began. Then in her ardent way, wanting to plead
25205 with him, she moved from her chair and went in front of him to her old
25206 place in the window, saying, "Do you suppose that I ever disbelieved in
25207 you?"
25208
25209 When Will saw her there, he gave a start and moved backward out of the
25210 window, without meeting her glance. Dorothea was hurt by this movement
25211 following up the previous anger of his tone. She was ready to say that
25212 it was as hard on her as on him, and that she was helpless; but those
25213 strange particulars of their relation which neither of them could
25214 explicitly mention kept her always in dread of saying too much. At
25215 this moment she had no belief that Will would in any case have wanted
25216 to marry her, and she feared using words which might imply such a
25217 belief. She only said earnestly, recurring to his last word--
25218
25219 "I am sure no safeguard was ever needed against you."
25220
25221 Will did not answer. In the stormy fluctuation of his feelings these
25222 words of hers seemed to him cruelly neutral, and he looked pale and
25223 miserable after his angry outburst. He went to the table and fastened
25224 up his portfolio, while Dorothea looked at him from the distance. They
25225 were wasting these last moments together in wretched silence. What
25226 could he say, since what had got obstinately uppermost in his mind was
25227 the passionate love for her which he forbade himself to utter? What
25228 could she say, since she might offer him no help--since she was forced
25229 to keep the money that ought to have been his?--since to-day he seemed
25230 not to respond as he used to do to her thorough trust and liking?
25231
25232 But Will at last turned away from his portfolio and approached the
25233 window again.
25234
25235 "I must go," he said, with that peculiar look of the eyes which
25236 sometimes accompanies bitter feeling, as if they had been tired and
25237 burned with gazing too close at a light.
25238
25239 "What shall you do in life?" said Dorothea, timidly. "Have your
25240 intentions remained just the same as when we said good-by before?"
25241
25242 "Yes," said Will, in a tone that seemed to waive the subject as
25243 uninteresting. "I shall work away at the first thing that offers. I
25244 suppose one gets a habit of doing without happiness or hope."
25245
25246 "Oh, what sad words!" said Dorothea, with a dangerous tendency to sob.
25247 Then trying to smile, she added, "We used to agree that we were alike
25248 in speaking too strongly."
25249
25250 "I have not spoken too strongly now," said Will, leaning back against
25251 the angle of the wall. "There are certain things which a man can only
25252 go through once in his life; and he must know some time or other that
25253 the best is over with him. This experience has happened to me while I
25254 am very young--that is all. What I care more for than I can ever care
25255 for anything else is absolutely forbidden to me--I don't mean merely
25256 by being out of my reach, but forbidden me, even if it were within my
25257 reach, by my own pride and honor--by everything I respect myself for.
25258 Of course I shall go on living as a man might do who had seen heaven in
25259 a trance."
25260
25261 Will paused, imagining that it would be impossible for Dorothea to
25262 misunderstand this; indeed he felt that he was contradicting himself
25263 and offending against his self-approval in speaking to her so plainly;
25264 but still--it could not be fairly called wooing a woman to tell her
25265 that he would never woo her. It must be admitted to be a ghostly kind
25266 of wooing.
25267
25268 But Dorothea's mind was rapidly going over the past with quite another
25269 vision than his. The thought that she herself might be what Will most
25270 cared for did throb through her an instant, but then came doubt: the
25271 memory of the little they had lived through together turned pale and
25272 shrank before the memory which suggested how much fuller might have
25273 been the intercourse between Will and some one else with whom he had
25274 had constant companionship. Everything he had said might refer to that
25275 other relation, and whatever had passed between him and herself was
25276 thoroughly explained by what she had always regarded as their simple
25277 friendship and the cruel obstruction thrust upon it by her husband's
25278 injurious act. Dorothea stood silent, with her eyes cast down
25279 dreamily, while images crowded upon her which left the sickening
25280 certainty that Will was referring to Mrs. Lydgate. But why sickening?
25281 He wanted her to know that here too his conduct should be above
25282 suspicion.
25283
25284 Will was not surprised at her silence. His mind also was tumultuously
25285 busy while he watched her, and he was feeling rather wildly that
25286 something must happen to hinder their parting--some miracle, clearly
25287 nothing in their own deliberate speech. Yet, after all, had she any
25288 love for him?--he could not pretend to himself that he would rather
25289 believe her to be without that pain. He could not deny that a secret
25290 longing for the assurance that she loved him was at the root of all his
25291 words.
25292
25293 Neither of them knew how long they stood in that way. Dorothea was
25294 raising her eyes, and was about to speak, when the door opened and her
25295 footman came to say--
25296
25297 "The horses are ready, madam, whenever you like to start."
25298
25299 "Presently," said Dorothea. Then turning to Will, she said, "I have
25300 some memoranda to write for the housekeeper."
25301
25302 "I must go," said Will, when the door had closed again--advancing
25303 towards her. "The day after to-morrow I shall leave Middlemarch."
25304
25305 "You have acted in every way rightly," said Dorothea, in a low tone,
25306 feeling a pressure at her heart which made it difficult to speak.
25307
25308 She put out her hand, and Will took it for an instant without speaking,
25309 for her words had seemed to him cruelly cold and unlike herself. Their
25310 eyes met, but there was discontent in his, and in hers there was only
25311 sadness. He turned away and took his portfolio under his arm.
25312
25313 "I have never done you injustice. Please remember me," said Dorothea,
25314 repressing a rising sob.
25315
25316 "Why should you say that?" said Will, with irritation. "As if I were
25317 not in danger of forgetting everything else."
25318
25319 He had really a movement of anger against her at that moment, and it
25320 impelled him to go away without pause. It was all one flash to
25321 Dorothea--his last words--his distant bow to her as he reached the
25322 door--the sense that he was no longer there. She sank into the chair,
25323 and for a few moments sat like a statue, while images and emotions were
25324 hurrying upon her. Joy came first, in spite of the threatening train
25325 behind it--joy in the impression that it was really herself whom Will
25326 loved and was renouncing, that there was really no other love less
25327 permissible, more blameworthy, which honor was hurrying him away from.
25328 They were parted all the same, but--Dorothea drew a deep breath and
25329 felt her strength return--she could think of him unrestrainedly. At
25330 that moment the parting was easy to bear: the first sense of loving and
25331 being loved excluded sorrow. It was as if some hard icy pressure had
25332 melted, and her consciousness had room to expand: her past was come
25333 back to her with larger interpretation. The joy was not the
25334 less--perhaps it was the more complete just then--because of the
25335 irrevocable parting; for there was no reproach, no contemptuous wonder
25336 to imagine in any eye or from any lips. He had acted so as to defy
25337 reproach, and make wonder respectful.
25338
25339 Any one watching her might have seen that there was a fortifying
25340 thought within her. Just as when inventive power is working with glad
25341 ease some small claim on the attention is fully met as if it were only
25342 a cranny opened to the sunlight, it was easy now for Dorothea to write
25343 her memoranda. She spoke her last words to the housekeeper in cheerful
25344 tones, and when she seated herself in the carriage her eyes were bright
25345 and her cheeks blooming under the dismal bonnet. She threw back the
25346 heavy "weepers," and looked before her, wondering which road Will had
25347 taken. It was in her nature to be proud that he was blameless, and
25348 through all her feelings there ran this vein--"I was right to defend
25349 him."
25350
25351 The coachman was used to drive his grays at a good pace, Mr. Casaubon
25352 being unenjoying and impatient in everything away from his desk, and
25353 wanting to get to the end of all journeys; and Dorothea was now bowled
25354 along quickly. Driving was pleasant, for rain in the night had laid
25355 the dust, and the blue sky looked far off, away from the region of the
25356 great clouds that sailed in masses. The earth looked like a happy
25357 place under the vast heavens, and Dorothea was wishing that she might
25358 overtake Will and see him once more.
25359
25360 After a turn of the road, there he was with the portfolio under his
25361 arm; but the next moment she was passing him while he raised his hat,
25362 and she felt a pang at being seated there in a sort of exaltation,
25363 leaving him behind. She could not look back at him. It was as if a
25364 crowd of indifferent objects had thrust them asunder, and forced them
25365 along different paths, taking them farther and farther away from each
25366 other, and making it useless to look back. She could no more make any
25367 sign that would seem to say, "Need we part?" than she could stop the
25368 carriage to wait for him. Nay, what a world of reasons crowded upon
25369 her against any movement of her thought towards a future that might
25370 reverse the decision of this day!
25371
25372 "I only wish I had known before--I wish he knew--then we could be quite
25373 happy in thinking of each other, though we are forever parted. And if
25374 I could but have given him the money, and made things easier for
25375 him!"--were the longings that came back the most persistently. And
25376 yet, so heavily did the world weigh on her in spite of her independent
25377 energy, that with this idea of Will as in need of such help and at a
25378 disadvantage with the world, there came always the vision of that
25379 unfittingness of any closer relation between them which lay in the
25380 opinion of every one connected with her. She felt to the full all the
25381 imperativeness of the motives which urged Will's conduct. How could he
25382 dream of her defying the barrier that her husband had placed between
25383 them?--how could she ever say to herself that she would defy it?
25384
25385 Will's certainty as the carriage grew smaller in the distance, had much
25386 more bitterness in it. Very slight matters were enough to gall him in
25387 his sensitive mood, and the sight of Dorothea driving past him while he
25388 felt himself plodding along as a poor devil seeking a position in a
25389 world which in his present temper offered him little that he coveted,
25390 made his conduct seem a mere matter of necessity, and took away the
25391 sustainment of resolve. After all, he had no assurance that she loved
25392 him: could any man pretend that he was simply glad in such a case to
25393 have the suffering all on his own side?
25394
25395 That evening Will spent with the Lydgates; the next evening he was gone.
25396
25397
25398
25399
25400
25401 BOOK VII.
25402
25403
25404
25405
25406
25407 TWO TEMPTATIONS.
25408
25409
25410
25411 CHAPTER LXIII.
25412
25413 These little things are great to little man.--GOLDSMITH.
25414
25415
25416 "Have you seen much of your scientific phoenix, Lydgate, lately?" said
25417 Mr. Toller at one of his Christmas dinner-parties, speaking to Mr.
25418 Farebrother on his right hand.
25419
25420 "Not much, I am sorry to say," answered the Vicar, accustomed to parry
25421 Mr. Toller's banter about his belief in the new medical light. "I am
25422 out of the way and he is too busy."
25423
25424 "Is he? I am glad to hear it," said Dr. Minchin, with mingled suavity
25425 and surprise.
25426
25427 "He gives a great deal of time to the New Hospital," said Mr.
25428 Farebrother, who had his reasons for continuing the subject: "I hear of
25429 that from my neighbor, Mrs. Casaubon, who goes there often. She says
25430 Lydgate is indefatigable, and is making a fine thing of Bulstrode's
25431 institution. He is preparing a new ward in case of the cholera coming
25432 to us."
25433
25434 "And preparing theories of treatment to try on the patients, I
25435 suppose," said Mr. Toller.
25436
25437 "Come, Toller, be candid," said Mr. Farebrother. "You are too clever
25438 not to see the good of a bold fresh mind in medicine, as well as in
25439 everything else; and as to cholera, I fancy, none of you are very sure
25440 what you ought to do. If a man goes a little too far along a new road,
25441 it is usually himself that he harms more than any one else."
25442
25443 "I am sure you and Wrench ought to be obliged to him," said Dr.
25444 Minchin, looking towards Toller, "for he has sent you the cream of
25445 Peacock's patients."
25446
25447 "Lydgate has been living at a great rate for a young beginner," said
25448 Mr. Harry Toller, the brewer. "I suppose his relations in the North
25449 back him up."
25450
25451 "I hope so," said Mr. Chichely, "else he ought not to have married that
25452 nice girl we were all so fond of. Hang it, one has a grudge against a
25453 man who carries off the prettiest girl in the town."
25454
25455 "Ay, by God! and the best too," said Mr. Standish.
25456
25457 "My friend Vincy didn't half like the marriage, I know that," said Mr.
25458 Chichely. "_He_ wouldn't do much. How the relations on the other side
25459 may have come down I can't say." There was an emphatic kind of
25460 reticence in Mr. Chichely's manner of speaking.
25461
25462 "Oh, I shouldn't think Lydgate ever looked to practice for a living,"
25463 said Mr. Toller, with a slight touch of sarcasm, and there the subject
25464 was dropped.
25465
25466 This was not the first time that Mr. Farebrother had heard hints of
25467 Lydgate's expenses being obviously too great to be met by his practice,
25468 but he thought it not unlikely that there were resources or
25469 expectations which excused the large outlay at the time of Lydgate's
25470 marriage, and which might hinder any bad consequences from the
25471 disappointment in his practice. One evening, when he took the pains to
25472 go to Middlemarch on purpose to have a chat with Lydgate as of old, he
25473 noticed in him an air of excited effort quite unlike his usual easy way
25474 of keeping silence or breaking it with abrupt energy whenever he had
25475 anything to say. Lydgate talked persistently when they were in his
25476 work-room, putting arguments for and against the probability of certain
25477 biological views; but he had none of those definite things to say or to
25478 show which give the waymarks of a patient uninterrupted pursuit, such
25479 as he used himself to insist on, saying that "there must be a systole
25480 and diastole in all inquiry," and that "a man's mind must be
25481 continually expanding and shrinking between the whole human horizon and
25482 the horizon of an object-glass." That evening he seemed to be talking
25483 widely for the sake of resisting any personal bearing; and before long
25484 they went into the drawing room, where Lydgate, having asked Rosamond
25485 to give them music, sank back in his chair in silence, but with a
25486 strange light in his eyes. "He may have been taking an opiate," was a
25487 thought that crossed Mr. Farebrother's mind--"tic-douloureux
25488 perhaps--or medical worries."
25489
25490 It did not occur to him that Lydgate's marriage was not delightful: he
25491 believed, as the rest did, that Rosamond was an amiable, docile
25492 creature, though he had always thought her rather uninteresting--a
25493 little too much the pattern-card of the finishing-school; and his
25494 mother could not forgive Rosamond because she never seemed to see that
25495 Henrietta Noble was in the room. "However, Lydgate fell in love with
25496 her," said the Vicar to himself, "and she must be to his taste."
25497
25498 Mr. Farebrother was aware that Lydgate was a proud man, but having very
25499 little corresponding fibre in himself, and perhaps too little care
25500 about personal dignity, except the dignity of not being mean or
25501 foolish, he could hardly allow enough for the way in which Lydgate
25502 shrank, as from a burn, from the utterance of any word about his
25503 private affairs. And soon after that conversation at Mr. Toller's, the
25504 Vicar learned something which made him watch the more eagerly for an
25505 opportunity of indirectly letting Lydgate know that if he wanted to
25506 open himself about any difficulty there was a friendly ear ready.
25507
25508 The opportunity came at Mr. Vincy's, where, on New Year's Day, there
25509 was a party, to which Mr. Farebrother was irresistibly invited, on the
25510 plea that he must not forsake his old friends on the first new year of
25511 his being a greater man, and Rector as well as Vicar. And this party
25512 was thoroughly friendly: all the ladies of the Farebrother family were
25513 present; the Vincy children all dined at the table, and Fred had
25514 persuaded his mother that if she did not invite Mary Garth, the
25515 Farebrothers would regard it as a slight to themselves, Mary being
25516 their particular friend. Mary came, and Fred was in high spirits,
25517 though his enjoyment was of a checkered kind--triumph that his mother
25518 should see Mary's importance with the chief personages in the party
25519 being much streaked with jealousy when Mr. Farebrother sat down by her.
25520 Fred used to be much more easy about his own accomplishments in the
25521 days when he had not begun to dread being "bowled out by Farebrother,"
25522 and this terror was still before him. Mrs. Vincy, in her fullest
25523 matronly bloom, looked at Mary's little figure, rough wavy hair, and
25524 visage quite without lilies and roses, and wondered; trying
25525 unsuccessfully to fancy herself caring about Mary's appearance in
25526 wedding clothes, or feeling complacency in grandchildren who would
25527 "feature" the Garths. However, the party was a merry one, and Mary was
25528 particularly bright; being glad, for Fred's sake, that his friends were
25529 getting kinder to her, and being also quite willing that they should
25530 see how much she was valued by others whom they must admit to be judges.
25531
25532 Mr. Farebrother noticed that Lydgate seemed bored, and that Mr. Vincy
25533 spoke as little as possible to his son-in-law. Rosamond was perfectly
25534 graceful and calm, and only a subtle observation such as the Vicar had
25535 not been roused to bestow on her would have perceived the total absence
25536 of that interest in her husband's presence which a loving wife is sure
25537 to betray, even if etiquette keeps her aloof from him. When Lydgate
25538 was taking part in the conversation, she never looked towards him any
25539 more than if she had been a sculptured Psyche modelled to look another
25540 way: and when, after being called out for an hour or two, he re-entered
25541 the room, she seemed unconscious of the fact, which eighteen months
25542 before would have had the effect of a numeral before ciphers. In
25543 reality, however, she was intensely aware of Lydgate's voice and
25544 movements; and her pretty good-tempered air of unconsciousness was a
25545 studied negation by which she satisfied her inward opposition to him
25546 without compromise of propriety. When the ladies were in the
25547 drawing-room after Lydgate had been called away from the dessert, Mrs.
25548 Farebrother, when Rosamond happened to be near her, said--"You have to
25549 give up a great deal of your husband's society, Mrs. Lydgate."
25550
25551 "Yes, the life of a medical man is very arduous: especially when he is
25552 so devoted to his profession as Mr. Lydgate is," said Rosamond, who was
25553 standing, and moved easily away at the end of this correct little
25554 speech.
25555
25556 "It is dreadfully dull for her when there is no company," said Mrs.
25557 Vincy, who was seated at the old lady's side. "I am sure I thought so
25558 when Rosamond was ill, and I was staying with her. You know, Mrs.
25559 Farebrother, ours is a cheerful house. I am of a cheerful disposition
25560 myself, and Mr. Vincy always likes something to be going on. That is
25561 what Rosamond has been used to. Very different from a husband out at
25562 odd hours, and never knowing when he will come home, and of a close,
25563 proud disposition, _I_ think"--indiscreet Mrs. Vincy did lower her tone
25564 slightly with this parenthesis. "But Rosamond always had an angel of a
25565 temper; her brothers used very often not to please her, but she was
25566 never the girl to show temper; from a baby she was always as good as
25567 good, and with a complexion beyond anything. But my children are all
25568 good-tempered, thank God."
25569
25570 This was easily credible to any one looking at Mrs. Vincy as she threw
25571 back her broad cap-strings, and smiled towards her three little girls,
25572 aged from seven to eleven. But in that smiling glance she was obliged
25573 to include Mary Garth, whom the three girls had got into a corner to
25574 make her tell them stories. Mary was just finishing the delicious tale
25575 of Rumpelstiltskin, which she had well by heart, because Letty was
25576 never tired of communicating it to her ignorant elders from a favorite
25577 red volume. Louisa, Mrs. Vincy's darling, now ran to her with
25578 wide-eyed serious excitement, crying, "Oh mamma, mamma, the little man
25579 stamped so hard on the floor he couldn't get his leg out again!"
25580
25581 "Bless you, my cherub!" said mamma; "you shall tell me all about it
25582 to-morrow. Go and listen!" and then, as her eyes followed Louisa back
25583 towards the attractive corner, she thought that if Fred wished her to
25584 invite Mary again she would make no objection, the children being so
25585 pleased with her.
25586
25587 But presently the corner became still more animated, for Mr.
25588 Farebrother came in, and seating himself behind Louisa, took her on his
25589 lap; whereupon the girls all insisted that he must hear
25590 Rumpelstiltskin, and Mary must tell it over again. He insisted too,
25591 and Mary, without fuss, began again in her neat fashion, with precisely
25592 the same words as before. Fred, who had also seated himself near,
25593 would have felt unmixed triumph in Mary's effectiveness if Mr.
25594 Farebrother had not been looking at her with evident admiration, while
25595 he dramatized an intense interest in the tale to please the children.
25596
25597 "You will never care any more about my one-eyed giant, Loo," said Fred
25598 at the end.
25599
25600 "Yes, I shall. Tell about him now," said Louisa.
25601
25602 "Oh, I dare say; I am quite cut out. Ask Mr. Farebrother."
25603
25604 "Yes," added Mary; "ask Mr. Farebrother to tell you about the ants
25605 whose beautiful house was knocked down by a giant named Tom, and he
25606 thought they didn't mind because he couldn't hear them cry, or see them
25607 use their pocket-handkerchiefs."
25608
25609 "Please," said Louisa, looking up at the Vicar.
25610
25611 "No, no, I am a grave old parson. If I try to draw a story out of my
25612 bag a sermon comes instead. Shall I preach you a sermon?" said he,
25613 putting on his short-sighted glasses, and pursing up his lips.
25614
25615 "Yes," said Louisa, falteringly.
25616
25617 "Let me see, then. Against cakes: how cakes are bad things, especially
25618 if they are sweet and have plums in them."
25619
25620 Louisa took the affair rather seriously, and got down from the Vicar's
25621 knee to go to Fred.
25622
25623 "Ah, I see it will not do to preach on New Year's Day," said Mr.
25624 Farebrother, rising and walking away. He had discovered of late that
25625 Fred had become jealous of him, and also that he himself was not losing
25626 his preference for Mary above all other women.
25627
25628 "A delightful young person is Miss Garth," said Mrs. Farebrother, who
25629 had been watching her son's movements.
25630
25631 "Yes," said Mrs. Vincy, obliged to reply, as the old lady turned to her
25632 expectantly. "It is a pity she is not better-looking."
25633
25634 "I cannot say that," said Mrs. Farebrother, decisively. "I like her
25635 countenance. We must not always ask for beauty, when a good God has
25636 seen fit to make an excellent young woman without it. I put good
25637 manners first, and Miss Garth will know how to conduct herself in any
25638 station."
25639
25640 The old lady was a little sharp in her tone, having a prospective
25641 reference to Mary's becoming her daughter-in-law; for there was this
25642 inconvenience in Mary's position with regard to Fred, that it was not
25643 suitable to be made public, and hence the three ladies at Lowick
25644 Parsonage were still hoping that Camden would choose Miss Garth.
25645
25646 New visitors entered, and the drawing-room was given up to music and
25647 games, while whist-tables were prepared in the quiet room on the other
25648 side of the hall. Mr. Farebrother played a rubber to satisfy his
25649 mother, who regarded her occasional whist as a protest against scandal
25650 and novelty of opinion, in which light even a revoke had its dignity.
25651 But at the end he got Mr. Chichely to take his place, and left the
25652 room. As he crossed the hall, Lydgate had just come in and was taking
25653 off his great-coat.
25654
25655 "You are the man I was going to look for," said the Vicar; and instead
25656 of entering the drawing-room, they walked along the hall and stood
25657 against the fireplace, where the frosty air helped to make a glowing
25658 bank. "You see, I can leave the whist-table easily enough," he went
25659 on, smiling at Lydgate, "now I don't play for money. I owe that to
25660 you, Mrs. Casaubon says."
25661
25662 "How?" said Lydgate, coldly.
25663
25664 "Ah, you didn't mean me to know it; I call that ungenerous reticence.
25665 You should let a man have the pleasure of feeling that you have done
25666 him a good turn. I don't enter into some people's dislike of being
25667 under an obligation: upon my word, I prefer being under an obligation
25668 to everybody for behaving well to me."
25669
25670 "I can't tell what you mean," said Lydgate, "unless it is that I once
25671 spoke of you to Mrs. Casaubon. But I did not think that she would
25672 break her promise not to mention that I had done so," said Lydgate,
25673 leaning his back against the corner of the mantel-piece, and showing no
25674 radiance in his face.
25675
25676 "It was Brooke who let it out, only the other day. He paid me the
25677 compliment of saying that he was very glad I had the living though you
25678 had come across his tactics, and had praised me up as a lien and a
25679 Tillotson, and that sort of thing, till Mrs. Casaubon would hear of no
25680 one else."
25681
25682 "Oh, Brooke is such a leaky-minded fool," said Lydgate, contemptuously.
25683
25684 "Well, I was glad of the leakiness then. I don't see why you shouldn't
25685 like me to know that you wished to do me a service, my dear fellow.
25686 And you certainly have done me one. It's rather a strong check to
25687 one's self-complacency to find how much of one's right doing depends on
25688 not being in want of money. A man will not be tempted to say the
25689 Lord's Prayer backward to please the devil, if he doesn't want the
25690 devil's services. I have no need to hang on the smiles of chance now."
25691
25692 "I don't see that there's any money-getting without chance," said
25693 Lydgate; "if a man gets it in a profession, it's pretty sure to come by
25694 chance."
25695
25696 Mr. Farebrother thought he could account for this speech, in striking
25697 contrast with Lydgate's former way of talking, as the perversity which
25698 will often spring from the moodiness of a man ill at ease in his
25699 affairs. He answered in a tone of good-humored admission--
25700
25701 "Ah, there's enormous patience wanted with the way of the world. But
25702 it is the easier for a man to wait patiently when he has friends who
25703 love him, and ask for nothing better than to help him through, so far
25704 as it lies in their power."
25705
25706 "Oh yes," said Lydgate, in a careless tone, changing his attitude and
25707 looking at his watch. "People make much more of their difficulties
25708 than they need to do."
25709
25710 He knew as distinctly as possible that this was an offer of help to
25711 himself from Mr. Farebrother, and he could not bear it. So strangely
25712 determined are we mortals, that, after having been long gratified with
25713 the sense that he had privately done the Vicar a service, the
25714 suggestion that the Vicar discerned his need of a service in return
25715 made him shrink into unconquerable reticence. Besides, behind all
25716 making of such offers what else must come?--that he should "mention his
25717 case," imply that he wanted specific things. At that moment, suicide
25718 seemed easier.
25719
25720 Mr. Farebrother was too keen a man not to know the meaning of that
25721 reply, and there was a certain massiveness in Lydgate's manner and
25722 tone, corresponding with his physique, which if he repelled your
25723 advances in the first instance seemed to put persuasive devices out of
25724 question.
25725
25726 "What time are you?" said the Vicar, devouring his wounded feeling.
25727
25728 "After eleven," said Lydgate. And they went into the drawing-room.
25729
25730
25731
25732 CHAPTER LXIV.
25733
25734 1st Gent. Where lies the power, there let the blame lie too.
25735 2d Gent. Nay, power is relative; you cannot fright
25736 The coming pest with border fortresses,
25737 Or catch your carp with subtle argument.
25738 All force is twain in one: cause is not cause
25739 Unless effect be there; and action's self
25740 Must needs contain a passive. So command
25741 Exists but with obedience."
25742
25743
25744 Even if Lydgate had been inclined to be quite open about his affairs,
25745 he knew that it would have hardly been in Mr. Farebrother's power to
25746 give him the help he immediately wanted. With the year's bills coming
25747 in from his tradesmen, with Dover's threatening hold on his furniture,
25748 and with nothing to depend on but slow dribbling payments from patients
25749 who must not be offended--for the handsome fees he had had from
25750 Freshitt Hall and Lowick Manor had been easily absorbed--nothing less
25751 than a thousand pounds would have freed him from actual embarrassment,
25752 and left a residue which, according to the favorite phrase of
25753 hopefulness in such circumstances, would have given him "time to look
25754 about him."
25755
25756 Naturally, the merry Christmas bringing the happy New Year, when
25757 fellow-citizens expect to be paid for the trouble and goods they have
25758 smilingly bestowed on their neighbors, had so tightened the pressure of
25759 sordid cares on Lydgate's mind that it was hardly possible for him to
25760 think unbrokenly of any other subject, even the most habitual and
25761 soliciting. He was not an ill-tempered man; his intellectual activity,
25762 the ardent kindness of his heart, as well as his strong frame, would
25763 always, under tolerably easy conditions, have kept him above the petty
25764 uncontrolled susceptibilities which make bad temper. But he was now a
25765 prey to that worst irritation which arises not simply from annoyances,
25766 but from the second consciousness underlying those annoyances, of
25767 wasted energy and a degrading preoccupation, which was the reverse of
25768 all his former purposes. "_This_ is what I am thinking of; and _that_
25769 is what I might have been thinking of," was the bitter incessant murmur
25770 within him, making every difficulty a double goad to impatience.
25771
25772 Some gentlemen have made an amazing figure in literature by general
25773 discontent with the universe as a trap of dulness into which their
25774 great souls have fallen by mistake; but the sense of a stupendous self
25775 and an insignificant world may have its consolations. Lydgate's
25776 discontent was much harder to bear: it was the sense that there was a
25777 grand existence in thought and effective action lying around him, while
25778 his self was being narrowed into the miserable isolation of egoistic
25779 fears, and vulgar anxieties for events that might allay such fears.
25780 His troubles will perhaps appear miserably sordid, and beneath the
25781 attention of lofty persons who can know nothing of debt except on a
25782 magnificent scale. Doubtless they were sordid; and for the majority,
25783 who are not lofty, there is no escape from sordidness but by being free
25784 from money-craving, with all its base hopes and temptations, its
25785 watching for death, its hinted requests, its horse-dealer's desire to
25786 make bad work pass for good, its seeking for function which ought to be
25787 another's, its compulsion often to long for Luck in the shape of a wide
25788 calamity.
25789
25790 It was because Lydgate writhed under the idea of getting his neck
25791 beneath this vile yoke that he had fallen into a bitter moody state
25792 which was continually widening Rosamond's alienation from him. After
25793 the first disclosure about the bill of sale, he had made many efforts
25794 to draw her into sympathy with him about possible measures for
25795 narrowing their expenses, and with the threatening approach of
25796 Christmas his propositions grew more and more definite. "We two can do
25797 with only one servant, and live on very little," he said, "and I shall
25798 manage with one horse." For Lydgate, as we have seen, had begun to
25799 reason, with a more distinct vision, about the expenses of living, and
25800 any share of pride he had given to appearances of that sort was meagre
25801 compared with the pride which made him revolt from exposure as a
25802 debtor, or from asking men to help him with their money.
25803
25804 "Of course you can dismiss the other two servants, if you like," said
25805 Rosamond; "but I should have thought it would be very injurious to your
25806 position for us to live in a poor way. You must expect your practice
25807 to be lowered."
25808
25809 "My dear Rosamond, it is not a question of choice. We have begun too
25810 expensively. Peacock, you know, lived in a much smaller house than
25811 this. It is my fault: I ought to have known better, and I deserve a
25812 thrashing--if there were anybody who had a right to give it me--for
25813 bringing you into the necessity of living in a poorer way than you have
25814 been used to. But we married because we loved each other, I suppose.
25815 And that may help us to pull along till things get better. Come, dear,
25816 put down that work and come to me."
25817
25818 He was really in chill gloom about her at that moment, but he dreaded a
25819 future without affection, and was determined to resist the oncoming of
25820 division between them. Rosamond obeyed him, and he took her on his
25821 knee, but in her secret soul she was utterly aloof from him. The poor
25822 thing saw only that the world was not ordered to her liking, and
25823 Lydgate was part of that world. But he held her waist with one hand
25824 and laid the other gently on both of hers; for this rather abrupt man
25825 had much tenderness in his manners towards women, seeming to have
25826 always present in his imagination the weakness of their frames and the
25827 delicate poise of their health both in body and mind. And he began
25828 again to speak persuasively.
25829
25830 "I find, now I look into things a little, Rosy, that it is wonderful
25831 what an amount of money slips away in our housekeeping. I suppose the
25832 servants are careless, and we have had a great many people coming. But
25833 there must be many in our rank who manage with much less: they must do
25834 with commoner things, I suppose, and look after the scraps. It seems,
25835 money goes but a little way in these matters, for Wrench has everything
25836 as plain as possible, and he has a very large practice."
25837
25838 "Oh, if you think of living as the Wrenches do!" said Rosamond, with a
25839 little turn of her neck. "But I have heard you express your disgust at
25840 that way of living."
25841
25842 "Yes, they have bad taste in everything--they make economy look ugly.
25843 We needn't do that. I only meant that they avoid expenses, although
25844 Wrench has a capital practice."
25845
25846 "Why should not you have a good practice, Tertius? Mr. Peacock had.
25847 You should be more careful not to offend people, and you should send
25848 out medicines as the others do. I am sure you began well, and you got
25849 several good houses. It cannot answer to be eccentric; you should
25850 think what will be generally liked," said Rosamond, in a decided little
25851 tone of admonition.
25852
25853 Lydgate's anger rose: he was prepared to be indulgent towards feminine
25854 weakness, but not towards feminine dictation. The shallowness of a
25855 waternixie's soul may have a charm until she becomes didactic. But he
25856 controlled himself, and only said, with a touch of despotic firmness--
25857
25858 "What I am to do in my practice, Rosy, it is for me to judge. That is
25859 not the question between us. It is enough for you to know that our
25860 income is likely to be a very narrow one--hardly four hundred, perhaps
25861 less, for a long time to come, and we must try to re-arrange our lives
25862 in accordance with that fact."
25863
25864 Rosamond was silent for a moment or two, looking before her, and then
25865 said, "My uncle Bulstrode ought to allow you a salary for the time you
25866 give to the Hospital: it is not right that you should work for nothing."
25867
25868 "It was understood from the beginning that my services would be
25869 gratuitous. That, again, need not enter into our discussion. I have
25870 pointed out what is the only probability," said Lydgate, impatiently.
25871 Then checking himself, he went on more quietly--
25872
25873 "I think I see one resource which would free us from a good deal of the
25874 present difficulty. I hear that young Ned Plymdale is going to be
25875 married to Miss Sophy Toller. They are rich, and it is not often that
25876 a good house is vacant in Middlemarch. I feel sure that they would be
25877 glad to take this house from us with most of our furniture, and they
25878 would be willing to pay handsomely for the lease. I can employ
25879 Trumbull to speak to Plymdale about it."
25880
25881 Rosamond left her husband's knee and walked slowly to the other end of
25882 the room; when she turned round and walked towards him it was evident
25883 that the tears had come, and that she was biting her under-lip and
25884 clasping her hands to keep herself from crying. Lydgate was
25885 wretched--shaken with anger and yet feeling that it would be unmanly to
25886 vent the anger just now.
25887
25888 "I am very sorry, Rosamond; I know this is painful."
25889
25890 "I thought, at least, when I had borne to send the plate back and have
25891 that man taking an inventory of the furniture--I should have thought
25892 _that_ would suffice."
25893
25894 "I explained it to you at the time, dear. That was only a security and
25895 behind that security there is a debt. And that debt must be paid
25896 within the next few months, else we shall have our furniture sold. If
25897 young Plymdale will take our house and most of our furniture, we shall
25898 be able to pay that debt, and some others too, and we shall be quit of
25899 a place too expensive for us. We might take a smaller house: Trumbull,
25900 I know, has a very decent one to let at thirty pounds a-year, and this
25901 is ninety." Lydgate uttered this speech in the curt hammering way with
25902 which we usually try to nail down a vague mind to imperative facts.
25903 Tears rolled silently down Rosamond's cheeks; she just pressed her
25904 handkerchief against them, and stood looking at the large vase on the
25905 mantel-piece. It was a moment of more intense bitterness than she had
25906 ever felt before. At last she said, without hurry and with careful
25907 emphasis--
25908
25909 "I never could have believed that you would like to act in that way."
25910
25911 "Like it?" burst out Lydgate, rising from his chair, thrusting his
25912 hands in his pockets and stalking away from the hearth; "it's not a
25913 question of liking. Of course, I don't like it; it's the only thing I
25914 can do." He wheeled round there, and turned towards her.
25915
25916 "I should have thought there were many other means than that," said
25917 Rosamond. "Let us have a sale and leave Middlemarch altogether."
25918
25919 "To do what? What is the use of my leaving my work in Middlemarch to
25920 go where I have none? We should be just as penniless elsewhere as we
25921 are here," said Lydgate still more angrily.
25922
25923 "If we are to be in that position it will be entirely your own doing,
25924 Tertius," said Rosamond, turning round to speak with the fullest
25925 conviction. "You will not behave as you ought to do to your own
25926 family. You offended Captain Lydgate. Sir Godwin was very kind to me
25927 when we were at Quallingham, and I am sure if you showed proper regard
25928 to him and told him your affairs, he would do anything for you. But
25929 rather than that, you like giving up our house and furniture to Mr. Ned
25930 Plymdale."
25931
25932 There was something like fierceness in Lydgate's eyes, as he answered
25933 with new violence, "Well, then, if you will have it so, I do like it.
25934 I admit that I like it better than making a fool of myself by going to
25935 beg where it's of no use. Understand then, that it is what I _like to
25936 do._"
25937
25938 There was a tone in the last sentence which was equivalent to the
25939 clutch of his strong hand on Rosamond's delicate arm. But for all
25940 that, his will was not a whit stronger than hers. She immediately
25941 walked out of the room in silence, but with an intense determination to
25942 hinder what Lydgate liked to do.
25943
25944 He went out of the house, but as his blood cooled he felt that the
25945 chief result of the discussion was a deposit of dread within him at the
25946 idea of opening with his wife in future subjects which might again urge
25947 him to violent speech. It was as if a fracture in delicate crystal had
25948 begun, and he was afraid of any movement that might make it fatal. His
25949 marriage would be a mere piece of bitter irony if they could not go on
25950 loving each other. He had long ago made up his mind to what he thought
25951 was her negative character--her want of sensibility, which showed
25952 itself in disregard both of his specific wishes and of his general
25953 aims. The first great disappointment had been borne: the tender
25954 devotedness and docile adoration of the ideal wife must be renounced,
25955 and life must be taken up on a lower stage of expectation, as it is by
25956 men who have lost their limbs. But the real wife had not only her
25957 claims, she had still a hold on his heart, and it was his intense
25958 desire that the hold should remain strong. In marriage, the certainty,
25959 "She will never love me much," is easier to bear than the fear, "I
25960 shall love her no more." Hence, after that outburst, his inward effort
25961 was entirely to excuse her, and to blame the hard circumstances which
25962 were partly his fault. He tried that evening, by petting her, to heal
25963 the wound he had made in the morning, and it was not in Rosamond's
25964 nature to be repellent or sulky; indeed, she welcomed the signs that
25965 her husband loved her and was under control. But this was something
25966 quite distinct from loving _him_. Lydgate would not have chosen soon to
25967 recur to the plan of parting with the house; he was resolved to carry
25968 it out, and say as little more about it as possible. But Rosamond
25969 herself touched on it at breakfast by saying, mildly--
25970
25971 "Have you spoken to Trumbull yet?"
25972
25973 "No," said Lydgate, "but I shall call on him as I go by this morning.
25974 No time must be lost." He took Rosamond's question as a sign that she
25975 withdrew her inward opposition, and kissed her head caressingly when he
25976 got up to go away.
25977
25978 As soon as it was late enough to make a call, Rosamond went to Mrs.
25979 Plymdale, Mr. Ned's mother, and entered with pretty congratulations
25980 into the subject of the coming marriage. Mrs. Plymdale's maternal view
25981 was, that Rosamond might possibly now have retrospective glimpses of
25982 her own folly; and feeling the advantages to be at present all on the
25983 side of her son, was too kind a woman not to behave graciously.
25984
25985 "Yes, Ned is most happy, I must say. And Sophy Toller is all I could
25986 desire in a daughter-in-law. Of course her father is able to do
25987 something handsome for her--that is only what would be expected with a
25988 brewery like his. And the connection is everything we should desire.
25989 But that is not what I look at. She is such a very nice girl--no airs,
25990 no pretensions, though on a level with the first. I don't mean with
25991 the titled aristocracy. I see very little good in people aiming out of
25992 their own sphere. I mean that Sophy is equal to the best in the town,
25993 and she is contented with that."
25994
25995 "I have always thought her very agreeable," said Rosamond.
25996
25997 "I look upon it as a reward for Ned, who never held his head too high,
25998 that he should have got into the very best connection," continued Mrs.
25999 Plymdale, her native sharpness softened by a fervid sense that she was
26000 taking a correct view. "And such particular people as the Tollers are,
26001 they might have objected because some of our friends are not theirs.
26002 It is well known that your aunt Bulstrode and I have been intimate from
26003 our youth, and Mr. Plymdale has been always on Mr. Bulstrode's side.
26004 And I myself prefer serious opinions. But the Tollers have welcomed
26005 Ned all the same."
26006
26007 "I am sure he is a very deserving, well-principled young man," said
26008 Rosamond, with a neat air of patronage in return for Mrs. Plymdale's
26009 wholesome corrections.
26010
26011 "Oh, he has not the style of a captain in the army, or that sort of
26012 carriage as if everybody was beneath him, or that showy kind of
26013 talking, and singing, and intellectual talent. But I am thankful he
26014 has not. It is a poor preparation both for here and Hereafter."
26015
26016 "Oh dear, yes; appearances have very little to do with happiness," said
26017 Rosamond. "I think there is every prospect of their being a happy
26018 couple. What house will they take?"
26019
26020 "Oh, as for that, they must put up with what they can get. They have
26021 been looking at the house in St. Peter's Place, next to Mr. Hackbutt's;
26022 it belongs to him, and he is putting it nicely in repair. I suppose
26023 they are not likely to hear of a better. Indeed, I think Ned will
26024 decide the matter to-day."
26025
26026 "I should think it is a nice house; I like St. Peter's Place."
26027
26028 "Well, it is near the Church, and a genteel situation. But the windows
26029 are narrow, and it is all ups and downs. You don't happen to know of
26030 any other that would be at liberty?" said Mrs. Plymdale, fixing her
26031 round black eyes on Rosamond with the animation of a sudden thought in
26032 them.
26033
26034 "Oh no; I hear so little of those things."
26035
26036 Rosamond had not foreseen that question and answer in setting out to
26037 pay her visit; she had simply meant to gather any information which
26038 would help her to avert the parting with her own house under
26039 circumstances thoroughly disagreeable to her. As to the untruth in her
26040 reply, she no more reflected on it than she did on the untruth there
26041 was in her saying that appearances had very little to do with
26042 happiness. Her object, she was convinced, was thoroughly justifiable:
26043 it was Lydgate whose intention was inexcusable; and there was a plan in
26044 her mind which, when she had carried it out fully, would prove how very
26045 false a step it would have been for him to have descended from his
26046 position.
26047
26048 She returned home by Mr. Borthrop Trumbull's office, meaning to call
26049 there. It was the first time in her life that Rosamond had thought of
26050 doing anything in the form of business, but she felt equal to the
26051 occasion. That she should be obliged to do what she intensely
26052 disliked, was an idea which turned her quiet tenacity into active
26053 invention. Here was a case in which it could not be enough simply to
26054 disobey and be serenely, placidly obstinate: she must act according to
26055 her judgment, and she said to herself that her judgment was
26056 right--"indeed, if it had not been, she would not have wished to act on
26057 it."
26058
26059 Mr. Trumbull was in the back-room of his office, and received Rosamond
26060 with his finest manners, not only because he had much sensibility to
26061 her charms, but because the good-natured fibre in him was stirred by
26062 his certainty that Lydgate was in difficulties, and that this
26063 uncommonly pretty woman--this young lady with the highest personal
26064 attractions--was likely to feel the pinch of trouble--to find herself
26065 involved in circumstances beyond her control. He begged her to do him
26066 the honor to take a seat, and stood before her trimming and comporting
26067 himself with an eager solicitude, which was chiefly benevolent.
26068 Rosamond's first question was, whether her husband had called on Mr.
26069 Trumbull that morning, to speak about disposing of their house.
26070
26071 "Yes, ma'am, yes, he did; he did so," said the good auctioneer, trying
26072 to throw something soothing into his iteration. "I was about to fulfil
26073 his order, if possible, this afternoon. He wished me not to
26074 procrastinate."
26075
26076 "I called to tell you not to go any further, Mr. Trumbull; and I beg of
26077 you not to mention what has been said on the subject. Will you oblige
26078 me?"
26079
26080 "Certainly I will, Mrs. Lydgate, certainly. Confidence is sacred with
26081 me on business or any other topic. I am then to consider the
26082 commission withdrawn?" said Mr. Trumbull, adjusting the long ends of
26083 his blue cravat with both hands, and looking at Rosamond deferentially.
26084
26085 "Yes, if you please. I find that Mr. Ned Plymdale has taken a house--the
26086 one in St. Peter's Place next to Mr. Hackbutt's. Mr. Lydgate would be
26087 annoyed that his orders should be fulfilled uselessly. And besides
26088 that, there are other circumstances which render the proposal
26089 unnecessary."
26090
26091 "Very good, Mrs. Lydgate, very good. I am at your commands, whenever
26092 you require any service of me," said Mr. Trumbull, who felt pleasure in
26093 conjecturing that some new resources had been opened. "Rely on me, I
26094 beg. The affair shall go no further."
26095
26096 That evening Lydgate was a little comforted by observing that Rosamond
26097 was more lively than she had usually been of late, and even seemed
26098 interested in doing what would please him without being asked. He
26099 thought, "If she will be happy and I can rub through, what does it all
26100 signify? It is only a narrow swamp that we have to pass in a long
26101 journey. If I can get my mind clear again, I shall do."
26102
26103 He was so much cheered that he began to search for an account of
26104 experiments which he had long ago meant to look up, and had neglected
26105 out of that creeping self-despair which comes in the train of petty
26106 anxieties. He felt again some of the old delightful absorption in a
26107 far-reaching inquiry, while Rosamond played the quiet music which was
26108 as helpful to his meditation as the plash of an oar on the evening
26109 lake. It was rather late; he had pushed away all the books, and was
26110 looking at the fire with his hands clasped behind his head in
26111 forgetfulness of everything except the construction of a new
26112 controlling experiment, when Rosamond, who had left the piano and was
26113 leaning back in her chair watching him, said--
26114
26115 "Mr. Ned Plymdale has taken a house already."
26116
26117 Lydgate, startled and jarred, looked up in silence for a moment, like a
26118 man who has been disturbed in his sleep. Then flushing with an
26119 unpleasant consciousness, he asked--
26120
26121 "How do you know?"
26122
26123 "I called at Mrs. Plymdale's this morning, and she told me that he had
26124 taken the house in St. Peter's Place, next to Mr. Hackbutt's."
26125
26126 Lydgate was silent. He drew his hands from behind his head and pressed
26127 them against the hair which was hanging, as it was apt to do, in a mass
26128 on his forehead, while he rested his elbows on his knees. He was
26129 feeling bitter disappointment, as if he had opened a door out of a
26130 suffocating place and had found it walled up; but he also felt sure
26131 that Rosamond was pleased with the cause of his disappointment. He
26132 preferred not looking at her and not speaking, until he had got over
26133 the first spasm of vexation. After all, he said in his bitterness,
26134 what can a woman care about so much as house and furniture? a husband
26135 without them is an absurdity. When he looked up and pushed his hair
26136 aside, his dark eyes had a miserable blank non-expectance of sympathy
26137 in them, but he only said, coolly--
26138
26139 "Perhaps some one else may turn up. I told Trumbull to be on the
26140 look-out if he failed with Plymdale."
26141
26142 Rosamond made no remark. She trusted to the chance that nothing more
26143 would pass between her husband and the auctioneer until some issue
26144 should have justified her interference; at any rate, she had hindered
26145 the event which she immediately dreaded. After a pause, she said--
26146
26147 "How much money is it that those disagreeable people want?"
26148
26149 "What disagreeable people?"
26150
26151 "Those who took the list--and the others. I mean, how much money would
26152 satisfy them so that you need not be troubled any more?"
26153
26154 Lydgate surveyed her for a moment, as if he were looking for symptoms,
26155 and then said, "Oh, if I could have got six hundred from Plymdale for
26156 furniture and as premium, I might have managed. I could have paid off
26157 Dover, and given enough on account to the others to make them wait
26158 patiently, if we contracted our expenses."
26159
26160 "But I mean how much should you want if we stayed in this house?"
26161
26162 "More than I am likely to get anywhere," said Lydgate, with rather a
26163 grating sarcasm in his tone. It angered him to perceive that
26164 Rosamond's mind was wandering over impracticable wishes instead of
26165 facing possible efforts.
26166
26167 "Why should you not mention the sum?" said Rosamond, with a mild
26168 indication that she did not like his manners.
26169
26170 "Well," said Lydgate in a guessing tone, "it would take at least a
26171 thousand to set me at ease. But," he added, incisively, "I have to
26172 consider what I shall do without it, not with it."
26173
26174 Rosamond said no more.
26175
26176 But the next day she carried out her plan of writing to Sir Godwin
26177 Lydgate. Since the Captain's visit, she had received a letter from
26178 him, and also one from Mrs. Mengan, his married sister, condoling with
26179 her on the loss of her baby, and expressing vaguely the hope that they
26180 should see her again at Quallingham. Lydgate had told her that this
26181 politeness meant nothing; but she was secretly convinced that any
26182 backwardness in Lydgate's family towards him was due to his cold and
26183 contemptuous behavior, and she had answered the letters in her most
26184 charming manner, feeling some confidence that a specific invitation
26185 would follow. But there had been total silence. The Captain evidently
26186 was not a great penman, and Rosamond reflected that the sisters might
26187 have been abroad. However, the season was come for thinking of friends
26188 at home, and at any rate Sir Godwin, who had chucked her under the
26189 chin, and pronounced her to be like the celebrated beauty, Mrs. Croly,
26190 who had made a conquest of him in 1790, would be touched by any appeal
26191 from her, and would find it pleasant for her sake to behave as he ought
26192 to do towards his nephew. Rosamond was naively convinced of what an
26193 old gentleman ought to do to prevent her from suffering annoyance. And
26194 she wrote what she considered the most judicious letter possible--one
26195 which would strike Sir Godwin as a proof of her excellent sense--pointing
26196 out how desirable it was that Tertius should quit such a place
26197 as Middlemarch for one more fitted to his talents, how the unpleasant
26198 character of the inhabitants had hindered his professional success, and
26199 how in consequence he was in money difficulties, from which it would
26200 require a thousand pounds thoroughly to extricate him. She did not say
26201 that Tertius was unaware of her intention to write; for she had the
26202 idea that his supposed sanction of her letter would be in accordance
26203 with what she did say of his great regard for his uncle Godwin as the
26204 relative who had always been his best friend. Such was the force of
26205 Poor Rosamond's tactics now she applied them to affairs.
26206
26207 This had happened before the party on New Year's Day, and no answer had
26208 yet come from Sir Godwin. But on the morning of that day Lydgate had
26209 to learn that Rosamond had revoked his order to Borthrop Trumbull.
26210 Feeling it necessary that she should be gradually accustomed to the
26211 idea of their quitting the house in Lowick Gate, he overcame his
26212 reluctance to speak to her again on the subject, and when they were
26213 breakfasting said--
26214
26215 "I shall try to see Trumbull this morning, and tell him to advertise
26216 the house in the 'Pioneer' and the 'Trumpet.' If the thing were
26217 advertised, some one might be inclined to take it who would not
26218 otherwise have thought of a change. In these country places many
26219 people go on in their old houses when their families are too large for
26220 them, for want of knowing where they can find another. And Trumbull
26221 seems to have got no bite at all."
26222
26223 Rosamond knew that the inevitable moment was come. "I ordered Trumbull
26224 not to inquire further," she said, with a careful calmness which was
26225 evidently defensive.
26226
26227 Lydgate stared at her in mute amazement. Only half an hour before he
26228 had been fastening up her plaits for her, and talking the "little
26229 language" of affection, which Rosamond, though not returning it,
26230 accepted as if she had been a serene and lovely image, now and then
26231 miraculously dimpling towards her votary. With such fibres still astir
26232 in him, the shock he received could not at once be distinctly anger; it
26233 was confused pain. He laid down the knife and fork with which he was
26234 carving, and throwing himself back in his chair, said at last, with a
26235 cool irony in his tone--
26236
26237 "May I ask when and why you did so?"
26238
26239 "When I knew that the Plymdales had taken a house, I called to tell him
26240 not to mention ours to them; and at the same time I told him not to let
26241 the affair go on any further. I knew that it would be very injurious
26242 to you if it were known that you wished to part with your house and
26243 furniture, and I had a very strong objection to it. I think that was
26244 reason enough."
26245
26246 "It was of no consequence then that I had told you imperative reasons
26247 of another kind; of no consequence that I had come to a different
26248 conclusion, and given an order accordingly?" said Lydgate, bitingly,
26249 the thunder and lightning gathering about his brow and eyes.
26250
26251 The effect of any one's anger on Rosamond had always been to make her
26252 shrink in cold dislike, and to become all the more calmly correct, in
26253 the conviction that she was not the person to misbehave whatever others
26254 might do. She replied--
26255
26256 "I think I had a perfect right to speak on a subject which concerns me
26257 at least as much as you."
26258
26259 "Clearly--you had a right to speak, but only to me. You had no right
26260 to contradict my orders secretly, and treat me as if I were a fool,"
26261 said Lydgate, in the same tone as before. Then with some added scorn,
26262 "Is it possible to make you understand what the consequences will be?
26263 Is it of any use for me to tell you again why we must try to part with
26264 the house?"
26265
26266 "It is not necessary for you to tell me again," said Rosamond, in a
26267 voice that fell and trickled like cold water-drops. "I remembered what
26268 you said. You spoke just as violently as you do now. But that does
26269 not alter my opinion that you ought to try every other means rather
26270 than take a step which is so painful to me. And as to advertising the
26271 house, I think it would be perfectly degrading to you."
26272
26273 "And suppose I disregard your opinion as you disregard mine?"
26274
26275 "You can do so, of course. But I think you ought to have told me
26276 before we were married that you would place me in the worst position,
26277 rather than give up your own will."
26278
26279 Lydgate did not speak, but tossed his head on one side, and twitched
26280 the corners of his mouth in despair. Rosamond, seeing that he was not
26281 looking at her, rose and set his cup of coffee before him; but he took
26282 no notice of it, and went on with an inward drama and argument,
26283 occasionally moving in his seat, resting one arm on the table, and
26284 rubbing his hand against his hair. There was a conflux of emotions and
26285 thoughts in him that would not let him either give thorough way to his
26286 anger or persevere with simple rigidity of resolve. Rosamond took
26287 advantage of his silence.
26288
26289 "When we were married everyone felt that your position was very high.
26290 I could not have imagined then that you would want to sell our
26291 furniture, and take a house in Bride Street, where the rooms are like
26292 cages. If we are to live in that way let us at least leave
26293 Middlemarch."
26294
26295 "These would be very strong considerations," said Lydgate, half
26296 ironically--still there was a withered paleness about his lips as he
26297 looked at his coffee, and did not drink--"these would be very strong
26298 considerations if I did not happen to be in debt."
26299
26300 "Many persons must have been in debt in the same way, but if they are
26301 respectable, people trust them. I am sure I have heard papa say that
26302 the Torbits were in debt, and they went on very well. It cannot be
26303 good to act rashly," said Rosamond, with serene wisdom.
26304
26305 Lydgate sat paralyzed by opposing impulses: since no reasoning he could
26306 apply to Rosamond seemed likely to conquer her assent, he wanted to
26307 smash and grind some object on which he could at least produce an
26308 impression, or else to tell her brutally that he was master, and she
26309 must obey. But he not only dreaded the effect of such extremities on
26310 their mutual life--he had a growing dread of Rosamond's quiet elusive
26311 obstinacy, which would not allow any assertion of power to be final;
26312 and again, she had touched him in a spot of keenest feeling by implying
26313 that she had been deluded with a false vision of happiness in marrying
26314 him. As to saying that he was master, it was not the fact. The very
26315 resolution to which he had wrought himself by dint of logic and
26316 honorable pride was beginning to relax under her torpedo contact. He
26317 swallowed half his cup of coffee, and then rose to go.
26318
26319 "I may at least request that you will not go to Trumbull at
26320 present--until it has been seen that there are no other means," said
26321 Rosamond. Although she was not subject to much fear, she felt it safer
26322 not to betray that she had written to Sir Godwin. "Promise me that you
26323 will not go to him for a few weeks, or without telling me."
26324
26325 Lydgate gave a short laugh. "I think it is I who should exact a
26326 promise that you will do nothing without telling me," he said, turning
26327 his eyes sharply upon her, and then moving to the door.
26328
26329 "You remember that we are going to dine at papa's," said Rosamond,
26330 wishing that he should turn and make a more thorough concession to her.
26331 But he only said "Oh yes," impatiently, and went away. She held it to
26332 be very odious in him that he did not think the painful propositions he
26333 had had to make to her were enough, without showing so unpleasant a
26334 temper. And when she put the moderate request that he would defer
26335 going to Trumbull again, it was cruel in him not to assure her of what
26336 he meant to do. She was convinced of her having acted in every way for
26337 the best; and each grating or angry speech of Lydgate's served only as
26338 an addition to the register of offences in her mind. Poor Rosamond for
26339 months had begun to associate her husband with feelings of
26340 disappointment, and the terribly inflexible relation of marriage had
26341 lost its charm of encouraging delightful dreams. It had freed her from
26342 the disagreeables of her father's house, but it had not given her
26343 everything that she had wished and hoped. The Lydgate with whom she
26344 had been in love had been a group of airy conditions for her, most of
26345 which had disappeared, while their place had been taken by every-day
26346 details which must be lived through slowly from hour to hour, not
26347 floated through with a rapid selection of favorable aspects. The
26348 habits of Lydgate's profession, his home preoccupation with scientific
26349 subjects, which seemed to her almost like a morbid vampire's taste, his
26350 peculiar views of things which had never entered into the dialogue of
26351 courtship--all these continually alienating influences, even without
26352 the fact of his having placed himself at a disadvantage in the town,
26353 and without that first shock of revelation about Dover's debt, would
26354 have made his presence dull to her. There was another presence which
26355 ever since the early days of her marriage, until four months ago, had
26356 been an agreeable excitement, but that was gone: Rosamond would not
26357 confess to herself how much the consequent blank had to do with her
26358 utter ennui; and it seemed to her (perhaps she was right) that an
26359 invitation to Quallingham, and an opening for Lydgate to settle
26360 elsewhere than in Middlemarch--in London, or somewhere likely to be
26361 free from unpleasantness--would satisfy her quite well, and make her
26362 indifferent to the absence of Will Ladislaw, towards whom she felt some
26363 resentment for his exaltation of Mrs. Casaubon.
26364
26365 That was the state of things with Lydgate and Rosamond on the New
26366 Year's Day when they dined at her father's, she looking mildly neutral
26367 towards him in remembrance of his ill-tempered behavior at breakfast,
26368 and he carrying a much deeper effect from the inward conflict in which
26369 that morning scene was only one of many epochs. His flushed effort
26370 while talking to Mr. Farebrother--his effort after the cynical pretence
26371 that all ways of getting money are essentially the same, and that
26372 chance has an empire which reduces choice to a fool's illusion--was but
26373 the symptom of a wavering resolve, a benumbed response to the old
26374 stimuli of enthusiasm.
26375
26376 What was he to do? He saw even more keenly than Rosamond did the
26377 dreariness of taking her into the small house in Bride Street, where
26378 she would have scanty furniture around her and discontent within: a
26379 life of privation and life with Rosamond were two images which had
26380 become more and more irreconcilable ever since the threat of privation
26381 had disclosed itself. But even if his resolves had forced the two
26382 images into combination, the useful preliminaries to that hard change
26383 were not visibly within reach. And though he had not given the promise
26384 which his wife had asked for, he did not go again to Trumbull. He even
26385 began to think of taking a rapid journey to the North and seeing Sir
26386 Godwin. He had once believed that nothing would urge him into making
26387 an application for money to his uncle, but he had not then known the
26388 full pressure of alternatives yet more disagreeable. He could not
26389 depend on the effect of a letter; it was only in an interview, however
26390 disagreeable this might be to himself, that he could give a thorough
26391 explanation and could test the effectiveness of kinship. No sooner had
26392 Lydgate begun to represent this step to himself as the easiest than
26393 there was a reaction of anger that he--he who had long ago determined
26394 to live aloof from such abject calculations, such self-interested
26395 anxiety about the inclinations and the pockets of men with whom he had
26396 been proud to have no aims in common--should have fallen not simply to
26397 their level, but to the level of soliciting them.
26398
26399
26400
26401 CHAPTER LXV.
26402
26403 "One of us two must bowen douteless,
26404 And, sith a man is more reasonable
26405 Than woman is, ye [men] moste be suffrable.
26406 --CHAUCER: Canterbury Tales.
26407
26408
26409 The bias of human nature to be slow in correspondence triumphs even
26410 over the present quickening in the general pace of things: what wonder
26411 then that in 1832 old Sir Godwin Lydgate was slow to write a letter
26412 which was of consequence to others rather than to himself? Nearly
26413 three weeks of the new year were gone, and Rosamond, awaiting an answer
26414 to her winning appeal, was every day disappointed. Lydgate, in total
26415 ignorance of her expectations, was seeing the bills come in, and
26416 feeling that Dover's use of his advantage over other creditors was
26417 imminent. He had never mentioned to Rosamond his brooding purpose of
26418 going to Quallingham: he did not want to admit what would appear to her
26419 a concession to her wishes after indignant refusal, until the last
26420 moment; but he was really expecting to set off soon. A slice of the
26421 railway would enable him to manage the whole journey and back in four
26422 days.
26423
26424 But one morning after Lydgate had gone out, a letter came addressed to
26425 him, which Rosamond saw clearly to be from Sir Godwin. She was full of
26426 hope. Perhaps there might be a particular note to her enclosed; but
26427 Lydgate was naturally addressed on the question of money or other aid,
26428 and the fact that he was written to, nay, the very delay in writing at
26429 all, seemed to certify that the answer was thoroughly compliant. She
26430 was too much excited by these thoughts to do anything but light
26431 stitching in a warm corner of the dining-room, with the outside of this
26432 momentous letter lying on the table before her. About twelve she heard
26433 her husband's step in the passage, and tripping to open the door, she
26434 said in her lightest tones, "Tertius, come in here--here is a letter
26435 for you."
26436
26437 "Ah?" he said, not taking off his hat, but just turning her round
26438 within his arm to walk towards the spot where the letter lay. "My
26439 uncle Godwin!" he exclaimed, while Rosamond reseated herself, and
26440 watched him as he opened the letter. She had expected him to be
26441 surprised.
26442
26443 While Lydgate's eyes glanced rapidly over the brief letter, she saw his
26444 face, usually of a pale brown, taking on a dry whiteness; with nostrils
26445 and lips quivering he tossed down the letter before her, and said
26446 violently--
26447
26448 "It will be impossible to endure life with you, if you will always be
26449 acting secretly--acting in opposition to me and hiding your actions."
26450
26451 He checked his speech and turned his back on her--then wheeled round
26452 and walked about, sat down, and got up again restlessly, grasping hard
26453 the objects deep down in his pockets. He was afraid of saying
26454 something irremediably cruel.
26455
26456 Rosamond too had changed color as she read. The letter ran in this
26457 way:--
26458
26459 "DEAR TERTIUS,--Don't set your wife to write to me when you have
26460 anything to ask. It is a roundabout wheedling sort of thing which I
26461 should not have credited you with. I never choose to write to a woman
26462 on matters of business. As to my supplying you with a thousand pounds,
26463 or only half that sum, I can do nothing of the sort. My own family
26464 drains me to the last penny. With two younger sons and three
26465 daughters, I am not likely to have cash to spare. You seem to have got
26466 through your own money pretty quickly, and to have made a mess where
26467 you are; the sooner you go somewhere else the better. But I have
26468 nothing to do with men of your profession, and can't help you there. I
26469 did the best I could for you as guardian, and let you have your own way
26470 in taking to medicine. You might have gone into the army or the
26471 Church. Your money would have held out for that, and there would have
26472 been a surer ladder before you. Your uncle Charles has had a grudge
26473 against you for not going into his profession, but not I. I have always
26474 wished you well, but you must consider yourself on your own legs
26475 entirely now.
26476
26477 Your affectionate uncle,
26478 GODWIN LYDGATE."
26479
26480 When Rosamond had finished reading the letter she sat quite still, with
26481 her hands folded before her, restraining any show of her keen
26482 disappointment, and intrenching herself in quiet passivity under her
26483 husband's wrath. Lydgate paused in his movements, looked at her again,
26484 and said, with biting severity--
26485
26486 "Will this be enough to convince you of the harm you may do by secret
26487 meddling? Have you sense enough to recognize now your incompetence to
26488 judge and act for me--to interfere with your ignorance in affairs which
26489 it belongs to me to decide on?"
26490
26491 The words were hard; but this was not the first time that Lydgate had
26492 been frustrated by her. She did not look at him, and made no reply.
26493
26494 "I had nearly resolved on going to Quallingham. It would have cost me
26495 pain enough to do it, yet it might have been of some use. But it has
26496 been of no use for me to think of anything. You have always been
26497 counteracting me secretly. You delude me with a false assent, and then
26498 I am at the mercy of your devices. If you mean to resist every wish I
26499 express, say so and defy me. I shall at least know what I am doing
26500 then."
26501
26502 It is a terrible moment in young lives when the closeness of love's
26503 bond has turned to this power of galling. In spite of Rosamond's
26504 self-control a tear fell silently and rolled over her lips. She still
26505 said nothing; but under that quietude was hidden an intense effect: she
26506 was in such entire disgust with her husband that she wished she had
26507 never seen him. Sir Godwin's rudeness towards her and utter want of
26508 feeling ranged him with Dover and all other creditors--disagreeable
26509 people who only thought of themselves, and did not mind how annoying
26510 they were to her. Even her father was unkind, and might have done more
26511 for them. In fact there was but one person in Rosamond's world whom
26512 she did not regard as blameworthy, and that was the graceful creature
26513 with blond plaits and with little hands crossed before her, who had
26514 never expressed herself unbecomingly, and had always acted for the
26515 best--the best naturally being what she best liked.
26516
26517 Lydgate pausing and looking at her began to feel that half-maddening
26518 sense of helplessness which comes over passionate people when their
26519 passion is met by an innocent-looking silence whose meek victimized air
26520 seems to put them in the wrong, and at last infects even the justest
26521 indignation with a doubt of its justice. He needed to recover the full
26522 sense that he was in the right by moderating his words.
26523
26524 "Can you not see, Rosamond," he began again, trying to be simply grave
26525 and not bitter, "that nothing can be so fatal as a want of openness and
26526 confidence between us? It has happened again and again that I have
26527 expressed a decided wish, and you have seemed to assent, yet after that
26528 you have secretly disobeyed my wish. In that way I can never know what
26529 I have to trust to. There would be some hope for us if you would admit
26530 this. Am I such an unreasonable, furious brute? Why should you not be
26531 open with me?" Still silence.
26532
26533 "Will you only say that you have been mistaken, and that I may depend
26534 on your not acting secretly in future?" said Lydgate, urgently, but
26535 with something of request in his tone which Rosamond was quick to
26536 perceive. She spoke with coolness.
26537
26538 "I cannot possibly make admissions or promises in answer to such words
26539 as you have used towards me. I have not been accustomed to language of
26540 that kind. You have spoken of my 'secret meddling,' and my
26541 'interfering ignorance,' and my 'false assent.' I have never expressed
26542 myself in that way to you, and I think that you ought to apologize.
26543 You spoke of its being impossible to live with me. Certainly you have
26544 not made my life pleasant to me of late. I think it was to be expected
26545 that I should try to avert some of the hardships which our marriage has
26546 brought on me." Another tear fell as Rosamond ceased speaking, and she
26547 pressed it away as quietly as the first.
26548
26549 Lydgate flung himself into a chair, feeling checkmated. What place was
26550 there in her mind for a remonstrance to lodge in? He laid down his
26551 hat, flung an arm over the back of his chair, and looked down for some
26552 moments without speaking. Rosamond had the double purchase over him of
26553 insensibility to the point of justice in his reproach, and of
26554 sensibility to the undeniable hardships now present in her married
26555 life. Although her duplicity in the affair of the house had exceeded
26556 what he knew, and had really hindered the Plymdales from knowing of it,
26557 she had no consciousness that her action could rightly be called false.
26558 We are not obliged to identify our own acts according to a strict
26559 classification, any more than the materials of our grocery and clothes.
26560 Rosamond felt that she was aggrieved, and that this was what Lydgate
26561 had to recognize.
26562
26563 As for him, the need of accommodating himself to her nature, which was
26564 inflexible in proportion to its negations, held him as with pincers.
26565 He had begun to have an alarmed foresight of her irrevocable loss of
26566 love for him, and the consequent dreariness of their life. The ready
26567 fulness of his emotions made this dread alternate quickly with the
26568 first violent movements of his anger. It would assuredly have been a
26569 vain boast in him to say that he was her master.
26570
26571 "You have not made my life pleasant to me of late"--"the hardships
26572 which our marriage has brought on me"--these words were stinging his
26573 imagination as a pain makes an exaggerated dream. If he were not only
26574 to sink from his highest resolve, but to sink into the hideous
26575 fettering of domestic hate?
26576
26577 "Rosamond," he said, turning his eyes on her with a melancholy look,
26578 "you should allow for a man's words when he is disappointed and
26579 provoked. You and I cannot have opposite interests. I cannot part my
26580 happiness from yours. If I am angry with you, it is that you seem not
26581 to see how any concealment divides us. How could I wish to make
26582 anything hard to you either by my words or conduct? When I hurt you, I
26583 hurt part of my own life. I should never be angry with you if you
26584 would be quite open with me."
26585
26586 "I have only wished to prevent you from hurrying us into wretchedness
26587 without any necessity," said Rosamond, the tears coming again from a
26588 softened feeling now that her husband had softened. "It is so very
26589 hard to be disgraced here among all the people we know, and to live in
26590 such a miserable way. I wish I had died with the baby."
26591
26592 She spoke and wept with that gentleness which makes such words and
26593 tears omnipotent over a loving-hearted man. Lydgate drew his chair
26594 near to hers and pressed her delicate head against his cheek with his
26595 powerful tender hand. He only caressed her; he did not say anything;
26596 for what was there to say? He could not promise to shield her from the
26597 dreaded wretchedness, for he could see no sure means of doing so. When
26598 he left her to go out again, he told himself that it was ten times
26599 harder for her than for him: he had a life away from home, and constant
26600 appeals to his activity on behalf of others. He wished to excuse
26601 everything in her if he could--but it was inevitable that in that
26602 excusing mood he should think of her as if she were an animal of
26603 another and feebler species. Nevertheless she had mastered him.
26604
26605
26606
26607 CHAPTER LXVI.
26608
26609 "'Tis one thing to be tempted, Escalus,
26610 Another thing to fall."
26611 --Measure for Measure.
26612
26613
26614 Lydgate certainly had good reason to reflect on the service his
26615 practice did him in counteracting his personal cares. He had no longer
26616 free energy enough for spontaneous research and speculative thinking,
26617 but by the bedside of patients, the direct external calls on his
26618 judgment and sympathies brought the added impulse needed to draw him
26619 out of himself. It was not simply that beneficent harness of routine
26620 which enables silly men to live respectably and unhappy men to live
26621 calmly--it was a perpetual claim on the immediate fresh application of
26622 thought, and on the consideration of another's need and trial. Many of
26623 us looking back through life would say that the kindest man we have
26624 ever known has been a medical man, or perhaps that surgeon whose fine
26625 tact, directed by deeply informed perception, has come to us in our
26626 need with a more sublime beneficence than that of miracle-workers. Some
26627 of that twice-blessed mercy was always with Lydgate in his work at the
26628 Hospital or in private houses, serving better than any opiate to quiet
26629 and sustain him under his anxieties and his sense of mental degeneracy.
26630
26631 Mr. Farebrother's suspicion as to the opiate was true, however. Under
26632 the first galling pressure of foreseen difficulties, and the first
26633 perception that his marriage, if it were not to be a yoked loneliness,
26634 must be a state of effort to go on loving without too much care about
26635 being loved, he had once or twice tried a dose of opium. But he had no
26636 hereditary constitutional craving after such transient escapes from the
26637 hauntings of misery. He was strong, could drink a great deal of wine,
26638 but did not care about it; and when the men round him were drinking
26639 spirits, he took sugar and water, having a contemptuous pity even for
26640 the earliest stages of excitement from drink. It was the same with
26641 gambling. He had looked on at a great deal of gambling in Paris,
26642 watching it as if it had been a disease. He was no more tempted by
26643 such winning than he was by drink. He had said to himself that the
26644 only winning he cared for must be attained by a conscious process of
26645 high, difficult combination tending towards a beneficent result. The
26646 power he longed for could not be represented by agitated fingers
26647 clutching a heap of coin, or by the half-barbarous, half-idiotic
26648 triumph in the eyes of a man who sweeps within his arms the ventures of
26649 twenty chapfallen companions.
26650
26651 But just as he had tried opium, so his thought now began to turn upon
26652 gambling--not with appetite for its excitement, but with a sort of
26653 wistful inward gaze after that easy way of getting money, which implied
26654 no asking and brought no responsibility. If he had been in London or
26655 Paris at that time, it is probable that such thoughts, seconded by
26656 opportunity, would have taken him into a gambling-house, no longer to
26657 watch the gamblers, but to watch with them in kindred eagerness.
26658 Repugnance would have been surmounted by the immense need to win, if
26659 chance would be kind enough to let him. An incident which happened not
26660 very long after that airy notion of getting aid from his uncle had been
26661 excluded, was a strong sign of the effect that might have followed any
26662 extant opportunity of gambling.
26663
26664 The billiard-room at the Green Dragon was the constant resort of a
26665 certain set, most of whom, like our acquaintance Mr. Bambridge, were
26666 regarded as men of pleasure. It was here that poor Fred Vincy had made
26667 part of his memorable debt, having lost money in betting, and been
26668 obliged to borrow of that gay companion. It was generally known in
26669 Middlemarch that a good deal of money was lost and won in this way; and
26670 the consequent repute of the Green Dragon as a place of dissipation
26671 naturally heightened in some quarters the temptation to go there.
26672 Probably its regular visitants, like the initiates of freemasonry,
26673 wished that there were something a little more tremendous to keep to
26674 themselves concerning it; but they were not a closed community, and
26675 many decent seniors as well as juniors occasionally turned into the
26676 billiard-room to see what was going on. Lydgate, who had the muscular
26677 aptitude for billiards, and was fond of the game, had once or twice in
26678 the early days after his arrival in Middlemarch taken his turn with the
26679 cue at the Green Dragon; but afterwards he had no leisure for the game,
26680 and no inclination for the socialities there. One evening, however, he
26681 had occasion to seek Mr. Bambridge at that resort. The horsedealer had
26682 engaged to get him a customer for his remaining good horse, for which
26683 Lydgate had determined to substitute a cheap hack, hoping by this
26684 reduction of style to get perhaps twenty pounds; and he cared now for
26685 every small sum, as a help towards feeding the patience of his
26686 tradesmen. To run up to the billiard-room, as he was passing, would
26687 save time.
26688
26689 Mr. Bambridge was not yet come, but would be sure to arrive by-and-by,
26690 said his friend Mr. Horrock; and Lydgate stayed, playing a game for the
26691 sake of passing the time. That evening he had the peculiar light in
26692 the eyes and the unusual vivacity which had been once noticed in him by
26693 Mr. Farebrother. The exceptional fact of his presence was much noticed
26694 in the room, where there was a good deal of Middlemarch company; and
26695 several lookers-on, as well as some of the players, were betting with
26696 animation. Lydgate was playing well, and felt confident; the bets were
26697 dropping round him, and with a swift glancing thought of the probable
26698 gain which might double the sum he was saving from his horse, he began
26699 to bet on his own play, and won again and again. Mr. Bambridge had
26700 come in, but Lydgate did not notice him. He was not only excited with
26701 his play, but visions were gleaming on him of going the next day to
26702 Brassing, where there was gambling on a grander scale to be had, and
26703 where, by one powerful snatch at the devil's bait, he might carry it
26704 off without the hook, and buy his rescue from his daily solicitings.
26705
26706 He was still winning when two new visitors entered. One of them was a
26707 young Hawley, just come from his law studies in town, and the other was
26708 Fred Vincy, who had spent several evenings of late at this old haunt of
26709 his. Young Hawley, an accomplished billiard-player, brought a cool
26710 fresh hand to the cue. But Fred Vincy, startled at seeing Lydgate, and
26711 astonished to see him betting with an excited air, stood aside, and
26712 kept out of the circle round the table.
26713
26714 Fred had been rewarding resolution by a little laxity of late. He had
26715 been working heartily for six months at all outdoor occupations under
26716 Mr. Garth, and by dint of severe practice had nearly mastered the
26717 defects of his handwriting, this practice being, perhaps, a little the
26718 less severe that it was often carried on in the evening at Mr. Garth's
26719 under the eyes of Mary. But the last fortnight Mary had been staying
26720 at Lowick Parsonage with the ladies there, during Mr. Farebrother's
26721 residence in Middlemarch, where he was carrying out some parochial
26722 plans; and Fred, not seeing anything more agreeable to do, had turned
26723 into the Green Dragon, partly to play at billiards, partly to taste the
26724 old flavor of discourse about horses, sport, and things in general,
26725 considered from a point of view which was not strenuously correct. He
26726 had not been out hunting once this season, had had no horse of his own
26727 to ride, and had gone from place to place chiefly with Mr. Garth in his
26728 gig, or on the sober cob which Mr. Garth could lend him. It was a
26729 little too bad, Fred began to think, that he should be kept in the
26730 traces with more severity than if he had been a clergyman. "I will
26731 tell you what, Mistress Mary--it will be rather harder work to learn
26732 surveying and drawing plans than it would have been to write sermons,"
26733 he had said, wishing her to appreciate what he went through for her
26734 sake; "and as to Hercules and Theseus, they were nothing to me. They
26735 had sport, and never learned to write a bookkeeping hand." And now,
26736 Mary being out of the way for a little while, Fred, like any other
26737 strong dog who cannot slip his collar, had pulled up the staple of his
26738 chain and made a small escape, not of course meaning to go fast or far.
26739 There could be no reason why he should not play at billiards, but he
26740 was determined not to bet. As to money just now, Fred had in his mind
26741 the heroic project of saving almost all of the eighty pounds that Mr.
26742 Garth offered him, and returning it, which he could easily do by giving
26743 up all futile money-spending, since he had a superfluous stock of
26744 clothes, and no expense in his board. In that way he could, in one
26745 year, go a good way towards repaying the ninety pounds of which he had
26746 deprived Mrs. Garth, unhappily at a time when she needed that sum more
26747 than she did now. Nevertheless, it must be acknowledged that on this
26748 evening, which was the fifth of his recent visits to the billiard-room,
26749 Fred had, not in his pocket, but in his mind, the ten pounds which he
26750 meant to reserve for himself from his half-year's salary (having before
26751 him the pleasure of carrying thirty to Mrs. Garth when Mary was likely
26752 to be come home again)--he had those ten pounds in his mind as a fund
26753 from which he might risk something, if there were a chance of a good
26754 bet. Why? Well, when sovereigns were flying about, why shouldn't he
26755 catch a few? He would never go far along that road again; but a man
26756 likes to assure himself, and men of pleasure generally, what he could
26757 do in the way of mischief if he chose, and that if he abstains from
26758 making himself ill, or beggaring himself, or talking with the utmost
26759 looseness which the narrow limits of human capacity will allow, it is
26760 not because he is a spooney. Fred did not enter into formal reasons,
26761 which are a very artificial, inexact way of representing the tingling
26762 returns of old habit, and the caprices of young blood: but there was
26763 lurking in him a prophetic sense that evening, that when he began to
26764 play he should also begin to bet--that he should enjoy some
26765 punch-drinking, and in general prepare himself for feeling "rather
26766 seedy" in the morning. It is in such indefinable movements that action
26767 often begins.
26768
26769 But the last thing likely to have entered Fred's expectation was that
26770 he should see his brother-in-law Lydgate--of whom he had never quite
26771 dropped the old opinion that he was a prig, and tremendously conscious
26772 of his superiority--looking excited and betting, just as he himself
26773 might have done. Fred felt a shock greater than he could quite account
26774 for by the vague knowledge that Lydgate was in debt, and that his
26775 father had refused to help him; and his own inclination to enter into
26776 the play was suddenly checked. It was a strange reversal of attitudes:
26777 Fred's blond face and blue eyes, usually bright and careless, ready to
26778 give attention to anything that held out a promise of amusement,
26779 looking involuntarily grave and almost embarrassed as if by the sight
26780 of something unfitting; while Lydgate, who had habitually an air of
26781 self-possessed strength, and a certain meditativeness that seemed to
26782 lie behind his most observant attention, was acting, watching, speaking
26783 with that excited narrow consciousness which reminds one of an animal
26784 with fierce eyes and retractile claws.
26785
26786 Lydgate, by betting on his own strokes, had won sixteen pounds; but
26787 young Hawley's arrival had changed the poise of things. He made
26788 first-rate strokes himself, and began to bet against Lydgate's strokes,
26789 the strain of whose nerves was thus changed from simple confidence in
26790 his own movements to defying another person's doubt in them. The
26791 defiance was more exciting than the confidence, but it was less sure.
26792 He continued to bet on his own play, but began often to fail. Still he
26793 went on, for his mind was as utterly narrowed into that precipitous
26794 crevice of play as if he had been the most ignorant lounger there.
26795 Fred observed that Lydgate was losing fast, and found himself in the
26796 new situation of puzzling his brains to think of some device by which,
26797 without being offensive, he could withdraw Lydgate's attention, and
26798 perhaps suggest to him a reason for quitting the room. He saw that
26799 others were observing Lydgate's strange unlikeness to himself, and it
26800 occurred to him that merely to touch his elbow and call him aside for a
26801 moment might rouse him from his absorption. He could think of nothing
26802 cleverer than the daring improbability of saying that he wanted to see
26803 Rosy, and wished to know if she were at home this evening; and he was
26804 going desperately to carry out this weak device, when a waiter came up
26805 to him with a message, saying that Mr. Farebrother was below, and
26806 begged to speak with him.
26807
26808 Fred was surprised, not quite comfortably, but sending word that he
26809 would be down immediately, he went with a new impulse up to Lydgate,
26810 said, "Can I speak to you a moment?" and drew him aside.
26811
26812 "Farebrother has just sent up a message to say that he wants to speak
26813 to me. He is below. I thought you might like to know he was there, if
26814 you had anything to say to him."
26815
26816 Fred had simply snatched up this pretext for speaking, because he could
26817 not say, "You are losing confoundedly, and are making everybody stare
26818 at you; you had better come away." But inspiration could hardly have
26819 served him better. Lydgate had not before seen that Fred was present,
26820 and his sudden appearance with an announcement of Mr. Farebrother had
26821 the effect of a sharp concussion.
26822
26823 "No, no," said Lydgate; "I have nothing particular to say to him.
26824 But--the game is up--I must be going--I came in just to see Bambridge."
26825
26826 "Bambridge is over there, but he is making a row--I don't think he's
26827 ready for business. Come down with me to Farebrother. I expect he is
26828 going to blow me up, and you will shield me," said Fred, with some
26829 adroitness.
26830
26831 Lydgate felt shame, but could not bear to act as if he felt it, by
26832 refusing to see Mr. Farebrother; and he went down. They merely shook
26833 hands, however, and spoke of the frost; and when all three had turned
26834 into the street, the Vicar seemed quite willing to say good-by to
26835 Lydgate. His present purpose was clearly to talk with Fred alone, and
26836 he said, kindly, "I disturbed you, young gentleman, because I have some
26837 pressing business with you. Walk with me to St. Botolph's, will you?"
26838
26839 It was a fine night, the sky thick with stars, and Mr. Farebrother
26840 proposed that they should make a circuit to the old church by the
26841 London road. The next thing he said was--
26842
26843 "I thought Lydgate never went to the Green Dragon?"
26844
26845 "So did I," said Fred. "But he said that he went to see Bambridge."
26846
26847 "He was not playing, then?"
26848
26849 Fred had not meant to tell this, but he was obliged now to say, "Yes,
26850 he was. But I suppose it was an accidental thing. I have never seen
26851 him there before."
26852
26853 "You have been going often yourself, then, lately?"
26854
26855 "Oh, about five or six times."
26856
26857 "I think you had some good reason for giving up the habit of going
26858 there?"
26859
26860 "Yes. You know all about it," said Fred, not liking to be catechised
26861 in this way. "I made a clean breast to you."
26862
26863 "I suppose that gives me a warrant to speak about the matter now. It
26864 is understood between us, is it not?--that we are on a footing of open
26865 friendship: I have listened to you, and you will be willing to listen
26866 to me. I may take my turn in talking a little about myself?"
26867
26868 "I am under the deepest obligation to you, Mr. Farebrother," said Fred,
26869 in a state of uncomfortable surmise.
26870
26871 "I will not affect to deny that you are under some obligation to me.
26872 But I am going to confess to you, Fred, that I have been tempted to
26873 reverse all that by keeping silence with you just now. When somebody
26874 said to me, 'Young Vincy has taken to being at the billiard-table every
26875 night again--he won't bear the curb long;' I was tempted to do the
26876 opposite of what I am doing--to hold my tongue and wait while you went
26877 down the ladder again, betting first and then--"
26878
26879 "I have not made any bets," said Fred, hastily.
26880
26881 "Glad to hear it. But I say, my prompting was to look on and see you
26882 take the wrong turning, wear out Garth's patience, and lose the best
26883 opportunity of your life--the opportunity which you made some rather
26884 difficult effort to secure. You can guess the feeling which raised
26885 that temptation in me--I am sure you know it. I am sure you know that
26886 the satisfaction of your affections stands in the way of mine."
26887
26888 There was a pause. Mr. Farebrother seemed to wait for a recognition of
26889 the fact; and the emotion perceptible in the tones of his fine voice
26890 gave solemnity to his words. But no feeling could quell Fred's alarm.
26891
26892 "I could not be expected to give her up," he said, after a moment's
26893 hesitation: it was not a case for any pretence of generosity.
26894
26895 "Clearly not, when her affection met yours. But relations of this
26896 sort, even when they are of long standing, are always liable to change.
26897 I can easily conceive that you might act in a way to loosen the tie she
26898 feels towards you--it must be remembered that she is only conditionally
26899 bound to you--and that in that case, another man, who may flatter
26900 himself that he has a hold on her regard, might succeed in winning that
26901 firm place in her love as well as respect which you had let slip. I
26902 can easily conceive such a result," repeated Mr. Farebrother,
26903 emphatically. "There is a companionship of ready sympathy, which might
26904 get the advantage even over the longest associations." It seemed to
26905 Fred that if Mr. Farebrother had had a beak and talons instead of his
26906 very capable tongue, his mode of attack could hardly be more cruel. He
26907 had a horrible conviction that behind all this hypothetic statement
26908 there was a knowledge of some actual change in Mary's feeling.
26909
26910 "Of course I know it might easily be all up with me," he said, in a
26911 troubled voice. "If she is beginning to compare--" He broke off, not
26912 liking to betray all he felt, and then said, by the help of a little
26913 bitterness, "But I thought you were friendly to me."
26914
26915 "So I am; that is why we are here. But I have had a strong disposition
26916 to be otherwise. I have said to myself, 'If there is a likelihood of
26917 that youngster doing himself harm, why should you interfere? Aren't
26918 you worth as much as he is, and don't your sixteen years over and above
26919 his, in which you have gone rather hungry, give you more right to
26920 satisfaction than he has? If there's a chance of his going to the
26921 dogs, let him--perhaps you could nohow hinder it--and do you take the
26922 benefit.'"
26923
26924 There was a pause, in which Fred was seized by a most uncomfortable
26925 chill. What was coming next? He dreaded to hear that something had
26926 been said to Mary--he felt as if he were listening to a threat rather
26927 than a warning. When the Vicar began again there was a change in his
26928 tone like the encouraging transition to a major key.
26929
26930 "But I had once meant better than that, and I am come back to my old
26931 intention. I thought that I could hardly _secure myself_ in it better,
26932 Fred, than by telling you just what had gone on in me. And now, do you
26933 understand me? I want you to make the happiness of her life and your
26934 own, and if there is any chance that a word of warning from me may turn
26935 aside any risk to the contrary--well, I have uttered it."
26936
26937 There was a drop in the Vicar's voice when he spoke the last words. He
26938 paused--they were standing on a patch of green where the road diverged
26939 towards St. Botolph's, and he put out his hand, as if to imply that the
26940 conversation was closed. Fred was moved quite newly. Some one highly
26941 susceptible to the contemplation of a fine act has said, that it
26942 produces a sort of regenerating shudder through the frame, and makes
26943 one feel ready to begin a new life. A good degree of that effect was
26944 just then present in Fred Vincy.
26945
26946 "I will try to be worthy," he said, breaking off before he could say
26947 "of you as well as of her." And meanwhile Mr. Farebrother had gathered
26948 the impulse to say something more.
26949
26950 "You must not imagine that I believe there is at present any decline in
26951 her preference of you, Fred. Set your heart at rest, that if you keep
26952 right, other things will keep right."
26953
26954 "I shall never forget what you have done," Fred answered. "I can't say
26955 anything that seems worth saying--only I will try that your goodness
26956 shall not be thrown away."
26957
26958 "That's enough. Good-by, and God bless you."
26959
26960 In that way they parted. But both of them walked about a long while
26961 before they went out of the starlight. Much of Fred's rumination might
26962 be summed up in the words, "It certainly would have been a fine thing
26963 for her to marry Farebrother--but if she loves me best and I am a good
26964 husband?"
26965
26966 Perhaps Mr. Farebrother's might be concentrated into a single shrug and
26967 one little speech. "To think of the part one little woman can play in
26968 the life of a man, so that to renounce her may be a very good imitation
26969 of heroism, and to win her may be a discipline!"
26970
26971
26972
26973 CHAPTER LXVII.
26974
26975 Now is there civil war within the soul:
26976 Resolve is thrust from off the sacred throne
26977 By clamorous Needs, and Pride the grand-vizier
26978 Makes humble compact, plays the supple part
26979 Of envoy and deft-tongued apologist
26980 For hungry rebels.
26981
26982
26983 Happily Lydgate had ended by losing in the billiard-room, and brought
26984 away no encouragement to make a raid on luck. On the contrary, he felt
26985 unmixed disgust with himself the next day when he had to pay four or
26986 five pounds over and above his gains, and he carried about with him a
26987 most unpleasant vision of the figure he had made, not only rubbing
26988 elbows with the men at the Green Dragon but behaving just as they did.
26989 A philosopher fallen to betting is hardly distinguishable from a
26990 Philistine under the same circumstances: the difference will chiefly be
26991 found in his subsequent reflections, and Lydgate chewed a very
26992 disagreeable cud in that way. His reason told him how the affair might
26993 have been magnified into ruin by a slight change of scenery--if it had
26994 been a gambling-house that he had turned into, where chance could be
26995 clutched with both hands instead of being picked up with thumb and
26996 fore-finger. Nevertheless, though reason strangled the desire to
26997 gamble, there remained the feeling that, with an assurance of luck to
26998 the needful amount, he would have liked to gamble, rather than take the
26999 alternative which was beginning to urge itself as inevitable.
27000
27001 That alternative was to apply to Mr. Bulstrode. Lydgate had so many
27002 times boasted both to himself and others that he was totally
27003 independent of Bulstrode, to whose plans he had lent himself solely
27004 because they enabled him to carry out his own ideas of professional
27005 work and public benefit--he had so constantly in their personal
27006 intercourse had his pride sustained by the sense that he was making a
27007 good social use of this predominating banker, whose opinions he thought
27008 contemptible and whose motives often seemed to him an absurd mixture of
27009 contradictory impressions--that he had been creating for himself
27010 strong ideal obstacles to the proffering of any considerable request to
27011 him on his own account.
27012
27013 Still, early in March his affairs were at that pass in which men begin
27014 to say that their oaths were delivered in ignorance, and to perceive
27015 that the act which they had called impossible to them is becoming
27016 manifestly possible. With Dover's ugly security soon to be put in
27017 force, with the proceeds of his practice immediately absorbed in paying
27018 back debts, and with the chance, if the worst were known, of daily
27019 supplies being refused on credit, above all with the vision of
27020 Rosamond's hopeless discontent continually haunting him, Lydgate had
27021 begun to see that he should inevitably bend himself to ask help from
27022 somebody or other. At first he had considered whether he should write
27023 to Mr. Vincy; but on questioning Rosamond he found that, as he had
27024 suspected, she had already applied twice to her father, the last time
27025 being since the disappointment from Sir Godwin; and papa had said that
27026 Lydgate must look out for himself. "Papa said he had come, with one
27027 bad year after another, to trade more and more on borrowed capital, and
27028 had had to give up many indulgences; he could not spare a single
27029 hundred from the charges of his family. He said, let Lydgate ask
27030 Bulstrode: they have always been hand and glove."
27031
27032 Indeed, Lydgate himself had come to the conclusion that if he must end
27033 by asking for a free loan, his relations with Bulstrode, more at least
27034 than with any other man, might take the shape of a claim which was not
27035 purely personal. Bulstrode had indirectly helped to cause the failure
27036 of his practice, and had also been highly gratified by getting a
27037 medical partner in his plans:--but who among us ever reduced himself
27038 to the sort of dependence in which Lydgate now stood, without trying to
27039 believe that he had claims which diminished the humiliation of asking?
27040 It was true that of late there had seemed to be a new languor of
27041 interest in Bulstrode about the Hospital; but his health had got worse,
27042 and showed signs of a deep-seated nervous affection. In other respects
27043 he did not appear to be changed: he had always been highly polite, but
27044 Lydgate had observed in him from the first a marked coldness about his
27045 marriage and other private circumstances, a coldness which he had
27046 hitherto preferred to any warmth of familiarity between them. He
27047 deferred the intention from day to day, his habit of acting on his
27048 conclusions being made infirm by his repugnance to every possible
27049 conclusion and its consequent act. He saw Mr. Bulstrode often, but he
27050 did not try to use any occasion for his private purpose. At one moment
27051 he thought, "I will write a letter: I prefer that to any circuitous
27052 talk;" at another he thought, "No; if I were talking to him, I could
27053 make a retreat before any signs of disinclination."
27054
27055 Still the days passed and no letter was written, no special interview
27056 sought. In his shrinking from the humiliation of a dependent attitude
27057 towards Bulstrode, he began to familiarize his imagination with another
27058 step even more unlike his remembered self. He began spontaneously to
27059 consider whether it would be possible to carry out that puerile notion
27060 of Rosamond's which had often made him angry, namely, that they should
27061 quit Middlemarch without seeing anything beyond that preface. The
27062 question came--"Would any man buy the practice of me even now, for as
27063 little as it is worth? Then the sale might happen as a necessary
27064 preparation for going away."
27065
27066 But against his taking this step, which he still felt to be a
27067 contemptible relinquishment of present work, a guilty turning aside
27068 from what was a real and might be a widening channel for worthy
27069 activity, to start again without any justified destination, there was
27070 this obstacle, that the purchaser, if procurable at all, might not be
27071 quickly forthcoming. And afterwards? Rosamond in a poor lodging,
27072 though in the largest city or most distant town, would not find the
27073 life that could save her from gloom, and save him from the reproach of
27074 having plunged her into it. For when a man is at the foot of the hill
27075 in his fortunes, he may stay a long while there in spite of
27076 professional accomplishment. In the British climate there is no
27077 incompatibility between scientific insight and furnished lodgings: the
27078 incompatibility is chiefly between scientific ambition and a wife who
27079 objects to that kind of residence.
27080
27081 But in the midst of his hesitation, opportunity came to decide him. A
27082 note from Mr. Bulstrode requested Lydgate to call on him at the Bank.
27083 A hypochondriacal tendency had shown itself in the banker's
27084 constitution of late; and a lack of sleep, which was really only a
27085 slight exaggeration of an habitual dyspeptic symptom, had been dwelt on
27086 by him as a sign of threatening insanity. He wanted to consult Lydgate
27087 without delay on that particular morning, although he had nothing to
27088 tell beyond what he had told before. He listened eagerly to what
27089 Lydgate had to say in dissipation of his fears, though this too was
27090 only repetition; and this moment in which Bulstrode was receiving a
27091 medical opinion with a sense of comfort, seemed to make the
27092 communication of a personal need to him easier than it had been in
27093 Lydgate's contemplation beforehand. He had been insisting that it
27094 would be well for Mr. Bulstrode to relax his attention to business.
27095
27096 "One sees how any mental strain, however slight, may affect a delicate
27097 frame," said Lydgate at that stage of the consultation when the remarks
27098 tend to pass from the personal to the general, "by the deep stamp which
27099 anxiety will make for a time even on the young and vigorous. I am
27100 naturally very strong; yet I have been thoroughly shaken lately by an
27101 accumulation of trouble."
27102
27103 "I presume that a constitution in the susceptible state in which mine
27104 at present is, would be especially liable to fall a victim to cholera,
27105 if it visited our district. And since its appearance near London, we
27106 may well besiege the Mercy-seat for our protection," said Mr.
27107 Bulstrode, not intending to evade Lydgate's allusion, but really
27108 preoccupied with alarms about himself.
27109
27110 "You have at all events taken your share in using good practical
27111 precautions for the town, and that is the best mode of asking for
27112 protection," said Lydgate, with a strong distaste for the broken
27113 metaphor and bad logic of the banker's religion, somewhat increased by
27114 the apparent deafness of his sympathy. But his mind had taken up its
27115 long-prepared movement towards getting help, and was not yet arrested.
27116 He added, "The town has done well in the way of cleansing, and finding
27117 appliances; and I think that if the cholera should come, even our
27118 enemies will admit that the arrangements in the Hospital are a public
27119 good."
27120
27121 "Truly," said Mr. Bulstrode, with some coldness. "With regard to what
27122 you say, Mr. Lydgate, about the relaxation of my mental labor, I have
27123 for some time been entertaining a purpose to that effect--a purpose of
27124 a very decided character. I contemplate at least a temporary
27125 withdrawal from the management of much business, whether benevolent or
27126 commercial. Also I think of changing my residence for a time: probably
27127 I shall close or let 'The Shrubs,' and take some place near the
27128 coast--under advice of course as to salubrity. That would be a measure
27129 which you would recommend?"
27130
27131 "Oh yes," said Lydgate, falling backward in his chair, with
27132 ill-repressed impatience under the banker's pale earnest eyes and
27133 intense preoccupation with himself.
27134
27135 "I have for some time felt that I should open this subject with you in
27136 relation to our Hospital," continued Bulstrode. "Under the
27137 circumstances I have indicated, of course I must cease to have any
27138 personal share in the management, and it is contrary to my views of
27139 responsibility to continue a large application of means to an
27140 institution which I cannot watch over and to some extent regulate. I
27141 shall therefore, in case of my ultimate decision to leave Middlemarch,
27142 consider that I withdraw other support to the New Hospital than that
27143 which will subsist in the fact that I chiefly supplied the expenses of
27144 building it, and have contributed further large sums to its successful
27145 working."
27146
27147 Lydgate's thought, when Bulstrode paused according to his wont, was,
27148 "He has perhaps been losing a good deal of money." This was the most
27149 plausible explanation of a speech which had caused rather a startling
27150 change in his expectations. He said in reply--
27151
27152 "The loss to the Hospital can hardly be made up, I fear."
27153
27154 "Hardly," returned Bulstrode, in the same deliberate, silvery tone;
27155 "except by some changes of plan. The only person who may be certainly
27156 counted on as willing to increase her contributions is Mrs. Casaubon.
27157 I have had an interview with her on the subject, and I have pointed out
27158 to her, as I am about to do to you, that it will be desirable to win a
27159 more general support to the New Hospital by a change of system."
27160 Another pause, but Lydgate did not speak.
27161
27162 "The change I mean is an amalgamation with the Infirmary, so that the
27163 New Hospital shall be regarded as a special addition to the elder
27164 institution, having the same directing board. It will be necessary,
27165 also, that the medical management of the two shall be combined. In
27166 this way any difficulty as to the adequate maintenance of our new
27167 establishment will be removed; the benevolent interests of the town
27168 will cease to be divided."
27169
27170 Mr. Bulstrode had lowered his eyes from Lydgate's face to the buttons
27171 of his coat as he again paused.
27172
27173 "No doubt that is a good device as to ways and means," said Lydgate,
27174 with an edge of irony in his tone. "But I can't be expected to rejoice
27175 in it at once, since one of the first results will be that the other
27176 medical men will upset or interrupt my methods, if it were only because
27177 they are mine."
27178
27179 "I myself, as you know, Mr. Lydgate, highly valued the opportunity of
27180 new and independent procedure which you have diligently employed: the
27181 original plan, I confess, was one which I had much at heart, under
27182 submission to the Divine Will. But since providential indications
27183 demand a renunciation from me, I renounce."
27184
27185 Bulstrode showed a rather exasperating ability in this conversation.
27186 The broken metaphor and bad logic of motive which had stirred his
27187 hearer's contempt were quite consistent with a mode of putting the
27188 facts which made it difficult for Lydgate to vent his own indignation
27189 and disappointment. After some rapid reflection, he only asked--
27190
27191 "What did Mrs. Casaubon say?"
27192
27193 "That was the further statement which I wished to make to you," said
27194 Bulstrode, who had thoroughly prepared his ministerial explanation.
27195 "She is, you are aware, a woman of most munificent disposition, and
27196 happily in possession--not I presume of great wealth, but of funds
27197 which she can well spare. She has informed me that though she has
27198 destined the chief part of those funds to another purpose, she is
27199 willing to consider whether she cannot fully take my place in relation
27200 to the Hospital. But she wishes for ample time to mature her thoughts
27201 on the subject, and I have told her that there is no need for
27202 haste--that, in fact, my own plans are not yet absolute."
27203
27204 Lydgate was ready to say, "If Mrs. Casaubon would take your place,
27205 there would be gain, instead of loss." But there was still a weight on
27206 his mind which arrested this cheerful candor. He replied, "I suppose,
27207 then, that I may enter into the subject with Mrs. Casaubon."
27208
27209 "Precisely; that is what she expressly desires. Her decision, she
27210 says, will much depend on what you can tell her. But not at present:
27211 she is, I believe, just setting out on a journey. I have her letter
27212 here," said Mr. Bulstrode, drawing it out, and reading from it. "'I am
27213 immediately otherwise engaged,' she says. 'I am going into Yorkshire
27214 with Sir James and Lady Chettam; and the conclusions I come to about
27215 some land which I am to see there may affect my power of contributing
27216 to the Hospital.' Thus, Mr. Lydgate, there is no haste necessary in
27217 this matter; but I wished to apprise you beforehand of what may
27218 possibly occur."
27219
27220 Mr. Bulstrode returned the letter to his side-pocket, and changed his
27221 attitude as if his business were closed. Lydgate, whose renewed hope
27222 about the Hospital only made him more conscious of the facts which
27223 poisoned his hope, felt that his effort after help, if made at all,
27224 must be made now and vigorously.
27225
27226 "I am much obliged to you for giving me full notice," he said, with a
27227 firm intention in his tone, yet with an interruptedness in his delivery
27228 which showed that he spoke unwillingly. "The highest object to me is
27229 my profession, and I had identified the Hospital with the best use I
27230 can at present make of my profession. But the best use is not always
27231 the same with monetary success. Everything which has made the Hospital
27232 unpopular has helped with other causes--I think they are all connected
27233 with my professional zeal--to make me unpopular as a practitioner. I
27234 get chiefly patients who can't pay me. I should like them best, if I
27235 had nobody to pay on my own side." Lydgate waited a little, but
27236 Bulstrode only bowed, looking at him fixedly, and he went on with the
27237 same interrupted enunciation--as if he were biting an objectional leek.
27238
27239 "I have slipped into money difficulties which I can see no way out of,
27240 unless some one who trusts me and my future will advance me a sum
27241 without other security. I had very little fortune left when I came
27242 here. I have no prospects of money from my own family. My expenses,
27243 in consequence of my marriage, have been very much greater than I had
27244 expected. The result at this moment is that it would take a thousand
27245 pounds to clear me. I mean, to free me from the risk of having all my
27246 goods sold in security of my largest debt--as well as to pay my other
27247 debts--and leave anything to keep us a little beforehand with our small
27248 income. I find that it is out of the question that my wife's father
27249 should make such an advance. That is why I mention my position to--to
27250 the only other man who may be held to have some personal connection
27251 with my prosperity or ruin."
27252
27253 Lydgate hated to hear himself. But he had spoken now, and had spoken
27254 with unmistakable directness. Mr. Bulstrode replied without haste, but
27255 also without hesitation.
27256
27257 "I am grieved, though, I confess, not surprised by this information,
27258 Mr. Lydgate. For my own part, I regretted your alliance with my
27259 brother-in-law's family, which has always been of prodigal habits, and
27260 which has already been much indebted to me for sustainment in its
27261 present position. My advice to you, Mr. Lydgate, would be, that
27262 instead of involving yourself in further obligations, and continuing a
27263 doubtful struggle, you should simply become a bankrupt."
27264
27265 "That would not improve my prospect," said Lydgate, rising and speaking
27266 bitterly, "even if it were a more agreeable thing in itself."
27267
27268 "It is always a trial," said Mr. Bulstrode; "but trial, my dear sir, is
27269 our portion here, and is a needed corrective. I recommend you to weigh
27270 the advice I have given."
27271
27272 "Thank you," said Lydgate, not quite knowing what he said. "I have
27273 occupied you too long. Good-day."
27274
27275
27276
27277 CHAPTER LXVIII.
27278
27279 "What suit of grace hath Virtue to put on
27280 If Vice shall wear as good, and do as well?
27281 If Wrong, if Craft, if Indiscretion
27282 Act as fair parts with ends as laudable?
27283 Which all this mighty volume of events
27284 The world, the universal map of deeds,
27285 Strongly controls, and proves from all descents,
27286 That the directest course still best succeeds.
27287 For should not grave and learn'd Experience
27288 That looks with the eyes of all the world beside,
27289 And with all ages holds intelligence,
27290 Go safer than Deceit without a guide!
27291 --DANIEL: Musophilus.
27292
27293
27294 That change of plan and shifting of interest which Bulstrode stated or
27295 betrayed in his conversation with Lydgate, had been determined in him
27296 by some severe experience which he had gone through since the epoch of
27297 Mr. Larcher's sale, when Raffles had recognized Will Ladislaw, and when
27298 the banker had in vain attempted an act of restitution which might move
27299 Divine Providence to arrest painful consequences.
27300
27301 His certainty that Raffles, unless he were dead, would return to
27302 Middlemarch before long, had been justified. On Christmas Eve he had
27303 reappeared at The Shrubs. Bulstrode was at home to receive him, and
27304 hinder his communication with the rest of the family, but he could not
27305 altogether hinder the circumstances of the visit from compromising
27306 himself and alarming his wife. Raffles proved more unmanageable than
27307 he had shown himself to be in his former appearances, his chronic state
27308 of mental restlessness, the growing effect of habitual intemperance,
27309 quickly shaking off every impression from what was said to him. He
27310 insisted on staying in the house, and Bulstrode, weighing two sets of
27311 evils, felt that this was at least not a worse alternative than his
27312 going into the town. He kept him in his own room for the evening and
27313 saw him to bed, Raffles all the while amusing himself with the
27314 annoyance he was causing this decent and highly prosperous
27315 fellow-sinner, an amusement which he facetiously expressed as sympathy
27316 with his friend's pleasure in entertaining a man who had been
27317 serviceable to him, and who had not had all his earnings. There was a
27318 cunning calculation under this noisy joking--a cool resolve to extract
27319 something the handsomer from Bulstrode as payment for release from this
27320 new application of torture. But his cunning had a little overcast its
27321 mark.
27322
27323 Bulstrode was indeed more tortured than the coarse fibre of Raffles
27324 could enable him to imagine. He had told his wife that he was simply
27325 taking care of this wretched creature, the victim of vice, who might
27326 otherwise injure himself; he implied, without the direct form of
27327 falsehood, that there was a family tie which bound him to this care,
27328 and that there were signs of mental alienation in Raffles which urged
27329 caution. He would himself drive the unfortunate being away the next
27330 morning. In these hints he felt that he was supplying Mrs. Bulstrode
27331 with precautionary information for his daughters and servants, and
27332 accounting for his allowing no one but himself to enter the room even
27333 with food and drink. But he sat in an agony of fear lest Raffles
27334 should be overheard in his loud and plain references to past facts--lest
27335 Mrs. Bulstrode should be even tempted to listen at the door. How
27336 could he hinder her, how betray his terror by opening the door to
27337 detect her? She was a woman of honest direct habits, and little likely
27338 to take so low a course in order to arrive at painful knowledge; but
27339 fear was stronger than the calculation of probabilities.
27340
27341 In this way Raffles had pushed the torture too far, and produced an
27342 effect which had not been in his plan. By showing himself hopelessly
27343 unmanageable he had made Bulstrode feel that a strong defiance was the
27344 only resource left. After taking Raffles to bed that night the banker
27345 ordered his closed carriage to be ready at half-past seven the next
27346 morning. At six o'clock he had already been long dressed, and had
27347 spent some of his wretchedness in prayer, pleading his motives for
27348 averting the worst evil if in anything he had used falsity and spoken
27349 what was not true before God. For Bulstrode shrank from a direct lie
27350 with an intensity disproportionate to the number of his more indirect
27351 misdeeds. But many of these misdeeds were like the subtle muscular
27352 movements which are not taken account of in the consciousness, though
27353 they bring about the end that we fix our mind on and desire. And it is
27354 only what we are vividly conscious of that we can vividly imagine to be
27355 seen by Omniscience.
27356
27357 Bulstrode carried his candle to the bedside of Raffles, who was
27358 apparently in a painful dream. He stood silent, hoping that the
27359 presence of the light would serve to waken the sleeper gradually and
27360 gently, for he feared some noise as the consequence of a too sudden
27361 awakening. He had watched for a couple of minutes or more the
27362 shudderings and pantings which seemed likely to end in waking, when
27363 Raffles, with a long half-stifled moan, started up and stared round him
27364 in terror, trembling and gasping. But he made no further noise, and
27365 Bulstrode, setting down the candle, awaited his recovery.
27366
27367 It was a quarter of an hour later before Bulstrode, with a cold
27368 peremptoriness of manner which he had not before shown, said, "I came
27369 to call you thus early, Mr. Raffles, because I have ordered the
27370 carriage to be ready at half-past seven, and intend myself to conduct
27371 you as far as Ilsely, where you can either take the railway or await a
27372 coach." Raffles was about to speak, but Bulstrode anticipated him
27373 imperiously with the words, "Be silent, sir, and hear what I have to
27374 say. I shall supply you with money now, and I will furnish you with a
27375 reasonable sum from time to time, on your application to me by letter;
27376 but if you choose to present yourself here again, if you return to
27377 Middlemarch, if you use your tongue in a manner injurious to me, you
27378 will have to live on such fruits as your malice can bring you, without
27379 help from me. Nobody will pay you well for blasting my name: I know
27380 the worst you can do against me, and I shall brave it if you dare to
27381 thrust yourself upon me again. Get up, sir, and do as I order you,
27382 without noise, or I will send for a policeman to take you off my
27383 premises, and you may carry your stories into every pothouse in the
27384 town, but you shall have no sixpence from me to pay your expenses
27385 there."
27386
27387 Bulstrode had rarely in his life spoken with such nervous energy: he
27388 had been deliberating on this speech and its probable effects through a
27389 large part of the night; and though he did not trust to its ultimately
27390 saving him from any return of Raffles, he had concluded that it was the
27391 best throw he could make. It succeeded in enforcing submission from
27392 the jaded man this morning: his empoisoned system at this moment
27393 quailed before Bulstrode's cold, resolute bearing, and he was taken off
27394 quietly in the carriage before the family breakfast time. The servants
27395 imagined him to be a poor relation, and were not surprised that a
27396 strict man like their master, who held his head high in the world,
27397 should be ashamed of such a cousin and want to get rid of him. The
27398 banker's drive of ten miles with his hated companion was a dreary
27399 beginning of the Christmas day; but at the end of the drive, Raffles
27400 had recovered his spirits, and parted in a contentment for which there
27401 was the good reason that the banker had given him a hundred pounds.
27402 Various motives urged Bulstrode to this open-handedness, but he did not
27403 himself inquire closely into all of them. As he had stood watching
27404 Raffles in his uneasy sleep, it had certainly entered his mind that the
27405 man had been much shattered since the first gift of two hundred pounds.
27406
27407 He had taken care to repeat the incisive statement of his resolve not
27408 to be played on any more; and had tried to penetrate Raffles with the
27409 fact that he had shown the risks of bribing him to be quite equal to
27410 the risks of defying him. But when, freed from his repulsive presence,
27411 Bulstrode returned to his quiet home, he brought with him no confidence
27412 that he had secured more than a respite. It was as if he had had a
27413 loathsome dream, and could not shake off its images with their hateful
27414 kindred of sensations--as if on all the pleasant surroundings of his
27415 life a dangerous reptile had left his slimy traces.
27416
27417 Who can know how much of his most inward life is made up of the
27418 thoughts he believes other men to have about him, until that fabric of
27419 opinion is threatened with ruin?
27420
27421 Bulstrode was only the more conscious that there was a deposit of
27422 uneasy presentiment in his wife's mind, because she carefully avoided
27423 any allusion to it. He had been used every day to taste the flavor of
27424 supremacy and the tribute of complete deference: and the certainty that
27425 he was watched or measured with a hidden suspicion of his having some
27426 discreditable secret, made his voice totter when he was speaking to
27427 edification. Foreseeing, to men of Bulstrode's anxious temperament, is
27428 often worse than seeing; and his imagination continually heightened the
27429 anguish of an imminent disgrace. Yes, imminent; for if his defiance of
27430 Raffles did not keep the man away--and though he prayed for this result
27431 he hardly hoped for it--the disgrace was certain. In vain he said to
27432 himself that, if permitted, it would be a divine visitation, a
27433 chastisement, a preparation; he recoiled from the imagined burning; and
27434 he judged that it must be more for the Divine glory that he should
27435 escape dishonor. That recoil had at last urged him to make
27436 preparations for quitting Middlemarch. If evil truth must be reported
27437 of him, he would then be at a less scorching distance from the contempt
27438 of his old neighbors; and in a new scene, where his life would not have
27439 gathered the same wide sensibility, the tormentor, if he pursued him,
27440 would be less formidable. To leave the place finally would, he knew,
27441 be extremely painful to his wife, and on other grounds he would have
27442 preferred to stay where he had struck root. Hence he made his
27443 preparations at first in a conditional way, wishing to leave on all
27444 sides an opening for his return after brief absence, if any favorable
27445 intervention of Providence should dissipate his fears. He was
27446 preparing to transfer his management of the Bank, and to give up any
27447 active control of other commercial affairs in the neighborhood, on the
27448 ground of his failing health, but without excluding his future
27449 resumption of such work. The measure would cause him some added
27450 expense and some diminution of income beyond what he had already
27451 undergone from the general depression of trade; and the Hospital
27452 presented itself as a principal object of outlay on which he could
27453 fairly economize.
27454
27455 This was the experience which had determined his conversation with
27456 Lydgate. But at this time his arrangements had most of them gone no
27457 farther than a stage at which he could recall them if they proved to be
27458 unnecessary. He continually deferred the final steps; in the midst of
27459 his fears, like many a man who is in danger of shipwreck or of being
27460 dashed from his carriage by runaway horses, he had a clinging
27461 impression that something would happen to hinder the worst, and that to
27462 spoil his life by a late transplantation might be over-hasty--especially
27463 since it was difficult to account satisfactorily to his wife for the
27464 project of their indefinite exile from the only place where she would
27465 like to live.
27466
27467 Among the affairs Bulstrode had to care for, was the management of the
27468 farm at Stone Court in case of his absence; and on this as well as on
27469 all other matters connected with any houses and land he possessed in or
27470 about Middlemarch, he had consulted Caleb Garth. Like every one else
27471 who had business of that sort, he wanted to get the agent who was more
27472 anxious for his employer's interests than his own. With regard to
27473 Stone Court, since Bulstrode wished to retain his hold on the stock,
27474 and to have an arrangement by which he himself could, if he chose,
27475 resume his favorite recreation of superintendence, Caleb had advised
27476 him not to trust to a mere bailiff, but to let the land, stock, and
27477 implements yearly, and take a proportionate share of the proceeds.
27478
27479 "May I trust to you to find me a tenant on these terms, Mr. Garth?"
27480 said Bulstrode. "And will you mention to me the yearly sum which would
27481 repay you for managing these affairs which we have discussed together?"
27482
27483 "I'll think about it," said Caleb, in his blunt way. "I'll see how I
27484 can make it out."
27485
27486 If it had not been that he had to consider Fred Vincy's future, Mr.
27487 Garth would not probably have been glad of any addition to his work, of
27488 which his wife was always fearing an excess for him as he grew older.
27489 But on quitting Bulstrode after that conversation, a very alluring idea
27490 occurred to him about this said letting of Stone Court. What if
27491 Bulstrode would agree to his placing Fred Vincy there on the
27492 understanding that he, Caleb Garth, should be responsible for the
27493 management? It would be an excellent schooling for Fred; he might make
27494 a modest income there, and still have time left to get knowledge by
27495 helping in other business. He mentioned his notion to Mrs. Garth with
27496 such evident delight that she could not bear to chill his pleasure by
27497 expressing her constant fear of his undertaking too much.
27498
27499 "The lad would be as happy as two," he said, throwing himself back in
27500 his chair, and looking radiant, "if I could tell him it was all
27501 settled. Think; Susan! His mind had been running on that place for
27502 years before old Featherstone died. And it would be as pretty a turn
27503 of things as could be that he should hold the place in a good
27504 industrious way after all--by his taking to business. For it's likely
27505 enough Bulstrode might let him go on, and gradually buy the stock. He
27506 hasn't made up his mind, I can see, whether or not he shall settle
27507 somewhere else as a lasting thing. I never was better pleased with a
27508 notion in my life. And then the children might be married by-and-by,
27509 Susan."
27510
27511 "You will not give any hint of the plan to Fred, until you are sure
27512 that Bulstrode would agree to the plan?" said Mrs. Garth, in a tone of
27513 gentle caution. "And as to marriage, Caleb, we old people need not
27514 help to hasten it."
27515
27516 "Oh, I don't know," said Caleb, swinging his head aside. "Marriage is
27517 a taming thing. Fred would want less of my bit and bridle. However, I
27518 shall say nothing till I know the ground I'm treading on. I shall
27519 speak to Bulstrode again."
27520
27521 He took his earliest opportunity of doing so. Bulstrode had anything
27522 but a warm interest in his nephew Fred Vincy, but he had a strong wish
27523 to secure Mr. Garth's services on many scattered points of business at
27524 which he was sure to be a considerable loser, if they were under less
27525 conscientious management. On that ground he made no objection to Mr.
27526 Garth's proposal; and there was also another reason why he was not
27527 sorry to give a consent which was to benefit one of the Vincy family.
27528 It was that Mrs. Bulstrode, having heard of Lydgate's debts, had been
27529 anxious to know whether her husband could not do something for poor
27530 Rosamond, and had been much troubled on learning from him that
27531 Lydgate's affairs were not easily remediable, and that the wisest plan
27532 was to let them "take their course." Mrs. Bulstrode had then said for
27533 the first time, "I think you are always a little hard towards my
27534 family, Nicholas. And I am sure I have no reason to deny any of my
27535 relatives. Too worldly they may be, but no one ever had to say that
27536 they were not respectable."
27537
27538 "My dear Harriet," said Mr. Bulstrode, wincing under his wife's eyes,
27539 which were filling with tears, "I have supplied your brother with a
27540 great deal of capital. I cannot be expected to take care of his
27541 married children."
27542
27543 That seemed to be true, and Mrs. Bulstrode's remonstrance subsided into
27544 pity for poor Rosamond, whose extravagant education she had always
27545 foreseen the fruits of.
27546
27547 But remembering that dialogue, Mr. Bulstrode felt that when he had to
27548 talk to his wife fully about his plan of quitting Middlemarch, he
27549 should be glad to tell her that he had made an arrangement which might
27550 be for the good of her nephew Fred. At present he had merely mentioned
27551 to her that he thought of shutting up The Shrubs for a few months, and
27552 taking a house on the Southern Coast.
27553
27554 Hence Mr. Garth got the assurance he desired, namely, that in case of
27555 Bulstrode's departure from Middlemarch for an indefinite time, Fred
27556 Vincy should be allowed to have the tenancy of Stone Court on the terms
27557 proposed.
27558
27559 Caleb was so elated with his hope of this "neat turn" being given to
27560 things, that if his self-control had not been braced by a little
27561 affectionate wifely scolding, he would have betrayed everything to
27562 Mary, wanting "to give the child comfort." However, he restrained
27563 himself, and kept in strict privacy from Fred certain visits which he
27564 was making to Stone Court, in order to look more thoroughly into the
27565 state of the land and stock, and take a preliminary estimate. He was
27566 certainly more eager in these visits than the probable speed of events
27567 required him to be; but he was stimulated by a fatherly delight in
27568 occupying his mind with this bit of probable happiness which he held in
27569 store like a hidden birthday gift for Fred and Mary.
27570
27571 "But suppose the whole scheme should turn out to be a castle in the
27572 air?" said Mrs. Garth.
27573
27574 "Well, well," replied Caleb; "the castle will tumble about nobody's
27575 head."
27576
27577
27578
27579 CHAPTER LXIX.
27580
27581 "If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee."
27582 --Ecclesiasticus.
27583
27584
27585 Mr. Bulstrode was still seated in his manager's room at the Bank, about
27586 three o'clock of the same day on which he had received Lydgate there,
27587 when the clerk entered to say that his horse was waiting, and also that
27588 Mr. Garth was outside and begged to speak with him.
27589
27590 "By all means," said Bulstrode; and Caleb entered. "Pray sit down, Mr.
27591 Garth," continued the banker, in his suavest tone.
27592
27593 "I am glad that you arrived just in time to find me here. I know you
27594 count your minutes."
27595
27596 "Oh," said Caleb, gently, with a slow swing of his head on one side, as
27597 he seated himself and laid his hat on the floor.
27598
27599 He looked at the ground, leaning forward and letting his long fingers
27600 droop between his legs, while each finger moved in succession, as if it
27601 were sharing some thought which filled his large quiet brow.
27602
27603 Mr. Bulstrode, like every one else who knew Caleb, was used to his
27604 slowness in beginning to speak on any topic which he felt to be
27605 important, and rather expected that he was about to recur to the buying
27606 of some houses in Blindman's Court, for the sake of pulling them down,
27607 as a sacrifice of property which would be well repaid by the influx of
27608 air and light on that spot. It was by propositions of this kind that
27609 Caleb was sometimes troublesome to his employers; but he had usually
27610 found Bulstrode ready to meet him in projects of improvement, and they
27611 had got on well together. When he spoke again, however, it was to say,
27612 in rather a subdued voice--
27613
27614 "I have just come away from Stone Court, Mr. Bulstrode."
27615
27616 "You found nothing wrong there, I hope," said the banker; "I was there
27617 myself yesterday. Abel has done well with the lambs this year."
27618
27619 "Why, yes," said Caleb, looking up gravely, "there is something wrong--a
27620 stranger, who is very ill, I think. He wants a doctor, and I came to
27621 tell you of that. His name is Raffles."
27622
27623 He saw the shock of his words passing through Bulstrode's frame. On
27624 this subject the banker had thought that his fears were too constantly
27625 on the watch to be taken by surprise; but he had been mistaken.
27626
27627 "Poor wretch!" he said in a compassionate tone, though his lips
27628 trembled a little. "Do you know how he came there?"
27629
27630 "I took him myself," said Caleb, quietly--"took him up in my gig. He
27631 had got down from the coach, and was walking a little beyond the
27632 turning from the toll-house, and I overtook him. He remembered seeing
27633 me with you once before, at Stone Court, and he asked me to take him
27634 on. I saw he was ill: it seemed to me the right thing to do, to carry
27635 him under shelter. And now I think you should lose no time in getting
27636 advice for him." Caleb took up his hat from the floor as he ended, and
27637 rose slowly from his seat.
27638
27639 "Certainly," said Bulstrode, whose mind was very active at this moment.
27640 "Perhaps you will yourself oblige me, Mr. Garth, by calling at Mr.
27641 Lydgate's as you pass--or stay! he may at this hour probably be at the
27642 Hospital. I will first send my man on the horse there with a note this
27643 instant, and then I will myself ride to Stone Court."
27644
27645 Bulstrode quickly wrote a note, and went out himself to give the
27646 commission to his man. When he returned, Caleb was standing as before
27647 with one hand on the back of the chair, holding his hat with the other.
27648 In Bulstrode's mind the dominant thought was, "Perhaps Raffles only
27649 spoke to Garth of his illness. Garth may wonder, as he must have done
27650 before, at this disreputable fellow's claiming intimacy with me; but he
27651 will know nothing. And he is friendly to me--I can be of use to him."
27652
27653 He longed for some confirmation of this hopeful conjecture, but to have
27654 asked any question as to what Raffles had said or done would have been
27655 to betray fear.
27656
27657 "I am exceedingly obliged to you, Mr. Garth," he said, in his usual
27658 tone of politeness. "My servant will be back in a few minutes, and I
27659 shall then go myself to see what can be done for this unfortunate man.
27660 Perhaps you had some other business with me? If so, pray be seated."
27661
27662 "Thank you," said Caleb, making a slight gesture with his right hand to
27663 waive the invitation. "I wish to say, Mr. Bulstrode, that I must
27664 request you to put your business into some other hands than mine. I am
27665 obliged to you for your handsome way of meeting me--about the letting
27666 of Stone Court, and all other business. But I must give it up." A
27667 sharp certainty entered like a stab into Bulstrode's soul.
27668
27669 "This is sudden, Mr. Garth," was all he could say at first.
27670
27671 "It is," said Caleb; "but it is quite fixed. I must give it up."
27672
27673 He spoke with a firmness which was very gentle, and yet he could see
27674 that Bulstrode seemed to cower under that gentleness, his face looking
27675 dried and his eyes swerving away from the glance which rested on him.
27676 Caleb felt a deep pity for him, but he could have used no pretexts to
27677 account for his resolve, even if they would have been of any use.
27678
27679 "You have been led to this, I apprehend, by some slanders concerning me
27680 uttered by that unhappy creature," said Bulstrode, anxious now to know
27681 the utmost.
27682
27683 "That is true. I can't deny that I act upon what I heard from him."
27684
27685 "You are a conscientious man, Mr. Garth--a man, I trust, who feels
27686 himself accountable to God. You would not wish to injure me by being
27687 too ready to believe a slander," said Bulstrode, casting about for
27688 pleas that might be adapted to his hearer's mind. "That is a poor
27689 reason for giving up a connection which I think I may say will be
27690 mutually beneficial."
27691
27692 "I would injure no man if I could help it," said Caleb; "even if I
27693 thought God winked at it. I hope I should have a feeling for my
27694 fellow-creature. But, sir--I am obliged to believe that this Raffles
27695 has told me the truth. And I can't be happy in working with you, or
27696 profiting by you. It hurts my mind. I must beg you to seek another
27697 agent."
27698
27699 "Very well, Mr. Garth. But I must at least claim to know the worst
27700 that he has told you. I must know what is the foul speech that I am
27701 liable to be the victim of," said Bulstrode, a certain amount of anger
27702 beginning to mingle with his humiliation before this quiet man who
27703 renounced his benefits.
27704
27705 "That's needless," said Caleb, waving his hand, bowing his head
27706 slightly, and not swerving from the tone which had in it the merciful
27707 intention to spare this pitiable man. "What he has said to me will
27708 never pass from my lips, unless something now unknown forces it from
27709 me. If you led a harmful life for gain, and kept others out of their
27710 rights by deceit, to get the more for yourself, I dare say you
27711 repent--you would like to go back, and can't: that must be a bitter
27712 thing"--Caleb paused a moment and shook his head--"it is not for me to
27713 make your life harder to you."
27714
27715 "But you do--you do make it harder to me," said Bulstrode constrained
27716 into a genuine, pleading cry. "You make it harder to me by turning
27717 your back on me."
27718
27719 "That I'm forced to do," said Caleb, still more gently, lifting up his
27720 hand. "I am sorry. I don't judge you and say, he is wicked, and I am
27721 righteous. God forbid. I don't know everything. A man may do wrong,
27722 and his will may rise clear out of it, though he can't get his life
27723 clear. That's a bad punishment. If it is so with you,--well, I'm
27724 very sorry for you. But I have that feeling inside me, that I can't go
27725 on working with you. That's all, Mr. Bulstrode. Everything else is
27726 buried, so far as my will goes. And I wish you good-day."
27727
27728 "One moment, Mr. Garth!" said Bulstrode, hurriedly. "I may trust then
27729 to your solemn assurance that you will not repeat either to man or
27730 woman what--even if it have any degree of truth in it--is yet a
27731 malicious representation?" Caleb's wrath was stirred, and he said,
27732 indignantly--
27733
27734 "Why should I have said it if I didn't mean it? I am in no fear of
27735 you. Such tales as that will never tempt my tongue."
27736
27737 "Excuse me--I am agitated--I am the victim of this abandoned man."
27738
27739 "Stop a bit! you have got to consider whether you didn't help to make
27740 him worse, when you profited by his vices."
27741
27742 "You are wronging me by too readily believing him," said Bulstrode,
27743 oppressed, as by a nightmare, with the inability to deny flatly what
27744 Raffles might have said; and yet feeling it an escape that Caleb had
27745 not so stated it to him as to ask for that flat denial.
27746
27747 "No," said Caleb, lifting his hand deprecatingly; "I am ready to
27748 believe better, when better is proved. I rob you of no good chance.
27749 As to speaking, I hold it a crime to expose a man's sin unless I'm
27750 clear it must be done to save the innocent. That is my way of
27751 thinking, Mr. Bulstrode, and what I say, I've no need to swear. I wish
27752 you good-day."
27753
27754 Some hours later, when he was at home, Caleb said to his wife,
27755 incidentally, that he had had some little differences with Bulstrode,
27756 and that in consequence, he had given up all notion of taking Stone
27757 Court, and indeed had resigned doing further business for him.
27758
27759 "He was disposed to interfere too much, was he?" said Mrs. Garth,
27760 imagining that her husband had been touched on his sensitive point, and
27761 not been allowed to do what he thought right as to materials and modes
27762 of work.
27763
27764 "Oh," said Caleb, bowing his head and waving his hand gravely. And
27765 Mrs. Garth knew that this was a sign of his not intending to speak
27766 further on the subject.
27767
27768 As for Bulstrode, he had almost immediately mounted his horse and set
27769 off for Stone Court, being anxious to arrive there before Lydgate.
27770
27771 His mind was crowded with images and conjectures, which were a language
27772 to his hopes and fears, just as we hear tones from the vibrations which
27773 shake our whole system. The deep humiliation with which he had winced
27774 under Caleb Garth's knowledge of his past and rejection of his
27775 patronage, alternated with and almost gave way to the sense of safety
27776 in the fact that Garth, and no other, had been the man to whom Raffles
27777 had spoken. It seemed to him a sort of earnest that Providence
27778 intended his rescue from worse consequences; the way being thus left
27779 open for the hope of secrecy. That Raffles should be afflicted with
27780 illness, that he should have been led to Stone Court rather than
27781 elsewhere--Bulstrode's heart fluttered at the vision of probabilities
27782 which these events conjured up. If it should turn out that he was
27783 freed from all danger of disgrace--if he could breathe in perfect
27784 liberty--his life should be more consecrated than it had ever been
27785 before. He mentally lifted up this vow as if it would urge the result
27786 he longed for--he tried to believe in the potency of that prayerful
27787 resolution--its potency to determine death. He knew that he ought to
27788 say, "Thy will be done;" and he said it often. But the intense desire
27789 remained that the will of God might be the death of that hated man.
27790
27791 Yet when he arrived at Stone Court he could not see the change in
27792 Raffles without a shock. But for his pallor and feebleness, Bulstrode
27793 would have called the change in him entirely mental. Instead of his
27794 loud tormenting mood, he showed an intense, vague terror, and seemed to
27795 deprecate Bulstrode's anger, because the money was all gone--he had
27796 been robbed--it had half of it been taken from him. He had only come
27797 here because he was ill and somebody was hunting him--somebody was
27798 after him, he had told nobody anything, he had kept his mouth shut.
27799 Bulstrode, not knowing the significance of these symptoms, interpreted
27800 this new nervous susceptibility into a means of alarming Raffles into
27801 true confessions, and taxed him with falsehood in saying that he had
27802 not told anything, since he had just told the man who took him up in
27803 his gig and brought him to Stone Court. Raffles denied this with
27804 solemn adjurations; the fact being that the links of consciousness were
27805 interrupted in him, and that his minute terror-stricken narrative to
27806 Caleb Garth had been delivered under a set of visionary impulses which
27807 had dropped back into darkness.
27808
27809 Bulstrode's heart sank again at this sign that he could get no grasp
27810 over the wretched man's mind, and that no word of Raffles could be
27811 trusted as to the fact which he most wanted to know, namely, whether or
27812 not he had really kept silence to every one in the neighborhood except
27813 Caleb Garth. The housekeeper had told him without the least constraint
27814 of manner that since Mr. Garth left, Raffles had asked her for beer,
27815 and after that had not spoken, seeming very ill. On that side it might
27816 be concluded that there had been no betrayal. Mrs. Abel thought, like
27817 the servants at The Shrubs, that the strange man belonged to the
27818 unpleasant "kin" who are among the troubles of the rich; she had at
27819 first referred the kinship to Mr. Rigg, and where there was property
27820 left, the buzzing presence of such large blue-bottles seemed natural
27821 enough. How he could be "kin" to Bulstrode as well was not so clear,
27822 but Mrs. Abel agreed with her husband that there was "no knowing," a
27823 proposition which had a great deal of mental food for her, so that she
27824 shook her head over it without further speculation.
27825
27826 In less than an hour Lydgate arrived. Bulstrode met him outside the
27827 wainscoted parlor, where Raffles was, and said--
27828
27829 "I have called you in, Mr. Lydgate, to an unfortunate man who was once
27830 in my employment, many years ago. Afterwards he went to America, and
27831 returned I fear to an idle dissolute life. Being destitute, he has a
27832 claim on me. He was slightly connected with Rigg, the former owner of
27833 this place, and in consequence found his way here. I believe he is
27834 seriously ill: apparently his mind is affected. I feel bound to do the
27835 utmost for him."
27836
27837 Lydgate, who had the remembrance of his last conversation with
27838 Bulstrode strongly upon him, was not disposed to say an unnecessary
27839 word to him, and bowed slightly in answer to this account; but just
27840 before entering the room he turned automatically and said, "What is his
27841 name?"--to know names being as much a part of the medical man's
27842 accomplishment as of the practical politician's.
27843
27844 "Raffles, John Raffles," said Bulstrode, who hoped that whatever became
27845 of Raffles, Lydgate would never know any more of him.
27846
27847 When he had thoroughly examined and considered the patient, Lydgate
27848 ordered that he should go to bed, and be kept there in as complete
27849 quiet as possible, and then went with Bulstrode into another room.
27850
27851 "It is a serious case, I apprehend," said the banker, before Lydgate
27852 began to speak.
27853
27854 "No--and yes," said Lydgate, half dubiously. "It is difficult to
27855 decide as to the possible effect of long-standing complications; but
27856 the man had a robust constitution to begin with. I should not expect
27857 this attack to be fatal, though of course the system is in a ticklish
27858 state. He should be well watched and attended to."
27859
27860 "I will remain here myself," said Bulstrode. "Mrs. Abel and her
27861 husband are inexperienced. I can easily remain here for the night, if
27862 you will oblige me by taking a note for Mrs. Bulstrode."
27863
27864 "I should think that is hardly necessary," said Lydgate. "He seems
27865 tame and terrified enough. He might become more unmanageable. But
27866 there is a man here--is there not?"
27867
27868 "I have more than once stayed here a few nights for the sake of
27869 seclusion," said Bulstrode, indifferently; "I am quite disposed to do
27870 so now. Mrs. Abel and her husband can relieve or aid me, if necessary."
27871
27872 "Very well. Then I need give my directions only to you," said Lydgate,
27873 not feeling surprised at a little peculiarity in Bulstrode.
27874
27875 "You think, then, that the case is hopeful?" said Bulstrode, when
27876 Lydgate had ended giving his orders.
27877
27878 "Unless there turn out to be further complications, such as I have not
27879 at present detected--yes," said Lydgate. "He may pass on to a worse
27880 stage; but I should not wonder if he got better in a few days, by
27881 adhering to the treatment I have prescribed. There must be firmness.
27882 Remember, if he calls for liquors of any sort, not to give them to him.
27883 In my opinion, men in his condition are oftener killed by treatment
27884 than by the disease. Still, new symptoms may arise. I shall come
27885 again to-morrow morning."
27886
27887 After waiting for the note to be carried to Mrs. Bulstrode, Lydgate
27888 rode away, forming no conjectures, in the first instance, about the
27889 history of Raffles, but rehearsing the whole argument, which had lately
27890 been much stirred by the publication of Dr. Ware's abundant experience
27891 in America, as to the right way of treating cases of alcoholic
27892 poisoning such as this. Lydgate, when abroad, had already been
27893 interested in this question: he was strongly convinced against the
27894 prevalent practice of allowing alcohol and persistently administering
27895 large doses of opium; and he had repeatedly acted on this conviction
27896 with a favorable result.
27897
27898 "The man is in a diseased state," he thought, "but there's a good deal
27899 of wear in him still. I suppose he is an object of charity to
27900 Bulstrode. It is curious what patches of hardness and tenderness lie
27901 side by side in men's dispositions. Bulstrode seems the most
27902 unsympathetic fellow I ever saw about some people, and yet he has taken
27903 no end of trouble, and spent a great deal of money, on benevolent
27904 objects. I suppose he has some test by which he finds out whom Heaven
27905 cares for--he has made up his mind that it doesn't care for me."
27906
27907 This streak of bitterness came from a plenteous source, and kept
27908 widening in the current of his thought as he neared Lowick Gate. He
27909 had not been there since his first interview with Bulstrode in the
27910 morning, having been found at the Hospital by the banker's messenger;
27911 and for the first time he was returning to his home without the vision
27912 of any expedient in the background which left him a hope of raising
27913 money enough to deliver him from the coming destitution of everything
27914 which made his married life tolerable--everything which saved him and
27915 Rosamond from that bare isolation in which they would be forced to
27916 recognize how little of a comfort they could be to each other. It was
27917 more bearable to do without tenderness for himself than to see that his
27918 own tenderness could make no amends for the lack of other things to
27919 her. The sufferings of his own pride from humiliations past and to
27920 come were keen enough, yet they were hardly distinguishable to himself
27921 from that more acute pain which dominated them--the pain of foreseeing
27922 that Rosamond would come to regard him chiefly as the cause of
27923 disappointment and unhappiness to her. He had never liked the
27924 makeshifts of poverty, and they had never before entered into his
27925 prospects for himself; but he was beginning now to imagine how two
27926 creatures who loved each other, and had a stock of thoughts in common,
27927 might laugh over their shabby furniture, and their calculations how far
27928 they could afford butter and eggs. But the glimpse of that poetry
27929 seemed as far off from him as the carelessness of the golden age; in
27930 poor Rosamond's mind there was not room enough for luxuries to look
27931 small in. He got down from his horse in a very sad mood, and went into
27932 the house, not expecting to be cheered except by his dinner, and
27933 reflecting that before the evening closed it would be wise to tell
27934 Rosamond of his application to Bulstrode and its failure. It would be
27935 well not to lose time in preparing her for the worst.
27936
27937 But his dinner waited long for him before he was able to eat it. For
27938 on entering he found that Dover's agent had already put a man in the
27939 house, and when he asked where Mrs. Lydgate was, he was told that she
27940 was in her bedroom. He went up and found her stretched on the bed pale
27941 and silent, without an answer even in her face to any word or look of
27942 his. He sat down by the bed and leaning over her said with almost a
27943 cry of prayer--
27944
27945 "Forgive me for this misery, my poor Rosamond! Let us only love one
27946 another."
27947
27948 She looked at him silently, still with the blank despair on her face;
27949 but then the tears began to fill her blue eyes, and her lip trembled.
27950 The strong man had had too much to bear that day. He let his head fall
27951 beside hers and sobbed.
27952
27953 He did not hinder her from going to her father early in the morning--it
27954 seemed now that he ought not to hinder her from doing as she
27955 pleased. In half an hour she came back, and said that papa and mamma
27956 wished her to go and stay with them while things were in this miserable
27957 state. Papa said he could do nothing about the debt--if he paid this,
27958 there would be half-a-dozen more. She had better come back home again
27959 till Lydgate had got a comfortable home for her. "Do you object,
27960 Tertius?"
27961
27962 "Do as you like," said Lydgate. "But things are not coming to a crisis
27963 immediately. There is no hurry."
27964
27965 "I should not go till to-morrow," said Rosamond; "I shall want to pack
27966 my clothes."
27967
27968 "Oh, I would wait a little longer than to-morrow--there is no knowing
27969 what may happen," said Lydgate, with bitter irony. "I may get my neck
27970 broken, and that may make things easier to you."
27971
27972 It was Lydgate's misfortune and Rosamond's too, that his tenderness
27973 towards her, which was both an emotional prompting and a
27974 well-considered resolve, was inevitably interrupted by these outbursts
27975 of indignation either ironical or remonstrant. She thought them
27976 totally unwarranted, and the repulsion which this exceptional severity
27977 excited in her was in danger of making the more persistent tenderness
27978 unacceptable.
27979
27980 "I see you do not wish me to go," she said, with chill mildness; "why
27981 can you not say so, without that kind of violence? I shall stay until
27982 you request me to do otherwise."
27983
27984 Lydgate said no more, but went out on his rounds. He felt bruised and
27985 shattered, and there was a dark line under his eyes which Rosamond had
27986 not seen before. She could not bear to look at him. Tertius had a way
27987 of taking things which made them a great deal worse for her.
27988
27989
27990
27991 CHAPTER LXX.
27992
27993 Our deeds still travel with us from afar,
27994 And what we have been makes us what we are."
27995
27996
27997 Bulstrode's first object after Lydgate had left Stone Court was to
27998 examine Raffles's pockets, which he imagined were sure to carry signs
27999 in the shape of hotel-bills of the places he had stopped in, if he had
28000 not told the truth in saying that he had come straight from Liverpool
28001 because he was ill and had no money. There were various bills crammed
28002 into his pocketbook, but none of a later date than Christmas at any
28003 other place, except one, which bore date that morning. This was
28004 crumpled up with a hand-bill about a horse-fair in one of his
28005 tail-pockets, and represented the cost of three days' stay at an inn at
28006 Bilkley, where the fair was held--a town at least forty miles from
28007 Middlemarch. The bill was heavy, and since Raffles had no luggage with
28008 him, it seemed probable that he had left his portmanteau behind in
28009 payment, in order to save money for his travelling fare; for his purse
28010 was empty, and he had only a couple of sixpences and some loose pence
28011 in his pockets.
28012
28013 Bulstrode gathered a sense of safety from these indications that
28014 Raffles had really kept at a distance from Middlemarch since his
28015 memorable visit at Christmas. At a distance and among people who were
28016 strangers to Bulstrode, what satisfaction could there be to Raffles's
28017 tormenting, self-magnifying vein in telling old scandalous stories
28018 about a Middlemarch banker? And what harm if he did talk? The chief
28019 point now was to keep watch over him as long as there was any danger of
28020 that intelligible raving, that unaccountable impulse to tell, which
28021 seemed to have acted towards Caleb Garth; and Bulstrode felt much
28022 anxiety lest some such impulse should come over him at the sight of
28023 Lydgate. He sat up alone with him through the night, only ordering the
28024 housekeeper to lie down in her clothes, so as to be ready when he
28025 called her, alleging his own indisposition to sleep, and his anxiety to
28026 carry out the doctor's orders. He did carry them out faithfully,
28027 although Raffles was incessantly asking for brandy, and declaring that
28028 he was sinking away--that the earth was sinking away from under him.
28029 He was restless and sleepless, but still quailing and manageable. On
28030 the offer of the food ordered by Lydgate, which he refused, and the
28031 denial of other things which he demanded, he seemed to concentrate all
28032 his terror on Bulstrode, imploringly deprecating his anger, his revenge
28033 on him by starvation, and declaring with strong oaths that he had never
28034 told any mortal a word against him. Even this Bulstrode felt that he
28035 would not have liked Lydgate to hear; but a more alarming sign of
28036 fitful alternation in his delirium was, that in-the morning twilight
28037 Raffles suddenly seemed to imagine a doctor present, addressing him and
28038 declaring that Bulstrode wanted to starve him to death out of revenge
28039 for telling, when he never had told.
28040
28041 Bulstrode's native imperiousness and strength of determination served
28042 him well. This delicate-looking man, himself nervously perturbed,
28043 found the needed stimulus in his strenuous circumstances, and through
28044 that difficult night and morning, while he had the air of an animated
28045 corpse returned to movement without warmth, holding the mastery by its
28046 chill impassibility his mind was intensely at work thinking of what he
28047 had to guard against and what would win him security. Whatever prayers
28048 he might lift up, whatever statements he might inwardly make of this
28049 man's wretched spiritual condition, and the duty he himself was under
28050 to submit to the punishment divinely appointed for him rather than to
28051 wish for evil to another--through all this effort to condense words
28052 into a solid mental state, there pierced and spread with irresistible
28053 vividness the images of the events he desired. And in the train of
28054 those images came their apology. He could not but see the death of
28055 Raffles, and see in it his own deliverance. What was the removal of
28056 this wretched creature? He was impenitent--but were not public
28057 criminals impenitent?--yet the law decided on their fate. Should
28058 Providence in this case award death, there was no sin in contemplating
28059 death as the desirable issue--if he kept his hands from hastening
28060 it--if he scrupulously did what was prescribed. Even here there might
28061 be a mistake: human prescriptions were fallible things: Lydgate had
28062 said that treatment had hastened death,--why not his own method of
28063 treatment? But of course intention was everything in the question of
28064 right and wrong.
28065
28066 And Bulstrode set himself to keep his intention separate from his
28067 desire. He inwardly declared that he intended to obey orders. Why
28068 should he have got into any argument about the validity of these
28069 orders? It was only the common trick of desire--which avails itself of
28070 any irrelevant scepticism, finding larger room for itself in all
28071 uncertainty about effects, in every obscurity that looks like the
28072 absence of law. Still, he did obey the orders.
28073
28074 His anxieties continually glanced towards Lydgate, and his remembrance
28075 of what had taken place between them the morning before was accompanied
28076 with sensibilities which had not been roused at all during the actual
28077 scene. He had then cared but little about Lydgate's painful
28078 impressions with regard to the suggested change in the Hospital, or
28079 about the disposition towards himself which what he held to be his
28080 justifiable refusal of a rather exorbitant request might call forth.
28081 He recurred to the scene now with a perception that he had probably
28082 made Lydgate his enemy, and with an awakened desire to propitiate him,
28083 or rather to create in him a strong sense of personal obligation. He
28084 regretted that he had not at once made even an unreasonable
28085 money-sacrifice. For in case of unpleasant suspicions, or even
28086 knowledge gathered from the raving of Raffles, Bulstrode would have
28087 felt that he had a defence in Lydgate's mind by having conferred a
28088 momentous benefit on him. But the regret had perhaps come too late.
28089
28090 Strange, piteous conflict in the soul of this unhappy man, who had
28091 longed for years to be better than he was--who had taken his selfish
28092 passions into discipline and clad them in severe robes, so that he had
28093 walked with them as a devout choir, till now that a terror had risen
28094 among them, and they could chant no longer, but threw out their common
28095 cries for safety.
28096
28097 It was nearly the middle of the day before Lydgate arrived: he had
28098 meant to come earlier, but had been detained, he said; and his
28099 shattered looks were noticed by Balstrode. But he immediately threw
28100 himself into the consideration of the patient, and inquired strictly
28101 into all that had occurred. Raffles was worse, would take hardly any
28102 food, was persistently wakeful and restlessly raving; but still not
28103 violent. Contrary to Bulstrode's alarmed expectation, he took little
28104 notice of Lydgate's presence, and continued to talk or murmur
28105 incoherently.
28106
28107 "What do you think of him?" said Bulstrode, in private.
28108
28109 "The symptoms are worse."
28110
28111 "You are less hopeful?"
28112
28113 "No; I still think he may come round. Are you going to stay here
28114 yourself?" said Lydgate, looking at Bulstrode with an abrupt question,
28115 which made him uneasy, though in reality it was not due to any
28116 suspicious conjecture.
28117
28118 "Yes, I think so," said Bulstrode, governing himself and speaking with
28119 deliberation. "Mrs. Bulstrode is advised of the reasons which detain
28120 me. Mrs. Abel and her husband are not experienced enough to be left
28121 quite alone, and this kind of responsibility is scarcely included in
28122 their service of me. You have some fresh instructions, I presume."
28123
28124 The chief new instruction that Lydgate had to give was on the
28125 administration of extremely moderate doses of opium, in case of the
28126 sleeplessness continuing after several hours. He had taken the
28127 precaution of bringing opium in his pocket, and he gave minute
28128 directions to Bulstrode as to the doses, and the point at which they
28129 should cease. He insisted on the risk of not ceasing; and repeated his
28130 order that no alcohol should be given.
28131
28132 "From what I see of the case," he ended, "narcotism is the only thing I
28133 should be much afraid of. He may wear through even without much food.
28134 There's a good deal of strength in him."
28135
28136 "You look ill yourself, Mr. Lydgate--a most unusual, I may say
28137 unprecedented thing in my knowledge of you," said Bulstrode, showing a
28138 solicitude as unlike his indifference the day before, as his present
28139 recklessness about his own fatigue was unlike his habitual
28140 self-cherishing anxiety. "I fear you are harassed."
28141
28142 "Yes, I am," said Lydgate, brusquely, holding his hat, and ready to go.
28143
28144 "Something new, I fear," said Bulstrode, inquiringly. "Pray be seated."
28145
28146 "No, thank you," said Lydgate, with some hauteur. "I mentioned to you
28147 yesterday what was the state of my affairs. There is nothing to add,
28148 except that the execution has since then been actually put into my
28149 house. One can tell a good deal of trouble in a short sentence. I
28150 will say good morning."
28151
28152 "Stay, Mr. Lydgate, stay," said Bulstrode; "I have been reconsidering
28153 this subject. I was yesterday taken by surprise, and saw it
28154 superficially. Mrs. Bulstrode is anxious for her niece, and I myself
28155 should grieve at a calamitous change in your position. Claims on me
28156 are numerous, but on reconsideration, I esteem it right that I should
28157 incur a small sacrifice rather than leave you unaided. You said, I
28158 think, that a thousand pounds would suffice entirely to free you from
28159 your burthens, and enable you to recover a firm stand?"
28160
28161 "Yes," said Lydgate, a great leap of joy within him surmounting every
28162 other feeling; "that would pay all my debts, and leave me a little on
28163 hand. I could set about economizing in our way of living. And
28164 by-and-by my practice might look up."
28165
28166 "If you will wait a moment, Mr. Lydgate, I will draw a check to that
28167 amount. I am aware that help, to be effectual in these cases, should
28168 be thorough."
28169
28170 While Bulstrode wrote, Lydgate turned to the window thinking of his
28171 home--thinking of his life with its good start saved from frustration,
28172 its good purposes still unbroken.
28173
28174 "You can give me a note of hand for this, Mr. Lydgate," said the
28175 banker, advancing towards him with the check. "And by-and-by, I hope,
28176 you may be in circumstances gradually to repay me. Meanwhile, I have
28177 pleasure in thinking that you will be released from further difficulty."
28178
28179 "I am deeply obliged to you," said Lydgate. "You have restored to me
28180 the prospect of working with some happiness and some chance of good."
28181
28182 It appeared to him a very natural movement in Bulstrode that he should
28183 have reconsidered his refusal: it corresponded with the more munificent
28184 side of his character. But as he put his hack into a canter, that he
28185 might get the sooner home, and tell the good news to Rosamond, and get
28186 cash at the bank to pay over to Dover's agent, there crossed his mind,
28187 with an unpleasant impression, as from a dark-winged flight of evil
28188 augury across his vision, the thought of that contrast in himself which
28189 a few months had brought--that he should be overjoyed at being under a
28190 strong personal obligation--that he should be overjoyed at getting
28191 money for himself from Bulstrode.
28192
28193 The banker felt that he had done something to nullify one cause of
28194 uneasiness, and yet he was scarcely the easier. He did not measure the
28195 quantity of diseased motive which had made him wish for Lydgate's
28196 good-will, but the quantity was none the less actively there, like an
28197 irritating agent in his blood. A man vows, and yet will not cast away
28198 the means of breaking his vow. Is it that he distinctly means to break
28199 it? Not at all; but the desires which tend to break it are at work in
28200 him dimly, and make their way into his imagination, and relax his
28201 muscles in the very moments when he is telling himself over again the
28202 reasons for his vow. Raffles, recovering quickly, returning to the
28203 free use of his odious powers--how could Bulstrode wish for that?
28204 Raffles dead was the image that brought release, and indirectly he
28205 prayed for that way of release, beseeching that, if it were possible,
28206 the rest of his days here below might be freed from the threat of an
28207 ignominy which would break him utterly as an instrument of God's
28208 service. Lydgate's opinion was not on the side of promise that this
28209 prayer would be fulfilled; and as the day advanced, Bulstrode felt
28210 himself getting irritated at the persistent life in this man, whom he
28211 would fain have seen sinking into the silence of death: imperious will
28212 stirred murderous impulses towards this brute life, over which will, by
28213 itself, had no power. He said inwardly that he was getting too much
28214 worn; he would not sit up with the patient to-night, but leave him to
28215 Mrs. Abel, who, if necessary, could call her husband.
28216
28217 At six o'clock, Raffles, having had only fitful perturbed snatches of
28218 sleep, from which he waked with fresh restlessness and perpetual cries
28219 that he was sinking away, Bulstrode began to administer the opium
28220 according to Lydgate's directions. At the end of half an hour or more
28221 he called Mrs. Abel and told her that he found himself unfit for
28222 further watching. He must now consign the patient to her care; and he
28223 proceeded to repeat to her Lydgate's directions as to the quantity of
28224 each dose. Mrs. Abel had not before known anything of Lydgate's
28225 prescriptions; she had simply prepared and brought whatever Bulstrode
28226 ordered, and had done what he pointed out to her. She began now to ask
28227 what else she should do besides administering the opium.
28228
28229 "Nothing at present, except the offer of the soup or the soda-water:
28230 you can come to me for further directions. Unless there is any
28231 important change, I shall not come into the room again to-night. You
28232 will ask your husband for help if necessary. I must go to bed early."
28233
28234 "You've much need, sir, I'm sure," said Mrs. Abel, "and to take
28235 something more strengthening than what you've done."
28236
28237 Bulstrode went away now without anxiety as to what Raffles might say in
28238 his raving, which had taken on a muttering incoherence not likely to
28239 create any dangerous belief. At any rate he must risk this. He went
28240 down into the wainscoted parlor first, and began to consider whether he
28241 would not have his horse saddled and go home by the moonlight, and give
28242 up caring for earthly consequences. Then, he wished that he had begged
28243 Lydgate to come again that evening. Perhaps he might deliver a
28244 different opinion, and think that Raffles was getting into a less
28245 hopeful state. Should he send for Lydgate? If Raffles were really
28246 getting worse, and slowly dying, Bulstrode felt that he could go to bed
28247 and sleep in gratitude to Providence. But was he worse? Lydgate might
28248 come and simply say that he was going on as he expected, and predict
28249 that he would by-and-by fall into a good sleep, and get well. What was
28250 the use of sending for him? Bulstrode shrank from that result. No
28251 ideas or opinions could hinder him from seeing the one probability to
28252 be, that Raffles recovered would be just the same man as before, with
28253 his strength as a tormentor renewed, obliging him to drag away his wife
28254 to spend her years apart from her friends and native place, carrying an
28255 alienating suspicion against him in her heart.
28256
28257 He had sat an hour and a half in this conflict by the firelight only,
28258 when a sudden thought made him rise and light the bed-candle, which he
28259 had brought down with him. The thought was, that he had not told Mrs.
28260 Abel when the doses of opium must cease.
28261
28262 He took hold of the candlestick, but stood motionless for a long while.
28263 She might already have given him more than Lydgate had prescribed. But
28264 it was excusable in him, that he should forget part of an order, in his
28265 present wearied condition. He walked up-stairs, candle in hand, not
28266 knowing whether he should straightway enter his own room and go to bed,
28267 or turn to the patient's room and rectify his omission. He paused in
28268 the passage, with his face turned towards Raffles's room, and he could
28269 hear him moaning and murmuring. He was not asleep, then. Who could
28270 know that Lydgate's prescription would not be better disobeyed than
28271 followed, since there was still no sleep?
28272
28273 He turned into his own room. Before he had quite undressed, Mrs. Abel
28274 rapped at the door; he opened it an inch, so that he could hear her
28275 speak low.
28276
28277 "If you please, sir, should I have no brandy nor nothing to give the
28278 poor creetur? He feels sinking away, and nothing else will he
28279 swaller--and but little strength in it, if he did--only the opium. And
28280 he says more and more he's sinking down through the earth."
28281
28282 To her surprise, Mr. Bulstrode did not answer. A struggle was going on
28283 within him.
28284
28285 "I think he must die for want o' support, if he goes on in that way.
28286 When I nursed my poor master, Mr. Robisson, I had to give him port-wine
28287 and brandy constant, and a big glass at a time," added Mrs. Abel, with
28288 a touch of remonstrance in her tone.
28289
28290 But again Mr. Bulstrode did not answer immediately, and she continued,
28291 "It's not a time to spare when people are at death's door, nor would
28292 you wish it, sir, I'm sure. Else I should give him our own bottle o'
28293 rum as we keep by us. But a sitter-up so as you've been, and doing
28294 everything as laid in your power--"
28295
28296 Here a key was thrust through the inch of doorway, and Mr. Bulstrode
28297 said huskily, "That is the key of the wine-cooler. You will find plenty
28298 of brandy there."
28299
28300 Early in the morning--about six--Mr. Bulstrode rose and spent some time
28301 in prayer. Does any one suppose that private prayer is necessarily
28302 candid--necessarily goes to the roots of action? Private prayer is
28303 inaudible speech, and speech is representative: who can represent
28304 himself just as he is, even in his own reflections? Bulstrode had not
28305 yet unravelled in his thought the confused promptings of the last
28306 four-and-twenty hours.
28307
28308 He listened in the passage, and could hear hard stertorous breathing.
28309 Then he walked out in the garden, and looked at the early rime on the
28310 grass and fresh spring leaves. When he re-entered the house, he felt
28311 startled at the sight of Mrs. Abel.
28312
28313 "How is your patient--asleep, I think?" he said, with an attempt at
28314 cheerfulness in his tone.
28315
28316 "He's gone very deep, sir," said Mrs. Abel. "He went off gradual
28317 between three and four o'clock. Would you please to go and look at
28318 him? I thought it no harm to leave him. My man's gone afield, and the
28319 little girl's seeing to the kettles."
28320
28321 Bulstrode went up. At a glance he knew that Raffles was not in the
28322 sleep which brings revival, but in the sleep which streams deeper and
28323 deeper into the gulf of death.
28324
28325 He looked round the room and saw a bottle with some brandy in it, and
28326 the almost empty opium phial. He put the phial out of sight, and
28327 carried the brandy-bottle down-stairs with him, locking it again in the
28328 wine-cooler.
28329
28330 While breakfasting he considered whether he should ride to Middlemarch
28331 at once, or wait for Lydgate's arrival. He decided to wait, and told
28332 Mrs. Abel that she might go about her work--he could watch in the
28333 bed-chamber.
28334
28335 As he sat there and beheld the enemy of his peace going irrevocably
28336 into silence, he felt more at rest than he had done for many months.
28337 His conscience was soothed by the enfolding wing of secrecy, which
28338 seemed just then like an angel sent down for his relief. He drew out
28339 his pocket-book to review various memoranda there as to the
28340 arrangements he had projected and partly carried out in the prospect of
28341 quitting Middlemarch, and considered how far he would let them stand or
28342 recall them, now that his absence would be brief. Some economies which
28343 he felt desirable might still find a suitable occasion in his temporary
28344 withdrawal from management, and he hoped still that Mrs. Casaubon would
28345 take a large share in the expenses of the Hospital. In that way the
28346 moments passed, until a change in the stertorous breathing was marked
28347 enough to draw his attention wholly to the bed, and forced him to think
28348 of the departing life, which had once been subservient to his
28349 own--which he had once been glad to find base enough for him to act on
28350 as he would. It was his gladness then which impelled him now to be
28351 glad that the life was at an end.
28352
28353 And who could say that the death of Raffles had been hastened? Who
28354 knew what would have saved him?
28355
28356 Lydgate arrived at half-past ten, in time to witness the final pause of
28357 the breath. When he entered the room Bulstrode observed a sudden
28358 expression in his face, which was not so much surprise as a recognition
28359 that he had not judged correctly. He stood by the bed in silence for
28360 some time, with his eyes turned on the dying man, but with that subdued
28361 activity of expression which showed that he was carrying on an inward
28362 debate.
28363
28364 "When did this change begin?" said he, looking at Bulstrode.
28365
28366 "I did not watch by him last night," said Bulstrode. "I was over-worn,
28367 and left him under Mrs. Abel's care. She said that he sank into sleep
28368 between three and four o'clock. When I came in before eight he was
28369 nearly in this condition."
28370
28371 Lydgate did not ask another question, but watched in silence until he
28372 said, "It's all over."
28373
28374 This morning Lydgate was in a state of recovered hope and freedom. He
28375 had set out on his work with all his old animation, and felt himself
28376 strong enough to bear all the deficiencies of his married life. And he
28377 was conscious that Bulstrode had been a benefactor to him. But he was
28378 uneasy about this case. He had not expected it to terminate as it had
28379 done. Yet he hardly knew how to put a question on the subject to
28380 Bulstrode without appearing to insult him; and if he examined the
28381 housekeeper--why, the man was dead. There seemed to be no use in
28382 implying that somebody's ignorance or imprudence had killed him. And
28383 after all, he himself might be wrong.
28384
28385 He and Bulstrode rode back to Middlemarch together, talking of many
28386 things--chiefly cholera and the chances of the Reform Bill in the House
28387 of Lords, and the firm resolve of the political Unions. Nothing was
28388 said about Raffles, except that Bulstrode mentioned the necessity of
28389 having a grave for him in Lowick churchyard, and observed that, so far
28390 as he knew, the poor man had no connections, except Rigg, whom he had
28391 stated to be unfriendly towards him.
28392
28393 On returning home Lydgate had a visit from Mr. Farebrother. The Vicar
28394 had not been in the town the day before, but the news that there was an
28395 execution in Lydgate's house had got to Lowick by the evening, having
28396 been carried by Mr. Spicer, shoemaker and parish-clerk, who had it from
28397 his brother, the respectable bell-hanger in Lowick Gate. Since that
28398 evening when Lydgate had come down from the billiard room with Fred
28399 Vincy, Mr. Farebrother's thoughts about him had been rather gloomy.
28400 Playing at the Green Dragon once or oftener might have been a trifle in
28401 another man; but in Lydgate it was one of several signs that he was
28402 getting unlike his former self. He was beginning to do things for
28403 which he had formerly even an excessive scorn. Whatever certain
28404 dissatisfactions in marriage, which some silly tinklings of gossip had
28405 given him hints of, might have to do with this change, Mr. Farebrother
28406 felt sure that it was chiefly connected with the debts which were being
28407 more and more distinctly reported, and he began to fear that any notion
28408 of Lydgate's having resources or friends in the background must be
28409 quite illusory. The rebuff he had met with in his first attempt to win
28410 Lydgate's confidence, disinclined him to a second; but this news of the
28411 execution being actually in the house, determined the Vicar to overcome
28412 his reluctance.
28413
28414 Lydgate had just dismissed a poor patient, in whom he was much
28415 interested, and he came forward to put out his hand--with an open
28416 cheerfulness which surprised Mr. Farebrother. Could this too be a
28417 proud rejection of sympathy and help? Never mind; the sympathy and
28418 help should be offered.
28419
28420 "How are you, Lydgate? I came to see you because I had heard something
28421 which made me anxious about you," said the Vicar, in the tone of a good
28422 brother, only that there was no reproach in it. They were both seated
28423 by this time, and Lydgate answered immediately--
28424
28425 "I think I know what you mean. You had heard that there was an
28426 execution in the house?"
28427
28428 "Yes; is it true?"
28429
28430 "It was true," said Lydgate, with an air of freedom, as if he did not
28431 mind talking about the affair now. "But the danger is over; the debt
28432 is paid. I am out of my difficulties now: I shall be freed from debts,
28433 and able, I hope, to start afresh on a better plan."
28434
28435 "I am very thankful to hear it," said the Vicar, falling back in his
28436 chair, and speaking with that low-toned quickness which often follows
28437 the removal of a load. "I like that better than all the news in the
28438 'Times.' I confess I came to you with a heavy heart."
28439
28440 "Thank you for coming," said Lydgate, cordially. "I can enjoy the
28441 kindness all the more because I am happier. I have certainly been a
28442 good deal crushed. I'm afraid I shall find the bruises still painful
28443 by-and by," he added, smiling rather sadly; "but just now I can only
28444 feel that the torture-screw is off."
28445
28446 Mr. Farebrother was silent for a moment, and then said earnestly, "My
28447 dear fellow, let me ask you one question. Forgive me if I take a
28448 liberty."
28449
28450 "I don't believe you will ask anything that ought to offend me."
28451
28452 "Then--this is necessary to set my heart quite at rest--you have
28453 not--have you?--in order to pay your debts, incurred another debt which
28454 may harass you worse hereafter?"
28455
28456 "No," said Lydgate, coloring slightly. "There is no reason why I
28457 should not tell you--since the fact is so--that the person to whom I am
28458 indebted is Bulstrode. He has made me a very handsome advance--a
28459 thousand pounds--and he can afford to wait for repayment."
28460
28461 "Well, that is generous," said Mr. Farebrother, compelling himself to
28462 approve of the man whom he disliked. His delicate feeling shrank from
28463 dwelling even in his thought on the fact that he had always urged
28464 Lydgate to avoid any personal entanglement with Bulstrode. He added
28465 immediately, "And Bulstrode must naturally feel an interest in your
28466 welfare, after you have worked with him in a way which has probably
28467 reduced your income instead of adding to it. I am glad to think that
28468 he has acted accordingly."
28469
28470 Lydgate felt uncomfortable under these kindly suppositions. They made
28471 more distinct within him the uneasy consciousness which had shown its
28472 first dim stirrings only a few hours before, that Bulstrode's motives
28473 for his sudden beneficence following close upon the chillest
28474 indifference might be merely selfish. He let the kindly suppositions
28475 pass. He could not tell the history of the loan, but it was more
28476 vividly present with him than ever, as well as the fact which the Vicar
28477 delicately ignored--that this relation of personal indebtedness to
28478 Bulstrode was what he had once been most resolved to avoid.
28479
28480 He began, instead of answering, to speak of his projected economies,
28481 and of his having come to look at his life from a different point of
28482 view.
28483
28484 "I shall set up a surgery," he said. "I really think I made a mistaken
28485 effort in that respect. And if Rosamond will not mind, I shall take an
28486 apprentice. I don't like these things, but if one carries them out
28487 faithfully they are not really lowering. I have had a severe galling
28488 to begin with: that will make the small rubs seem easy."
28489
28490 Poor Lydgate! the "if Rosamond will not mind," which had fallen from
28491 him involuntarily as part of his thought, was a significant mark of the
28492 yoke he bore. But Mr. Farebrother, whose hopes entered strongly into
28493 the same current with Lydgate's, and who knew nothing about him that
28494 could now raise a melancholy presentiment, left him with affectionate
28495 congratulation.
28496
28497
28498
28499 CHAPTER LXXI.
28500
28501 Clown. . . . 'Twas in the Bunch of Grapes, where, indeed,
28502 you have a delight to sit, have you not?
28503 Froth. I have so: because it is an open room, and good for winter.
28504 Clo. Why, very well then: I hope here be truths.
28505 --Measure for Measure.
28506
28507
28508 Five days after the death of Raffles, Mr. Bambridge was standing at his
28509 leisure under the large archway leading into the yard of the Green
28510 Dragon. He was not fond of solitary contemplation, but he had only
28511 just come out of the house, and any human figure standing at ease under
28512 the archway in the early afternoon was as certain to attract
28513 companionship as a pigeon which has found something worth pecking at.
28514 In this case there was no material object to feed upon, but the eye of
28515 reason saw a probability of mental sustenance in the shape of gossip.
28516 Mr. Hopkins, the meek-mannered draper opposite, was the first to act on
28517 this inward vision, being the more ambitious of a little masculine talk
28518 because his customers were chiefly women. Mr. Bambridge was rather
28519 curt to the draper, feeling that Hopkins was of course glad to talk to
28520 _him_, but that he was not going to waste much of his talk on Hopkins.
28521 Soon, however, there was a small cluster of more important listeners,
28522 who were either deposited from the passers-by, or had sauntered to the
28523 spot expressly to see if there were anything going on at the Green
28524 Dragon; and Mr. Bambridge was finding it worth his while to say many
28525 impressive things about the fine studs he had been seeing and the
28526 purchases he had made on a journey in the north from which he had just
28527 returned. Gentlemen present were assured that when they could show him
28528 anything to cut out a blood mare, a bay, rising four, which was to be
28529 seen at Doncaster if they chose to go and look at it, Mr. Bambridge
28530 would gratify them by being shot "from here to Hereford." Also, a pair
28531 of blacks which he was going to put into the break recalled vividly to
28532 his mind a pair which he had sold to Faulkner in '19, for a hundred
28533 guineas, and which Faulkner had sold for a hundred and sixty two months
28534 later--any gent who could disprove this statement being offered the
28535 privilege of calling Mr. Bambridge by a very ugly name until the
28536 exercise made his throat dry.
28537
28538 When the discourse was at this point of animation, came up Mr. Frank
28539 Hawley. He was not a man to compromise his dignity by lounging at the
28540 Green Dragon, but happening to pass along the High Street and seeing
28541 Bambridge on the other side, he took some of his long strides across to
28542 ask the horsedealer whether he had found the first-rate gig-horse which
28543 he had engaged to look for. Mr. Hawley was requested to wait until he
28544 had seen a gray selected at Bilkley: if that did not meet his wishes to
28545 a hair, Bambridge did not know a horse when he saw it, which seemed to
28546 be the highest conceivable unlikelihood. Mr. Hawley, standing with his
28547 back to the street, was fixing a time for looking at the gray and
28548 seeing it tried, when a horseman passed slowly by.
28549
28550 "Bulstrode!" said two or three voices at once in a low tone, one of
28551 them, which was the draper's, respectfully prefixing the "Mr.;" but
28552 nobody having more intention in this interjectural naming than if they
28553 had said "the Riverston coach" when that vehicle appeared in the
28554 distance. Mr. Hawley gave a careless glance round at Bulstrode's back,
28555 but as Bambridge's eyes followed it he made a sarcastic grimace.
28556
28557 "By jingo! that reminds me," he began, lowering his voice a little, "I
28558 picked up something else at Bilkley besides your gig-horse, Mr. Hawley.
28559 I picked up a fine story about Bulstrode. Do you know how he came by
28560 his fortune? Any gentleman wanting a bit of curious information, I can
28561 give it him free of expense. If everybody got their deserts, Bulstrode
28562 might have had to say his prayers at Botany Bay."
28563
28564 "What do you mean?" said Mr. Hawley, thrusting his hands into his
28565 pockets, and pushing a little forward under the archway. If Bulstrode
28566 should turn out to be a rascal, Frank Hawley had a prophetic soul.
28567
28568 "I had it from a party who was an old chum of Bulstrode's. I'll tell
28569 you where I first picked him up," said Bambridge, with a sudden gesture
28570 of his fore-finger. "He was at Larcher's sale, but I knew nothing of
28571 him then--he slipped through my fingers--was after Bulstrode, no
28572 doubt. He tells me he can tap Bulstrode to any amount, knows all his
28573 secrets. However, he blabbed to me at Bilkley: he takes a stiff glass.
28574 Damme if I think he meant to turn king's evidence; but he's that sort
28575 of bragging fellow, the bragging runs over hedge and ditch with him,
28576 till he'd brag of a spavin as if it 'ud fetch money. A man should know
28577 when to pull up." Mr. Bambridge made this remark with an air of
28578 disgust, satisfied that his own bragging showed a fine sense of the
28579 marketable.
28580
28581 "What's the man's name? Where can he be found?" said Mr. Hawley.
28582
28583 "As to where he is to be found, I left him to it at the Saracen's Head;
28584 but his name is Raffles."
28585
28586 "Raffles!" exclaimed Mr. Hopkins. "I furnished his funeral yesterday.
28587 He was buried at Lowick. Mr. Bulstrode followed him. A very decent
28588 funeral." There was a strong sensation among the listeners. Mr.
28589 Bambridge gave an ejaculation in which "brimstone" was the mildest
28590 word, and Mr. Hawley, knitting his brows and bending his head forward,
28591 exclaimed, "What?--where did the man die?"
28592
28593 "At Stone Court," said the draper. "The housekeeper said he was a
28594 relation of the master's. He came there ill on Friday."
28595
28596 "Why, it was on Wednesday I took a glass with him," interposed
28597 Bambridge.
28598
28599 "Did any doctor attend him?" said Mr. Hawley
28600
28601 "Yes. Mr. Lydgate. Mr. Bulstrode sat up with him one night. He died
28602 the third morning."
28603
28604 "Go on, Bambridge," said Mr. Hawley, insistently. "What did this
28605 fellow say about Bulstrode?"
28606
28607 The group had already become larger, the town-clerk's presence being a
28608 guarantee that something worth listening to was going on there; and Mr.
28609 Bambridge delivered his narrative in the hearing of seven. It was
28610 mainly what we know, including the fact about Will Ladislaw, with some
28611 local color and circumstance added: it was what Bulstrode had dreaded
28612 the betrayal of--and hoped to have buried forever with the corpse of
28613 Raffles--it was that haunting ghost of his earlier life which as he
28614 rode past the archway of the Green Dragon he was trusting that
28615 Providence had delivered him from. Yes, Providence. He had not
28616 confessed to himself yet that he had done anything in the way of
28617 contrivance to this end; he had accepted what seemed to have been
28618 offered. It was impossible to prove that he had done anything which
28619 hastened the departure of that man's soul.
28620
28621 But this gossip about Bulstrode spread through Middlemarch like the
28622 smell of fire. Mr. Frank Hawley followed up his information by sending
28623 a clerk whom he could trust to Stone Court on a pretext of inquiring
28624 about hay, but really to gather all that could be learned about Raffles
28625 and his illness from Mrs. Abel. In this way it came to his knowledge
28626 that Mr. Garth had carried the man to Stone Court in his gig; and Mr.
28627 Hawley in consequence took an opportunity of seeing Caleb, calling at
28628 his office to ask whether he had time to undertake an arbitration if it
28629 were required, and then asking him incidentally about Raffles. Caleb
28630 was betrayed into no word injurious to Bulstrode beyond the fact which
28631 he was forced to admit, that he had given up acting for him within the
28632 last week. Mr Hawley drew his inferences, and feeling convinced that
28633 Raffles had told his story to Garth, and that Garth had given up
28634 Bulstrode's affairs in consequence, said so a few hours later to Mr.
28635 Toller. The statement was passed on until it had quite lost the stamp
28636 of an inference, and was taken as information coming straight from
28637 Garth, so that even a diligent historian might have concluded Caleb to
28638 be the chief publisher of Bulstrode's misdemeanors.
28639
28640 Mr. Hawley was not slow to perceive that there was no handle for the
28641 law either in the revelations made by Raffles or in the circumstances
28642 of his death. He had himself ridden to Lowick village that he might
28643 look at the register and talk over the whole matter with Mr.
28644 Farebrother, who was not more surprised than the lawyer that an ugly
28645 secret should have come to light about Bulstrode, though he had always
28646 had justice enough in him to hinder his antipathy from turning into
28647 conclusions. But while they were talking another combination was
28648 silently going forward in Mr. Farebrother's mind, which foreshadowed
28649 what was soon to be loudly spoken of in Middlemarch as a necessary
28650 "putting of two and two together." With the reasons which kept
28651 Bulstrode in dread of Raffles there flashed the thought that the dread
28652 might have something to do with his munificence towards his medical
28653 man; and though he resisted the suggestion that it had been consciously
28654 accepted in any way as a bribe, he had a foreboding that this
28655 complication of things might be of malignant effect on Lydgate's
28656 reputation. He perceived that Mr. Hawley knew nothing at present of
28657 the sudden relief from debt, and he himself was careful to glide away
28658 from all approaches towards the subject.
28659
28660 "Well," he said, with a deep breath, wanting to wind up the illimitable
28661 discussion of what might have been, though nothing could be legally
28662 proven, "it is a strange story. So our mercurial Ladislaw has a queer
28663 genealogy! A high-spirited young lady and a musical Polish patriot
28664 made a likely enough stock for him to spring from, but I should never
28665 have suspected a grafting of the Jew pawnbroker. However, there's no
28666 knowing what a mixture will turn out beforehand. Some sorts of dirt
28667 serve to clarify."
28668
28669 "It's just what I should have expected," said Mr. Hawley, mounting his
28670 horse. "Any cursed alien blood, Jew, Corsican, or Gypsy."
28671
28672 "I know he's one of your black sheep, Hawley. But he is really a
28673 disinterested, unworldly fellow," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling.
28674
28675 "Ay, ay, that is your Whiggish twist," said Mr. Hawley, who had been in
28676 the habit of saying apologetically that Farebrother was such a damned
28677 pleasant good-hearted fellow you would mistake him for a Tory.
28678
28679 Mr. Hawley rode home without thinking of Lydgate's attendance on
28680 Raffles in any other light than as a piece of evidence on the side of
28681 Bulstrode. But the news that Lydgate had all at once become able not
28682 only to get rid of the execution in his house but to pay all his debts
28683 in Middlemarch was spreading fast, gathering round it conjectures and
28684 comments which gave it new body and impetus, and soon filling the ears
28685 of other persons besides Mr. Hawley, who were not slow to see a
28686 significant relation between this sudden command of money and
28687 Bulstrode's desire to stifle the scandal of Raffles. That the money
28688 came from Bulstrode would infallibly have been guessed even if there
28689 had been no direct evidence of it; for it had beforehand entered into
28690 the gossip about Lydgate's affairs, that neither his father-in-law nor
28691 his own family would do anything for him, and direct evidence was
28692 furnished not only by a clerk at the Bank, but by innocent Mrs.
28693 Bulstrode herself, who mentioned the loan to Mrs. Plymdale, who
28694 mentioned it to her daughter-in-law of the house of Toller, who
28695 mentioned it generally. The business was felt to be so public and
28696 important that it required dinners to feed it, and many invitations
28697 were just then issued and accepted on the strength of this scandal
28698 concerning Bulstrode and Lydgate; wives, widows, and single ladies took
28699 their work and went out to tea oftener than usual; and all public
28700 conviviality, from the Green Dragon to Dollop's, gathered a zest which
28701 could not be won from the question whether the Lords would throw out
28702 the Reform Bill.
28703
28704 For hardly anybody doubted that some scandalous reason or other was at
28705 the bottom of Bulstrode's liberality to Lydgate. Mr. Hawley indeed, in
28706 the first instance, invited a select party, including the two
28707 physicians, with Mr Toller and Mr. Wrench, expressly to hold a close
28708 discussion as to the probabilities of Raffles's illness, reciting to
28709 them all the particulars which had been gathered from Mrs. Abel in
28710 connection with Lydgate's certificate, that the death was due to
28711 delirium tremens; and the medical gentlemen, who all stood
28712 undisturbedly on the old paths in relation to this disease, declared
28713 that they could see nothing in these particulars which could be
28714 transformed into a positive ground of suspicion. But the moral grounds
28715 of suspicion remained: the strong motives Bulstrode clearly had for
28716 wishing to be rid of Raffles, and the fact that at this critical moment
28717 he had given Lydgate the help which he must for some time have known
28718 the need for; the disposition, moreover, to believe that Bulstrode
28719 would be unscrupulous, and the absence of any indisposition to believe
28720 that Lydgate might be as easily bribed as other haughty-minded men when
28721 they have found themselves in want of money. Even if the money had
28722 been given merely to make him hold his tongue about the scandal of
28723 Bulstrode's earlier life, the fact threw an odious light on Lydgate,
28724 who had long been sneered at as making himself subservient to the
28725 banker for the sake of working himself into predominance, and
28726 discrediting the elder members of his profession. Hence, in spite of
28727 the negative as to any direct sign of guilt in relation to the death at
28728 Stone Court, Mr. Hawley's select party broke up with the sense that the
28729 affair had "an ugly look."
28730
28731 But this vague conviction of indeterminable guilt, which was enough to
28732 keep up much head-shaking and biting innuendo even among substantial
28733 professional seniors, had for the general mind all the superior power
28734 of mystery over fact. Everybody liked better to conjecture how the
28735 thing was, than simply to know it; for conjecture soon became more
28736 confident than knowledge, and had a more liberal allowance for the
28737 incompatible. Even the more definite scandal concerning Bulstrode's
28738 earlier life was, for some minds, melted into the mass of mystery, as
28739 so much lively metal to be poured out in dialogue, and to take such
28740 fantastic shapes as heaven pleased.
28741
28742 This was the tone of thought chiefly sanctioned by Mrs. Dollop, the
28743 spirited landlady of the Tankard in Slaughter Lane, who had often to
28744 resist the shallow pragmatism of customers disposed to think that their
28745 reports from the outer world were of equal force with what had "come
28746 up" in her mind. How it had been brought to her she didn't know, but
28747 it was there before her as if it had been "scored with the chalk on the
28748 chimney-board--" as Bulstrode should say, "his inside was _that black_
28749 as if the hairs of his head knowed the thoughts of his heart, he'd tear
28750 'em up by the roots."
28751
28752 "That's odd," said Mr. Limp, a meditative shoemaker, with weak eyes and
28753 a piping voice. "Why, I read in the 'Trumpet' that was what the Duke
28754 of Wellington said when he turned his coat and went over to the Romans."
28755
28756 "Very like," said Mrs. Dollop. "If one raskill said it, it's more
28757 reason why another should. But hypo_crite_ as he's been, and holding
28758 things with that high hand, as there was no parson i' the country good
28759 enough for him, he was forced to take Old Harry into his counsel, and
28760 Old Harry's been too many for him."
28761
28762 "Ay, ay, he's a 'complice you can't send out o' the country," said Mr.
28763 Crabbe, the glazier, who gathered much news and groped among it dimly.
28764 "But by what I can make out, there's them says Bulstrode was for
28765 running away, for fear o' being found out, before now."
28766
28767 "He'll be drove away, whether or no," said Mr. Dill, the barber, who
28768 had just dropped in. "I shaved Fletcher, Hawley's clerk, this
28769 morning--he's got a bad finger--and he says they're all of one mind to
28770 get rid of Bulstrode. Mr. Thesiger is turned against him, and wants
28771 him out o' the parish. And there's gentlemen in this town says they'd
28772 as soon dine with a fellow from the hulks. 'And a deal sooner I
28773 would,' says Fletcher; 'for what's more against one's stomach than a
28774 man coming and making himself bad company with his religion, and giving
28775 out as the Ten Commandments are not enough for him, and all the while
28776 he's worse than half the men at the tread-mill?' Fletcher said so
28777 himself."
28778
28779 "It'll be a bad thing for the town though, if Bulstrode's money goes
28780 out of it," said Mr. Limp, quaveringly.
28781
28782 "Ah, there's better folks spend their money worse," said a firm-voiced
28783 dyer, whose crimson hands looked out of keeping with his good-natured
28784 face.
28785
28786 "But he won't keep his money, by what I can make out," said the
28787 glazier. "Don't they say as there's somebody can strip it off him? By
28788 what I can understan', they could take every penny off him, if they
28789 went to lawing."
28790
28791 "No such thing!" said the barber, who felt himself a little above his
28792 company at Dollop's, but liked it none the worse. "Fletcher says it's
28793 no such thing. He says they might prove over and over again whose
28794 child this young Ladislaw was, and they'd do no more than if they
28795 proved I came out of the Fens--he couldn't touch a penny."
28796
28797 "Look you there now!" said Mrs. Dollop, indignantly. "I thank the Lord
28798 he took my children to Himself, if that's all the law can do for the
28799 motherless. Then by that, it's o' no use who your father and mother
28800 is. But as to listening to what one lawyer says without asking
28801 another--I wonder at a man o' your cleverness, Mr. Dill. It's well
28802 known there's always two sides, if no more; else who'd go to law, I
28803 should like to know? It's a poor tale, with all the law as there is up
28804 and down, if it's no use proving whose child you are. Fletcher may say
28805 that if he likes, but I say, don't Fletcher _me_!"
28806
28807 Mr. Dill affected to laugh in a complimentary way at Mrs. Dollop, as a
28808 woman who was more than a match for the lawyers; being disposed to
28809 submit to much twitting from a landlady who had a long score against
28810 him.
28811
28812 "If they come to lawing, and it's all true as folks say, there's more
28813 to be looked to nor money," said the glazier. "There's this poor
28814 creetur as is dead and gone; by what I can make out, he'd seen the day
28815 when he was a deal finer gentleman nor Bulstrode."
28816
28817 "Finer gentleman! I'll warrant him," said Mrs. Dollop; "and a far
28818 personabler man, by what I can hear. As I said when Mr. Baldwin, the
28819 tax-gatherer, comes in, a-standing where you sit, and says, 'Bulstrode
28820 got all his money as he brought into this town by thieving and
28821 swindling,'--I said, 'You don't make me no wiser, Mr. Baldwin: it's set
28822 my blood a-creeping to look at him ever sin' here he came into
28823 Slaughter Lane a-wanting to buy the house over my head: folks don't
28824 look the color o' the dough-tub and stare at you as if they wanted to
28825 see into your backbone for nothingk.' That was what I said, and Mr.
28826 Baldwin can bear me witness."
28827
28828 "And in the rights of it too," said Mr. Crabbe. "For by what I can
28829 make out, this Raffles, as they call him, was a lusty, fresh-colored
28830 man as you'd wish to see, and the best o' company--though dead he lies
28831 in Lowick churchyard sure enough; and by what I can understan', there's
28832 them knows more than they _should_ know about how he got there."
28833
28834 "I'll believe you!" said Mrs. Dallop, with a touch of scorn at Mr.
28835 Crabbe's apparent dimness. "When a man's been 'ticed to a lone house,
28836 and there's them can pay for hospitals and nurses for half the
28837 country-side choose to be sitters-up night and day, and nobody to come
28838 near but a doctor as is known to stick at nothingk, and as poor as he
28839 can hang together, and after that so flush o' money as he can pay off
28840 Mr. Byles the butcher as his bill has been running on for the best o'
28841 joints since last Michaelmas was a twelvemonth--I don't want anybody to
28842 come and tell me as there's been more going on nor the Prayer-book's
28843 got a service for--I don't want to stand winking and blinking and
28844 thinking."
28845
28846 Mrs. Dollop looked round with the air of a landlady accustomed to
28847 dominate her company. There was a chorus of adhesion from the more
28848 courageous; but Mr. Limp, after taking a draught, placed his flat hands
28849 together and pressed them hard between his knees, looking down at them
28850 with blear-eyed contemplation, as if the scorching power of Mrs.
28851 Dollop's speech had quite dried up and nullified his wits until they
28852 could be brought round again by further moisture.
28853
28854 "Why shouldn't they dig the man up and have the Crowner?" said the
28855 dyer. "It's been done many and many's the time. If there's been foul
28856 play they might find it out."
28857
28858 "Not they, Mr. Jonas!" said Mrs Dollop, emphatically. "I know what
28859 doctors are. They're a deal too cunning to be found out. And this
28860 Doctor Lydgate that's been for cutting up everybody before the breath
28861 was well out o' their body--it's plain enough what use he wanted to
28862 make o' looking into respectable people's insides. He knows drugs, you
28863 may be sure, as you can neither smell nor see, neither before they're
28864 swallowed nor after. Why, I've seen drops myself ordered by Doctor
28865 Gambit, as is our club doctor and a good charikter, and has brought
28866 more live children into the world nor ever another i' Middlemarch--I
28867 say I've seen drops myself as made no difference whether they was in
28868 the glass or out, and yet have griped you the next day. So I'll leave
28869 your own sense to judge. Don't tell me! All I say is, it's a mercy
28870 they didn't take this Doctor Lydgate on to our club. There's many a
28871 mother's child might ha' rued it."
28872
28873 The heads of this discussion at "Dollop's" had been the common theme
28874 among all classes in the town, had been carried to Lowick Parsonage on
28875 one side and to Tipton Grange on the other, had come fully to the ears
28876 of the Vincy family, and had been discussed with sad reference to "poor
28877 Harriet" by all Mrs. Bulstrode's friends, before Lydgate knew
28878 distinctly why people were looking strangely at him, and before
28879 Bulstrode himself suspected the betrayal of his secrets. He had not
28880 been accustomed to very cordial relations with his neighbors, and hence
28881 he could not miss the signs of cordiality; moreover, he had been taking
28882 journeys on business of various kinds, having now made up his mind that
28883 he need not quit Middlemarch, and feeling able consequently to
28884 determine on matters which he had before left in suspense.
28885
28886 "We will make a journey to Cheltenham in the course of a month or two,"
28887 he had said to his wife. "There are great spiritual advantages to be
28888 had in that town along with the air and the waters, and six weeks there
28889 will be eminently refreshing to us."
28890
28891 He really believed in the spiritual advantages, and meant that his life
28892 henceforth should be the more devoted because of those later sins which
28893 he represented to himself as hypothetic, praying hypothetically for
28894 their pardon:--"if I have herein transgressed."
28895
28896 As to the Hospital, he avoided saying anything further to Lydgate,
28897 fearing to manifest a too sudden change of plans immediately on the
28898 death of Raffles. In his secret soul he believed that Lydgate
28899 suspected his orders to have been intentionally disobeyed, and
28900 suspecting this he must also suspect a motive. But nothing had been
28901 betrayed to him as to the history of Raffles, and Bulstrode was anxious
28902 not to do anything which would give emphasis to his undefined
28903 suspicions. As to any certainty that a particular method of treatment
28904 would either save or kill, Lydgate himself was constantly arguing
28905 against such dogmatism; he had no right to speak, and he had every
28906 motive for being silent. Hence Bulstrode felt himself providentially
28907 secured. The only incident he had strongly winced under had been an
28908 occasional encounter with Caleb Garth, who, however, had raised his hat
28909 with mild gravity.
28910
28911 Meanwhile, on the part of the principal townsmen a strong determination
28912 was growing against him.
28913
28914 A meeting was to be held in the Town-Hall on a sanitary question which
28915 had risen into pressing importance by the occurrence of a cholera case
28916 in the town. Since the Act of Parliament, which had been hurriedly
28917 passed, authorizing assessments for sanitary measures, there had been a
28918 Board for the superintendence of such measures appointed in
28919 Middlemarch, and much cleansing and preparation had been concurred in
28920 by Whigs and Tories. The question now was, whether a piece of ground
28921 outside the town should be secured as a burial-ground by means of
28922 assessment or by private subscription. The meeting was to be open, and
28923 almost everybody of importance in the town was expected to be there.
28924
28925 Mr. Bulstrode was a member of the Board, and just before twelve o'clock
28926 he started from the Bank with the intention of urging the plan of
28927 private subscription. Under the hesitation of his projects, he had for
28928 some time kept himself in the background, and he felt that he should
28929 this morning resume his old position as a man of action and influence
28930 in the public affairs of the town where he expected to end his days.
28931 Among the various persons going in the same direction, he saw Lydgate;
28932 they joined, talked over the object of the meeting, and entered it
28933 together.
28934
28935 It seemed that everybody of mark had been earlier than they. But there
28936 were still spaces left near the head of the large central table, and
28937 they made their way thither. Mr. Farebrother sat opposite, not far
28938 from Mr. Hawley; all the medical men were there; Mr. Thesiger was in
28939 the chair, and Mr. Brooke of Tipton was on his right hand.
28940
28941 Lydgate noticed a peculiar interchange of glances when he and Bulstrode
28942 took their seats.
28943
28944 After the business had been fully opened by the chairman, who pointed
28945 out the advantages of purchasing by subscription a piece of ground
28946 large enough to be ultimately used as a general cemetery, Mr.
28947 Bulstrode, whose rather high-pitched but subdued and fluent voice the
28948 town was used to at meetings of this sort, rose and asked leave to
28949 deliver his opinion. Lydgate could see again the peculiar interchange
28950 of glances before Mr. Hawley started up, and said in his firm resonant
28951 voice, "Mr. Chairman, I request that before any one delivers his
28952 opinion on this point I may be permitted to speak on a question of
28953 public feeling, which not only by myself, but by many gentlemen
28954 present, is regarded as preliminary."
28955
28956 Mr. Hawley's mode of speech, even when public decorum repressed his
28957 "awful language," was formidable in its curtness and self-possession.
28958 Mr. Thesiger sanctioned the request, Mr. Bulstrode sat down, and Mr.
28959 Hawley continued.
28960
28961 "In what I have to say, Mr. Chairman, I am not speaking simply on my
28962 own behalf: I am speaking with the concurrence and at the express
28963 request of no fewer than eight of my fellow-townsmen, who are
28964 immediately around us. It is our united sentiment that Mr. Bulstrode
28965 should be called upon--and I do now call upon him--to resign public
28966 positions which he holds not simply as a tax-payer, but as a gentleman
28967 among gentlemen. There are practices and there are acts which, owing
28968 to circumstances, the law cannot visit, though they may be worse than
28969 many things which are legally punishable. Honest men and gentlemen, if
28970 they don't want the company of people who perpetrate such acts, have
28971 got to defend themselves as they best can, and that is what I and the
28972 friends whom I may call my clients in this affair are determined to do.
28973 I don't say that Mr. Bulstrode has been guilty of shameful acts, but I
28974 call upon him either publicly to deny and confute the scandalous
28975 statements made against him by a man now dead, and who died in his
28976 house--the statement that he was for many years engaged in nefarious
28977 practices, and that he won his fortune by dishonest procedures--or else
28978 to withdraw from positions which could only have been allowed him as a
28979 gentleman among gentlemen."
28980
28981 All eyes in the room were turned on Mr. Bulstrode, who, since the first
28982 mention of his name, had been going through a crisis of feeling almost
28983 too violent for his delicate frame to support. Lydgate, who himself
28984 was undergoing a shock as from the terrible practical interpretation of
28985 some faint augury, felt, nevertheless, that his own movement of
28986 resentful hatred was checked by that instinct of the Healer which
28987 thinks first of bringing rescue or relief to the sufferer, when he
28988 looked at the shrunken misery of Bulstrode's livid face.
28989
28990 The quick vision that his life was after all a failure, that he was a
28991 dishonored man, and must quail before the glance of those towards whom
28992 he had habitually assumed the attitude of a reprover--that God had
28993 disowned him before men and left him unscreened to the triumphant scorn
28994 of those who were glad to have their hatred justified--the sense of
28995 utter futility in that equivocation with his conscience in dealing with
28996 the life of his accomplice, an equivocation which now turned venomously
28997 upon him with the full-grown fang of a discovered lie:--all this
28998 rushed through him like the agony of terror which fails to kill, and
28999 leaves the ears still open to the returning wave of execration. The
29000 sudden sense of exposure after the re-established sense of safety
29001 came--not to the coarse organization of a criminal but to--the
29002 susceptible nerve of a man whose intensest being lay in such mastery
29003 and predominance as the conditions of his life had shaped for him.
29004
29005 But in that intense being lay the strength of reaction. Through all
29006 his bodily infirmity there ran a tenacious nerve of ambitious
29007 self-preserving will, which had continually leaped out like a flame,
29008 scattering all doctrinal fears, and which, even while he sat an object
29009 of compassion for the merciful, was beginning to stir and glow under
29010 his ashy paleness. Before the last words were out of Mr. Hawley's
29011 mouth, Bulstrode felt that he should answer, and that his answer would
29012 be a retort. He dared not get up and say, "I am not guilty, the whole
29013 story is false"--even if he had dared this, it would have seemed to
29014 him, under his present keen sense of betrayal, as vain as to pull, for
29015 covering to his nakedness, a frail rag which would rend at every little
29016 strain.
29017
29018 For a few moments there was total silence, while every man in the room
29019 was looking at Bulstrode. He sat perfectly still, leaning hard against
29020 the back of his chair; he could not venture to rise, and when he began
29021 to speak he pressed his hands upon the seat on each side of him. But
29022 his voice was perfectly audible, though hoarser than usual, and his
29023 words were distinctly pronounced, though he paused between sentence as
29024 if short of breath. He said, turning first toward Mr. Thesiger, and
29025 then looking at Mr. Hawley--
29026
29027 "I protest before you, sir, as a Christian minister, against the
29028 sanction of proceedings towards me which are dictated by virulent
29029 hatred. Those who are hostile to me are glad to believe any libel
29030 uttered by a loose tongue against me. And their consciences become
29031 strict against me. Say that the evil-speaking of which I am to be made
29032 the victim accuses me of malpractices--" here Bulstrode's voice rose
29033 and took on a more biting accent, till it seemed a low cry--"who shall
29034 be my accuser? Not men whose own lives are unchristian, nay,
29035 scandalous--not men who themselves use low instruments to carry out
29036 their ends--whose profession is a tissue of chicanery--who have been
29037 spending their income on their own sensual enjoyments, while I have
29038 been devoting mine to advance the best objects with regard to this life
29039 and the next."
29040
29041 After the word chicanery there was a growing noise, half of murmurs and
29042 half of hisses, while four persons started up at once--Mr. Hawley, Mr.
29043 Toller, Mr. Chichely, and Mr. Hackbutt; but Mr. Hawley's outburst was
29044 instantaneous, and left the others behind in silence.
29045
29046 "If you mean me, sir, I call you and every one else to the inspection
29047 of my professional life. As to Christian or unchristian, I repudiate
29048 your canting palavering Christianity; and as to the way in which I
29049 spend my income, it is not my principle to maintain thieves and cheat
29050 offspring of their due inheritance in order to support religion and set
29051 myself up as a saintly Killjoy. I affect no niceness of conscience--I
29052 have not found any nice standards necessary yet to measure your actions
29053 by, sir. And I again call upon you to enter into satisfactory
29054 explanations concerning the scandals against you, or else to withdraw
29055 from posts in which we at any rate decline you as a colleague. I say,
29056 sir, we decline to co-operate with a man whose character is not cleared
29057 from infamous lights cast upon it, not only by reports but by recent
29058 actions."
29059
29060 "Allow me, Mr. Hawley," said the chairman; and Mr. Hawley, still
29061 fuming, bowed half impatiently, and sat down with his hands thrust deep
29062 in his pockets.
29063
29064 "Mr. Bulstrode, it is not desirable, I think, to prolong the present
29065 discussion," said Mr. Thesiger, turning to the pallid trembling man; "I
29066 must so far concur with what has fallen from Mr. Hawley in expression
29067 of a general feeling, as to think it due to your Christian profession
29068 that you should clear yourself, if possible, from unhappy aspersions.
29069 I for my part should be willing to give you full opportunity and
29070 hearing. But I must say that your present attitude is painfully
29071 inconsistent with those principles which you have sought to identify
29072 yourself with, and for the honor of which I am bound to care. I
29073 recommend you at present, as your clergyman, and one who hopes for your
29074 reinstatement in respect, to quit the room, and avoid further hindrance
29075 to business."
29076
29077 Bulstrode, after a moment's hesitation, took his hat from the floor and
29078 slowly rose, but he grasped the corner of the chair so totteringly that
29079 Lydgate felt sure there was not strength enough in him to walk away
29080 without support. What could he do? He could not see a man sink close
29081 to him for want of help. He rose and gave his arm to Bulstrode, and in
29082 that way led him out of the room; yet this act, which might have been
29083 one of gentle duty and pure compassion, was at this moment unspeakably
29084 bitter to him. It seemed as if he were putting his sign-manual to that
29085 association of himself with Bulstrode, of which he now saw the full
29086 meaning as it must have presented itself to other minds. He now felt
29087 the conviction that this man who was leaning tremblingly on his arm,
29088 had given him the thousand pounds as a bribe, and that somehow the
29089 treatment of Raffles had been tampered with from an evil motive. The
29090 inferences were closely linked enough; the town knew of the loan,
29091 believed it to be a bribe, and believed that he took it as a bribe.
29092
29093 Poor Lydgate, his mind struggling under the terrible clutch of this
29094 revelation, was all the while morally forced to take Mr. Bulstrode to
29095 the Bank, send a man off for his carriage, and wait to accompany him
29096 home.
29097
29098 Meanwhile the business of the meeting was despatched, and fringed off
29099 into eager discussion among various groups concerning this affair of
29100 Bulstrode--and Lydgate.
29101
29102 Mr. Brooke, who had before heard only imperfect hints of it, and was
29103 very uneasy that he had "gone a little too far" in countenancing
29104 Bulstrode, now got himself fully informed, and felt some benevolent
29105 sadness in talking to Mr. Farebrother about the ugly light in which
29106 Lydgate had come to be regarded. Mr. Farebrother was going to walk
29107 back to Lowick.
29108
29109 "Step into my carriage," said Mr. Brooke. "I am going round to see
29110 Mrs. Casaubon. She was to come back from Yorkshire last night. She
29111 will like to see me, you know."
29112
29113 So they drove along, Mr. Brooke chatting with good-natured hope that
29114 there had not really been anything black in Lydgate's behavior--a
29115 young fellow whom he had seen to be quite above the common mark, when
29116 he brought a letter from his uncle Sir Godwin. Mr. Farebrother said
29117 little: he was deeply mournful: with a keen perception of human
29118 weakness, he could not be confident that under the pressure of
29119 humiliating needs Lydgate had not fallen below himself.
29120
29121 When the carriage drove up to the gate of the Manor, Dorothea was out
29122 on the gravel, and came to greet them.
29123
29124 "Well, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, "we have just come from a meeting--a
29125 sanitary meeting, you know."
29126
29127 "Was Mr. Lydgate there?" said Dorothea, who looked full of health and
29128 animation, and stood with her head bare under the gleaming April
29129 lights. "I want to see him and have a great consultation with him
29130 about the Hospital. I have engaged with Mr. Bulstrode to do so."
29131
29132 "Oh, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, "we have been hearing bad news--bad
29133 news, you know."
29134
29135 They walked through the garden towards the churchyard gate, Mr.
29136 Farebrother wanting to go on to the parsonage; and Dorothea heard the
29137 whole sad story.
29138
29139 She listened with deep interest, and begged to hear twice over the
29140 facts and impressions concerning Lydgate. After a short silence,
29141 pausing at the churchyard gate, and addressing Mr. Farebrother, she
29142 said energetically--
29143
29144 "You don't believe that Mr. Lydgate is guilty of anything base? I will
29145 not believe it. Let us find out the truth and clear him!"
29146
29147
29148
29149
29150
29151 BOOK VIII.
29152
29153
29154
29155
29156
29157 SUNSET AND SUNRISE.
29158
29159
29160
29161 CHAPTER LXXII.
29162
29163 Full souls are double mirrors, making still
29164 An endless vista of fair things before,
29165 Repeating things behind.
29166
29167
29168 Dorothea's impetuous generosity, which would have leaped at once to the
29169 vindication of Lydgate from the suspicion of having accepted money as a
29170 bribe, underwent a melancholy check when she came to consider all the
29171 circumstances of the case by the light of Mr. Farebrother's experience.
29172
29173 "It is a delicate matter to touch," he said. "How can we begin to
29174 inquire into it? It must be either publicly by setting the magistrate
29175 and coroner to work, or privately by questioning Lydgate. As to the
29176 first proceeding there is no solid ground to go upon, else Hawley would
29177 have adopted it; and as to opening the subject with Lydgate, I confess
29178 I should shrink from it. He would probably take it as a deadly insult.
29179 I have more than once experienced the difficulty of speaking to him on
29180 personal matters. And--one should know the truth about his conduct
29181 beforehand, to feel very confident of a good result."
29182
29183 "I feel convinced that his conduct has not been guilty: I believe that
29184 people are almost always better than their neighbors think they are,"
29185 said Dorothea. Some of her intensest experience in the last two years
29186 had set her mind strongly in opposition to any unfavorable construction
29187 of others; and for the first time she felt rather discontented with Mr.
29188 Farebrother. She disliked this cautious weighing of consequences,
29189 instead of an ardent faith in efforts of justice and mercy, which would
29190 conquer by their emotional force. Two days afterwards, he was dining
29191 at the Manor with her uncle and the Chettams, and when the dessert was
29192 standing uneaten, the servants were out of the room, and Mr. Brooke was
29193 nodding in a nap, she returned to the subject with renewed vivacity.
29194
29195 "Mr. Lydgate would understand that if his friends hear a calumny about
29196 him their first wish must be to justify him. What do we live for, if
29197 it is not to make life less difficult to each other? I cannot be
29198 indifferent to the troubles of a man who advised me in _my_ trouble,
29199 and attended me in my illness."
29200
29201 Dorothea's tone and manner were not more energetic than they had been
29202 when she was at the head of her uncle's table nearly three years
29203 before, and her experience since had given her more right to express a
29204 decided opinion. But Sir James Chettam was no longer the diffident and
29205 acquiescent suitor: he was the anxious brother-in-law, with a devout
29206 admiration for his sister, but with a constant alarm lest she should
29207 fall under some new illusion almost as bad as marrying Casaubon. He
29208 smiled much less; when he said "Exactly" it was more often an
29209 introduction to a dissentient opinion than in those submissive bachelor
29210 days; and Dorothea found to her surprise that she had to resolve not to
29211 be afraid of him--all the more because he was really her best friend.
29212 He disagreed with her now.
29213
29214 "But, Dorothea," he said, remonstrantly, "you can't undertake to manage
29215 a man's life for him in that way. Lydgate must know--at least he will
29216 soon come to know how he stands. If he can clear himself, he will. He
29217 must act for himself."
29218
29219 "I think his friends must wait till they find an opportunity," added
29220 Mr. Farebrother. "It is possible--I have often felt so much weakness
29221 in myself that I can conceive even a man of honorable disposition, such
29222 as I have always believed Lydgate to be, succumbing to such a
29223 temptation as that of accepting money which was offered more or less
29224 indirectly as a bribe to insure his silence about scandalous facts long
29225 gone by. I say, I can conceive this, if he were under the pressure of
29226 hard circumstances--if he had been harassed as I feel sure Lydgate has
29227 been. I would not believe anything worse of him except under stringent
29228 proof. But there is the terrible Nemesis following on some errors,
29229 that it is always possible for those who like it to interpret them into
29230 a crime: there is no proof in favor of the man outside his own
29231 consciousness and assertion."
29232
29233 "Oh, how cruel!" said Dorothea, clasping her hands. "And would you not
29234 like to be the one person who believed in that man's innocence, if the
29235 rest of the world belied him? Besides, there is a man's character
29236 beforehand to speak for him."
29237
29238 "But, my dear Mrs. Casaubon," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling gently at
29239 her ardor, "character is not cut in marble--it is not something solid
29240 and unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become
29241 diseased as our bodies do."
29242
29243 "Then it may be rescued and healed," said Dorothea "I should not be
29244 afraid of asking Mr. Lydgate to tell me the truth, that I might help
29245 him. Why should I be afraid? Now that I am not to have the land,
29246 James, I might do as Mr. Bulstrode proposed, and take his place in
29247 providing for the Hospital; and I have to consult Mr. Lydgate, to know
29248 thoroughly what are the prospects of doing good by keeping up the
29249 present plans. There is the best opportunity in the world for me to
29250 ask for his confidence; and he would be able to tell me things which
29251 might make all the circumstances clear. Then we would all stand by him
29252 and bring him out of his trouble. People glorify all sorts of bravery
29253 except the bravery they might show on behalf of their nearest
29254 neighbors." Dorothea's eyes had a moist brightness in them, and the
29255 changed tones of her voice roused her uncle, who began to listen.
29256
29257 "It is true that a woman may venture on some efforts of sympathy which
29258 would hardly succeed if we men undertook them," said Mr. Farebrother,
29259 almost converted by Dorothea's ardor.
29260
29261 "Surely, a woman is bound to be cautious and listen to those who know
29262 the world better than she does." said Sir James, with his little
29263 frown. "Whatever you do in the end, Dorothea, you should really keep
29264 back at present, and not volunteer any meddling with this Bulstrode
29265 business. We don't know yet what may turn up. You must agree with
29266 me?" he ended, looking at Mr. Farebrother.
29267
29268 "I do think it would be better to wait," said the latter.
29269
29270 "Yes, yes, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, not quite knowing at what point
29271 the discussion had arrived, but coming up to it with a contribution
29272 which was generally appropriate. "It is easy to go too far, you know.
29273 You must not let your ideas run away with you. And as to being in a
29274 hurry to put money into schemes--it won't do, you know. Garth has
29275 drawn me in uncommonly with repairs, draining, that sort of thing: I'm
29276 uncommonly out of pocket with one thing or another. I must pull up.
29277 As for you, Chettam, you are spending a fortune on those oak fences
29278 round your demesne."
29279
29280 Dorothea, submitting uneasily to this discouragement, went with Celia
29281 into the library, which was her usual drawing-room.
29282
29283 "Now, Dodo, do listen to what James says," said Celia, "else you will
29284 be getting into a scrape. You always did, and you always will, when
29285 you set about doing as you please. And I think it is a mercy now after
29286 all that you have got James to think for you. He lets you have your
29287 plans, only he hinders you from being taken in. And that is the good
29288 of having a brother instead of a husband. A husband would not let you
29289 have your plans."
29290
29291 "As if I wanted a husband!" said Dorothea. "I only want not to have my
29292 feelings checked at every turn." Mrs. Casaubon was still undisciplined
29293 enough to burst into angry tears.
29294
29295 "Now, really, Dodo," said Celia, with rather a deeper guttural than
29296 usual, "you _are_ contradictory: first one thing and then another. You
29297 used to submit to Mr. Casaubon quite shamefully: I think you would have
29298 given up ever coming to see me if he had asked you."
29299
29300 "Of course I submitted to him, because it was my duty; it was my
29301 feeling for him," said Dorothea, looking through the prism of her tears.
29302
29303 "Then why can't you think it your duty to submit a little to what James
29304 wishes?" said Celia, with a sense of stringency in her argument.
29305 "Because he only wishes what is for your own good. And, of course, men
29306 know best about everything, except what women know better." Dorothea
29307 laughed and forgot her tears.
29308
29309 "Well, I mean about babies and those things," explained Celia. "I
29310 should not give up to James when I knew he was wrong, as you used to do
29311 to Mr. Casaubon."
29312
29313
29314
29315 CHAPTER LXXIII.
29316
29317 Pity the laden one; this wandering woe
29318 May visit you and me.
29319
29320
29321 When Lydgate had allayed Mrs. Bulstrode's anxiety by telling her that
29322 her husband had been seized with faintness at the meeting, but that he
29323 trusted soon to see him better and would call again the next day,
29324 unless she sent for him earlier, he went directly home, got on his
29325 horse, and rode three miles out of the town for the sake of being out
29326 of reach.
29327
29328 He felt himself becoming violent and unreasonable as if raging under
29329 the pain of stings: he was ready to curse the day on which he had come
29330 to Middlemarch. Everything that bad happened to him there seemed a
29331 mere preparation for this hateful fatality, which had come as a blight
29332 on his honorable ambition, and must make even people who had only
29333 vulgar standards regard his reputation as irrevocably damaged. In such
29334 moments a man can hardly escape being unloving. Lydgate thought of
29335 himself as the sufferer, and of others as the agents who had injured
29336 his lot. He had meant everything to turn out differently; and others
29337 had thrust themselves into his life and thwarted his purposes. His
29338 marriage seemed an unmitigated calamity; and he was afraid of going to
29339 Rosamond before he had vented himself in this solitary rage, lest the
29340 mere sight of her should exasperate him and make him behave
29341 unwarrantably. There are episodes in most men's lives in which their
29342 highest qualities can only cast a deterring shadow over the objects
29343 that fill their inward vision: Lydgate's tenderheartedness was present
29344 just then only as a dread lest he should offend against it, not as an
29345 emotion that swayed him to tenderness. For he was very miserable.
29346 Only those who know the supremacy of the intellectual life--the life
29347 which has a seed of ennobling thought and purpose within it--can
29348 understand the grief of one who falls from that serene activity into
29349 the absorbing soul-wasting struggle with worldly annoyances.
29350
29351 How was he to live on without vindicating himself among people who
29352 suspected him of baseness? How could he go silently away from
29353 Middlemarch as if he were retreating before a just condemnation? And
29354 yet how was he to set about vindicating himself?
29355
29356 For that scene at the meeting, which he had just witnessed, although it
29357 had told him no particulars, had been enough to make his own situation
29358 thoroughly clear to him. Bulstrode had been in dread of scandalous
29359 disclosures on the part of Raffles. Lydgate could now construct all
29360 the probabilities of the case. "He was afraid of some betrayal in my
29361 hearing: all he wanted was to bind me to him by a strong obligation:
29362 that was why he passed on a sudden from hardness to liberality. And he
29363 may have tampered with the patient--he may have disobeyed my orders. I
29364 fear he did. But whether he did or not, the world believes that he
29365 somehow or other poisoned the man and that I winked at the crime, if I
29366 didn't help in it. And yet--and yet he may not be guilty of the last
29367 offence; and it is just possible that the change towards me may have
29368 been a genuine relenting--the effect of second thoughts such as he
29369 alleged. What we call the 'just possible' is sometimes true and the
29370 thing we find it easier to believe is grossly false. In his last
29371 dealings with this man Bulstrode may have kept his hands pure, in spite
29372 of my suspicion to the contrary."
29373
29374 There was a benumbing cruelty in his position. Even if he renounced
29375 every other consideration than that of justifying himself--if he met
29376 shrugs, cold glances, and avoidance as an accusation, and made a public
29377 statement of all the facts as he knew them, who would be convinced? It
29378 would be playing the part of a fool to offer his own testimony on
29379 behalf of himself, and say, "I did not take the money as a bribe." The
29380 circumstances would always be stronger than his assertion. And
29381 besides, to come forward and tell everything about himself must include
29382 declarations about Bulstrode which would darken the suspicions of
29383 others against him. He must tell that he had not known of Raffles's
29384 existence when he first mentioned his pressing need of money to
29385 Bulstrode, and that he took the money innocently as a result of that
29386 communication, not knowing that a new motive for the loan might have
29387 arisen on his being called in to this man. And after all, the
29388 suspicion of Bulstrode's motives might be unjust.
29389
29390 But then came the question whether he should have acted in precisely
29391 the same way if he had not taken the money? Certainly, if Raffles had
29392 continued alive and susceptible of further treatment when he arrived,
29393 and he had then imagined any disobedience to his orders on the part of
29394 Bulstrode, he would have made a strict inquiry, and if his conjecture
29395 had been verified he would have thrown up the case, in spite of his
29396 recent heavy obligation. But if he had not received any money--if
29397 Bulstrode had never revoked his cold recommendation of bankruptcy--would
29398 he, Lydgate, have abstained from all inquiry even on finding the
29399 man dead?--would the shrinking from an insult to Bulstrode--would the
29400 dubiousness of all medical treatment and the argument that his own
29401 treatment would pass for the wrong with most members of his
29402 profession--have had just the same force or significance with him?
29403
29404 That was the uneasy corner of Lydgate's consciousness while he was
29405 reviewing the facts and resisting all reproach. If he had been
29406 independent, this matter of a patient's treatment and the distinct rule
29407 that he must do or see done that which he believed best for the life
29408 committed to him, would have been the point on which he would have been
29409 the sturdiest. As it was, he had rested in the consideration that
29410 disobedience to his orders, however it might have arisen, could not be
29411 considered a crime, that in the dominant opinion obedience to his
29412 orders was just as likely to be fatal, and that the affair was simply
29413 one of etiquette. Whereas, again and again, in his time of freedom, he
29414 had denounced the perversion of pathological doubt into moral doubt and
29415 had said--"the purest experiment in treatment may still be
29416 conscientious: my business is to take care of life, and to do the best
29417 I can think of for it. Science is properly more scrupulous than dogma.
29418 Dogma gives a charter to mistake, but the very breath of science is a
29419 contest with mistake, and must keep the conscience alive." Alas! the
29420 scientific conscience had got into the debasing company of money
29421 obligation and selfish respects.
29422
29423 "Is there a medical man of them all in Middlemarch who would question
29424 himself as I do?" said poor Lydgate, with a renewed outburst of
29425 rebellion against the oppression of his lot. "And yet they will all
29426 feel warranted in making a wide space between me and them, as if I were
29427 a leper! My practice and my reputation are utterly damned--I can see
29428 that. Even if I could be cleared by valid evidence, it would make
29429 little difference to the blessed world here. I have been set down as
29430 tainted and should be cheapened to them all the same."
29431
29432 Already there had been abundant signs which had hitherto puzzled him,
29433 that just when he had been paying off his debts and getting cheerfully
29434 on his feet, the townsmen were avoiding him or looking strangely at
29435 him, and in two instances it came to his knowledge that patients of his
29436 had called in another practitioner. The reasons were too plain now.
29437 The general black-balling had begun.
29438
29439 No wonder that in Lydgate's energetic nature the sense of a hopeless
29440 misconstruction easily turned into a dogged resistance. The scowl
29441 which occasionally showed itself on his square brow was not a
29442 meaningless accident. Already when he was re-entering the town after
29443 that ride taken in the first hours of stinging pain, he was setting his
29444 mind on remaining in Middlemarch in spite of the worst that could be
29445 done against him. He would not retreat before calumny, as if he
29446 submitted to it. He would face it to the utmost, and no act of his
29447 should show that he was afraid. It belonged to the generosity as well
29448 as defiant force of his nature that he resolved not to shrink from
29449 showing to the full his sense of obligation to Bulstrode. It was true
29450 that the association with this man had been fatal to him--true that if
29451 he had had the thousand pounds still in his hands with all his debts
29452 unpaid he would have returned the money to Bulstrode, and taken beggary
29453 rather than the rescue which had been sullied with the suspicion of a
29454 bribe (for, remember, he was one of the proudest among the sons of
29455 men)--nevertheless, he would not turn away from this crushed
29456 fellow-mortal whose aid he had used, and make a pitiful effort to get
29457 acquittal for himself by howling against another. "I shall do as I
29458 think right, and explain to nobody. They will try to starve me out,
29459 but--" he was going on with an obstinate resolve, but he was getting
29460 near home, and the thought of Rosamond urged itself again into that
29461 chief place from which it had been thrust by the agonized struggles of
29462 wounded honor and pride.
29463
29464 How would Rosamond take it all? Here was another weight of chain to
29465 drag, and poor Lydgate was in a bad mood for bearing her dumb mastery.
29466 He had no impulse to tell her the trouble which must soon be common to
29467 them both. He preferred waiting for the incidental disclosure which
29468 events must soon bring about.
29469
29470
29471
29472 CHAPTER LXXIV.
29473
29474 "Mercifully grant that we may grow aged together."
29475 --BOOK OF TOBIT: Marriage Prayer.
29476
29477
29478 In Middlemarch a wife could not long remain ignorant that the town held
29479 a bad opinion of her husband. No feminine intimate might carry her
29480 friendship so far as to make a plain statement to the wife of the
29481 unpleasant fact known or believed about her husband; but when a woman
29482 with her thoughts much at leisure got them suddenly employed on
29483 something grievously disadvantageous to her neighbors, various moral
29484 impulses were called into play which tended to stimulate utterance.
29485 Candor was one. To be candid, in Middlemarch phraseology, meant, to
29486 use an early opportunity of letting your friends know that you did not
29487 take a cheerful view of their capacity, their conduct, or their
29488 position; and a robust candor never waited to be asked for its opinion.
29489 Then, again, there was the love of truth--a wide phrase, but meaning in
29490 this relation, a lively objection to seeing a wife look happier than
29491 her husband's character warranted, or manifest too much satisfaction in
29492 her lot--the poor thing should have some hint given her that if she
29493 knew the truth she would have less complacency in her bonnet, and in
29494 light dishes for a supper-party. Stronger than all, there was the
29495 regard for a friend's moral improvement, sometimes called her soul,
29496 which was likely to be benefited by remarks tending to gloom, uttered
29497 with the accompaniment of pensive staring at the furniture and a manner
29498 implying that the speaker would not tell what was on her mind, from
29499 regard to the feelings of her hearer. On the whole, one might say that
29500 an ardent charity was at work setting the virtuous mind to make a
29501 neighbor unhappy for her good.
29502
29503 There were hardly any wives in Middlemarch whose matrimonial
29504 misfortunes would in different ways be likely to call forth more of
29505 this moral activity than Rosamond and her aunt Bulstrode. Mrs.
29506 Bulstrode was not an object of dislike, and had never consciously
29507 injured any human being. Men had always thought her a handsome
29508 comfortable woman, and had reckoned it among the signs of Bulstrode's
29509 hypocrisy that he had chosen a red-blooded Vincy, instead of a ghastly
29510 and melancholy person suited to his low esteem for earthly pleasure.
29511 When the scandal about her husband was disclosed they remarked of
29512 her--"Ah, poor woman! She's as honest as the day--_she_ never
29513 suspected anything wrong in him, you may depend on it." Women, who
29514 were intimate with her, talked together much of "poor Harriet,"
29515 imagined what her feelings must be when she came to know everything,
29516 and conjectured how much she had already come to know. There was no
29517 spiteful disposition towards her; rather, there was a busy benevolence
29518 anxious to ascertain what it would be well for her to feel and do under
29519 the circumstances, which of course kept the imagination occupied with
29520 her character and history from the times when she was Harriet Vincy
29521 till now. With the review of Mrs. Bulstrode and her position it was
29522 inevitable to associate Rosamond, whose prospects were under the same
29523 blight with her aunt's. Rosamond was more severely criticised and less
29524 pitied, though she too, as one of the good old Vincy family who had
29525 always been known in Middlemarch, was regarded as a victim to marriage
29526 with an interloper. The Vincys had their weaknesses, but then they lay
29527 on the surface: there was never anything bad to be "found out"
29528 concerning them. Mrs. Bulstrode was vindicated from any resemblance to
29529 her husband. Harriet's faults were her own.
29530
29531 "She has always been showy," said Mrs. Hackbutt, making tea for a small
29532 party, "though she has got into the way of putting her religion
29533 forward, to conform to her husband; she has tried to hold her head up
29534 above Middlemarch by making it known that she invites clergymen and
29535 heaven-knows-who from Riverston and those places."
29536
29537 "We can hardly blame her for that," said Mrs. Sprague; "because few of
29538 the best people in the town cared to associate with Bulstrode, and she
29539 must have somebody to sit down at her table."
29540
29541 "Mr. Thesiger has always countenanced him," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "I
29542 think he must be sorry now."
29543
29544 "But he was never fond of him in his heart--that every one knows," said
29545 Mrs. Tom Toller. "Mr. Thesiger never goes into extremes. He keeps to
29546 the truth in what is evangelical. It is only clergymen like Mr. Tyke,
29547 who want to use Dissenting hymn-books and that low kind of religion,
29548 who ever found Bulstrode to their taste."
29549
29550 "I understand, Mr. Tyke is in great distress about him," said Mrs.
29551 Hackbutt. "And well he may be: they say the Bulstrodes have half kept
29552 the Tyke family."
29553
29554 "And of course it is a discredit to his doctrines," said Mrs. Sprague,
29555 who was elderly, and old-fashioned in her opinions.
29556
29557 "People will not make a boast of being methodistical in Middlemarch for
29558 a good while to come."
29559
29560 "I think we must not set down people's bad actions to their religion,"
29561 said falcon-faced Mrs. Plymdale, who had been listening hitherto.
29562
29563 "Oh, my dear, we are forgetting," said Mrs. Sprague. "We ought not to
29564 be talking of this before you."
29565
29566 "I am sure I have no reason to be partial," said Mrs. Plymdale,
29567 coloring. "It's true Mr. Plymdale has always been on good terms with
29568 Mr. Bulstrode, and Harriet Vincy was my friend long before she married
29569 him. But I have always kept my own opinions and told her where she was
29570 wrong, poor thing. Still, in point of religion, I must say, Mr.
29571 Bulstrode might have done what he has, and worse, and yet have been a
29572 man of no religion. I don't say that there has not been a little too
29573 much of that--I like moderation myself. But truth is truth. The men
29574 tried at the assizes are not all over-religious, I suppose."
29575
29576 "Well," said Mrs. Hackbutt, wheeling adroitly, "all I can say is, that
29577 I think she ought to separate from him."
29578
29579 "I can't say that," said Mrs. Sprague. "She took him for better or
29580 worse, you know."
29581
29582 "But 'worse' can never mean finding out that your husband is fit for
29583 Newgate," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "Fancy living with such a man! I should
29584 expect to be poisoned."
29585
29586 "Yes, I think myself it is an encouragement to crime if such men are to
29587 be taken care of and waited on by good wives," said Mrs. Tom Toller.
29588
29589 "And a good wife poor Harriet has been," said Mrs. Plymdale. "She
29590 thinks her husband the first of men. It's true he has never denied her
29591 anything."
29592
29593 "Well, we shall see what she will do," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "I suppose
29594 she knows nothing yet, poor creature. I do hope and trust I shall not
29595 see her, for I should be frightened to death lest I should say anything
29596 about her husband. Do you think any hint has reached her?"
29597
29598 "I should hardly think so," said Mrs. Tom Toller. "We hear that he is
29599 ill, and has never stirred out of the house since the meeting on
29600 Thursday; but she was with her girls at church yesterday, and they had
29601 new Tuscan bonnets. Her own had a feather in it. I have never seen
29602 that her religion made any difference in her dress."
29603
29604 "She wears very neat patterns always," said Mrs. Plymdale, a little
29605 stung. "And that feather I know she got dyed a pale lavender on
29606 purpose to be consistent. I must say it of Harriet that she wishes to
29607 do right."
29608
29609 "As to her knowing what has happened, it can't be kept from her long,"
29610 said Mrs. Hackbutt. "The Vincys know, for Mr. Vincy was at the
29611 meeting. It will be a great blow to him. There is his daughter as
29612 well as his sister."
29613
29614 "Yes, indeed," said Mrs. Sprague. "Nobody supposes that Mr. Lydgate
29615 can go on holding up his head in Middlemarch, things look so black
29616 about the thousand pounds he took just at that man's death. It really
29617 makes one shudder."
29618
29619 "Pride must have a fall," said Mrs. Hackbutt.
29620
29621 "I am not so sorry for Rosamond Vincy that was as I am for her aunt,"
29622 said Mrs. Plymdale. "She needed a lesson."
29623
29624 "I suppose the Bulstrodes will go and live abroad somewhere," said Mrs.
29625 Sprague. "That is what is generally done when there is anything
29626 disgraceful in a family."
29627
29628 "And a most deadly blow it will be to Harriet," said Mrs. Plymdale.
29629 "If ever a woman was crushed, she will be. I pity her from my heart.
29630 And with all her faults, few women are better. From a girl she had the
29631 neatest ways, and was always good-hearted, and as open as the day. You
29632 might look into her drawers when you would--always the same. And so
29633 she has brought up Kate and Ellen. You may think how hard it will be
29634 for her to go among foreigners."
29635
29636 "The doctor says that is what he should recommend the Lydgates to do,"
29637 said Mrs. Sprague. "He says Lydgate ought to have kept among the
29638 French."
29639
29640 "That would suit _her_ well enough, I dare say," said Mrs. Plymdale;
29641 "there is that kind of lightness about her. But she got that from her
29642 mother; she never got it from her aunt Bulstrode, who always gave her
29643 good advice, and to my knowledge would rather have had her marry
29644 elsewhere."
29645
29646 Mrs. Plymdale was in a situation which caused her some complication of
29647 feeling. There had been not only her intimacy with Mrs. Bulstrode, but
29648 also a profitable business relation of the great Plymdale dyeing house
29649 with Mr. Bulstrode, which on the one hand would have inclined her to
29650 desire that the mildest view of his character should be the true one,
29651 but on the other, made her the more afraid of seeming to palliate his
29652 culpability. Again, the late alliance of her family with the Tollers
29653 had brought her in connection with the best circle, which gratified her
29654 in every direction except in the inclination to those serious views
29655 which she believed to be the best in another sense. The sharp little
29656 woman's conscience was somewhat troubled in the adjustment of these
29657 opposing "bests," and of her griefs and satisfactions under late
29658 events, which were likely to humble those who needed humbling, but also
29659 to fall heavily on her old friend whose faults she would have preferred
29660 seeing on a background of prosperity.
29661
29662 Poor Mrs. Bulstrode, meanwhile, had been no further shaken by the
29663 oncoming tread of calamity than in the busier stirring of that secret
29664 uneasiness which had always been present in her since the last visit of
29665 Raffles to The Shrubs. That the hateful man had come ill to Stone
29666 Court, and that her husband had chosen to remain there and watch over
29667 him, she allowed to be explained by the fact that Raffles had been
29668 employed and aided in earlier-days, and that this made a tie of
29669 benevolence towards him in his degraded helplessness; and she had been
29670 since then innocently cheered by her husband's more hopeful speech
29671 about his own health and ability to continue his attention to business.
29672 The calm was disturbed when Lydgate had brought him home ill from the
29673 meeting, and in spite of comforting assurances during the next few
29674 days, she cried in private from the conviction that her husband was not
29675 suffering from bodily illness merely, but from something that afflicted
29676 his mind. He would not allow her to read to him, and scarcely to sit
29677 with him, alleging nervous susceptibility to sounds and movements; yet
29678 she suspected that in shutting himself up in his private room he wanted
29679 to be busy with his papers. Something, she felt sure, had happened.
29680 Perhaps it was some great loss of money; and she was kept in the dark.
29681 Not daring to question her husband, she said to Lydgate, on the fifth
29682 day after the meeting, when she had not left home except to go to
29683 church--
29684
29685 "Mr. Lydgate, pray be open with me: I like to know the truth. Has
29686 anything happened to Mr. Bulstrode?"
29687
29688 "Some little nervous shock," said Lydgate, evasively. He felt that it
29689 was not for him to make the painful revelation.
29690
29691 "But what brought it on?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, looking directly at him
29692 with her large dark eyes.
29693
29694 "There is often something poisonous in the air of public rooms," said
29695 Lydgate. "Strong men can stand it, but it tells on people in
29696 proportion to the delicacy of their systems. It is often impossible to
29697 account for the precise moment of an attack--or rather, to say why the
29698 strength gives way at a particular moment."
29699
29700 Mrs. Bulstrode was not satisfied with this answer. There remained in
29701 her the belief that some calamity had befallen her husband, of which
29702 she was to be kept in ignorance; and it was in her nature strongly to
29703 object to such concealment. She begged leave for her daughters to sit
29704 with their father, and drove into the town to pay some visits,
29705 conjecturing that if anything were known to have gone wrong in Mr.
29706 Bulstrode's affairs, she should see or hear some sign of it.
29707
29708 She called on Mrs. Thesiger, who was not at home, and then drove to
29709 Mrs. Hackbutt's on the other side of the churchyard. Mrs. Hackbutt saw
29710 her coming from an up-stairs window, and remembering her former alarm
29711 lest she should meet Mrs. Bulstrode, felt almost bound in consistency
29712 to send word that she was not at home; but against that, there was a
29713 sudden strong desire within her for the excitement of an interview in
29714 which she was quite determined not to make the slightest allusion to
29715 what was in her mind.
29716
29717 Hence Mrs. Bulstrode was shown into the drawing-room, and Mrs. Hackbutt
29718 went to her, with more tightness of lip and rubbing of her hands than
29719 was usually observable in her, these being precautions adopted against
29720 freedom of speech. She was resolved not to ask how Mr. Bulstrode was.
29721
29722 "I have not been anywhere except to church for nearly a week," said
29723 Mrs. Bulstrode, after a few introductory remarks. "But Mr. Bulstrode
29724 was taken so ill at the meeting on Thursday that I have not liked to
29725 leave the house."
29726
29727 Mrs. Hackbutt rubbed the back of one hand with the palm of the other
29728 held against her chest, and let her eyes ramble over the pattern on the
29729 rug.
29730
29731 "Was Mr. Hackbutt at the meeting?" persevered Mrs. Bulstrode.
29732
29733 "Yes, he was," said Mrs. Hackbutt, with the same attitude. "The land
29734 is to be bought by subscription, I believe."
29735
29736 "Let us hope that there will be no more cases of cholera to be buried
29737 in it," said Mrs. Bulstrode. "It is an awful visitation. But I always
29738 think Middlemarch a very healthy spot. I suppose it is being used to
29739 it from a child; but I never saw the town I should like to live at
29740 better, and especially our end."
29741
29742 "I am sure I should be glad that you always should live at Middlemarch,
29743 Mrs. Bulstrode," said Mrs. Hackbutt, with a slight sigh. "Still, we
29744 must learn to resign ourselves, wherever our lot may be cast. Though I
29745 am sure there will always be people in this town who will wish you
29746 well."
29747
29748 Mrs. Hackbutt longed to say, "if you take my advice you will part from
29749 your husband," but it seemed clear to her that the poor woman knew
29750 nothing of the thunder ready to bolt on her head, and she herself could
29751 do no more than prepare her a little. Mrs. Bulstrode felt suddenly
29752 rather chill and trembling: there was evidently something unusual
29753 behind this speech of Mrs. Hackbutt's; but though she had set out with
29754 the desire to be fully informed, she found herself unable now to pursue
29755 her brave purpose, and turning the conversation by an inquiry about the
29756 young Hackbutts, she soon took her leave saying that she was going to
29757 see Mrs. Plymdale. On her way thither she tried to imagine that there
29758 might have been some unusually warm sparring at the meeting between Mr.
29759 Bulstrode and some of his frequent opponents--perhaps Mr. Hackbutt
29760 might have been one of them. That would account for everything.
29761
29762 But when she was in conversation with Mrs. Plymdale that comforting
29763 explanation seemed no longer tenable. "Selina" received her with a
29764 pathetic affectionateness and a disposition to give edifying answers on
29765 the commonest topics, which could hardly have reference to an ordinary
29766 quarrel of which the most important consequence was a perturbation of
29767 Mr. Bulstrode's health. Beforehand Mrs. Bulstrode had thought that she
29768 would sooner question Mrs. Plymdale than any one else; but she found to
29769 her surprise that an old friend is not always the person whom it is
29770 easiest to make a confidant of: there was the barrier of remembered
29771 communication under other circumstances--there was the dislike of
29772 being pitied and informed by one who had been long wont to allow her
29773 the superiority. For certain words of mysterious appropriateness that
29774 Mrs. Plymdale let fall about her resolution never to turn her back on
29775 her friends, convinced Mrs. Bulstrode that what had happened must be
29776 some kind of misfortune, and instead of being able to say with her
29777 native directness, "What is it that you have in your mind?" she found
29778 herself anxious to get away before she had heard anything more
29779 explicit. She began to have an agitating certainty that the misfortune
29780 was something more than the mere loss of money, being keenly sensitive
29781 to the fact that Selina now, just as Mrs. Hackbutt had done before,
29782 avoided noticing what she said about her husband, as they would have
29783 avoided noticing a personal blemish.
29784
29785 She said good-by with nervous haste, and told the coachman to drive to
29786 Mr. Vincy's warehouse. In that short drive her dread gathered so much
29787 force from the sense of darkness, that when she entered the private
29788 counting-house where her brother sat at his desk, her knees trembled
29789 and her usually florid face was deathly pale. Something of the same
29790 effect was produced in him by the sight of her: he rose from his seat
29791 to meet her, took her by the hand, and said, with his impulsive
29792 rashness--
29793
29794 "God help you, Harriet! you know all."
29795
29796 That moment was perhaps worse than any which came after. It contained
29797 that concentrated experience which in great crises of emotion reveals
29798 the bias of a nature, and is prophetic of the ultimate act which will
29799 end an intermediate struggle. Without that memory of Raffles she might
29800 still have thought only of monetary ruin, but now along with her
29801 brother's look and words there darted into her mind the idea of some
29802 guilt in her husband--then, under the working of terror came the image
29803 of her husband exposed to disgrace--and then, after an instant of
29804 scorching shame in which she felt only the eyes of the world, with one
29805 leap of her heart she was at his side in mournful but unreproaching
29806 fellowship with shame and isolation. All this went on within her in a
29807 mere flash of time--while she sank into the chair, and raised her eyes
29808 to her brother, who stood over her. "I know nothing, Walter. What is
29809 it?" she said, faintly.
29810
29811 He told her everything, very inartificially, in slow fragments, making
29812 her aware that the scandal went much beyond proof, especially as to the
29813 end of Raffles.
29814
29815 "People will talk," he said. "Even if a man has been acquitted by a
29816 jury, they'll talk, and nod and wink--and as far as the world goes, a
29817 man might often as well be guilty as not. It's a breakdown blow, and
29818 it damages Lydgate as much as Bulstrode. I don't pretend to say what
29819 is the truth. I only wish we had never heard the name of either
29820 Bulstrode or Lydgate. You'd better have been a Vincy all your life,
29821 and so had Rosamond." Mrs. Bulstrode made no reply.
29822
29823 "But you must bear up as well as you can, Harriet. People don't blame
29824 _you_. And I'll stand by you whatever you make up your mind to do,"
29825 said the brother, with rough but well-meaning affectionateness.
29826
29827 "Give me your arm to the carriage, Walter," said Mrs. Bulstrode. "I
29828 feel very weak."
29829
29830 And when she got home she was obliged to say to her daughter, "I am not
29831 well, my dear; I must go and lie down. Attend to your papa. Leave me
29832 in quiet. I shall take no dinner."
29833
29834 She locked herself in her room. She needed time to get used to her
29835 maimed consciousness, her poor lopped life, before she could walk
29836 steadily to the place allotted her. A new searching light had fallen
29837 on her husband's character, and she could not judge him leniently: the
29838 twenty years in which she had believed in him and venerated him by
29839 virtue of his concealments came back with particulars that made them
29840 seem an odious deceit. He had married her with that bad past life
29841 hidden behind him, and she had no faith left to protest his innocence
29842 of the worst that was imputed to him. Her honest ostentatious nature
29843 made the sharing of a merited dishonor as bitter as it could be to any
29844 mortal.
29845
29846 But this imperfectly taught woman, whose phrases and habits were an odd
29847 patchwork, had a loyal spirit within her. The man whose prosperity she
29848 had shared through nearly half a life, and who had unvaryingly
29849 cherished her--now that punishment had befallen him it was not possible
29850 to her in any sense to forsake him. There is a forsaking which still
29851 sits at the same board and lies on the same couch with the forsaken
29852 soul, withering it the more by unloving proximity. She knew, when she
29853 locked her door, that she should unlock it ready to go down to her
29854 unhappy husband and espouse his sorrow, and say of his guilt, I will
29855 mourn and not reproach. But she needed time to gather up her strength;
29856 she needed to sob out her farewell to all the gladness and pride of her
29857 life. When she had resolved to go down, she prepared herself by some
29858 little acts which might seem mere folly to a hard onlooker; they were
29859 her way of expressing to all spectators visible or invisible that she
29860 had begun a new life in which she embraced humiliation. She took off
29861 all her ornaments and put on a plain black gown, and instead of wearing
29862 her much-adorned cap and large bows of hair, she brushed her hair down
29863 and put on a plain bonnet-cap, which made her look suddenly like an
29864 early Methodist.
29865
29866 Bulstrode, who knew that his wife had been out and had come in saying
29867 that she was not well, had spent the time in an agitation equal to
29868 hers. He had looked forward to her learning the truth from others, and
29869 had acquiesced in that probability, as something easier to him than any
29870 confession. But now that he imagined the moment of her knowledge come,
29871 he awaited the result in anguish. His daughters had been obliged to
29872 consent to leave him, and though he had allowed some food to be brought
29873 to him, he had not touched it. He felt himself perishing slowly in
29874 unpitied misery. Perhaps he should never see his wife's face with
29875 affection in it again. And if he turned to God there seemed to be no
29876 answer but the pressure of retribution.
29877
29878 It was eight o'clock in the evening before the door opened and his wife
29879 entered. He dared not look up at her. He sat with his eyes bent down,
29880 and as she went towards him she thought he looked smaller--he seemed
29881 so withered and shrunken. A movement of new compassion and old
29882 tenderness went through her like a great wave, and putting one hand on
29883 his which rested on the arm of the chair, and the other on his
29884 shoulder, she said, solemnly but kindly--
29885
29886 "Look up, Nicholas."
29887
29888 He raised his eyes with a little start and looked at her half amazed
29889 for a moment: her pale face, her changed, mourning dress, the trembling
29890 about her mouth, all said, "I know;" and her hands and eyes rested
29891 gently on him. He burst out crying and they cried together, she
29892 sitting at his side. They could not yet speak to each other of the
29893 shame which she was bearing with him, or of the acts which had brought
29894 it down on them. His confession was silent, and her promise of
29895 faithfulness was silent. Open-minded as she was, she nevertheless
29896 shrank from the words which would have expressed their mutual
29897 consciousness, as she would have shrunk from flakes of fire. She could
29898 not say, "How much is only slander and false suspicion?" and he did not
29899 say, "I am innocent."
29900
29901
29902
29903 CHAPTER LXXV.
29904
29905 "Le sentiment de la fausseté des plaisirs présents, et
29906 l'ignorance de la vanité des plaisirs absents causent
29907 l'inconstance."--PASCAL.
29908
29909
29910 Rosamond had a gleam of returning cheerfulness when the house was freed
29911 from the threatening figure, and when all the disagreeable creditors
29912 were paid. But she was not joyous: her married life had fulfilled none
29913 of her hopes, and had been quite spoiled for her imagination. In this
29914 brief interval of calm, Lydgate, remembering that he had often been
29915 stormy in his hours of perturbation, and mindful of the pain Rosamond
29916 had had to bear, was carefully gentle towards her; but he, too, had
29917 lost some of his old spirit, and he still felt it necessary to refer to
29918 an economical change in their way of living as a matter of course,
29919 trying to reconcile her to it gradually, and repressing his anger when
29920 she answered by wishing that he would go to live in London. When she
29921 did not make this answer, she listened languidly, and wondered what she
29922 had that was worth living for. The hard and contemptuous words which
29923 had fallen from her husband in his anger had deeply offended that
29924 vanity which he had at first called into active enjoyment; and what she
29925 regarded as his perverse way of looking at things, kept up a secret
29926 repulsion, which made her receive all his tenderness as a poor
29927 substitute for the happiness he had failed to give her. They were at a
29928 disadvantage with their neighbors, and there was no longer any outlook
29929 towards Quallingham--there was no outlook anywhere except in an
29930 occasional letter from Will Ladislaw. She had felt stung and
29931 disappointed by Will's resolution to quit Middlemarch, for in spite of
29932 what she knew and guessed about his admiration for Dorothea, she
29933 secretly cherished the belief that he had, or would necessarily come to
29934 have, much more admiration for herself; Rosamond being one of those
29935 women who live much in the idea that each man they meet would have
29936 preferred them if the preference had not been hopeless. Mrs. Casaubon
29937 was all very well; but Will's interest in her dated before he knew Mrs.
29938 Lydgate. Rosamond took his way of talking to herself, which was a
29939 mixture of playful fault-finding and hyperbolical gallantry, as the
29940 disguise of a deeper feeling; and in his presence she felt that
29941 agreeable titillation of vanity and sense of romantic drama which
29942 Lydgate's presence had no longer the magic to create. She even
29943 fancied--what will not men and women fancy in these matters?--that
29944 Will exaggerated his admiration for Mrs. Casaubon in order to pique
29945 herself. In this way poor Rosamond's brain had been busy before Will's
29946 departure. He would have made, she thought, a much more suitable
29947 husband for her than she had found in Lydgate. No notion could have
29948 been falser than this, for Rosamond's discontent in her marriage was
29949 due to the conditions of marriage itself, to its demand for
29950 self-suppression and tolerance, and not to the nature of her husband;
29951 but the easy conception of an unreal Better had a sentimental charm
29952 which diverted her ennui. She constructed a little romance which was
29953 to vary the flatness of her life: Will Ladislaw was always to be a
29954 bachelor and live near her, always to be at her command, and have an
29955 understood though never fully expressed passion for her, which would be
29956 sending out lambent flames every now and then in interesting scenes.
29957 His departure had been a proportionate disappointment, and had sadly
29958 increased her weariness of Middlemarch; but at first she had the
29959 alternative dream of pleasures in store from her intercourse with the
29960 family at Quallingham. Since then the troubles of her married life had
29961 deepened, and the absence of other relief encouraged her regretful
29962 rumination over that thin romance which she had once fed on. Men and
29963 women make sad mistakes about their own symptoms, taking their vague
29964 uneasy longings, sometimes for genius, sometimes for religion, and
29965 oftener still for a mighty love. Will Ladislaw had written chatty
29966 letters, half to her and half to Lydgate, and she had replied: their
29967 separation, she felt, was not likely to be final, and the change she
29968 now most longed for was that Lydgate should go to live in London;
29969 everything would be agreeable in London; and she had set to work with
29970 quiet determination to win this result, when there came a sudden,
29971 delightful promise which inspirited her.
29972
29973 It came shortly before the memorable meeting at the town-hall, and was
29974 nothing less than a letter from Will Ladislaw to Lydgate, which turned
29975 indeed chiefly on his new interest in plans of colonization, but
29976 mentioned incidentally, that he might find it necessary to pay a visit
29977 to Middlemarch within the next few weeks--a very pleasant necessity, he
29978 said, almost as good as holidays to a schoolboy. He hoped there was
29979 his old place on the rug, and a great deal of music in store for him.
29980 But he was quite uncertain as to the time. While Lydgate was reading
29981 the letter to Rosamond, her face looked like a reviving flower--it grew
29982 prettier and more blooming. There was nothing unendurable now: the
29983 debts were paid, Mr. Ladislaw was coming, and Lydgate would be
29984 persuaded to leave Middlemarch and settle in London, which was "so
29985 different from a provincial town."
29986
29987 That was a bright bit of morning. But soon the sky became black over
29988 poor Rosamond. The presence of a new gloom in her husband, about which
29989 he was entirely reserved towards her--for he dreaded to expose his
29990 lacerated feeling to her neutrality and misconception--soon received a
29991 painfully strange explanation, alien to all her previous notions of
29992 what could affect her happiness. In the new gayety of her spirits,
29993 thinking that Lydgate had merely a worse fit of moodiness than usual,
29994 causing him to leave her remarks unanswered, and evidently to keep out
29995 of her way as much as possible, she chose, a few days after the
29996 meeting, and without speaking to him on the subject, to send out notes
29997 of invitation for a small evening party, feeling convinced that this
29998 was a judicious step, since people seemed to have been keeping aloof
29999 from them, and wanted restoring to the old habit of intercourse. When
30000 the invitations had been accepted, she would tell Lydgate, and give him
30001 a wise admonition as to how a medical man should behave to his
30002 neighbors; for Rosamond had the gravest little airs possible about
30003 other people's duties. But all the invitations were declined, and the
30004 last answer came into Lydgate's hands.
30005
30006 "This is Chichely's scratch. What is he writing to you about?" said
30007 Lydgate, wonderingly, as he handed the note to her. She was obliged to
30008 let him see it, and, looking at her severely, he said--
30009
30010 "Why on earth have you been sending out invitations without telling me,
30011 Rosamond? I beg, I insist that you will not invite any one to this
30012 house. I suppose you have been inviting others, and they have refused
30013 too." She said nothing.
30014
30015 "Do you hear me?" thundered Lydgate.
30016
30017 "Yes, certainly I hear you," said Rosamond, turning her head aside with
30018 the movement of a graceful long-necked bird.
30019
30020 Lydgate tossed his head without any grace and walked out of the room,
30021 feeling himself dangerous. Rosamond's thought was, that he was getting
30022 more and more unbearable--not that there was any new special reason for
30023 this peremptoriness. His indisposition to tell her anything in which
30024 he was sure beforehand that she would not be interested was growing
30025 into an unreflecting habit, and she was in ignorance of everything
30026 connected with the thousand pounds except that the loan had come from
30027 her uncle Bulstrode. Lydgate's odious humors and their neighbors'
30028 apparent avoidance of them had an unaccountable date for her in their
30029 relief from money difficulties. If the invitations had been accepted
30030 she would have gone to invite her mamma and the rest, whom she had seen
30031 nothing of for several days; and she now put on her bonnet to go and
30032 inquire what had become of them all, suddenly feeling as if there were
30033 a conspiracy to leave her in isolation with a husband disposed to
30034 offend everybody. It was after the dinner hour, and she found her
30035 father and mother seated together alone in the drawing-room. They
30036 greeted her with sad looks, saying "Well, my dear!" and no more. She
30037 had never seen her father look so downcast; and seating herself near
30038 him she said--
30039
30040 "Is there anything the matter, papa?"
30041
30042 He did not answer, but Mrs. Vincy said, "Oh, my dear, have you heard
30043 nothing? It won't be long before it reaches you."
30044
30045 "Is it anything about Tertius?" said Rosamond, turning pale. The idea
30046 of trouble immediately connected itself with what had been
30047 unaccountable to her in him.
30048
30049 "Oh, my dear, yes. To think of your marrying into this trouble. Debt
30050 was bad enough, but this will be worse."
30051
30052 "Stay, stay, Lucy," said Mr. Vincy. "Have you heard nothing about your
30053 uncle Bulstrode, Rosamond?"
30054
30055 "No, papa," said the poor thing, feeling as if trouble were not
30056 anything she had before experienced, but some invisible power with an
30057 iron grasp that made her soul faint within her.
30058
30059 Her father told her everything, saying at the end, "It's better for you
30060 to know, my dear. I think Lydgate must leave the town. Things have
30061 gone against him. I dare say he couldn't help it. I don't accuse him
30062 of any harm," said Mr. Vincy. He had always before been disposed to
30063 find the utmost fault with Lydgate.
30064
30065 The shock to Rosamond was terrible. It seemed to her that no lot could
30066 be so cruelly hard as hers to have married a man who had become the
30067 centre of infamous suspicions. In many cases it is inevitable that the
30068 shame is felt to be the worst part of crime; and it would have required
30069 a great deal of disentangling reflection, such as had never entered
30070 into Rosamond's life, for her in these moments to feel that her trouble
30071 was less than if her husband had been certainly known to have done
30072 something criminal. All the shame seemed to be there. And she had
30073 innocently married this man with the belief that he and his family were
30074 a glory to her! She showed her usual reticence to her parents, and
30075 only said, that if Lydgate had done as she wished he would have left
30076 Middlemarch long ago.
30077
30078 "She bears it beyond anything," said her mother when she was gone.
30079
30080 "Ah, thank God!" said Mr. Vincy, who was much broken down.
30081
30082 But Rosamond went home with a sense of justified repugnance towards her
30083 husband. What had he really done--how had he really acted? She did
30084 not know. Why had he not told her everything? He did not speak to her
30085 on the subject, and of course she could not speak to him. It came into
30086 her mind once that she would ask her father to let her go home again;
30087 but dwelling on that prospect made it seem utter dreariness to her: a
30088 married woman gone back to live with her parents--life seemed to have
30089 no meaning for her in such a position: she could not contemplate
30090 herself in it.
30091
30092 The next two days Lydgate observed a change in her, and believed that
30093 she had heard the bad news. Would she speak to him about it, or would
30094 she go on forever in the silence which seemed to imply that she
30095 believed him guilty? We must remember that he was in a morbid state of
30096 mind, in which almost all contact was pain. Certainly Rosamond in this
30097 case had equal reason to complain of reserve and want of confidence on
30098 his part; but in the bitterness of his soul he excused himself;--was
30099 he not justified in shrinking from the task of telling her, since now
30100 she knew the truth she had no impulse to speak to him? But a
30101 deeper-lying consciousness that he was in fault made him restless, and
30102 the silence between them became intolerable to him; it was as if they
30103 were both adrift on one piece of wreck and looked away from each other.
30104
30105 He thought, "I am a fool. Haven't I given up expecting anything? I
30106 have married care, not help." And that evening he said--
30107
30108 "Rosamond, have you heard anything that distresses you?"
30109
30110 "Yes," she answered, laying down her work, which she had been carrying
30111 on with a languid semi-consciousness, most unlike her usual self.
30112
30113 "What have you heard?"
30114
30115 "Everything, I suppose. Papa told me."
30116
30117 "That people think me disgraced?"
30118
30119 "Yes," said Rosamond, faintly, beginning to sew again automatically.
30120
30121 There was silence. Lydgate thought, "If she has any trust in me--any
30122 notion of what I am, she ought to speak now and say that she does not
30123 believe I have deserved disgrace."
30124
30125 But Rosamond on her side went on moving her fingers languidly.
30126 Whatever was to be said on the subject she expected to come from
30127 Tertius. What did she know? And if he were innocent of any wrong, why
30128 did he not do something to clear himself?
30129
30130 This silence of hers brought a new rush of gall to that bitter mood in
30131 which Lydgate had been saying to himself that nobody believed in
30132 him--even Farebrother had not come forward. He had begun to question
30133 her with the intent that their conversation should disperse the chill
30134 fog which had gathered between them, but he felt his resolution checked
30135 by despairing resentment. Even this trouble, like the rest, she seemed
30136 to regard as if it were hers alone. He was always to her a being
30137 apart, doing what she objected to. He started from his chair with an
30138 angry impulse, and thrusting his hands in his pockets, walked up and
30139 down the room. There was an underlying consciousness all the while
30140 that he should have to master this anger, and tell her everything, and
30141 convince her of the facts. For he had almost learned the lesson that
30142 he must bend himself to her nature, and that because she came short in
30143 her sympathy, he must give the more. Soon he recurred to his intention
30144 of opening himself: the occasion must not be lost. If he could bring
30145 her to feel with some solemnity that here was a slander which must be
30146 met and not run away from, and that the whole trouble had come out of
30147 his desperate want of money, it would be a moment for urging powerfully
30148 on her that they should be one in the resolve to do with as little
30149 money as possible, so that they might weather the bad time and keep
30150 themselves independent. He would mention the definite measures which
30151 he desired to take, and win her to a willing spirit. He was bound to
30152 try this--and what else was there for him to do?
30153
30154 He did not know how long he had been walking uneasily backwards and
30155 forwards, but Rosamond felt that it was long, and wished that he would
30156 sit down. She too had begun to think this an opportunity for urging on
30157 Tertius what he ought to do. Whatever might be the truth about all
30158 this misery, there was one dread which asserted itself.
30159
30160 Lydgate at last seated himself, not in his usual chair, but in one
30161 nearer to Rosamond, leaning aside in it towards her, and looking at her
30162 gravely before he reopened the sad subject. He had conquered himself
30163 so far, and was about to speak with a sense of solemnity, as on an
30164 occasion which was not to be repeated. He had even opened his lips,
30165 when Rosamond, letting her hands fall, looked at him and said--
30166
30167 "Surely, Tertius--"
30168
30169 "Well?"
30170
30171 "Surely now at last you have given up the idea of staying in
30172 Middlemarch. I cannot go on living here. Let us go to London. Papa,
30173 and every one else, says you had better go. Whatever misery I have to
30174 put up with, it will be easier away from here."
30175
30176 Lydgate felt miserably jarred. Instead of that critical outpouring for
30177 which he had prepared himself with effort, here was the old round to be
30178 gone through again. He could not bear it. With a quick change of
30179 countenance he rose and went out of the room.
30180
30181 Perhaps if he had been strong enough to persist in his determination to
30182 be the more because she was less, that evening might have had a better
30183 issue. If his energy could have borne down that check, he might still
30184 have wrought on Rosamond's vision and will. We cannot be sure that any
30185 natures, however inflexible or peculiar, will resist this effect from a
30186 more massive being than their own. They may be taken by storm and for
30187 the moment converted, becoming part of the soul which enwraps them in
30188 the ardor of its movement. But poor Lydgate had a throbbing pain
30189 within him, and his energy had fallen short of its task.
30190
30191 The beginning of mutual understanding and resolve seemed as far off as
30192 ever; nay, it seemed blocked out by the sense of unsuccessful effort.
30193 They lived on from day to day with their thoughts still apart, Lydgate
30194 going about what work he had in a mood of despair, and Rosamond
30195 feeling, with some justification, that he was behaving cruelly. It was
30196 of no use to say anything to Tertius; but when Will Ladislaw came, she
30197 was determined to tell him everything. In spite of her general
30198 reticence, she needed some one who would recognize her wrongs.
30199
30200
30201
30202 CHAPTER LXXVI.
30203
30204 "To mercy, pity, peace, and love
30205 All pray in their distress,
30206 And to these virtues of delight,
30207 Return their thankfulness.
30208 . . . . . .
30209 For Mercy has a human heart,
30210 Pity a human face;
30211 And Love, the human form divine;
30212 And Peace, the human dress.
30213 --WILLIAM BLAKE: Songs of Innocence.
30214
30215
30216 Some days later, Lydgate was riding to Lowick Manor, in consequence of
30217 a summons from Dorothea. The summons had not been unexpected, since it
30218 had followed a letter from Mr. Bulstrode, in which he stated that he
30219 had resumed his arrangements for quitting Middlemarch, and must remind
30220 Lydgate of his previous communications about the Hospital, to the
30221 purport of which he still adhered. It had been his duty, before taking
30222 further steps, to reopen the subject with Mrs. Casaubon, who now
30223 wished, as before, to discuss the question with Lydgate. "Your views
30224 may possibly have undergone some change," wrote Mr. Bulstrode; "but, in
30225 that case also, it is desirable that you should lay them before her."
30226
30227 Dorothea awaited his arrival with eager interest. Though, in deference
30228 to her masculine advisers, she had refrained from what Sir James had
30229 called "interfering in this Bulstrode business," the hardship of
30230 Lydgate's position was continually in her mind, and when Bulstrode
30231 applied to her again about the hospital, she felt that the opportunity
30232 was come to her which she had been hindered from hastening. In her
30233 luxurious home, wandering under the boughs of her own great trees, her
30234 thought was going out over the lot of others, and her emotions were
30235 imprisoned. The idea of some active good within her reach, "haunted
30236 her like a passion," and another's need having once come to her as a
30237 distinct image, preoccupied her desire with the yearning to give
30238 relief, and made her own ease tasteless. She was full of confident
30239 hope about this interview with Lydgate, never heeding what was said of
30240 his personal reserve; never heeding that she was a very young woman.
30241 Nothing could have seemed more irrelevant to Dorothea than insistence
30242 on her youth and sex when she was moved to show her human fellowship.
30243
30244 As she sat waiting in the library, she could do nothing but live
30245 through again all the past scenes which had brought Lydgate into her
30246 memories. They all owed their significance to her marriage and its
30247 troubles--but no; there were two occasions in which the image of
30248 Lydgate had come painfully in connection with his wife and some one
30249 else. The pain had been allayed for Dorothea, but it had left in her
30250 an awakened conjecture as to what Lydgate's marriage might be to him, a
30251 susceptibility to the slightest hint about Mrs. Lydgate. These
30252 thoughts were like a drama to her, and made her eyes bright, and gave
30253 an attitude of suspense to her whole frame, though she was only looking
30254 out from the brown library on to the turf and the bright green buds
30255 which stood in relief against the dark evergreens.
30256
30257 When Lydgate came in, she was almost shocked at the change in his face,
30258 which was strikingly perceptible to her who had not seen him for two
30259 months. It was not the change of emaciation, but that effect which
30260 even young faces will very soon show from the persistent presence of
30261 resentment and despondency. Her cordial look, when she put out her
30262 hand to him, softened his expression, but only with melancholy.
30263
30264 "I have wished very much to see you for a long while, Mr. Lydgate,"
30265 said Dorothea when they were seated opposite each other; "but I put off
30266 asking you to come until Mr. Bulstrode applied to me again about the
30267 Hospital. I know that the advantage of keeping the management of it
30268 separate from that of the Infirmary depends on you, or, at least, on
30269 the good which you are encouraged to hope for from having it under your
30270 control. And I am sure you will not refuse to tell me exactly what you
30271 think."
30272
30273 "You want to decide whether you should give a generous support to the
30274 Hospital," said Lydgate. "I cannot conscientiously advise you to do it
30275 in dependence on any activity of mine. I may be obliged to leave the
30276 town."
30277
30278 He spoke curtly, feeling the ache of despair as to his being able to
30279 carry out any purpose that Rosamond had set her mind against.
30280
30281 "Not because there is no one to believe in you?" said Dorothea, pouring
30282 out her words in clearness from a full heart. "I know the unhappy
30283 mistakes about you. I knew them from the first moment to be mistakes.
30284 You have never done anything vile. You would not do anything
30285 dishonorable."
30286
30287 It was the first assurance of belief in him that had fallen on
30288 Lydgate's ears. He drew a deep breath, and said, "Thank you." He could
30289 say no more: it was something very new and strange in his life that
30290 these few words of trust from a woman should be so much to him.
30291
30292 "I beseech you to tell me how everything was," said Dorothea,
30293 fearlessly. "I am sure that the truth would clear you."
30294
30295 Lydgate started up from his chair and went towards the window,
30296 forgetting where he was. He had so often gone over in his mind the
30297 possibility of explaining everything without aggravating appearances
30298 that would tell, perhaps unfairly, against Bulstrode, and had so often
30299 decided against it--he had so often said to himself that his assertions
30300 would not change people's impressions--that Dorothea's words sounded
30301 like a temptation to do something which in his soberness he had
30302 pronounced to be unreasonable.
30303
30304 "Tell me, pray," said Dorothea, with simple earnestness; "then we can
30305 consult together. It is wicked to let people think evil of any one
30306 falsely, when it can be hindered."
30307
30308 Lydgate turned, remembering where he was, and saw Dorothea's face
30309 looking up at him with a sweet trustful gravity. The presence of a
30310 noble nature, generous in its wishes, ardent in its charity, changes
30311 the lights for us: we begin to see things again in their larger,
30312 quieter masses, and to believe that we too can be seen and judged in
30313 the wholeness of our character. That influence was beginning to act on
30314 Lydgate, who had for many days been seeing all life as one who is
30315 dragged and struggling amid the throng. He sat down again, and felt
30316 that he was recovering his old self in the consciousness that he was
30317 with one who believed in it.
30318
30319 "I don't want," he said, "to bear hard on Bulstrode, who has lent me
30320 money of which I was in need--though I would rather have gone without
30321 it now. He is hunted down and miserable, and has only a poor thread of
30322 life in him. But I should like to tell you everything. It will be a
30323 comfort to me to speak where belief has gone beforehand, and where I
30324 shall not seem to be offering assertions of my own honesty. You will
30325 feel what is fair to another, as you feel what is fair to me."
30326
30327 "Do trust me," said Dorothea; "I will not repeat anything without your
30328 leave. But at the very least, I could say that you have made all the
30329 circumstances clear to me, and that I know you are not in any way
30330 guilty. Mr. Farebrother would believe me, and my uncle, and Sir James
30331 Chettam. Nay, there are persons in Middlemarch to whom I could go;
30332 although they don't know much of me, they would believe me. They would
30333 know that I could have no other motive than truth and justice. I would
30334 take any pains to clear you. I have very little to do. There is
30335 nothing better that I can do in the world."
30336
30337 Dorothea's voice, as she made this childlike picture of what she would
30338 do, might have been almost taken as a proof that she could do it
30339 effectively. The searching tenderness of her woman's tones seemed made
30340 for a defence against ready accusers. Lydgate did not stay to think
30341 that she was Quixotic: he gave himself up, for the first time in his
30342 life, to the exquisite sense of leaning entirely on a generous
30343 sympathy, without any check of proud reserve. And he told her
30344 everything, from the time when, under the pressure of his difficulties,
30345 he unwillingly made his first application to Bulstrode; gradually, in
30346 the relief of speaking, getting into a more thorough utterance of what
30347 had gone on in his mind--entering fully into the fact that his
30348 treatment of the patient was opposed to the dominant practice, into his
30349 doubts at the last, his ideal of medical duty, and his uneasy
30350 consciousness that the acceptance of the money had made some difference
30351 in his private inclination and professional behavior, though not in his
30352 fulfilment of any publicly recognized obligation.
30353
30354 "It has come to my knowledge since," he added, "that Hawley sent some
30355 one to examine the housekeeper at Stone Court, and she said that she
30356 gave the patient all the opium in the phial I left, as well as a good
30357 deal of brandy. But that would not have been opposed to ordinary
30358 prescriptions, even of first-rate men. The suspicions against me had
30359 no hold there: they are grounded on the knowledge that I took money,
30360 that Bulstrode had strong motives for wishing the man to die, and that
30361 he gave me the money as a bribe to concur in some malpractices or other
30362 against the patient--that in any case I accepted a bribe to hold my
30363 tongue. They are just the suspicions that cling the most obstinately,
30364 because they lie in people's inclination and can never be disproved.
30365 How my orders came to be disobeyed is a question to which I don't know
30366 the answer. It is still possible that Bulstrode was innocent of any
30367 criminal intention--even possible that he had nothing to do with the
30368 disobedience, and merely abstained from mentioning it. But all that
30369 has nothing to do with the public belief. It is one of those cases on
30370 which a man is condemned on the ground of his character--it is
30371 believed that he has committed a crime in some undefined way, because
30372 he had the motive for doing it; and Bulstrode's character has enveloped
30373 me, because I took his money. I am simply blighted--like a damaged
30374 ear of corn--the business is done and can't be undone."
30375
30376 "Oh, it is hard!" said Dorothea. "I understand the difficulty there is
30377 in your vindicating yourself. And that all this should have come to
30378 you who had meant to lead a higher life than the common, and to find
30379 out better ways--I cannot bear to rest in this as unchangeable. I know
30380 you meant that. I remember what you said to me when you first spoke to
30381 me about the hospital. There is no sorrow I have thought more about
30382 than that--to love what is great, and try to reach it, and yet to fail."
30383
30384 "Yes," said Lydgate, feeling that here he had found room for the full
30385 meaning of his grief. "I had some ambition. I meant everything to be
30386 different with me. I thought I had more strength and mastery. But the
30387 most terrible obstacles are such as nobody can see except oneself."
30388
30389 "Suppose," said Dorothea, meditatively,--"suppose we kept on the
30390 Hospital according to the present plan, and you stayed here though only
30391 with the friendship and support of a few, the evil feeling towards you
30392 would gradually die out; there would come opportunities in which people
30393 would be forced to acknowledge that they had been unjust to you,
30394 because they would see that your purposes were pure. You may still win
30395 a great fame like the Louis and Laennec I have heard you speak of, and
30396 we shall all be proud of you," she ended, with a smile.
30397
30398 "That might do if I had my old trust in myself," said Lydgate,
30399 mournfully. "Nothing galls me more than the notion of turning round
30400 and running away before this slander, leaving it unchecked behind me.
30401 Still, I can't ask any one to put a great deal of money into a plan
30402 which depends on me."
30403
30404 "It would be quite worth my while," said Dorothea, simply. "Only
30405 think. I am very uncomfortable with my money, because they tell me I
30406 have too little for any great scheme of the sort I like best, and yet I
30407 have too much. I don't know what to do. I have seven hundred a-year
30408 of my own fortune, and nineteen hundred a-year that Mr. Casaubon left
30409 me, and between three and four thousand of ready money in the bank. I
30410 wished to raise money and pay it off gradually out of my income which I
30411 don't want, to buy land with and found a village which should be a
30412 school of industry; but Sir James and my uncle have convinced me that
30413 the risk would be too great. So you see that what I should most
30414 rejoice at would be to have something good to do with my money: I
30415 should like it to make other people's lives better to them. It makes
30416 me very uneasy--coming all to me who don't want it."
30417
30418 A smile broke through the gloom of Lydgate's face. The childlike
30419 grave-eyed earnestness with which Dorothea said all this was
30420 irresistible--blent into an adorable whole with her ready understanding
30421 of high experience. (Of lower experience such as plays a great part in
30422 the world, poor Mrs. Casaubon had a very blurred shortsighted
30423 knowledge, little helped by her imagination.) But she took the smile as
30424 encouragement of her plan.
30425
30426 "I think you see now that you spoke too scrupulously," she said, in a
30427 tone of persuasion. "The hospital would be one good; and making your
30428 life quite whole and well again would be another."
30429
30430 Lydgate's smile had died away. "You have the goodness as well as the
30431 money to do all that; if it could be done," he said. "But--"
30432
30433 He hesitated a little while, looking vaguely towards the window; and
30434 she sat in silent expectation. At last he turned towards her and said
30435 impetuously--
30436
30437 "Why should I not tell you?--you know what sort of bond marriage is.
30438 You will understand everything."
30439
30440 Dorothea felt her heart beginning to beat faster. Had he that sorrow
30441 too? But she feared to say any word, and he went on immediately.
30442
30443 "It is impossible for me now to do anything--to take any step without
30444 considering my wife's happiness. The thing that I might like to do if
30445 I were alone, is become impossible to me. I can't see her miserable.
30446 She married me without knowing what she was going into, and it might
30447 have been better for her if she had not married me."
30448
30449 "I know, I know--you could not give her pain, if you were not obliged
30450 to do it," said Dorothea, with keen memory of her own life.
30451
30452 "And she has set her mind against staying. She wishes to go. The
30453 troubles she has had here have wearied her," said Lydgate, breaking off
30454 again, lest he should say too much.
30455
30456 "But when she saw the good that might come of staying--" said Dorothea,
30457 remonstrantly, looking at Lydgate as if he had forgotten the reasons
30458 which had just been considered. He did not speak immediately.
30459
30460 "She would not see it," he said at last, curtly, feeling at first that
30461 this statement must do without explanation. "And, indeed, I have lost
30462 all spirit about carrying on my life here." He paused a moment and
30463 then, following the impulse to let Dorothea see deeper into the
30464 difficulty of his life, he said, "The fact is, this trouble has come
30465 upon her confusedly. We have not been able to speak to each other
30466 about it. I am not sure what is in her mind about it: she may fear
30467 that I have really done something base. It is my fault; I ought to be
30468 more open. But I have been suffering cruelly."
30469
30470 "May I go and see her?" said Dorothea, eagerly. "Would she accept my
30471 sympathy? I would tell her that you have not been blamable before any
30472 one's judgment but your own. I would tell her that you shall be
30473 cleared in every fair mind. I would cheer her heart. Will you ask her
30474 if I may go to see her? I did see her once."
30475
30476 "I am sure you may," said Lydgate, seizing the proposition with some
30477 hope. "She would feel honored--cheered, I think, by the proof that you
30478 at least have some respect for me. I will not speak to her about your
30479 coming--that she may not connect it with my wishes at all. I know very
30480 well that I ought not to have left anything to be told her by others,
30481 but--"
30482
30483 He broke off, and there was a moment's silence. Dorothea refrained
30484 from saying what was in her mind--how well she knew that there might be
30485 invisible barriers to speech between husband and wife. This was a
30486 point on which even sympathy might make a wound. She returned to the
30487 more outward aspect of Lydgate's position, saying cheerfully--
30488
30489 "And if Mrs. Lydgate knew that there were friends who would believe in
30490 you and support you, she might then be glad that you should stay in
30491 your place and recover your hopes--and do what you meant to do.
30492 Perhaps then you would see that it was right to agree with what I
30493 proposed about your continuing at the Hospital. Surely you would, if
30494 you still have faith in it as a means of making your knowledge useful?"
30495
30496 Lydgate did not answer, and she saw that he was debating with himself.
30497
30498 "You need not decide immediately," she said, gently. "A few days hence
30499 it will be early enough for me to send my answer to Mr. Bulstrode."
30500
30501 Lydgate still waited, but at last turned to speak in his most decisive
30502 tones.
30503
30504 "No; I prefer that there should be no interval left for wavering. I am
30505 no longer sure enough of myself--I mean of what it would be possible
30506 for me to do under the changed circumstances of my life. It would be
30507 dishonorable to let others engage themselves to anything serious in
30508 dependence on me. I might be obliged to go away after all; I see
30509 little chance of anything else. The whole thing is too problematic; I
30510 cannot consent to be the cause of your goodness being wasted. No--let
30511 the new Hospital be joined with the old Infirmary, and everything go on
30512 as it might have done if I had never come. I have kept a valuable
30513 register since I have been there; I shall send it to a man who will
30514 make use of it," he ended bitterly. "I can think of nothing for a long
30515 while but getting an income."
30516
30517 "It hurts me very much to hear you speak so hopelessly," said Dorothea.
30518 "It would be a happiness to your friends, who believe in your future,
30519 in your power to do great things, if you would let them save you from
30520 that. Think how much money I have; it would be like taking a burthen
30521 from me if you took some of it every year till you got free from this
30522 fettering want of income. Why should not people do these things? It
30523 is so difficult to make shares at all even. This is one way."
30524
30525 "God bless you, Mrs. Casaubon!" said Lydgate, rising as if with the
30526 same impulse that made his words energetic, and resting his arm on the
30527 back of the great leather chair he had been sitting in. "It is good
30528 that you should have such feelings. But I am not the man who ought to
30529 allow himself to benefit by them. I have not given guarantees enough.
30530 I must not at least sink into the degradation of being pensioned for
30531 work that I never achieved. It is very clear to me that I must not
30532 count on anything else than getting away from Middlemarch as soon as I
30533 can manage it. I should not be able for a long while, at the very
30534 best, to get an income here, and--and it is easier to make necessary
30535 changes in a new place. I must do as other men do, and think what will
30536 please the world and bring in money; look for a little opening in the
30537 London crowd, and push myself; set up in a watering-place, or go to
30538 some southern town where there are plenty of idle English, and get
30539 myself puffed,--that is the sort of shell I must creep into and try to
30540 keep my soul alive in."
30541
30542 "Now that is not brave," said Dorothea,--"to give up the fight."
30543
30544 "No, it is not brave," said Lydgate, "but if a man is afraid of
30545 creeping paralysis?" Then, in another tone, "Yet you have made a great
30546 difference in my courage by believing in me. Everything seems more
30547 bearable since I have talked to you; and if you can clear me in a few
30548 other minds, especially in Farebrother's, I shall be deeply grateful.
30549 The point I wish you not to mention is the fact of disobedience to my
30550 orders. That would soon get distorted. After all, there is no
30551 evidence for me but people's opinion of me beforehand. You can only
30552 repeat my own report of myself."
30553
30554 "Mr. Farebrother will believe--others will believe," said Dorothea. "I
30555 can say of you what will make it stupidity to suppose that you would be
30556 bribed to do a wickedness."
30557
30558 "I don't know," said Lydgate, with something like a groan in his voice.
30559 "I have not taken a bribe yet. But there is a pale shade of bribery
30560 which is sometimes called prosperity. You will do me another great
30561 kindness, then, and come to see my wife?"
30562
30563 "Yes, I will. I remember how pretty she is," said Dorothea, into whose
30564 mind every impression about Rosamond had cut deep. "I hope she will
30565 like me."
30566
30567 As Lydgate rode away, he thought, "This young creature has a heart
30568 large enough for the Virgin Mary. She evidently thinks nothing of her
30569 own future, and would pledge away half her income at once, as if she
30570 wanted nothing for herself but a chair to sit in from which she can
30571 look down with those clear eyes at the poor mortals who pray to her.
30572 She seems to have what I never saw in any woman before--a fountain of
30573 friendship towards men--a man can make a friend of her. Casaubon must
30574 have raised some heroic hallucination in her. I wonder if she could
30575 have any other sort of passion for a man? Ladislaw?--there was
30576 certainly an unusual feeling between them. And Casaubon must have had
30577 a notion of it. Well--her love might help a man more than her money."
30578
30579 Dorothea on her side had immediately formed a plan of relieving Lydgate
30580 from his obligation to Bulstrode, which she felt sure was a part,
30581 though small, of the galling pressure he had to bear. She sat down at
30582 once under the inspiration of their interview, and wrote a brief note,
30583 in which she pleaded that she had more claim than Mr. Bulstrode had to
30584 the satisfaction of providing the money which had been serviceable to
30585 Lydgate--that it would be unkind in Lydgate not to grant her the
30586 position of being his helper in this small matter, the favor being
30587 entirely to her who had so little that was plainly marked out for her
30588 to do with her superfluous money. He might call her a creditor or by
30589 any other name if it did but imply that he granted her request. She
30590 enclosed a check for a thousand pounds, and determined to take the
30591 letter with her the next day when she went to see Rosamond.
30592
30593
30594
30595 CHAPTER LXXVII.
30596
30597 "And thus thy fall hath left a kind of blot,
30598 To mark the full-fraught man and best indued
30599 With some suspicion."
30600 --Henry V.
30601
30602
30603 The next day Lydgate had to go to Brassing, and told Rosamond that he
30604 should be away until the evening. Of late she had never gone beyond
30605 her own house and garden, except to church, and once to see her papa,
30606 to whom she said, "If Tertius goes away, you will help us to move, will
30607 you not, papa? I suppose we shall have very little money. I am sure I
30608 hope some one will help us." And Mr. Vincy had said, "Yes, child, I
30609 don't mind a hundred or two. I can see the end of that." With these
30610 exceptions she had sat at home in languid melancholy and suspense,
30611 fixing her mind on Will Ladislaw's coming as the one point of hope and
30612 interest, and associating this with some new urgency on Lydgate to make
30613 immediate arrangements for leaving Middlemarch and going to London,
30614 till she felt assured that the coming would be a potent cause of the
30615 going, without at all seeing how. This way of establishing sequences
30616 is too common to be fairly regarded as a peculiar folly in Rosamond.
30617 And it is precisely this sort of sequence which causes the greatest
30618 shock when it is sundered: for to see how an effect may be produced is
30619 often to see possible missings and checks; but to see nothing except
30620 the desirable cause, and close upon it the desirable effect, rids us of
30621 doubt and makes our minds strongly intuitive. That was the process
30622 going on in poor Rosamond, while she arranged all objects around her
30623 with the same nicety as ever, only with more slowness--or sat down to
30624 the piano, meaning to play, and then desisting, yet lingering on the
30625 music stool with her white fingers suspended on the wooden front, and
30626 looking before her in dreamy ennui. Her melancholy had become so
30627 marked that Lydgate felt a strange timidity before it, as a perpetual
30628 silent reproach, and the strong man, mastered by his keen sensibilities
30629 towards this fair fragile creature whose life he seemed somehow to have
30630 bruised, shrank from her look, and sometimes started at her approach,
30631 fear of her and fear for her rushing in only the more forcibly after it
30632 had been momentarily expelled by exasperation.
30633
30634 But this morning Rosamond descended from her room upstairs--where she
30635 sometimes sat the whole day when Lydgate was out--equipped for a walk
30636 in the town. She had a letter to post--a letter addressed to Mr.
30637 Ladislaw and written with charming discretion, but intended to hasten
30638 his arrival by a hint of trouble. The servant-maid, their sole
30639 house-servant now, noticed her coming down-stairs in her walking dress,
30640 and thought "there never did anybody look so pretty in a bonnet poor
30641 thing."
30642
30643 Meanwhile Dorothea's mind was filled with her project of going to
30644 Rosamond, and with the many thoughts, both of the past and the probable
30645 future, which gathered round the idea of that visit. Until yesterday
30646 when Lydgate had opened to her a glimpse of some trouble in his married
30647 life, the image of Mrs. Lydgate had always been associated for her with
30648 that of Will Ladislaw. Even in her most uneasy moments--even when she
30649 had been agitated by Mrs. Cadwallader's painfully graphic report of
30650 gossip--her effort, nay, her strongest impulsive prompting, had been
30651 towards the vindication of Will from any sullying surmises; and when,
30652 in her meeting with him afterwards, she had at first interpreted his
30653 words as a probable allusion to a feeling towards Mrs. Lydgate which he
30654 was determined to cut himself off from indulging, she had had a quick,
30655 sad, excusing vision of the charm there might be in his constant
30656 opportunities of companionship with that fair creature, who most likely
30657 shared his other tastes as she evidently did his delight in music. But
30658 there had followed his parting words--the few passionate words in
30659 which he had implied that she herself was the object of whom his love
30660 held him in dread, that it was his love for her only which he was
30661 resolved not to declare but to carry away into banishment. From the
30662 time of that parting, Dorothea, believing in Will's love for her,
30663 believing with a proud delight in his delicate sense of honor and his
30664 determination that no one should impeach him justly, felt her heart
30665 quite at rest as to the regard he might have for Mrs. Lydgate. She was
30666 sure that the regard was blameless.
30667
30668 There are natures in which, if they love us, we are conscious of having
30669 a sort of baptism and consecration: they bind us over to rectitude and
30670 purity by their pure belief about us; and our sins become that worst
30671 kind of sacrilege which tears down the invisible altar of trust. "If
30672 you are not good, none is good"--those little words may give a
30673 terrific meaning to responsibility, may hold a vitriolic intensity for
30674 remorse.
30675
30676 Dorothea's nature was of that kind: her own passionate faults lay along
30677 the easily counted open channels of her ardent character; and while she
30678 was full of pity for the visible mistakes of others, she had not yet
30679 any material within her experience for subtle constructions and
30680 suspicions of hidden wrong. But that simplicity of hers, holding up an
30681 ideal for others in her believing conception of them, was one of the
30682 great powers of her womanhood. And it had from the first acted
30683 strongly on Will Ladislaw. He felt, when he parted from her, that the
30684 brief words by which he had tried to convey to her his feeling about
30685 herself and the division which her fortune made between them, would
30686 only profit by their brevity when Dorothea had to interpret them: he
30687 felt that in her mind he had found his highest estimate.
30688
30689 And he was right there. In the months since their parting Dorothea had
30690 felt a delicious though sad repose in their relation to each other, as
30691 one which was inwardly whole and without blemish. She had an active
30692 force of antagonism within her, when the antagonism turned on the
30693 defence either of plans or persons that she believed in; and the wrongs
30694 which she felt that Will had received from her husband, and the
30695 external conditions which to others were grounds for slighting him,
30696 only gave the more tenacity to her affection and admiring judgment.
30697 And now with the disclosures about Bulstrode had come another fact
30698 affecting Will's social position, which roused afresh Dorothea's inward
30699 resistance to what was said about him in that part of her world which
30700 lay within park palings.
30701
30702 "Young Ladislaw the grandson of a thieving Jew pawnbroker" was a phrase
30703 which had entered emphatically into the dialogues about the Bulstrode
30704 business, at Lowick, Tipton, and Freshitt, and was a worse kind of
30705 placard on poor Will's back than the "Italian with white mice."
30706 Upright Sir James Chettam was convinced that his own satisfaction was
30707 righteous when he thought with some complacency that here was an added
30708 league to that mountainous distance between Ladislaw and Dorothea,
30709 which enabled him to dismiss any anxiety in that direction as too
30710 absurd. And perhaps there had been some pleasure in pointing Mr.
30711 Brooke's attention to this ugly bit of Ladislaw's genealogy, as a fresh
30712 candle for him to see his own folly by. Dorothea had observed the
30713 animus with which Will's part in the painful story had been recalled
30714 more than once; but she had uttered no word, being checked now, as she
30715 had not been formerly in speaking of Will, by the consciousness of a
30716 deeper relation between them which must always remain in consecrated
30717 secrecy. But her silence shrouded her resistant emotion into a more
30718 thorough glow; and this misfortune in Will's lot which, it seemed,
30719 others were wishing to fling at his back as an opprobrium, only gave
30720 something more of enthusiasm to her clinging thought.
30721
30722 She entertained no visions of their ever coming into nearer union, and
30723 yet she had taken no posture of renunciation. She had accepted her
30724 whole relation to Will very simply as part of her marriage sorrows, and
30725 would have thought it very sinful in her to keep up an inward wail
30726 because she was not completely happy, being rather disposed to dwell on
30727 the superfluities of her lot. She could bear that the chief pleasures
30728 of her tenderness should lie in memory, and the idea of marriage came
30729 to her solely as a repulsive proposition from some suitor of whom she
30730 at present knew nothing, but whose merits, as seen by her friends,
30731 would be a source of torment to her:--"somebody who will manage your
30732 property for you, my dear," was Mr. Brooke's attractive suggestion of
30733 suitable characteristics. "I should like to manage it myself, if I
30734 knew what to do with it," said Dorothea. No--she adhered to her
30735 declaration that she would never be married again, and in the long
30736 valley of her life which looked so flat and empty of waymarks, guidance
30737 would come as she walked along the road, and saw her fellow-passengers
30738 by the way.
30739
30740 This habitual state of feeling about Will Ladislaw had been strong in
30741 all her waking hours since she had proposed to pay a visit to Mrs.
30742 Lydgate, making a sort of background against which she saw Rosamond's
30743 figure presented to her without hindrances to her interest and
30744 compassion. There was evidently some mental separation, some barrier
30745 to complete confidence which had arisen between this wife and the
30746 husband who had yet made her happiness a law to him. That was a
30747 trouble which no third person must directly touch. But Dorothea
30748 thought with deep pity of the loneliness which must have come upon
30749 Rosamond from the suspicions cast on her husband; and there would
30750 surely be help in the manifestation of respect for Lydgate and sympathy
30751 with her.
30752
30753 "I shall talk to her about her husband," thought Dorothea, as she was
30754 being driven towards the town. The clear spring morning, the scent of
30755 the moist earth, the fresh leaves just showing their creased-up wealth
30756 of greenery from out their half-opened sheaths, seemed part of the
30757 cheerfulness she was feeling from a long conversation with Mr.
30758 Farebrother, who had joyfully accepted the justifying explanation of
30759 Lydgate's conduct. "I shall take Mrs. Lydgate good news, and perhaps
30760 she will like to talk to me and make a friend of me."
30761
30762 Dorothea had another errand in Lowick Gate: it was about a new
30763 fine-toned bell for the school-house, and as she had to get out of her
30764 carriage very near to Lydgate's, she walked thither across the street,
30765 having told the coachman to wait for some packages. The street door
30766 was open, and the servant was taking the opportunity of looking out at
30767 the carriage which was pausing within sight when it became apparent to
30768 her that the lady who "belonged to it" was coming towards her.
30769
30770 "Is Mrs. Lydgate at home?" said Dorothea.
30771
30772 "I'm not sure, my lady; I'll see, if you'll please to walk in," said
30773 Martha, a little confused on the score of her kitchen apron, but
30774 collected enough to be sure that "mum" was not the right title for this
30775 queenly young widow with a carriage and pair. "Will you please to walk
30776 in, and I'll go and see."
30777
30778 "Say that I am Mrs. Casaubon," said Dorothea, as Martha moved forward
30779 intending to show her into the drawing-room and then to go up-stairs to
30780 see if Rosamond had returned from her walk.
30781
30782 They crossed the broader part of the entrance-hall, and turned up the
30783 passage which led to the garden. The drawing-room door was unlatched,
30784 and Martha, pushing it without looking into the room, waited for Mrs.
30785 Casaubon to enter and then turned away, the door having swung open and
30786 swung back again without noise.
30787
30788 Dorothea had less of outward vision than usual this morning, being
30789 filled with images of things as they had been and were going to be.
30790 She found herself on the other side of the door without seeing anything
30791 remarkable, but immediately she heard a voice speaking in low tones
30792 which startled her as with a sense of dreaming in daylight, and
30793 advancing unconsciously a step or two beyond the projecting slab of a
30794 bookcase, she saw, in the terrible illumination of a certainty which
30795 filled up all outlines, something which made her pause, motionless,
30796 without self-possession enough to speak.
30797
30798 Seated with his back towards her on a sofa which stood against the wall
30799 on a line with the door by which she had entered, she saw Will
30800 Ladislaw: close by him and turned towards him with a flushed
30801 tearfulness which gave a new brilliancy to her face sat Rosamond, her
30802 bonnet hanging back, while Will leaning towards her clasped both her
30803 upraised hands in his and spoke with low-toned fervor.
30804
30805 Rosamond in her agitated absorption had not noticed the silently
30806 advancing figure; but when Dorothea, after the first immeasurable
30807 instant of this vision, moved confusedly backward and found herself
30808 impeded by some piece of furniture, Rosamond was suddenly aware of her
30809 presence, and with a spasmodic movement snatched away her hands and
30810 rose, looking at Dorothea who was necessarily arrested. Will Ladislaw,
30811 starting up, looked round also, and meeting Dorothea's eyes with a new
30812 lightning in them, seemed changing to marble: But she immediately
30813 turned them away from him to Rosamond and said in a firm voice--
30814
30815 "Excuse me, Mrs. Lydgate, the servant did not know that you were here.
30816 I called to deliver an important letter for Mr. Lydgate, which I wished
30817 to put into your own hands."
30818
30819 She laid down the letter on the small table which had checked her
30820 retreat, and then including Rosamond and Will in one distant glance and
30821 bow, she went quickly out of the room, meeting in the passage the
30822 surprised Martha, who said she was sorry the mistress was not at home,
30823 and then showed the strange lady out with an inward reflection that
30824 grand people were probably more impatient than others.
30825
30826 Dorothea walked across the street with her most elastic step and was
30827 quickly in her carriage again.
30828
30829 "Drive on to Freshitt Hall," she said to the coachman, and any one
30830 looking at her might have thought that though she was paler than usual
30831 she was never animated by a more self-possessed energy. And that was
30832 really her experience. It was as if she had drunk a great draught of
30833 scorn that stimulated her beyond the susceptibility to other feelings.
30834 She had seen something so far below her belief, that her emotions
30835 rushed back from it and made an excited throng without an object. She
30836 needed something active to turn her excitement out upon. She felt
30837 power to walk and work for a day, without meat or drink. And she would
30838 carry out the purpose with which she had started in the morning, of
30839 going to Freshitt and Tipton to tell Sir James and her uncle all that
30840 she wished them to know about Lydgate, whose married loneliness under
30841 his trial now presented itself to her with new significance, and made
30842 her more ardent in readiness to be his champion. She had never felt
30843 anything like this triumphant power of indignation in the struggle of
30844 her married life, in which there had always been a quickly subduing
30845 pang; and she took it as a sign of new strength.
30846
30847 "Dodo, how very bright your eyes are!" said Celia, when Sir James was
30848 gone out of the room. "And you don't see anything you look at, Arthur
30849 or anything. You are going to do something uncomfortable, I know. Is
30850 it all about Mr. Lydgate, or has something else happened?" Celia had
30851 been used to watch her sister with expectation.
30852
30853 "Yes, dear, a great many things have happened," said Dodo, in her full
30854 tones.
30855
30856 "I wonder what," said Celia, folding her arms cozily and leaning
30857 forward upon them.
30858
30859 "Oh, all the troubles of all people on the face of the earth," said
30860 Dorothea, lifting her arms to the back of her head.
30861
30862 "Dear me, Dodo, are you going to have a scheme for them?" said Celia, a
30863 little uneasy at this Hamlet-like raving.
30864
30865 But Sir James came in again, ready to accompany Dorothea to the Grange,
30866 and she finished her expedition well, not swerving in her resolution
30867 until she descended at her own door.
30868
30869
30870
30871 CHAPTER LXXVIII.
30872
30873 "Would it were yesterday and I i' the grave,
30874 With her sweet faith above for monument"
30875
30876
30877 Rosamond and Will stood motionless--they did not know how long--he
30878 looking towards the spot where Dorothea had stood, and she looking
30879 towards him with doubt. It seemed an endless time to Rosamond, in
30880 whose inmost soul there was hardly so much annoyance as gratification
30881 from what had just happened. Shallow natures dream of an easy sway
30882 over the emotions of others, trusting implicitly in their own petty
30883 magic to turn the deepest streams, and confident, by pretty gestures
30884 and remarks, of making the thing that is not as though it were. She
30885 knew that Will had received a severe blow, but she had been little used
30886 to imagining other people's states of mind except as a material cut
30887 into shape by her own wishes; and she believed in her own power to
30888 soothe or subdue. Even Tertius, that most perverse of men, was always
30889 subdued in the long-run: events had been obstinate, but still Rosamond
30890 would have said now, as she did before her marriage, that she never
30891 gave up what she had set her mind on.
30892
30893 She put out her arm and laid the tips of her fingers on Will's
30894 coat-sleeve.
30895
30896 "Don't touch me!" he said, with an utterance like the cut of a lash,
30897 darting from her, and changing from pink to white and back again, as if
30898 his whole frame were tingling with the pain of the sting. He wheeled
30899 round to the other side of the room and stood opposite to her, with the
30900 tips of his fingers in his pockets and his head thrown back, looking
30901 fiercely not at Rosamond but at a point a few inches away from her.
30902
30903 She was keenly offended, but the Signs she made of this were such as
30904 only Lydgate was used to interpret. She became suddenly quiet and
30905 seated herself, untying her hanging bonnet and laying it down with her
30906 shawl. Her little hands which she folded before her were very cold.
30907
30908 It would have been safer for Will in the first instance to have taken
30909 up his hat and gone away; but he had felt no impulse to do this; on the
30910 contrary, he had a horrible inclination to stay and shatter Rosamond
30911 with his anger. It seemed as impossible to bear the fatality she had
30912 drawn down on him without venting his fury as it would be to a panther
30913 to bear the javelin-wound without springing and biting. And yet--how
30914 could he tell a woman that he was ready to curse her? He was fuming
30915 under a repressive law which he was forced to acknowledge: he was
30916 dangerously poised, and Rosamond's voice now brought the decisive
30917 vibration. In flute-like tones of sarcasm she said--
30918
30919 "You can easily go after Mrs. Casaubon and explain your preference."
30920
30921 "Go after her!" he burst out, with a sharp edge in his voice. "Do you
30922 think she would turn to look at me, or value any word I ever uttered to
30923 her again at more than a dirty feather?--Explain! How can a man
30924 explain at the expense of a woman?"
30925
30926 "You can tell her what you please," said Rosamond with more tremor.
30927
30928 "Do you suppose she would like me better for sacrificing you? She is
30929 not a woman to be flattered because I made myself despicable--to
30930 believe that I must be true to her because I was a dastard to you."
30931
30932 He began to move about with the restlessness of a wild animal that sees
30933 prey but cannot reach it. Presently he burst out again--
30934
30935 "I had no hope before--not much--of anything better to come. But I had
30936 one certainty--that she believed in me. Whatever people had said or
30937 done about me, she believed in me.--That's gone! She'll never again
30938 think me anything but a paltry pretence--too nice to take heaven
30939 except upon flattering conditions, and yet selling myself for any
30940 devil's change by the sly. She'll think of me as an incarnate insult
30941 to her, from the first moment we--"
30942
30943 Will stopped as if he had found himself grasping something that must
30944 not be thrown and shattered. He found another vent for his rage by
30945 snatching up Rosamond's words again, as if they were reptiles to be
30946 throttled and flung off.
30947
30948 "Explain! Tell a man to explain how he dropped into hell! Explain my
30949 preference! I never had a _preference_ for her, any more than I have a
30950 preference for breathing. No other woman exists by the side of her. I
30951 would rather touch her hand if it were dead, than I would touch any
30952 other woman's living."
30953
30954 Rosamond, while these poisoned weapons were being hurled at her, was
30955 almost losing the sense of her identity, and seemed to be waking into
30956 some new terrible existence. She had no sense of chill resolute
30957 repulsion, of reticent self-justification such as she had known under
30958 Lydgate's most stormy displeasure: all her sensibility was turned into
30959 a bewildering novelty of pain; she felt a new terrified recoil under a
30960 lash never experienced before. What another nature felt in opposition
30961 to her own was being burnt and bitten into her consciousness. When
30962 Will had ceased to speak she had become an image of sickened misery:
30963 her lips were pale, and her eyes had a tearless dismay in them. If it
30964 had been Tertius who stood opposite to her, that look of misery would
30965 have been a pang to him, and he would have sunk by her side to comfort
30966 her, with that strong-armed comfort which, she had often held very
30967 cheap.
30968
30969 Let it be forgiven to Will that he had no such movement of pity. He
30970 had felt no bond beforehand to this woman who had spoiled the ideal
30971 treasure of his life, and he held himself blameless. He knew that he
30972 was cruel, but he had no relenting in him yet.
30973
30974 After he had done speaking, he still moved about, half in absence of
30975 mind, and Rosamond sat perfectly still. At length Will, seeming to
30976 bethink himself, took up his hat, yet stood some moments irresolute.
30977 He had spoken to her in a way that made a phrase of common politeness
30978 difficult to utter; and yet, now that he had come to the point of going
30979 away from her without further speech, he shrank from it as a brutality;
30980 he felt checked and stultified in his anger. He walked towards the
30981 mantel-piece and leaned his arm on it, and waited in silence for--he
30982 hardly knew what. The vindictive fire was still burning in him, and he
30983 could utter no word of retractation; but it was nevertheless in his
30984 mind that having come back to this hearth where he had enjoyed a
30985 caressing friendship he had found calamity seated there--he had had
30986 suddenly revealed to him a trouble that lay outside the home as well as
30987 within it. And what seemed a foreboding was pressing upon him as with
30988 slow pincers:--that his life might come to be enslaved by this helpless
30989 woman who had thrown herself upon him in the dreary sadness of her
30990 heart. But he was in gloomy rebellion against the fact that his quick
30991 apprehensiveness foreshadowed to him, and when his eyes fell on
30992 Rosamond's blighted face it seemed to him that he was the more pitiable
30993 of the two; for pain must enter into its glorified life of memory
30994 before it can turn into compassion.
30995
30996 And so they remained for many minutes, opposite each other, far apart,
30997 in silence; Will's face still possessed by a mute rage, and Rosamond's
30998 by a mute misery. The poor thing had no force to fling out any passion
30999 in return; the terrible collapse of the illusion towards which all her
31000 hope had been strained was a stroke which had too thoroughly shaken
31001 her: her little world was in ruins, and she felt herself tottering in
31002 the midst as a lonely bewildered consciousness.
31003
31004 Will wished that she would speak and bring some mitigating shadow
31005 across his own cruel speech, which seemed to stand staring at them both
31006 in mockery of any attempt at revived fellowship. But she said nothing,
31007 and at last with a desperate effort over himself, he asked, "Shall I
31008 come in and see Lydgate this evening?"
31009
31010 "If you like," Rosamond answered, just audibly.
31011
31012 And then Will went out of the house, Martha never knowing that he had
31013 been in.
31014
31015 After he was gone, Rosamond tried to get up from her seat, but fell
31016 back fainting. When she came to herself again, she felt too ill to
31017 make the exertion of rising to ring the bell, and she remained helpless
31018 until the girl, surprised at her long absence, thought for the first
31019 time of looking for her in all the down-stairs rooms. Rosamond said
31020 that she had felt suddenly sick and faint, and wanted to be helped
31021 up-stairs. When there she threw herself on the bed with her clothes on,
31022 and lay in apparent torpor, as she had done once before on a memorable
31023 day of grief.
31024
31025 Lydgate came home earlier than he had expected, about half-past five,
31026 and found her there. The perception that she was ill threw every other
31027 thought into the background. When he felt her pulse, her eyes rested
31028 on him with more persistence than they had done for a long while, as if
31029 she felt some content that he was there. He perceived the difference
31030 in a moment, and seating himself by her put his arm gently under her,
31031 and bending over her said, "My poor Rosamond! has something agitated
31032 you?" Clinging to him she fell into hysterical sobbings and cries, and
31033 for the next hour he did nothing but soothe and tend her. He imagined
31034 that Dorothea had been to see her, and that all this effect on her
31035 nervous system, which evidently involved some new turning towards
31036 himself, was due to the excitement of the new impressions which that
31037 visit had raised.
31038
31039
31040
31041 CHAPTER LXXIX.
31042
31043 "Now, I saw in my dream, that just as they had ended their
31044 talk, they drew nigh to a very miry slough, that was in the
31045 midst of the plain; and they, being heedless, did both fall
31046 suddenly into the bog. The name of the slough was
31047 Despond."--BUNYAN.
31048
31049
31050 When Rosamond was quiet, and Lydgate had left her, hoping that she
31051 might soon sleep under the effect of an anodyne, he went into the
31052 drawing-room to fetch a book which he had left there, meaning to spend
31053 the evening in his work-room, and he saw on the table Dorothea's letter
31054 addressed to him. He had not ventured to ask Rosamond if Mrs. Casaubon
31055 had called, but the reading of this letter assured him of the fact, for
31056 Dorothea mentioned that it was to be carried by herself.
31057
31058 When Will Ladislaw came in a little later Lydgate met him with a
31059 surprise which made it clear that he had not been told of the earlier
31060 visit, and Will could not say, "Did not Mrs. Lydgate tell you that I
31061 came this morning?"
31062
31063 "Poor Rosamond is ill," Lydgate added immediately on his greeting.
31064
31065 "Not seriously, I hope," said Will.
31066
31067 "No--only a slight nervous shock--the effect of some agitation. She
31068 has been overwrought lately. The truth is, Ladislaw, I am an unlucky
31069 devil. We have gone through several rounds of purgatory since you
31070 left, and I have lately got on to a worse ledge of it than ever. I
31071 suppose you are only just come down--you look rather battered--you
31072 have not been long enough in the town to hear anything?"
31073
31074 "I travelled all night and got to the White Hart at eight o'clock this
31075 morning. I have been shutting myself up and resting," said Will,
31076 feeling himself a sneak, but seeing no alternative to this evasion.
31077
31078 And then he heard Lydgate's account of the troubles which Rosamond had
31079 already depicted to him in her way. She had not mentioned the fact of
31080 Will's name being connected with the public story--this detail not
31081 immediately affecting her--and he now heard it for the first time.
31082
31083 "I thought it better to tell you that your name is mixed up with the
31084 disclosures," said Lydgate, who could understand better than most men
31085 how Ladislaw might be stung by the revelation. "You will be sure to
31086 hear it as soon as you turn out into the town. I suppose it is true
31087 that Raffles spoke to you."
31088
31089 "Yes," said Will, sardonically. "I shall be fortunate if gossip does
31090 not make me the most disreputable person in the whole affair. I should
31091 think the latest version must be, that I plotted with Raffles to murder
31092 Bulstrode, and ran away from Middlemarch for the purpose."
31093
31094 He was thinking "Here is a new ring in the sound of my name to
31095 recommend it in her hearing; however--what does it signify now?"
31096
31097 But he said nothing of Bulstrode's offer to him. Will was very open
31098 and careless about his personal affairs, but it was among the more
31099 exquisite touches in nature's modelling of him that he had a delicate
31100 generosity which warned him into reticence here. He shrank from saying
31101 that he had rejected Bulstrode's money, in the moment when he was
31102 learning that it was Lydgate's misfortune to have accepted it.
31103
31104 Lydgate too was reticent in the midst of his confidence. He made no
31105 allusion to Rosamond's feeling under their trouble, and of Dorothea he
31106 only said, "Mrs. Casaubon has been the one person to come forward and
31107 say that she had no belief in any of the suspicions against me."
31108 Observing a change in Will's face, he avoided any further mention of
31109 her, feeling himself too ignorant of their relation to each other not
31110 to fear that his words might have some hidden painful bearing on it.
31111 And it occurred to him that Dorothea was the real cause of the present
31112 visit to Middlemarch.
31113
31114 The two men were pitying each other, but it was only Will who guessed
31115 the extent of his companion's trouble. When Lydgate spoke with
31116 desperate resignation of going to settle in London, and said with a
31117 faint smile, "We shall have you again, old fellow." Will felt
31118 inexpressibly mournful, and said nothing. Rosamond had that morning
31119 entreated him to urge this step on Lydgate; and it seemed to him as if
31120 he were beholding in a magic panorama a future where he himself was
31121 sliding into that pleasureless yielding to the small solicitations of
31122 circumstance, which is a commoner history of perdition than any single
31123 momentous bargain.
31124
31125 We are on a perilous margin when we begin to look passively at our
31126 future selves, and see our own figures led with dull consent into
31127 insipid misdoing and shabby achievement. Poor Lydgate was inwardly
31128 groaning on that margin, and Will was arriving at it. It seemed to him
31129 this evening as if the cruelty of his outburst to Rosamond had made an
31130 obligation for him, and he dreaded the obligation: he dreaded Lydgate's
31131 unsuspecting good-will: he dreaded his own distaste for his spoiled
31132 life, which would leave him in motiveless levity.
31133
31134
31135
31136 CHAPTER LXXX.
31137
31138 "Stern lawgiver! yet thou dost wear
31139 The Godhead's most benignant grace;
31140 Nor know we anything so fair
31141 As is the smile upon thy face;
31142 Flowers laugh before thee on their beds,
31143 And fragrance in thy footing treads;
31144 Thou dost preserve the Stars from wrong;
31145 And the most ancient Heavens, through thee, are fresh and strong.
31146 --WORDSWORTH: Ode to Duty.
31147
31148
31149 When Dorothea had seen Mr. Farebrother in the morning, she had promised
31150 to go and dine at the parsonage on her return from Freshitt. There was
31151 a frequent interchange of visits between her and the Farebrother
31152 family, which enabled her to say that she was not at all lonely at the
31153 Manor, and to resist for the present the severe prescription of a lady
31154 companion. When she reached home and remembered her engagement, she
31155 was glad of it; and finding that she had still an hour before she could
31156 dress for dinner, she walked straight to the schoolhouse and entered
31157 into a conversation with the master and mistress about the new bell,
31158 giving eager attention to their small details and repetitions, and
31159 getting up a dramatic sense that her life was very busy. She paused on
31160 her way back to talk to old Master Bunney who was putting in some
31161 garden-seeds, and discoursed wisely with that rural sage about the
31162 crops that would make the most return on a perch of ground, and the
31163 result of sixty years' experience as to soils--namely, that if your
31164 soil was pretty mellow it would do, but if there came wet, wet, wet to
31165 make it all of a mummy, why then--
31166
31167 Finding that the social spirit had beguiled her into being rather late,
31168 she dressed hastily and went over to the parsonage rather earlier than
31169 was necessary. That house was never dull, Mr. Farebrother, like
31170 another White of Selborne, having continually something new to tell of
31171 his inarticulate guests and proteges, whom he was teaching the boys not
31172 to torment; and he had just set up a pair of beautiful goats to be pets
31173 of the village in general, and to walk at large as sacred animals. The
31174 evening went by cheerfully till after tea, Dorothea talking more than
31175 usual and dilating with Mr. Farebrother on the possible histories of
31176 creatures that converse compendiously with their antennae, and for
31177 aught we know may hold reformed parliaments; when suddenly some
31178 inarticulate little sounds were heard which called everybody's
31179 attention.
31180
31181 "Henrietta Noble," said Mrs. Farebrother, seeing her small sister
31182 moving about the furniture-legs distressfully, "what is the matter?"
31183
31184 "I have lost my tortoise-shell lozenge-box. I fear the kitten has
31185 rolled it away," said the tiny old lady, involuntarily continuing her
31186 beaver-like notes.
31187
31188 "Is it a great treasure, aunt?" said Mr. Farebrother, putting up his
31189 glasses and looking at the carpet.
31190
31191 "Mr. Ladislaw gave it me," said Miss Noble. "A German box--very
31192 pretty, but if it falls it always spins away as far as it can."
31193
31194 "Oh, if it is Ladislaw's present," said Mr. Farebrother, in a deep tone
31195 of comprehension, getting up and hunting. The box was found at last
31196 under a chiffonier, and Miss Noble grasped it with delight, saying, "it
31197 was under a fender the last time."
31198
31199 "That is an affair of the heart with my aunt," said Mr. Farebrother,
31200 smiling at Dorothea, as he reseated himself.
31201
31202 "If Henrietta Noble forms an attachment to any one, Mrs. Casaubon,"
31203 said his mother, emphatically,--"she is like a dog--she would take
31204 their shoes for a pillow and sleep the better."
31205
31206 "Mr. Ladislaw's shoes, I would," said Henrietta Noble.
31207
31208 Dorothea made an attempt at smiling in return. She was surprised and
31209 annoyed to find that her heart was palpitating violently, and that it
31210 was quite useless to try after a recovery of her former animation.
31211 Alarmed at herself--fearing some further betrayal of a change so marked
31212 in its occasion, she rose and said in a low voice with undisguised
31213 anxiety, "I must go; I have overtired myself."
31214
31215 Mr. Farebrother, quick in perception, rose and said, "It is true; you
31216 must have half-exhausted yourself in talking about Lydgate. That sort
31217 of work tells upon one after the excitement is over."
31218
31219 He gave her his arm back to the Manor, but Dorothea did not attempt to
31220 speak, even when he said good-night.
31221
31222 The limit of resistance was reached, and she had sunk back helpless
31223 within the clutch of inescapable anguish. Dismissing Tantripp with a
31224 few faint words, she locked her door, and turning away from it towards
31225 the vacant room she pressed her hands hard on the top of her head, and
31226 moaned out--
31227
31228 "Oh, I did love him!"
31229
31230 Then came the hour in which the waves of suffering shook her too
31231 thoroughly to leave any power of thought. She could only cry in loud
31232 whispers, between her sobs, after her lost belief which she had planted
31233 and kept alive from a very little seed since the days in Rome--after
31234 her lost joy of clinging with silent love and faith to one who,
31235 misprized by others, was worthy in her thought--after her lost woman's
31236 pride of reigning in his memory--after her sweet dim perspective of
31237 hope, that along some pathway they should meet with unchanged
31238 recognition and take up the backward years as a yesterday.
31239
31240 In that hour she repeated what the merciful eyes of solitude have
31241 looked on for ages in the spiritual struggles of man--she besought
31242 hardness and coldness and aching weariness to bring her relief from the
31243 mysterious incorporeal might of her anguish: she lay on the bare floor
31244 and let the night grow cold around her; while her grand woman's frame
31245 was shaken by sobs as if she had been a despairing child.
31246
31247 There were two images--two living forms that tore her heart in two, as
31248 if it had been the heart of a mother who seems to see her child divided
31249 by the sword, and presses one bleeding half to her breast while her
31250 gaze goes forth in agony towards the half which is carried away by the
31251 lying woman that has never known the mother's pang.
31252
31253 Here, with the nearness of an answering smile, here within the
31254 vibrating bond of mutual speech, was the bright creature whom she had
31255 trusted--who had come to her like the spirit of morning visiting the
31256 dim vault where she sat as the bride of a worn-out life; and now, with
31257 a full consciousness which had never awakened before, she stretched out
31258 her arms towards him and cried with bitter cries that their nearness
31259 was a parting vision: she discovered her passion to herself in the
31260 unshrinking utterance of despair.
31261
31262 And there, aloof, yet persistently with her, moving wherever she moved,
31263 was the Will Ladislaw who was a changed belief exhausted of hope, a
31264 detected illusion--no, a living man towards whom there could not yet
31265 struggle any wail of regretful pity, from the midst of scorn and
31266 indignation and jealous offended pride. The fire of Dorothea's anger
31267 was not easily spent, and it flamed out in fitful returns of spurning
31268 reproach. Why had he come obtruding his life into hers, hers that
31269 might have been whole enough without him? Why had he brought his cheap
31270 regard and his lip-born words to her who had nothing paltry to give in
31271 exchange? He knew that he was deluding her--wished, in the very moment
31272 of farewell, to make her believe that he gave her the whole price of
31273 her heart, and knew that he had spent it half before. Why had he not
31274 stayed among the crowd of whom she asked nothing--but only prayed that
31275 they might be less contemptible?
31276
31277 But she lost energy at last even for her loud-whispered cries and
31278 moans: she subsided into helpless sobs, and on the cold floor she
31279 sobbed herself to sleep.
31280
31281 In the chill hours of the morning twilight, when all was dim around
31282 her, she awoke--not with any amazed wondering where she was or what had
31283 happened, but with the clearest consciousness that she was looking into
31284 the eyes of sorrow. She rose, and wrapped warm things around her, and
31285 seated herself in a great chair where she had often watched before.
31286 She was vigorous enough to have borne that hard night without feeling
31287 ill in body, beyond some aching and fatigue; but she had waked to a new
31288 condition: she felt as if her soul had been liberated from its terrible
31289 conflict; she was no longer wrestling with her grief, but could sit
31290 down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her
31291 thoughts. For now the thoughts came thickly. It was not in Dorothea's
31292 nature, for longer than the duration of a paroxysm, to sit in the
31293 narrow cell of her calamity, in the besotted misery of a consciousness
31294 that only sees another's lot as an accident of its own.
31295
31296 She began now to live through that yesterday morning deliberately
31297 again, forcing herself to dwell on every detail and its possible
31298 meaning. Was she alone in that scene? Was it her event only? She
31299 forced herself to think of it as bound up with another woman's life--a
31300 woman towards whom she had set out with a longing to carry some
31301 clearness and comfort into her beclouded youth. In her first outleap
31302 of jealous indignation and disgust, when quitting the hateful room, she
31303 had flung away all the mercy with which she had undertaken that visit.
31304 She had enveloped both Will and Rosamond in her burning scorn, and it
31305 seemed to her as if Rosamond were burned out of her sight forever. But
31306 that base prompting which makes a women more cruel to a rival than to a
31307 faithless lover, could have no strength of recurrence in Dorothea when
31308 the dominant spirit of justice within her had once overcome the tumult
31309 and had once shown her the truer measure of things. All the active
31310 thought with which she had before been representing to herself the
31311 trials of Lydgate's lot, and this young marriage union which, like her
31312 own, seemed to have its hidden as well as evident troubles--all this
31313 vivid sympathetic experience returned to her now as a power: it
31314 asserted itself as acquired knowledge asserts itself and will not let
31315 us see as we saw in the day of our ignorance. She said to her own
31316 irremediable grief, that it should make her more helpful, instead of
31317 driving her back from effort.
31318
31319 And what sort of crisis might not this be in three lives whose contact
31320 with hers laid an obligation on her as if they had been suppliants
31321 bearing the sacred branch? The objects of her rescue were not to be
31322 sought out by her fancy: they were chosen for her. She yearned towards
31323 the perfect Right, that it might make a throne within her, and rule her
31324 errant will. "What should I do--how should I act now, this very day,
31325 if I could clutch my own pain, and compel it to silence, and think of
31326 those three?"
31327
31328 It had taken long for her to come to that question, and there was light
31329 piercing into the room. She opened her curtains, and looked out
31330 towards the bit of road that lay in view, with fields beyond outside
31331 the entrance-gates. On the road there was a man with a bundle on his
31332 back and a woman carrying her baby; in the field she could see figures
31333 moving--perhaps the shepherd with his dog. Far off in the bending sky
31334 was the pearly light; and she felt the largeness of the world and the
31335 manifold wakings of men to labor and endurance. She was a part of that
31336 involuntary, palpitating life, and could neither look out on it from
31337 her luxurious shelter as a mere spectator, nor hide her eyes in selfish
31338 complaining.
31339
31340 What she would resolve to do that day did not yet seem quite clear, but
31341 something that she could achieve stirred her as with an approaching
31342 murmur which would soon gather distinctness. She took off the clothes
31343 which seemed to have some of the weariness of a hard watching in them,
31344 and began to make her toilet. Presently she rang for Tantripp, who
31345 came in her dressing-gown.
31346
31347 "Why, madam, you've never been in bed this blessed night," burst out
31348 Tantripp, looking first at the bed and then at Dorothea's face, which
31349 in spite of bathing had the pale cheeks and pink eyelids of a mater
31350 dolorosa. "You'll kill yourself, you _will_. Anybody might think now
31351 you had a right to give yourself a little comfort."
31352
31353 "Don't be alarmed, Tantripp," said Dorothea, smiling. "I have slept; I
31354 am not ill. I shall be glad of a cup of coffee as soon as possible.
31355 And I want you to bring me my new dress; and most likely I shall want
31356 my new bonnet to-day."
31357
31358 "They've lain there a month and more ready for you, madam, and most
31359 thankful I shall be to see you with a couple o' pounds' worth less of
31360 crape," said Tantripp, stooping to light the fire. "There's a reason
31361 in mourning, as I've always said; and three folds at the bottom of your
31362 skirt and a plain quilling in your bonnet--and if ever anybody looked
31363 like an angel, it's you in a net quilling--is what's consistent for a
31364 second year. At least, that's _my_ thinking," ended Tantripp, looking
31365 anxiously at the fire; "and if anybody was to marry me flattering
31366 himself I should wear those hijeous weepers two years for him, he'd be
31367 deceived by his own vanity, that's all."
31368
31369 "The fire will do, my good Tan," said Dorothea, speaking as she used to
31370 do in the old Lausanne days, only with a very low voice; "get me the
31371 coffee."
31372
31373 She folded herself in the large chair, and leaned her head against it
31374 in fatigued quiescence, while Tantripp went away wondering at this
31375 strange contrariness in her young mistress--that just the morning when
31376 she had more of a widow's face than ever, she should have asked for her
31377 lighter mourning which she had waived before. Tantripp would never
31378 have found the clew to this mystery. Dorothea wished to acknowledge
31379 that she had not the less an active life before her because she had
31380 buried a private joy; and the tradition that fresh garments belonged to
31381 all initiation, haunting her mind, made her grasp after even that
31382 slight outward help towards calm resolve. For the resolve was not easy.
31383
31384 Nevertheless at eleven o'clock she was walking towards Middlemarch,
31385 having made up her mind that she would make as quietly and unnoticeably
31386 as possible her second attempt to see and save Rosamond.
31387
31388
31389
31390 CHAPTER LXXXI.
31391
31392 "Du Erde warst auch diese Nacht bestandig,
31393 Und athmest neu erquickt zu meinen Fussen,
31394 Beginnest schon mit Lust mich zu umgeben,
31395 Zum regst und ruhrst ein kraftiges Reschliessen
31396 Zum hochsten Dasein immerfort zu streben.
31397 --Faust: 2r Theil.
31398
31399
31400 When Dorothea was again at Lydgate's door speaking to Martha, he was in
31401 the room close by with the door ajar, preparing to go out. He heard
31402 her voice, and immediately came to her.
31403
31404 "Do you think that Mrs. Lydgate can receive me this morning?" she said,
31405 having reflected that it would be better to leave out all allusion to
31406 her previous visit.
31407
31408 "I have no doubt she will," said Lydgate, suppressing his thought about
31409 Dorothea's looks, which were as much changed as Rosamond's, "if you
31410 will be kind enough to come in and let me tell her that you are here.
31411 She has not been very well since you were here yesterday, but she is
31412 better this morning, and I think it is very likely that she will be
31413 cheered by seeing you again."
31414
31415 It was plain that Lydgate, as Dorothea had expected, knew nothing about
31416 the circumstances of her yesterday's visit; nay, he appeared to imagine
31417 that she had carried it out according to her intention. She had
31418 prepared a little note asking Rosamond to see her, which she would have
31419 given to the servant if he had not been in the way, but now she was in
31420 much anxiety as to the result of his announcement.
31421
31422 After leading her into the drawing-room, he paused to take a letter
31423 from his pocket and put it into her hands, saying, "I wrote this last
31424 night, and was going to carry it to Lowick in my ride. When one is
31425 grateful for something too good for common thanks, writing is less
31426 unsatisfactory than speech--one does not at least _hear_ how inadequate
31427 the words are."
31428
31429 Dorothea's face brightened. "It is I who have most to thank for, since
31430 you have let me take that place. You _have_ consented?" she said,
31431 suddenly doubting.
31432
31433 "Yes, the check is going to Bulstrode to-day."
31434
31435 He said no more, but went up-stairs to Rosamond, who had but lately
31436 finished dressing herself, and sat languidly wondering what she should
31437 do next, her habitual industry in small things, even in the days of her
31438 sadness, prompting her to begin some kind of occupation, which she
31439 dragged through slowly or paused in from lack of interest. She looked
31440 ill, but had recovered her usual quietude of manner, and Lydgate had
31441 feared to disturb her by any questions. He had told her of Dorothea's
31442 letter containing the check, and afterwards he had said, "Ladislaw is
31443 come, Rosy; he sat with me last night; I dare say he will be here again
31444 to-day. I thought he looked rather battered and depressed." And
31445 Rosamond had made no reply.
31446
31447 Now, when he came up, he said to her very gently, "Rosy, dear, Mrs.
31448 Casaubon is come to see you again; you would like to see her, would you
31449 not?" That she colored and gave rather a startled movement did not
31450 surprise him after the agitation produced by the interview yesterday--a
31451 beneficent agitation, he thought, since it seemed to have made her turn
31452 to him again.
31453
31454 Rosamond dared not say no. She dared not with a tone of her voice
31455 touch the facts of yesterday. Why had Mrs. Casaubon come again? The
31456 answer was a blank which Rosamond could only fill up with dread, for
31457 Will Ladislaw's lacerating words had made every thought of Dorothea a
31458 fresh smart to her. Nevertheless, in her new humiliating uncertainty
31459 she dared do nothing but comply. She did not say yes, but she rose and
31460 let Lydgate put a light shawl over her shoulders, while he said, "I am
31461 going out immediately." Then something crossed her mind which prompted
31462 her to say, "Pray tell Martha not to bring any one else into the
31463 drawing-room." And Lydgate assented, thinking that he fully understood
31464 this wish. He led her down to the drawing-room door, and then turned
31465 away, observing to himself that he was rather a blundering husband to
31466 be dependent for his wife's trust in him on the influence of another
31467 woman.
31468
31469 Rosamond, wrapping her soft shawl around her as she walked towards
31470 Dorothea, was inwardly wrapping her soul in cold reserve. Had Mrs.
31471 Casaubon come to say anything to her about Will? If so, it was a
31472 liberty that Rosamond resented; and she prepared herself to meet every
31473 word with polite impassibility. Will had bruised her pride too sorely
31474 for her to feel any compunction towards him and Dorothea: her own
31475 injury seemed much the greater. Dorothea was not only the "preferred"
31476 woman, but had also a formidable advantage in being Lydgate's
31477 benefactor; and to poor Rosamond's pained confused vision it seemed
31478 that this Mrs. Casaubon--this woman who predominated in all things
31479 concerning her--must have come now with the sense of having the
31480 advantage, and with animosity prompting her to use it. Indeed, not
31481 Rosamond only, but any one else, knowing the outer facts of the case,
31482 and not the simple inspiration on which Dorothea acted, might well have
31483 wondered why she came.
31484
31485 Looking like the lovely ghost of herself, her graceful slimness wrapped
31486 in her soft white shawl, the rounded infantine mouth and cheek
31487 inevitably suggesting mildness and innocence, Rosamond paused at three
31488 yards' distance from her visitor and bowed. But Dorothea, who had
31489 taken off her gloves, from an impulse which she could never resist when
31490 she wanted a sense of freedom, came forward, and with her face full of
31491 a sad yet sweet openness, put out her hand. Rosamond could not avoid
31492 meeting her glance, could not avoid putting her small hand into
31493 Dorothea's, which clasped it with gentle motherliness; and immediately
31494 a doubt of her own prepossessions began to stir within her. Rosamond's
31495 eye was quick for faces; she saw that Mrs. Casaubon's face looked pale
31496 and changed since yesterday, yet gentle, and like the firm softness of
31497 her hand. But Dorothea had counted a little too much on her own
31498 strength: the clearness and intensity of her mental action this morning
31499 were the continuance of a nervous exaltation which made her frame as
31500 dangerously responsive as a bit of finest Venetian crystal; and in
31501 looking at Rosamond, she suddenly found her heart swelling, and was
31502 unable to speak--all her effort was required to keep back tears. She
31503 succeeded in that, and the emotion only passed over her face like the
31504 spirit of a sob; but it added to Rosamond's impression that Mrs.
31505 Casaubon's state of mind must be something quite different from what
31506 she had imagined.
31507
31508 So they sat down without a word of preface on the two chairs that
31509 happened to be nearest, and happened also to be close together; though
31510 Rosamond's notion when she first bowed was that she should stay a long
31511 way off from Mrs. Casaubon. But she ceased thinking how anything would
31512 turn out--merely wondering what would come. And Dorothea began to
31513 speak quite simply, gathering firmness as she went on.
31514
31515 "I had an errand yesterday which I did not finish; that is why I am
31516 here again so soon. You will not think me too troublesome when I tell
31517 you that I came to talk to you about the injustice that has been shown
31518 towards Mr. Lydgate. It will cheer you--will it not?--to know a great
31519 deal about him, that he may not like to speak about himself just
31520 because it is in his own vindication and to his own honor. You will
31521 like to know that your husband has warm friends, who have not left off
31522 believing in his high character? You will let me speak of this without
31523 thinking that I take a liberty?"
31524
31525 The cordial, pleading tones which seemed to flow with generous
31526 heedlessness above all the facts which had filled Rosamond's mind as
31527 grounds of obstruction and hatred between her and this woman, came as
31528 soothingly as a warm stream over her shrinking fears. Of course Mrs.
31529 Casaubon had the facts in her mind, but she was not going to speak of
31530 anything connected with them. That relief was too great for Rosamond
31531 to feel much else at the moment. She answered prettily, in the new
31532 ease of her soul--
31533
31534 "I know you have been very good. I shall like to hear anything you
31535 will say to me about Tertius."
31536
31537 "The day before yesterday," said Dorothea, "when I had asked him to
31538 come to Lowick to give me his opinion on the affairs of the Hospital,
31539 he told me everything about his conduct and feelings in this sad event
31540 which has made ignorant people cast suspicions on him. The reason he
31541 told me was because I was very bold and asked him. I believed that he
31542 had never acted dishonorably, and I begged him to tell me the history.
31543 He confessed to me that he had never told it before, not even to you,
31544 because he had a great dislike to say, 'I was not wrong,' as if that
31545 were proof, when there are guilty people who will say so. The truth
31546 is, he knew nothing of this man Raffles, or that there were any bad
31547 secrets about him; and he thought that Mr. Bulstrode offered him the
31548 money because he repented, out of kindness, of having refused it
31549 before. All his anxiety about his patient was to treat him rightly,
31550 and he was a little uncomfortable that the case did not end as he had
31551 expected; but he thought then and still thinks that there may have been
31552 no wrong in it on any one's part. And I have told Mr. Farebrother, and
31553 Mr. Brooke, and Sir James Chettam: they all believe in your husband.
31554 That will cheer you, will it not? That will give you courage?"
31555
31556 Dorothea's face had become animated, and as it beamed on Rosamond very
31557 close to her, she felt something like bashful timidity before a
31558 superior, in the presence of this self-forgetful ardor. She said, with
31559 blushing embarrassment, "Thank you: you are very kind."
31560
31561 "And he felt that he had been so wrong not to pour out everything about
31562 this to you. But you will forgive him. It was because he feels so
31563 much more about your happiness than anything else--he feels his life
31564 bound into one with yours, and it hurts him more than anything, that
31565 his misfortunes must hurt you. He could speak to me because I am an
31566 indifferent person. And then I asked him if I might come to see you;
31567 because I felt so much for his trouble and yours. That is why I came
31568 yesterday, and why I am come to-day. Trouble is so hard to bear, is it
31569 not?-- How can we live and think that any one has trouble--piercing
31570 trouble--and we could help them, and never try?"
31571
31572 Dorothea, completely swayed by the feeling that she was uttering,
31573 forgot everything but that she was speaking from out the heart of her
31574 own trial to Rosamond's. The emotion had wrought itself more and more
31575 into her utterance, till the tones might have gone to one's very
31576 marrow, like a low cry from some suffering creature in the darkness.
31577 And she had unconsciously laid her hand again on the little hand that
31578 she had pressed before.
31579
31580 Rosamond, with an overmastering pang, as if a wound within her had been
31581 probed, burst into hysterical crying as she had done the day before
31582 when she clung to her husband. Poor Dorothea was feeling a great wave
31583 of her own sorrow returning over her--her thought being drawn to the
31584 possible share that Will Ladislaw might have in Rosamond's mental
31585 tumult. She was beginning to fear that she should not be able to
31586 suppress herself enough to the end of this meeting, and while her hand
31587 was still resting on Rosamond's lap, though the hand underneath it was
31588 withdrawn, she was struggling against her own rising sobs. She tried
31589 to master herself with the thought that this might be a turning-point
31590 in three lives--not in her own; no, there the irrevocable had
31591 happened, but--in those three lives which were touching hers with the
31592 solemn neighborhood of danger and distress. The fragile creature who
31593 was crying close to her--there might still be time to rescue her from
31594 the misery of false incompatible bonds; and this moment was unlike any
31595 other: she and Rosamond could never be together again with the same
31596 thrilling consciousness of yesterday within them both. She felt the
31597 relation between them to be peculiar enough to give her a peculiar
31598 influence, though she had no conception that the way in which her own
31599 feelings were involved was fully known to Mrs. Lydgate.
31600
31601 It was a newer crisis in Rosamond's experience than even Dorothea could
31602 imagine: she was under the first great shock that had shattered her
31603 dream-world in which she had been easily confident of herself and
31604 critical of others; and this strange unexpected manifestation of
31605 feeling in a woman whom she had approached with a shrinking aversion
31606 and dread, as one who must necessarily have a jealous hatred towards
31607 her, made her soul totter all the more with a sense that she had been
31608 walking in an unknown world which had just broken in upon her.
31609
31610 When Rosamond's convulsed throat was subsiding into calm, and she
31611 withdrew the handkerchief with which she had been hiding her face, her
31612 eyes met Dorothea's as helplessly as if they had been blue flowers.
31613 What was the use of thinking about behavior after this crying? And
31614 Dorothea looked almost as childish, with the neglected trace of a
31615 silent tear. Pride was broken down between these two.
31616
31617 "We were talking about your husband," Dorothea said, with some
31618 timidity. "I thought his looks were sadly changed with suffering the
31619 other day. I had not seen him for many weeks before. He said he had
31620 been feeling very lonely in his trial; but I think he would have borne
31621 it all better if he had been able to be quite open with you."
31622
31623 "Tertius is so angry and impatient if I say anything," said Rosamond,
31624 imagining that he had been complaining of her to Dorothea. "He ought
31625 not to wonder that I object to speak to him on painful subjects."
31626
31627 "It was himself he blamed for not speaking," said Dorothea. "What he
31628 said of you was, that he could not be happy in doing anything which
31629 made you unhappy--that his marriage was of course a bond which must
31630 affect his choice about everything; and for that reason he refused my
31631 proposal that he should keep his position at the Hospital, because that
31632 would bind him to stay in Middlemarch, and he would not undertake to do
31633 anything which would be painful to you. He could say that to me,
31634 because he knows that I had much trial in my marriage, from my
31635 husband's illness, which hindered his plans and saddened him; and he
31636 knows that I have felt how hard it is to walk always in fear of hurting
31637 another who is tied to us."
31638
31639 Dorothea waited a little; she had discerned a faint pleasure stealing
31640 over Rosamond's face. But there was no answer, and she went on, with a
31641 gathering tremor, "Marriage is so unlike everything else. There is
31642 something even awful in the nearness it brings. Even if we loved some
31643 one else better than--than those we were married to, it would be no
31644 use"--poor Dorothea, in her palpitating anxiety, could only seize her
31645 language brokenly--"I mean, marriage drinks up all our power of giving
31646 or getting any blessedness in that sort of love. I know it may be very
31647 dear--but it murders our marriage--and then the marriage stays with us
31648 like a murder--and everything else is gone. And then our husband--if
31649 he loved and trusted us, and we have not helped him, but made a curse
31650 in his life--"
31651
31652 Her voice had sunk very low: there was a dread upon her of presuming
31653 too far, and of speaking as if she herself were perfection addressing
31654 error. She was too much preoccupied with her own anxiety, to be aware
31655 that Rosamond was trembling too; and filled with the need to express
31656 pitying fellowship rather than rebuke, she put her hands on Rosamond's,
31657 and said with more agitated rapidity,--"I know, I know that the feeling
31658 may be very dear--it has taken hold of us unawares--it is so hard, it
31659 may seem like death to part with it--and we are weak--I am weak--"
31660
31661 The waves of her own sorrow, from out of which she was struggling to
31662 save another, rushed over Dorothea with conquering force. She stopped
31663 in speechless agitation, not crying, but feeling as if she were being
31664 inwardly grappled. Her face had become of a deathlier paleness, her
31665 lips trembled, and she pressed her hands helplessly on the hands that
31666 lay under them.
31667
31668 Rosamond, taken hold of by an emotion stronger than her own--hurried
31669 along in a new movement which gave all things some new, awful,
31670 undefined aspect--could find no words, but involuntarily she put her
31671 lips to Dorothea's forehead which was very near her, and then for a
31672 minute the two women clasped each other as if they had been in a
31673 shipwreck.
31674
31675 "You are thinking what is not true," said Rosamond, in an eager
31676 half-whisper, while she was still feeling Dorothea's arms round
31677 her--urged by a mysterious necessity to free herself from something
31678 that oppressed her as if it were blood guiltiness.
31679
31680 They moved apart, looking at each other.
31681
31682 "When you came in yesterday--it was not as you thought," said Rosamond
31683 in the same tone.
31684
31685 There was a movement of surprised attention in Dorothea. She expected
31686 a vindication of Rosamond herself.
31687
31688 "He was telling me how he loved another woman, that I might know he
31689 could never love me," said Rosamond, getting more and more hurried as
31690 she went on. "And now I think he hates me because--because you
31691 mistook him yesterday. He says it is through me that you will think
31692 ill of him--think that he is a false person. But it shall not be
31693 through me. He has never had any love for me--I know he has not--he
31694 has always thought slightly of me. He said yesterday that no other
31695 woman existed for him beside you. The blame of what happened is
31696 entirely mine. He said he could never explain to you--because of me.
31697 He said you could never think well of him again. But now I have told
31698 you, and he cannot reproach me any more."
31699
31700 Rosamond had delivered her soul under impulses which she had not known
31701 before. She had begun her confession under the subduing influence of
31702 Dorothea's emotion; and as she went on she had gathered the sense that
31703 she was repelling Will's reproaches, which were still like a
31704 knife-wound within her.
31705
31706 The revulsion of feeling in Dorothea was too strong to be called joy.
31707 It was a tumult in which the terrible strain of the night and morning
31708 made a resistant pain:--she could only perceive that this would be joy
31709 when she had recovered her power of feeling it. Her immediate
31710 consciousness was one of immense sympathy without check; she cared for
31711 Rosamond without struggle now, and responded earnestly to her last
31712 words--
31713
31714 "No, he cannot reproach you any more."
31715
31716 With her usual tendency to over-estimate the good in others, she felt a
31717 great outgoing of her heart towards Rosamond, for the generous effort
31718 which had redeemed her from suffering, not counting that the effort was
31719 a reflex of her own energy. After they had been silent a little, she
31720 said--
31721
31722 "You are not sorry that I came this morning?"
31723
31724 "No, you have been very good to me," said Rosamond. "I did not think
31725 that you would be so good. I was very unhappy. I am not happy now.
31726 Everything is so sad."
31727
31728 "But better days will come. Your husband will be rightly valued. And
31729 he depends on you for comfort. He loves you best. The worst loss
31730 would be to lose that--and you have not lost it," said Dorothea.
31731
31732 She tried to thrust away the too overpowering thought of her own
31733 relief, lest she should fail to win some sign that Rosamond's affection
31734 was yearning back towards her husband.
31735
31736 "Tertius did not find fault with me, then?" said Rosamond,
31737 understanding now that Lydgate might have said anything to Mrs.
31738 Casaubon, and that she certainly was different from other women.
31739 Perhaps there was a faint taste of jealousy in the question. A smile
31740 began to play over Dorothea's face as she said--
31741
31742 "No, indeed! How could you imagine it?" But here the door opened, and
31743 Lydgate entered.
31744
31745 "I am come back in my quality of doctor," he said. "After I went away,
31746 I was haunted by two pale faces: Mrs. Casaubon looked as much in need
31747 of care as you, Rosy. And I thought that I had not done my duty in
31748 leaving you together; so when I had been to Coleman's I came home
31749 again. I noticed that you were walking, Mrs. Casaubon, and the sky has
31750 changed--I think we may have rain. May I send some one to order your
31751 carriage to come for you?"
31752
31753 "Oh, no! I am strong: I need the walk," said Dorothea, rising with
31754 animation in her face. "Mrs. Lydgate and I have chatted a great deal,
31755 and it is time for me to go. I have always been accused of being
31756 immoderate and saying too much."
31757
31758 She put out her hand to Rosamond, and they said an earnest, quiet
31759 good-by without kiss or other show of effusion: there had been between
31760 them too much serious emotion for them to use the signs of it
31761 superficially.
31762
31763 As Lydgate took her to the door she said nothing of Rosamond, but told
31764 him of Mr. Farebrother and the other friends who had listened with
31765 belief to his story.
31766
31767 When he came back to Rosamond, she had already thrown herself on the
31768 sofa, in resigned fatigue.
31769
31770 "Well, Rosy," he said, standing over her, and touching her hair, "what
31771 do you think of Mrs. Casaubon now you have seen so much of her?"
31772
31773 "I think she must be better than any one," said Rosamond, "and she is
31774 very beautiful. If you go to talk to her so often, you will be more
31775 discontented with me than ever!"
31776
31777 Lydgate laughed at the "so often." "But has she made you any less
31778 discontented with me?"
31779
31780 "I think she has," said Rosamond, looking up in his face. "How heavy
31781 your eyes are, Tertius--and do push your hair back." He lifted up his
31782 large white hand to obey her, and felt thankful for this little mark of
31783 interest in him. Poor Rosamond's vagrant fancy had come back terribly
31784 scourged--meek enough to nestle under the old despised shelter. And
31785 the shelter was still there: Lydgate had accepted his narrowed lot with
31786 sad resignation. He had chosen this fragile creature, and had taken
31787 the burthen of her life upon his arms. He must walk as he could,
31788 carrying that burthen pitifully.
31789
31790
31791
31792 CHAPTER LXXXII.
31793
31794 "My grief lies onward and my joy behind."
31795 --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets.
31796
31797
31798 Exiles notoriously feed much on hopes, and are unlikely to stay in
31799 banishment unless they are obliged. When Will Ladislaw exiled himself
31800 from Middlemarch he had placed no stronger obstacle to his return than
31801 his own resolve, which was by no means an iron barrier, but simply a
31802 state of mind liable to melt into a minuet with other states of mind,
31803 and to find itself bowing, smiling, and giving place with polite
31804 facility. As the months went on, it had seemed more and more difficult
31805 to him to say why he should not run down to Middlemarch--merely for the
31806 sake of hearing something about Dorothea; and if on such a flying visit
31807 he should chance by some strange coincidence to meet with her, there
31808 was no reason for him to be ashamed of having taken an innocent journey
31809 which he had beforehand supposed that he should not take. Since he was
31810 hopelessly divided from her, he might surely venture into her
31811 neighborhood; and as to the suspicious friends who kept a dragon watch
31812 over her--their opinions seemed less and less important with time and
31813 change of air.
31814
31815 And there had come a reason quite irrespective of Dorothea, which
31816 seemed to make a journey to Middlemarch a sort of philanthropic duty.
31817 Will had given a disinterested attention to an intended settlement on a
31818 new plan in the Far West, and the need for funds in order to carry out
31819 a good design had set him on debating with himself whether it would not
31820 be a laudable use to make of his claim on Bulstrode, to urge the
31821 application of that money which had been offered to himself as a means
31822 of carrying out a scheme likely to be largely beneficial. The question
31823 seemed a very dubious one to Will, and his repugnance to again entering
31824 into any relation with the banker might have made him dismiss it
31825 quickly, if there had not arisen in his imagination the probability
31826 that his judgment might be more safely determined by a visit to
31827 Middlemarch.
31828
31829 That was the object which Will stated to himself as a reason for coming
31830 down. He had meant to confide in Lydgate, and discuss the money
31831 question with him, and he had meant to amuse himself for the few
31832 evenings of his stay by having a great deal of music and badinage with
31833 fair Rosamond, without neglecting his friends at Lowick Parsonage:--if
31834 the Parsonage was close to the Manor, that was no fault of his. He had
31835 neglected the Farebrothers before his departure, from a proud
31836 resistance to the possible accusation of indirectly seeking interviews
31837 with Dorothea; but hunger tames us, and Will had become very hungry for
31838 the vision of a certain form and the sound of a certain voice.
31839 Nothing, had done instead--not the opera, or the converse of zealous
31840 politicians, or the flattering reception (in dim corners) of his new
31841 hand in leading articles.
31842
31843 Thus he had come down, foreseeing with confidence how almost everything
31844 would be in his familiar little world; fearing, indeed, that there
31845 would be no surprises in his visit. But he had found that humdrum
31846 world in a terribly dynamic condition, in which even badinage and
31847 lyrism had turned explosive; and the first day of this visit had become
31848 the most fatal epoch of his life. The next morning he felt so harassed
31849 with the nightmare of consequences--he dreaded so much the immediate
31850 issues before him--that seeing while he breakfasted the arrival of the
31851 Riverston coach, he went out hurriedly and took his place on it, that
31852 he might be relieved, at least for a day, from the necessity of doing
31853 or saying anything in Middlemarch. Will Ladislaw was in one of those
31854 tangled crises which are commoner in experience than one might imagine,
31855 from the shallow absoluteness of men's judgments. He had found
31856 Lydgate, for whom he had the sincerest respect, under circumstances
31857 which claimed his thorough and frankly declared sympathy; and the
31858 reason why, in spite of that claim, it would have been better for Will
31859 to have avoided all further intimacy, or even contact, with Lydgate,
31860 was precisely of the kind to make such a course appear impossible. To
31861 a creature of Will's susceptible temperament--without any neutral
31862 region of indifference in his nature, ready to turn everything that
31863 befell him into the collisions of a passionate drama--the revelation
31864 that Rosamond had made her happiness in any way dependent on him was a
31865 difficulty which his outburst of rage towards her had immeasurably
31866 increased for him. He hated his own cruelty, and yet he dreaded to
31867 show the fulness of his relenting: he must go to her again; the
31868 friendship could not be put to a sudden end; and her unhappiness was a
31869 power which he dreaded. And all the while there was no more foretaste
31870 of enjoyment in the life before him than if his limbs had been lopped
31871 off and he was making his fresh start on crutches. In the night he had
31872 debated whether he should not get on the coach, not for Riverston, but
31873 for London, leaving a note to Lydgate which would give a makeshift
31874 reason for his retreat. But there were strong cords pulling him back
31875 from that abrupt departure: the blight on his happiness in thinking of
31876 Dorothea, the crushing of that chief hope which had remained in spite
31877 of the acknowledged necessity for renunciation, was too fresh a misery
31878 for him to resign himself to it and go straightway into a distance
31879 which was also despair.
31880
31881 Thus he did nothing more decided than taking the Riverston coach. He
31882 came back again by it while it was still daylight, having made up his
31883 mind that he must go to Lydgate's that evening. The Rubicon, we know,
31884 was a very insignificant stream to look at; its significance lay
31885 entirely in certain invisible conditions. Will felt as if he were
31886 forced to cross his small boundary ditch, and what he saw beyond it was
31887 not empire, but discontented subjection.
31888
31889 But it is given to us sometimes even in our every-day life to witness
31890 the saving influence of a noble nature, the divine efficacy of rescue
31891 that may lie in a self-subduing act of fellowship. If Dorothea, after
31892 her night's anguish, had not taken that walk to Rosamond--why, she
31893 perhaps would have been a woman who gained a higher character for
31894 discretion, but it would certainly not have been as well for those
31895 three who were on one hearth in Lydgate's house at half-past seven that
31896 evening.
31897
31898 Rosamond had been prepared for Will's visit, and she received him with
31899 a languid coldness which Lydgate accounted for by her nervous
31900 exhaustion, of which he could not suppose that it had any relation to
31901 Will. And when she sat in silence bending over a bit of work, he
31902 innocently apologized for her in an indirect way by begging her to lean
31903 backward and rest. Will was miserable in the necessity for playing the
31904 part of a friend who was making his first appearance and greeting to
31905 Rosamond, while his thoughts were busy about her feeling since that
31906 scene of yesterday, which seemed still inexorably to enclose them both,
31907 like the painful vision of a double madness. It happened that nothing
31908 called Lydgate out of the room; but when Rosamond poured out the tea,
31909 and Will came near to fetch it, she placed a tiny bit of folded paper
31910 in his saucer. He saw it and secured it quickly, but as he went back
31911 to his inn he had no eagerness to unfold the paper. What Rosamond had
31912 written to him would probably deepen the painful impressions of the
31913 evening. Still, he opened and read it by his bed-candle. There were
31914 only these few words in her neatly flowing hand:--
31915
31916 "I have told Mrs. Casaubon. She is not under any mistake about you. I
31917 told her because she came to see me and was very kind. You will have
31918 nothing to reproach me with now. I shall not have made any difference
31919 to you."
31920
31921 The effect of these words was not quite all gladness. As Will dwelt on
31922 them with excited imagination, he felt his cheeks and ears burning at
31923 the thought of what had occurred between Dorothea and Rosamond--at the
31924 uncertainty how far Dorothea might still feel her dignity wounded in
31925 having an explanation of his conduct offered to her. There might still
31926 remain in her mind a changed association with him which made an
31927 irremediable difference--a lasting flaw. With active fancy he wrought
31928 himself into a state of doubt little more easy than that of the man who
31929 has escaped from wreck by night and stands on unknown ground in the
31930 darkness. Until that wretched yesterday--except the moment of
31931 vexation long ago in the very same room and in the very same
31932 presence--all their vision, all their thought of each other, had been
31933 as in a world apart, where the sunshine fell on tall white lilies,
31934 where no evil lurked, and no other soul entered. But now--would
31935 Dorothea meet him in that world again?
31936
31937
31938
31939 CHAPTER LXXXIII.
31940
31941 "And now good-morrow to our waking souls
31942 Which watch not one another out of fear;
31943 For love all love of other sights controls,
31944 And makes one little room, an everywhere."
31945 --DR. DONNE.
31946
31947
31948 On the second morning after Dorothea's visit to Rosamond, she had had
31949 two nights of sound sleep, and had not only lost all traces of fatigue,
31950 but felt as if she had a great deal of superfluous strength--that is
31951 to say, more strength than she could manage to concentrate on any
31952 occupation. The day before, she had taken long walks outside the
31953 grounds, and had paid two visits to the Parsonage; but she never in her
31954 life told any one the reason why she spent her time in that fruitless
31955 manner, and this morning she was rather angry with herself for her
31956 childish restlessness. To-day was to be spent quite differently. What
31957 was there to be done in the village? Oh dear! nothing. Everybody was
31958 well and had flannel; nobody's pig had died; and it was Saturday
31959 morning, when there was a general scrubbing of doors and door-stones,
31960 and when it was useless to go into the school. But there were various
31961 subjects that Dorothea was trying to get clear upon, and she resolved
31962 to throw herself energetically into the gravest of all. She sat down
31963 in the library before her particular little heap of books on political
31964 economy and kindred matters, out of which she was trying to get light
31965 as to the best way of spending money so as not to injure one's
31966 neighbors, or--what comes to the same thing--so as to do them the most
31967 good. Here was a weighty subject which, if she could but lay hold of
31968 it, would certainly keep her mind steady. Unhappily her mind slipped
31969 off it for a whole hour; and at the end she found herself reading
31970 sentences twice over with an intense consciousness of many things, but
31971 not of any one thing contained in the text. This was hopeless. Should
31972 she order the carriage and drive to Tipton? No; for some reason or
31973 other she preferred staying at Lowick. But her vagrant mind must be
31974 reduced to order: there was an art in self-discipline; and she walked
31975 round and round the brown library considering by what sort of manoeuvre
31976 she could arrest her wandering thoughts. Perhaps a mere task was the
31977 best means--something to which she must go doggedly. Was there not the
31978 geography of Asia Minor, in which her slackness had often been rebuked
31979 by Mr. Casaubon? She went to the cabinet of maps and unrolled one:
31980 this morning she might make herself finally sure that Paphlagonia was
31981 not on the Levantine coast, and fix her total darkness about the
31982 Chalybes firmly on the shores of the Euxine. A map was a fine thing to
31983 study when you were disposed to think of something else, being made up
31984 of names that would turn into a chime if you went back upon them.
31985 Dorothea set earnestly to work, bending close to her map, and uttering
31986 the names in an audible, subdued tone, which often got into a chime.
31987 She looked amusingly girlish after all her deep experience--nodding
31988 her head and marking the names off on her fingers, with a little
31989 pursing of her lip, and now and then breaking off to put her hands on
31990 each side of her face and say, "Oh dear! oh dear!"
31991
31992 There was no reason why this should end any more than a merry-go-round;
31993 but it was at last interrupted by the opening of the door and the
31994 announcement of Miss Noble.
31995
31996 The little old lady, whose bonnet hardly reached Dorothea's shoulder,
31997 was warmly welcomed, but while her hand was being pressed she made many
31998 of her beaver-like noises, as if she had something difficult to say.
31999
32000 "Do sit down," said Dorothea, rolling a chair forward. "Am I wanted
32001 for anything? I shall be so glad if I can do anything."
32002
32003 "I will not stay," said Miss Noble, putting her hand into her small
32004 basket, and holding some article inside it nervously; "I have left a
32005 friend in the churchyard." She lapsed into her inarticulate sounds,
32006 and unconsciously drew forth the article which she was fingering. It
32007 was the tortoise-shell lozenge-box, and Dorothea felt the color
32008 mounting to her cheeks.
32009
32010 "Mr. Ladislaw," continued the timid little woman. "He fears he has
32011 offended you, and has begged me to ask if you will see him for a few
32012 minutes."
32013
32014 Dorothea did not answer on the instant: it was crossing her mind that
32015 she could not receive him in this library, where her husband's
32016 prohibition seemed to dwell. She looked towards the window. Could she
32017 go out and meet him in the grounds? The sky was heavy, and the trees
32018 had begun to shiver as at a coming storm. Besides, she shrank from
32019 going out to him.
32020
32021 "Do see him, Mrs. Casaubon," said Miss Noble, pathetically; "else I
32022 must go back and say No, and that will hurt him."
32023
32024 "Yes, I will see him," said Dorothea. "Pray tell him to come."
32025
32026 What else was there to be done? There was nothing that she longed for
32027 at that moment except to see Will: the possibility of seeing him had
32028 thrust itself insistently between her and every other object; and yet
32029 she had a throbbing excitement like an alarm upon her--a sense that
32030 she was doing something daringly defiant for his sake.
32031
32032 When the little lady had trotted away on her mission, Dorothea stood in
32033 the middle of the library with her hands falling clasped before her,
32034 making no attempt to compose herself in an attitude of dignified
32035 unconsciousness. What she was least conscious of just then was her own
32036 body: she was thinking of what was likely to be in Will's mind, and of
32037 the hard feelings that others had had about him. How could any duty
32038 bind her to hardness? Resistance to unjust dispraise had mingled with
32039 her feeling for him from the very first, and now in the rebound of her
32040 heart after her anguish the resistance was stronger than ever. "If I
32041 love him too much it is because he has been used so ill:"--there was a
32042 voice within her saying this to some imagined audience in the library,
32043 when the door was opened, and she saw Will before her.
32044
32045 She did not move, and he came towards her with more doubt and timidity
32046 in his face than she had ever seen before. He was in a state of
32047 uncertainty which made him afraid lest some look or word of his should
32048 condemn him to a new distance from her; and Dorothea was afraid of her
32049 _own_ emotion. She looked as if there were a spell upon her, keeping
32050 her motionless and hindering her from unclasping her hands, while some
32051 intense, grave yearning was imprisoned within her eyes. Seeing that
32052 she did not put out her hand as usual, Will paused a yard from her and
32053 said with embarrassment, "I am so grateful to you for seeing me."
32054
32055 "I wanted to see you," said Dorothea, having no other words at command.
32056 It did not occur to her to sit down, and Will did not give a cheerful
32057 interpretation to this queenly way of receiving him; but he went on to
32058 say what he had made up his mind to say.
32059
32060 "I fear you think me foolish and perhaps wrong for coming back so soon.
32061 I have been punished for my impatience. You know--every one knows
32062 now--a painful story about my parentage. I knew of it before I went
32063 away, and I always meant to tell you of it if--if we ever met again."
32064
32065 There was a slight movement in Dorothea, and she unclasped her hands,
32066 but immediately folded them over each other.
32067
32068 "But the affair is matter of gossip now," Will continued. "I wished
32069 you to know that something connected with it--something which happened
32070 before I went away, helped to bring me down here again. At least I
32071 thought it excused my coming. It was the idea of getting Bulstrode to
32072 apply some money to a public purpose--some money which he had thought
32073 of giving me. Perhaps it is rather to Bulstrode's credit that he
32074 privately offered me compensation for an old injury: he offered to give
32075 me a good income to make amends; but I suppose you know the
32076 disagreeable story?"
32077
32078 Will looked doubtfully at Dorothea, but his manner was gathering some
32079 of the defiant courage with which he always thought of this fact in his
32080 destiny. He added, "You know that it must be altogether painful to me."
32081
32082 "Yes--yes--I know," said Dorothea, hastily.
32083
32084 "I did not choose to accept an income from such a source. I was sure
32085 that you would not think well of me if I did so," said Will. Why
32086 should he mind saying anything of that sort to her now? She knew that
32087 he had avowed his love for her. "I felt that"--he broke off,
32088 nevertheless.
32089
32090 "You acted as I should have expected you to act," said Dorothea, her
32091 face brightening and her head becoming a little more erect on its
32092 beautiful stem.
32093
32094 "I did not believe that you would let any circumstance of my birth
32095 create a prejudice in you against me, though it was sure to do so in
32096 others," said Will, shaking his head backward in his old way, and
32097 looking with a grave appeal into her eyes.
32098
32099 "If it were a new hardship it would be a new reason for me to cling to
32100 you," said Dorothea, fervidly. "Nothing could have changed me but--"
32101 her heart was swelling, and it was difficult to go on; she made a great
32102 effort over herself to say in a low tremulous voice, "but thinking that
32103 you were different--not so good as I had believed you to be."
32104
32105 "You are sure to believe me better than I am in everything but one,"
32106 said Will, giving way to his own feeling in the evidence of hers. "I
32107 mean, in my truth to you. When I thought you doubted of that, I didn't
32108 care about anything that was left. I thought it was all over with me,
32109 and there was nothing to try for--only things to endure."
32110
32111 "I don't doubt you any longer," said Dorothea, putting out her hand; a
32112 vague fear for him impelling her unutterable affection.
32113
32114 He took her hand and raised it to his lips with something like a sob.
32115 But he stood with his hat and gloves in the other hand, and might have
32116 done for the portrait of a Royalist. Still it was difficult to loose
32117 the hand, and Dorothea, withdrawing it in a confusion that distressed
32118 her, looked and moved away.
32119
32120 "See how dark the clouds have become, and how the trees are tossed,"
32121 she said, walking towards the window, yet speaking and moving with only
32122 a dim sense of what she was doing.
32123
32124 Will followed her at a little distance, and leaned against the tall
32125 back of a leather chair, on which he ventured now to lay his hat and
32126 gloves, and free himself from the intolerable durance of formality to
32127 which he had been for the first time condemned in Dorothea's presence.
32128 It must be confessed that he felt very happy at that moment leaning on
32129 the chair. He was not much afraid of anything that she might feel now.
32130
32131 They stood silent, not looking at each other, but looking at the
32132 evergreens which were being tossed, and were showing the pale underside
32133 of their leaves against the blackening sky. Will never enjoyed the
32134 prospect of a storm so much: it delivered him from the necessity of
32135 going away. Leaves and little branches were hurled about, and the
32136 thunder was getting nearer. The light was more and more sombre, but
32137 there came a flash of lightning which made them start and look at each
32138 other, and then smile. Dorothea began to say what she had been
32139 thinking of.
32140
32141 "That was a wrong thing for you to say, that you would have had nothing
32142 to try for. If we had lost our own chief good, other people's good
32143 would remain, and that is worth trying for. Some can be happy. I
32144 seemed to see that more clearly than ever, when I was the most
32145 wretched. I can hardly think how I could have borne the trouble, if
32146 that feeling had not come to me to make strength."
32147
32148 "You have never felt the sort of misery I felt," said Will; "the misery
32149 of knowing that you must despise me."
32150
32151 "But I have felt worse--it was worse to think ill--" Dorothea had begun
32152 impetuously, but broke off.
32153
32154 Will colored. He had the sense that whatever she said was uttered in
32155 the vision of a fatality that kept them apart. He was silent a moment,
32156 and then said passionately--
32157
32158 "We may at least have the comfort of speaking to each other without
32159 disguise. Since I must go away--since we must always be divided--you
32160 may think of me as one on the brink of the grave."
32161
32162 While he was speaking there came a vivid flash of lightning which lit
32163 each of them up for the other--and the light seemed to be the terror of
32164 a hopeless love. Dorothea darted instantaneously from the window; Will
32165 followed her, seizing her hand with a spasmodic movement; and so they
32166 stood, with their hands clasped, like two children, looking out on the
32167 storm, while the thunder gave a tremendous crack and roll above them,
32168 and the rain began to pour down. Then they turned their faces towards
32169 each other, with the memory of his last words in them, and they did not
32170 loose each other's hands.
32171
32172 "There is no hope for me," said Will. "Even if you loved me as well as
32173 I love you--even if I were everything to you--I shall most likely
32174 always be very poor: on a sober calculation, one can count on nothing
32175 but a creeping lot. It is impossible for us ever to belong to each
32176 other. It is perhaps base of me to have asked for a word from you. I
32177 meant to go away into silence, but I have not been able to do what I
32178 meant."
32179
32180 "Don't be sorry," said Dorothea, in her clear tender tones. "I would
32181 rather share all the trouble of our parting."
32182
32183 Her lips trembled, and so did his. It was never known which lips were
32184 the first to move towards the other lips; but they kissed tremblingly,
32185 and then they moved apart.
32186
32187 The rain was dashing against the window-panes as if an angry spirit
32188 were within it, and behind it was the great swoop of the wind; it was
32189 one of those moments in which both the busy and the idle pause with a
32190 certain awe.
32191
32192 Dorothea sat down on the seat nearest to her, a long low ottoman in the
32193 middle of the room, and with her hands folded over each other on her
32194 lap, looked at the drear outer world. Will stood still an instant
32195 looking at her, then seated himself beside her, and laid his hand on
32196 hers, which turned itself upward to be clasped. They sat in that way
32197 without looking at each other, until the rain abated and began to fall
32198 in stillness. Each had been full of thoughts which neither of them
32199 could begin to utter.
32200
32201 But when the rain was quiet, Dorothea turned to look at Will. With
32202 passionate exclamation, as if some torture screw were threatening him,
32203 he started up and said, "It is impossible!"
32204
32205 He went and leaned on the back of the chair again, and seemed to be
32206 battling with his own anger, while she looked towards him sadly.
32207
32208 "It is as fatal as a murder or any other horror that divides people,"
32209 he burst out again; "it is more intolerable--to have our life maimed by
32210 petty accidents."
32211
32212 "No--don't say that--your life need not be maimed," said Dorothea,
32213 gently.
32214
32215 "Yes, it must," said Will, angrily. "It is cruel of you to speak in
32216 that way--as if there were any comfort. You may see beyond the misery
32217 of it, but I don't. It is unkind--it is throwing back my love for you
32218 as if it were a trifle, to speak in that way in the face of the fact.
32219 We can never be married."
32220
32221 "Some time--we might," said Dorothea, in a trembling voice.
32222
32223 "When?" said Will, bitterly. "What is the use of counting on any
32224 success of mine? It is a mere toss up whether I shall ever do more
32225 than keep myself decently, unless I choose to sell myself as a mere pen
32226 and a mouthpiece. I can see that clearly enough. I could not offer
32227 myself to any woman, even if she had no luxuries to renounce."
32228
32229 There was silence. Dorothea's heart was full of something that she
32230 wanted to say, and yet the words were too difficult. She was wholly
32231 possessed by them: at that moment debate was mute within her. And it
32232 was very hard that she could not say what she wanted to say. Will was
32233 looking out of the window angrily. If he would have looked at her and
32234 not gone away from her side, she thought everything would have been
32235 easier. At last he turned, still resting against the chair, and
32236 stretching his hand automatically towards his hat, said with a sort of
32237 exasperation, "Good-by."
32238
32239 "Oh, I cannot bear it--my heart will break," said Dorothea, starting
32240 from her seat, the flood of her young passion bearing down all the
32241 obstructions which had kept her silent--the great tears rising and
32242 falling in an instant: "I don't mind about poverty--I hate my wealth."
32243
32244 In an instant Will was close to her and had his arms round her, but she
32245 drew her head back and held his away gently that she might go on
32246 speaking, her large tear-filled eyes looking at his very simply, while
32247 she said in a sobbing childlike way, "We could live quite well on my
32248 own fortune--it is too much--seven hundred a-year--I want so little--no
32249 new clothes--and I will learn what everything costs."
32250
32251
32252
32253 CHAPTER LXXXIV.
32254
32255 "Though it be songe of old and yonge,
32256 That I sholde be to blame,
32257 Theyrs be the charge, that spoke so large
32258 In hurtynge of my name."
32259 --The Not-Browne Mayde.
32260
32261
32262 It was just after the Lords had thrown out the Reform Bill: that
32263 explains how Mr. Cadwallader came to be walking on the slope of the
32264 lawn near the great conservatory at Freshitt Hall, holding the "Times"
32265 in his hands behind him, while he talked with a trout-fisher's
32266 dispassionateness about the prospects of the country to Sir James
32267 Chettam. Mrs. Cadwallader, the Dowager Lady Chettam, and Celia were
32268 sometimes seated on garden-chairs, sometimes walking to meet little
32269 Arthur, who was being drawn in his chariot, and, as became the
32270 infantine Bouddha, was sheltered by his sacred umbrella with handsome
32271 silken fringe.
32272
32273 The ladies also talked politics, though more fitfully. Mrs.
32274 Cadwallader was strong on the intended creation of peers: she had it
32275 for certain from her cousin that Truberry had gone over to the other
32276 side entirely at the instigation of his wife, who had scented peerages
32277 in the air from the very first introduction of the Reform question, and
32278 would sign her soul away to take precedence of her younger sister, who
32279 had married a baronet. Lady Chettam thought that such conduct was very
32280 reprehensible, and remembered that Mrs. Truberry's mother was a Miss
32281 Walsingham of Melspring. Celia confessed it was nicer to be "Lady"
32282 than "Mrs.," and that Dodo never minded about precedence if she could
32283 have her own way. Mrs. Cadwallader held that it was a poor
32284 satisfaction to take precedence when everybody about you knew that you
32285 had not a drop of good blood in your veins; and Celia again, stopping
32286 to look at Arthur, said, "It would be very nice, though, if he were a
32287 Viscount--and his lordship's little tooth coming through! He might
32288 have been, if James had been an Earl."
32289
32290 "My dear Celia," said the Dowager, "James's title is worth far more
32291 than any new earldom. I never wished his father to be anything else
32292 than Sir James."
32293
32294 "Oh, I only meant about Arthur's little tooth," said Celia,
32295 comfortably. "But see, here is my uncle coming."
32296
32297 She tripped off to meet her uncle, while Sir James and Mr. Cadwallader
32298 came forward to make one group with the ladies. Celia had slipped her
32299 arm through her uncle's, and he patted her hand with a rather
32300 melancholy "Well, my dear!" As they approached, it was evident that
32301 Mr. Brooke was looking dejected, but this was fully accounted for by
32302 the state of politics; and as he was shaking hands all round without
32303 more greeting than a "Well, you're all here, you know," the Rector
32304 said, laughingly--
32305
32306 "Don't take the throwing out of the Bill so much to heart, Brooke;
32307 you've got all the riff-raff of the country on your side."
32308
32309 "The Bill, eh? ah!" said Mr. Brooke, with a mild distractedness of
32310 manner. "Thrown out, you know, eh? The Lords are going too far,
32311 though. They'll have to pull up. Sad news, you know. I mean, here at
32312 home--sad news. But you must not blame me, Chettam."
32313
32314 "What is the matter?" said Sir James. "Not another gamekeeper shot, I
32315 hope? It's what I should expect, when a fellow like Trapping Bass is
32316 let off so easily."
32317
32318 "Gamekeeper? No. Let us go in; I can tell you all in the house, you
32319 know," said Mr. Brooke, nodding at the Cadwalladers, to show that he
32320 included them in his confidence. "As to poachers like Trapping Bass,
32321 you know, Chettam," he continued, as they were entering, "when you are
32322 a magistrate, you'll not find it so easy to commit. Severity is all
32323 very well, but it's a great deal easier when you've got somebody to do
32324 it for you. You have a soft place in your heart yourself, you
32325 know--you're not a Draco, a Jeffreys, that sort of thing."
32326
32327 Mr. Brooke was evidently in a state of nervous perturbation. When he
32328 had something painful to tell, it was usually his way to introduce it
32329 among a number of disjointed particulars, as if it were a medicine that
32330 would get a milder flavor by mixing. He continued his chat with Sir
32331 James about the poachers until they were all seated, and Mrs.
32332 Cadwallader, impatient of this drivelling, said--
32333
32334 "I'm dying to know the sad news. The gamekeeper is not shot: that is
32335 settled. What is it, then?"
32336
32337 "Well, it's a very trying thing, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "I'm glad
32338 you and the Rector are here; it's a family matter--but you will help
32339 us all to bear it, Cadwallader. I've got to break it to you, my dear."
32340 Here Mr. Brooke looked at Celia--"You've no notion what it is, you
32341 know. And, Chettam, it will annoy you uncommonly--but, you see, you
32342 have not been able to hinder it, any more than I have. There's
32343 something singular in things: they come round, you know."
32344
32345 "It must be about Dodo," said Celia, who had been used to think of her
32346 sister as the dangerous part of the family machinery. She had seated
32347 herself on a low stool against her husband's knee.
32348
32349 "For God's sake let us hear what it is!" said Sir James.
32350
32351 "Well, you know, Chettam, I couldn't help Casaubon's will: it was a
32352 sort of will to make things worse."
32353
32354 "Exactly," said Sir James, hastily. "But _what_ is worse?"
32355
32356 "Dorothea is going to be married again, you know," said Mr. Brooke,
32357 nodding towards Celia, who immediately looked up at her husband with a
32358 frightened glance, and put her hand on his knee. Sir James was almost
32359 white with anger, but he did not speak.
32360
32361 "Merciful heaven!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Not to _young_ Ladislaw?"
32362
32363 Mr. Brooke nodded, saying, "Yes; to Ladislaw," and then fell into a
32364 prudential silence.
32365
32366 "You see, Humphrey!" said Mrs. Cadwallader, waving her arm towards her
32367 husband. "Another time you will admit that I have some foresight; or
32368 rather you will contradict me and be just as blind as ever. _You_
32369 supposed that the young gentleman was gone out of the country."
32370
32371 "So he might be, and yet come back," said the Rector, quietly
32372
32373 "When did you learn this?" said Sir James, not liking to hear any one
32374 else speak, though finding it difficult to speak himself.
32375
32376 "Yesterday," said Mr. Brooke, meekly. "I went to Lowick. Dorothea
32377 sent for me, you know. It had come about quite suddenly--neither of
32378 them had any idea two days ago--not any idea, you know. There's
32379 something singular in things. But Dorothea is quite determined--it is
32380 no use opposing. I put it strongly to her. I did my duty, Chettam.
32381 But she can act as she likes, you know."
32382
32383 "It would have been better if I had called him out and shot him a year
32384 ago," said Sir James, not from bloody-mindedness, but because he needed
32385 something strong to say.
32386
32387 "Really, James, that would have been very disagreeable," said Celia.
32388
32389 "Be reasonable, Chettam. Look at the affair more quietly," said Mr.
32390 Cadwallader, sorry to see his good-natured friend so overmastered by
32391 anger.
32392
32393 "That is not so very easy for a man of any dignity--with any sense of
32394 right--when the affair happens to be in his own family," said Sir
32395 James, still in his white indignation. "It is perfectly scandalous.
32396 If Ladislaw had had a spark of honor he would have gone out of the
32397 country at once, and never shown his face in it again. However, I am
32398 not surprised. The day after Casaubon's funeral I said what ought to
32399 be done. But I was not listened to."
32400
32401 "You wanted what was impossible, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke.
32402 "You wanted him shipped off. I told you Ladislaw was not to be done as
32403 we liked with: he had his ideas. He was a remarkable fellow--I always
32404 said he was a remarkable fellow."
32405
32406 "Yes," said Sir James, unable to repress a retort, "it is rather a pity
32407 you formed that high opinion of him. We are indebted to that for his
32408 being lodged in this neighborhood. We are indebted to that for seeing
32409 a woman like Dorothea degrading herself by marrying him." Sir James
32410 made little stoppages between his clauses, the words not coming easily.
32411 "A man so marked out by her husband's will, that delicacy ought to have
32412 forbidden her from seeing him again--who takes her out of her proper
32413 rank--into poverty--has the meanness to accept such a sacrifice--has
32414 always had an objectionable position--a bad origin--and, I _believe_,
32415 is a man of little principle and light character. That is my opinion."
32416 Sir James ended emphatically, turning aside and crossing his leg.
32417
32418 "I pointed everything out to her," said Mr. Brooke, apologetically--"I
32419 mean the poverty, and abandoning her position. I said, 'My dear, you
32420 don't know what it is to live on seven hundred a-year, and have no
32421 carriage, and that kind of thing, and go amongst people who don't know
32422 who you are.' I put it strongly to her. But I advise you to talk to
32423 Dorothea herself. The fact is, she has a dislike to Casaubon's
32424 property. You will hear what she says, you know."
32425
32426 "No--excuse me--I shall not," said Sir James, with more coolness. "I
32427 cannot bear to see her again; it is too painful. It hurts me too much
32428 that a woman like Dorothea should have done what is wrong."
32429
32430 "Be just, Chettam," said the easy, large-lipped Rector, who objected to
32431 all this unnecessary discomfort. "Mrs. Casaubon may be acting
32432 imprudently: she is giving up a fortune for the sake of a man, and we
32433 men have so poor an opinion of each other that we can hardly call a
32434 woman wise who does that. But I think you should not condemn it as a
32435 wrong action, in the strict sense of the word."
32436
32437 "Yes, I do," answered Sir James. "I think that Dorothea commits a
32438 wrong action in marrying Ladislaw."
32439
32440 "My dear fellow, we are rather apt to consider an act wrong because it
32441 is unpleasant to us," said the Rector, quietly. Like many men who take
32442 life easily, he had the knack of saying a home truth occasionally to
32443 those who felt themselves virtuously out of temper. Sir James took out
32444 his handkerchief and began to bite the corner.
32445
32446 "It is very dreadful of Dodo, though," said Celia, wishing to justify
32447 her husband. "She said she _never would_ marry again--not anybody at
32448 all."
32449
32450 "I heard her say the same thing myself," said Lady Chettam,
32451 majestically, as if this were royal evidence.
32452
32453 "Oh, there is usually a silent exception in such cases," said Mrs.
32454 Cadwallader. "The only wonder to me is, that any of you are surprised.
32455 You did nothing to hinder it. If you would have had Lord Triton down
32456 here to woo her with his philanthropy, he might have carried her off
32457 before the year was over. There was no safety in anything else. Mr.
32458 Casaubon had prepared all this as beautifully as possible. He made
32459 himself disagreeable--or it pleased God to make him so--and then he
32460 dared her to contradict him. It's the way to make any trumpery
32461 tempting, to ticket it at a high price in that way."
32462
32463 "I don't know what you mean by wrong, Cadwallader," said Sir James,
32464 still feeling a little stung, and turning round in his chair towards
32465 the Rector. "He's not a man we can take into the family. At least, I
32466 must speak for myself," he continued, carefully keeping his eyes off
32467 Mr. Brooke. "I suppose others will find his society too pleasant to
32468 care about the propriety of the thing."
32469
32470 "Well, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke, good-humoredly, nursing his
32471 leg, "I can't turn my back on Dorothea. I must be a father to her up
32472 to a certain point. I said, 'My dear, I won't refuse to give you
32473 away.' I had spoken strongly before. But I can cut off the entail,
32474 you know. It will cost money and be troublesome; but I can do it, you
32475 know."
32476
32477 Mr. Brooke nodded at Sir James, and felt that he was both showing his
32478 own force of resolution and propitiating what was just in the Baronet's
32479 vexation. He had hit on a more ingenious mode of parrying than he was
32480 aware of. He had touched a motive of which Sir James was ashamed. The
32481 mass of his feeling about Dorothea's marriage to Ladislaw was due
32482 partly to excusable prejudice, or even justifiable opinion, partly to a
32483 jealous repugnance hardly less in Ladislaw's case than in Casaubon's.
32484 He was convinced that the marriage was a fatal one for Dorothea. But
32485 amid that mass ran a vein of which he was too good and honorable a man
32486 to like the avowal even to himself: it was undeniable that the union of
32487 the two estates--Tipton and Freshitt--lying charmingly within a
32488 ring-fence, was a prospect that flattered him for his son and heir.
32489 Hence when Mr. Brooke noddingly appealed to that motive, Sir James felt
32490 a sudden embarrassment; there was a stoppage in his throat; he even
32491 blushed. He had found more words than usual in the first jet of his
32492 anger, but Mr. Brooke's propitiation was more clogging to his tongue
32493 than Mr. Cadwallader's caustic hint.
32494
32495 But Celia was glad to have room for speech after her uncle's suggestion
32496 of the marriage ceremony, and she said, though with as little eagerness
32497 of manner as if the question had turned on an invitation to dinner, "Do
32498 you mean that Dodo is going to be married directly, uncle?"
32499
32500 "In three weeks, you know," said Mr. Brooke, helplessly. "I can do
32501 nothing to hinder it, Cadwallader," he added, turning for a little
32502 countenance toward the Rector, who said--
32503
32504 "--I--should not make any fuss about it. If she likes to be poor, that
32505 is her affair. Nobody would have said anything if she had married the
32506 young fellow because he was rich. Plenty of beneficed clergy are
32507 poorer than they will be. Here is Elinor," continued the provoking
32508 husband; "she vexed her friends by me: I had hardly a thousand
32509 a-year--I was a lout--nobody could see anything in me--my shoes were
32510 not the right cut--all the men wondered how a woman could like me.
32511 Upon my word, I must take Ladislaw's part until I hear more harm of
32512 him."
32513
32514 "Humphrey, that is all sophistry, and you know it," said his wife.
32515 "Everything is all one--that is the beginning and end with you. As if
32516 you had not been a Cadwallader! Does any one suppose that I would have
32517 taken such a monster as you by any other name?"
32518
32519 "And a clergyman too," observed Lady Chettam with approbation. "Elinor
32520 cannot be said to have descended below her rank. It is difficult to
32521 say what Mr. Ladislaw is, eh, James?"
32522
32523 Sir James gave a small grunt, which was less respectful than his usual
32524 mode of answering his mother. Celia looked up at him like a thoughtful
32525 kitten.
32526
32527 "It must be admitted that his blood is a frightful mixture!" said Mrs.
32528 Cadwallader. "The Casaubon cuttle-fish fluid to begin with, and then a
32529 rebellious Polish fiddler or dancing-master, was it?--and then an old
32530 clo--"
32531
32532 "Nonsense, Elinor," said the Rector, rising. "It is time for us to go."
32533
32534 "After all, he is a pretty sprig," said Mrs. Cadwallader, rising too,
32535 and wishing to make amends. "He is like the fine old Crichley
32536 portraits before the idiots came in."
32537
32538 "I'll go with you," said Mr. Brooke, starting up with alacrity. "You
32539 must all come and dine with me to-morrow, you know--eh, Celia, my dear?"
32540
32541 "You will, James--won't you?" said Celia, taking her husband's hand.
32542
32543 "Oh, of course, if you like," said Sir James, pulling down his
32544 waistcoat, but unable yet to adjust his face good-humoredly. "That is
32545 to say, if it is not to meet anybody else.':
32546
32547 "No, no, no," said Mr. Brooke, understanding the condition. "Dorothea
32548 would not come, you know, unless you had been to see her."
32549
32550 When Sir James and Celia were alone, she said, "Do you mind about my
32551 having the carriage to go to Lowick, James?"
32552
32553 "What, now, directly?" he answered, with some surprise.
32554
32555 "Yes, it is very important," said Celia.
32556
32557 "Remember, Celia, I cannot see her," said Sir James.
32558
32559 "Not if she gave up marrying?"
32560
32561 "What is the use of saying that?--however, I'm going to the stables.
32562 I'll tell Briggs to bring the carriage round."
32563
32564 Celia thought it was of great use, if not to say that, at least to take
32565 a journey to Lowick in order to influence Dorothea's mind. All through
32566 their girlhood she had felt that she could act on her sister by a word
32567 judiciously placed--by opening a little window for the daylight of her
32568 own understanding to enter among the strange colored lamps by which
32569 Dodo habitually saw. And Celia the matron naturally felt more able to
32570 advise her childless sister. How could any one understand Dodo so well
32571 as Celia did or love her so tenderly?
32572
32573 Dorothea, busy in her boudoir, felt a glow of pleasure at the sight of
32574 her sister so soon after the revelation of her intended marriage. She
32575 had prefigured to herself, even with exaggeration, the disgust of her
32576 friends, and she had even feared that Celia might be kept aloof from
32577 her.
32578
32579 "O Kitty, I am delighted to see you!" said Dorothea, putting her hands
32580 on Celia's shoulders, and beaming on her. "I almost thought you would
32581 not come to me."
32582
32583 "I have not brought Arthur, because I was in a hurry," said Celia, and
32584 they sat down on two small chairs opposite each other, with their knees
32585 touching.
32586
32587 "You know, Dodo, it is very bad," said Celia, in her placid guttural,
32588 looking as prettily free from humors as possible. "You have
32589 disappointed us all so. And I can't think that it ever _will_ be--you
32590 never can go and live in that way. And then there are all your plans!
32591 You never can have thought of that. James would have taken any trouble
32592 for you, and you might have gone on all your life doing what you liked."
32593
32594 "On the contrary, dear," said Dorothea, "I never could do anything that
32595 I liked. I have never carried out any plan yet."
32596
32597 "Because you always wanted things that wouldn't do. But other plans
32598 would have come. And how can you marry Mr. Ladislaw, that we none of
32599 us ever thought you _could_ marry? It shocks James so dreadfully. And
32600 then it is all so different from what you have always been. You would
32601 have Mr. Casaubon because he had such a great soul, and was so and
32602 dismal and learned; and now, to think of marrying Mr. Ladislaw, who has
32603 got no estate or anything. I suppose it is because you must be making
32604 yourself uncomfortable in some way or other."
32605
32606 Dorothea laughed.
32607
32608 "Well, it is very serious, Dodo," said Celia, becoming more impressive.
32609 "How will you live? and you will go away among queer people. And I
32610 shall never see you--and you won't mind about little Arthur--and I
32611 thought you always would--"
32612
32613 Celia's rare tears had got into her eyes, and the corners of her mouth
32614 were agitated.
32615
32616 "Dear Celia," said Dorothea, with tender gravity, "if you don't ever
32617 see me, it will not be my fault."
32618
32619 "Yes, it will," said Celia, with the same touching distortion of her
32620 small features. "How can I come to you or have you with me when James
32621 can't bear it?--that is because he thinks it is not right--he thinks
32622 you are so wrong, Dodo. But you always were wrong: only I can't help
32623 loving you. And nobody can think where you will live: where can you
32624 go?"
32625
32626 "I am going to London," said Dorothea.
32627
32628 "How can you always live in a street? And you will be so poor. I
32629 could give you half my things, only how can I, when I never see you?"
32630
32631 "Bless you, Kitty," said Dorothea, with gentle warmth. "Take comfort:
32632 perhaps James will forgive me some time."
32633
32634 "But it would be much better if you would not be married," said Celia,
32635 drying her eyes, and returning to her argument; "then there would be
32636 nothing uncomfortable. And you would not do what nobody thought you
32637 could do. James always said you ought to be a queen; but this is not
32638 at all being like a queen. You know what mistakes you have always been
32639 making, Dodo, and this is another. Nobody thinks Mr. Ladislaw a proper
32640 husband for you. And you _said you_ would never be married again."
32641
32642 "It is quite true that I might be a wiser person, Celia," said
32643 Dorothea, "and that I might have done something better, if I had been
32644 better. But this is what I am going to do. I have promised to marry
32645 Mr. Ladislaw; and I am going to marry him."
32646
32647 The tone in which Dorothea said this was a note that Celia had long
32648 learned to recognize. She was silent a few moments, and then said, as
32649 if she had dismissed all contest, "Is he very fond of you, Dodo?"
32650
32651 "I hope so. I am very fond of him."
32652
32653 "That is nice," said Celia, comfortably. "Only I rather you had such a
32654 sort of husband as James is, with a place very near, that I could drive
32655 to."
32656
32657 Dorothea smiled, and Celia looked rather meditative. Presently she
32658 said, "I cannot think how it all came about." Celia thought it would be
32659 pleasant to hear the story.
32660
32661 "I dare say not," said-Dorothea, pinching her sister's chin. "If you
32662 knew how it came about, it would not seem wonderful to you."
32663
32664 "Can't you tell me?" said Celia, settling her arms cozily.
32665
32666 "No, dear, you would have to feel with me, else you would never know."
32667
32668
32669
32670 CHAPTER LXXXV.
32671
32672 "Then went the jury out whose names were Mr. Blindman, Mr.
32673 No-good, Mr. Malice, Mr. Love-lust, Mr. Live-loose, Mr.
32674 Heady, Mr. High-mind, Mr. Enmity, Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, Mr.
32675 Hate-light, Mr. Implacable, who every one gave in his
32676 private verdict against him among themselves, and afterwards
32677 unanimously concluded to bring him in guilty before the
32678 judge. And first among themselves, Mr. Blindman, the
32679 foreman, said, I see clearly that this man is a heretic.
32680 Then said Mr. No-good, Away with such a fellow from the
32681 earth! Ay, said Mr. Malice, for I hate the very look of him.
32682 Then said Mr. Love-lust, I could never endure him. Nor I,
32683 said Mr. Live-loose; for he would be always condemning my
32684 way. Hang him, hang him, said Mr. Heady. A sorry scrub, said
32685 Mr. High-mind. My heart riseth against him, said Mr. Enmity.
32686 He is a rogue, said Mr. Liar. Hanging is too good for him,
32687 said Mr. Cruelty. Let us despatch him out of the way said
32688 Mr. Hate-light. Then said Mr. Implacable, Might I have all
32689 the world given me, I could not be reconciled to him;
32690 therefore let us forthwith bring him in guilty of death."
32691 --Pilgrim's Progress.
32692
32693
32694 When immortal Bunyan makes his picture of the persecuting passions
32695 bringing in their verdict of guilty, who pities Faithful? That is a
32696 rare and blessed lot which some greatest men have not attained, to know
32697 ourselves guiltless before a condemning crowd--to be sure that what we
32698 are denounced for is solely the good in us. The pitiable lot is that
32699 of the man who could not call himself a martyr even though he were to
32700 persuade himself that the men who stoned him were but ugly passions
32701 incarnate--who knows that he is stoned, not for professing the Right,
32702 but for not being the man he professed to be.
32703
32704 This was the consciousness that Bulstrode was withering under while he
32705 made his preparations for departing from Middlemarch, and going to end
32706 his stricken life in that sad refuge, the indifference of new faces.
32707 The duteous merciful constancy of his wife had delivered him from one
32708 dread, but it could not hinder her presence from being still a tribunal
32709 before which he shrank from confession and desired advocacy. His
32710 equivocations with himself about the death of Raffles had sustained the
32711 conception of an Omniscience whom he prayed to, yet he had a terror
32712 upon him which would not let him expose them to judgment by a full
32713 confession to his wife: the acts which he had washed and diluted with
32714 inward argument and motive, and for which it seemed comparatively easy
32715 to win invisible pardon--what name would she call them by? That she
32716 should ever silently call his acts Murder was what he could not bear.
32717 He felt shrouded by her doubt: he got strength to face her from the
32718 sense that she could not yet feel warranted in pronouncing that worst
32719 condemnation on him. Some time, perhaps--when he was dying--he would
32720 tell her all: in the deep shadow of that time, when she held his hand
32721 in the gathering darkness, she might listen without recoiling from his
32722 touch. Perhaps: but concealment had been the habit of his life, and
32723 the impulse to confession had no power against the dread of a deeper
32724 humiliation.
32725
32726 He was full of timid care for his wife, not only because he deprecated
32727 any harshness of judgment from her, but because he felt a deep distress
32728 at the sight of her suffering. She had sent her daughters away to
32729 board at a school on the coast, that this crisis might be hidden from
32730 them as far as possible. Set free by their absence from the
32731 intolerable necessity of accounting for her grief or of beholding their
32732 frightened wonder, she could live unconstrainedly with the sorrow that
32733 was every day streaking her hair with whiteness and making her eyelids
32734 languid.
32735
32736 "Tell me anything that you would like to have me do, Harriet,"
32737 Bulstrode had said to her; "I mean with regard to arrangements of
32738 property. It is my intention not to sell the land I possess in this
32739 neighborhood, but to leave it to you as a safe provision. If you have
32740 any wish on such subjects, do not conceal it from me."
32741
32742 A few days afterwards, when she had returned from a visit to her
32743 brother's, she began to speak to her husband on a subject which had for
32744 some time been in her mind.
32745
32746 "I _should_ like to do something for my brother's family, Nicholas; and
32747 I think we are bound to make some amends to Rosamond and her husband.
32748 Walter says Mr. Lydgate must leave the town, and his practice is almost
32749 good for nothing, and they have very little left to settle anywhere
32750 with. I would rather do without something for ourselves, to make some
32751 amends to my poor brother's family."
32752
32753 Mrs. Bulstrode did not wish to go nearer to the facts than in the
32754 phrase "make some amends;" knowing that her husband must understand
32755 her. He had a particular reason, which she was not aware of, for
32756 wincing under her suggestion. He hesitated before he said--
32757
32758 "It is not possible to carry out your wish in the way you propose, my
32759 dear. Mr. Lydgate has virtually rejected any further service from me.
32760 He has returned the thousand pounds which I lent him. Mrs. Casaubon
32761 advanced him the sum for that purpose. Here is his letter."
32762
32763 The letter seemed to cut Mrs. Bulstrode severely. The mention of Mrs.
32764 Casaubon's loan seemed a reflection of that public feeling which held
32765 it a matter of course that every one would avoid a connection with her
32766 husband. She was silent for some time; and the tears fell one after
32767 the other, her chin trembling as she wiped them away. Bulstrode,
32768 sitting opposite to her, ached at the sight of that grief-worn face,
32769 which two months before had been bright and blooming. It had aged to
32770 keep sad company with his own withered features. Urged into some
32771 effort at comforting her, he said--
32772
32773 "There is another means, Harriet, by which I might do a service to your
32774 brother's family, if you like to act in it. And it would, I think, be
32775 beneficial to you: it would be an advantageous way of managing the land
32776 which I mean to be yours."
32777
32778 She looked attentive.
32779
32780 "Garth once thought of undertaking the management of Stone Court in
32781 order to place your nephew Fred there. The stock was to remain as it
32782 is, and they were to pay a certain share of the profits instead of an
32783 ordinary rent. That would be a desirable beginning for the young man,
32784 in conjunction with his employment under Garth. Would it be a
32785 satisfaction to you?"
32786
32787 "Yes, it would," said Mrs. Bulstrode, with some return of energy.
32788 "Poor Walter is so cast down; I would try anything in my power to do
32789 him some good before I go away. We have always been brother and
32790 sister."
32791
32792 "You must make the proposal to Garth yourself, Harriet," said Mr.
32793 Bulstrode, not liking what he had to say, but desiring the end he had
32794 in view, for other reasons besides the consolation of his wife. "You
32795 must state to him that the land is virtually yours, and that he need
32796 have no transactions with me. Communications can be made through
32797 Standish. I mention this, because Garth gave up being my agent. I can
32798 put into your hands a paper which he himself drew up, stating
32799 conditions; and you can propose his renewed acceptance of them. I
32800 think it is not unlikely that he will accept when you propose the thing
32801 for the sake of your nephew."
32802
32803
32804
32805 CHAPTER LXXXVI.
32806
32807 "Le coeur se sature d'amour comme d'un sel divin qui le
32808 conserve; de la l'incorruptible adherence de ceux qui se
32809 sont aimes des l'aube de la vie, et la fraicheur des vielles
32810 amours prolonges. Il existe un embaumement d'amour. C'est de
32811 Daphnis et Chloe que sont faits Philemon et Baucis. Cette
32812 vieillesse la, ressemblance du soir avec l'aurore."
32813 --VICTOR HUGO: L'homme qui rit.
32814
32815
32816 Mrs. Garth, hearing Caleb enter the passage about tea-time, opened the
32817 parlor-door and said, "There you are, Caleb. Have you had your
32818 dinner?" (Mr. Garth's meals were much subordinated to "business.")
32819
32820 "Oh yes, a good dinner--cold mutton and I don't know what. Where is
32821 Mary?"
32822
32823 "In the garden with Letty, I think."
32824
32825 "Fred is not come yet?"
32826
32827 "No. Are you going out again without taking tea, Caleb?" said Mrs.
32828 Garth, seeing that her absent-minded husband was putting on again the
32829 hat which he had just taken off.
32830
32831 "No, no; I'm only going to Mary a minute."
32832
32833 Mary was in a grassy corner of the garden, where there was a swing
32834 loftily hung between two pear-trees. She had a pink kerchief tied over
32835 her head, making a little poke to shade her eyes from the level
32836 sunbeams, while she was giving a glorious swing to Letty, who laughed
32837 and screamed wildly.
32838
32839 Seeing her father, Mary left the swing and went to meet him, pushing
32840 back the pink kerchief and smiling afar off at him with the involuntary
32841 smile of loving pleasure.
32842
32843 "I came to look for you, Mary," said Mr. Garth. "Let us walk about a
32844 bit."
32845
32846 Mary knew quite well that her father had something particular to say:
32847 his eyebrows made their pathetic angle, and there was a tender gravity
32848 in his voice: these things had been signs to her when she was Letty's
32849 age. She put her arm within his, and they turned by the row of
32850 nut-trees.
32851
32852 "It will be a sad while before you can be married, Mary," said her
32853 father, not looking at her, but at the end of the stick which he held
32854 in his other hand.
32855
32856 "Not a sad while, father--I mean to be merry," said Mary, laughingly.
32857 "I have been single and merry for four-and-twenty years and more: I
32858 suppose it will not be quite as long again as that." Then, after a
32859 little pause, she said, more gravely, bending her face before her
32860 father's, "If you are contented with Fred?"
32861
32862 Caleb screwed up his mouth and turned his head aside wisely.
32863
32864 "Now, father, you did praise him last Wednesday. You said he had an
32865 uncommon notion of stock, and a good eye for things."
32866
32867 "Did I?" said Caleb, rather slyly.
32868
32869 "Yes, I put it all down, and the date, anno Domini, and everything,"
32870 said Mary. "You like things to be neatly booked. And then his
32871 behavior to you, father, is really good; he has a deep respect for you;
32872 and it is impossible to have a better temper than Fred has."
32873
32874 "Ay, ay; you want to coax me into thinking him a fine match."
32875
32876 "No, indeed, father. I don't love him because he is a fine match."
32877
32878 "What for, then?"
32879
32880 "Oh, dear, because I have always loved him. I should never like
32881 scolding any one else so well; and that is a point to be thought of in
32882 a husband."
32883
32884 "Your mind is quite settled, then, Mary?" said Caleb, returning to his
32885 first tone. "There's no other wish come into it since things have been
32886 going on as they have been of late?" (Caleb meant a great deal in that
32887 vague phrase;) "because, better late than never. A woman must not
32888 force her heart--she'll do a man no good by that."
32889
32890 "My feelings have not changed, father," said Mary, calmly. "I shall be
32891 constant to Fred as long as he is constant to me. I don't think either
32892 of us could spare the other, or like any one else better, however much
32893 we might admire them. It would make too great a difference to us--like
32894 seeing all the old places altered, and changing the name for
32895 everything. We must wait for each other a long while; but Fred knows
32896 that."
32897
32898 Instead of speaking immediately, Caleb stood still and screwed his
32899 stick on the grassy walk. Then he said, with emotion in his voice,
32900 "Well, I've got a bit of news. What do you think of Fred going to live
32901 at Stone Court, and managing the land there?"
32902
32903 "How can that ever be, father?" said Mary, wonderingly.
32904
32905 "He would manage it for his aunt Bulstrode. The poor woman has been to
32906 me begging and praying. She wants to do the lad good, and it might be
32907 a fine thing for him. With saving, he might gradually buy the stock,
32908 and he has a turn for farming."
32909
32910 "Oh, Fred would be so happy! It is too good to believe."
32911
32912 "Ah, but mind you," said Caleb, turning his head warningly, "I must
32913 take it on _my_ shoulders, and be responsible, and see after
32914 everything; and that will grieve your mother a bit, though she mayn't
32915 say so. Fred had need be careful."
32916
32917 "Perhaps it is too much, father," said Mary, checked in her joy.
32918 "There would be no happiness in bringing you any fresh trouble."
32919
32920 "Nay, nay; work is my delight, child, when it doesn't vex your mother.
32921 And then, if you and Fred get married," here Caleb's voice shook just
32922 perceptibly, "he'll be steady and saving; and you've got your mother's
32923 cleverness, and mine too, in a woman's sort of way; and you'll keep him
32924 in order. He'll be coming by-and-by, so I wanted to tell you first,
32925 because I think you'd like to tell _him_ by yourselves. After that, I
32926 could talk it well over with him, and we could go into business and the
32927 nature of things."
32928
32929 "Oh, you dear good father!" cried Mary, putting her hands round her
32930 father's neck, while he bent his head placidly, willing to be caressed.
32931 "I wonder if any other girl thinks her father the best man in the
32932 world!"
32933
32934 "Nonsense, child; you'll think your husband better."
32935
32936 "Impossible," said Mary, relapsing into her usual tone; "husbands are
32937 an inferior class of men, who require keeping in order."
32938
32939 When they were entering the house with Letty, who had run to join them,
32940 Mary saw Fred at the orchard-gate, and went to meet him.
32941
32942 "What fine clothes you wear, you extravagant youth!" said Mary, as Fred
32943 stood still and raised his hat to her with playful formality. "You are
32944 not learning economy."
32945
32946 "Now that is too bad, Mary," said Fred. "Just look at the edges of
32947 these coat-cuffs! It is only by dint of good brushing that I look
32948 respectable. I am saving up three suits--one for a wedding-suit."
32949
32950 "How very droll you will look!--like a gentleman in an old
32951 fashion-book."
32952
32953 "Oh no, they will keep two years."
32954
32955 "Two years! be reasonable, Fred," said Mary, turning to walk. "Don't
32956 encourage flattering expectations."
32957
32958 "Why not? One lives on them better than on unflattering ones. If we
32959 can't be married in two years, the truth will be quite bad enough when
32960 it comes."
32961
32962 "I have heard a story of a young gentleman who once encouraged
32963 flattering expectations, and they did him harm."
32964
32965 "Mary, if you've got something discouraging to tell me, I shall bolt; I
32966 shall go into the house to Mr. Garth. I am out of spirits. My father
32967 is so cut up--home is not like itself. I can't bear any more bad news."
32968
32969 "Should you call it bad news to be told that you were to live at Stone
32970 Court, and manage the farm, and be remarkably prudent, and save money
32971 every year till all the stock and furniture were your own, and you were
32972 a distinguished agricultural character, as Mr. Borthrop Trumbull
32973 says--rather stout, I fear, and with the Greek and Latin sadly
32974 weather-worn?"
32975
32976 "You don't mean anything except nonsense, Mary?" said Fred, coloring
32977 slightly nevertheless.
32978
32979 "That is what my father has just told me of as what may happen, and he
32980 never talks nonsense," said Mary, looking up at Fred now, while he
32981 grasped her hand as they walked, till it rather hurt her; but she would
32982 not complain.
32983
32984 "Oh, I could be a tremendously good fellow then, Mary, and we could be
32985 married directly."
32986
32987 "Not so fast, sir; how do you know that I would not rather defer our
32988 marriage for some years? That would leave you time to misbehave, and
32989 then if I liked some one else better, I should have an excuse for
32990 jilting you."
32991
32992 "Pray don't joke, Mary," said Fred, with strong feeling. "Tell me
32993 seriously that all this is true, and that you are happy because of
32994 it--because you love me best."
32995
32996 "It is all true, Fred, and I am happy because of it--because I love you
32997 best," said Mary, in a tone of obedient recitation.
32998
32999 They lingered on the door-step under the steep-roofed porch, and Fred
33000 almost in a whisper said--
33001
33002 "When we were first engaged, with the umbrella-ring, Mary, you used
33003 to--"
33004
33005 The spirit of joy began to laugh more decidedly in Mary's eyes, but the
33006 fatal Ben came running to the door with Brownie yapping behind him,
33007 and, bouncing against them, said--
33008
33009 "Fred and Mary! are you ever coming in?--or may I eat your cake?"
33010
33011
33012 FINALE.
33013
33014
33015 Every limit is a beginning as well as an ending. Who can quit young
33016 lives after being long in company with them, and not desire to know
33017 what befell them in their after-years? For the fragment of a life,
33018 however typical, is not the sample of an even web: promises may not be
33019 kept, and an ardent outset may be followed by declension; latent powers
33020 may find their long-waited opportunity; a past error may urge a grand
33021 retrieval.
33022
33023 Marriage, which has been the bourne of so many narratives, is still a
33024 great beginning, as it was to Adam and Eve, who kept their honeymoon in
33025 Eden, but had their first little one among the thorns and thistles of
33026 the wilderness. It is still the beginning of the home epic--the
33027 gradual conquest or irremediable loss of that complete union which
33028 makes the advancing years a climax, and age the harvest of sweet
33029 memories in common.
33030
33031 Some set out, like Crusaders of old, with a glorious equipment of hope
33032 and enthusiasm and get broken by the way, wanting patience with each
33033 other and the world.
33034
33035 All who have cared for Fred Vincy and Mary Garth will like to know that
33036 these two made no such failure, but achieved a solid mutual happiness.
33037 Fred surprised his neighbors in various ways. He became rather
33038 distinguished in his side of the county as a theoretic and practical
33039 farmer, and produced a work on the "Cultivation of Green Crops and the
33040 Economy of Cattle-Feeding" which won him high congratulations at
33041 agricultural meetings. In Middlemarch admiration was more reserved:
33042 most persons there were inclined to believe that the merit of Fred's
33043 authorship was due to his wife, since they had never expected Fred
33044 Vincy to write on turnips and mangel-wurzel.
33045
33046 But when Mary wrote a little book for her boys, called "Stories of
33047 Great Men, taken from Plutarch," and had it printed and published by
33048 Gripp & Co., Middlemarch, every one in the town was willing to give the
33049 credit of this work to Fred, observing that he had been to the
33050 University, "where the ancients were studied," and might have been a
33051 clergyman if he had chosen.
33052
33053 In this way it was made clear that Middlemarch had never been deceived,
33054 and that there was no need to praise anybody for writing a book, since
33055 it was always done by somebody else.
33056
33057 Moreover, Fred remained unswervingly steady. Some years after his
33058 marriage he told Mary that his happiness was half owing to Farebrother,
33059 who gave him a strong pull-up at the right moment. I cannot say that
33060 he was never again misled by his hopefulness: the yield of crops or the
33061 profits of a cattle sale usually fell below his estimate; and he was
33062 always prone to believe that he could make money by the purchase of a
33063 horse which turned out badly--though this, Mary observed, was of
33064 course the fault of the horse, not of Fred's judgment. He kept his
33065 love of horsemanship, but he rarely allowed himself a day's hunting;
33066 and when he did so, it was remarkable that he submitted to be laughed
33067 at for cowardliness at the fences, seeming to see Mary and the boys
33068 sitting on the five-barred gate, or showing their curly heads between
33069 hedge and ditch.
33070
33071 There were three boys: Mary was not discontented that she brought forth
33072 men-children only; and when Fred wished to have a girl like her, she
33073 said, laughingly, "that would be too great a trial to your mother."
33074 Mrs. Vincy in her declining years, and in the diminished lustre of her
33075 housekeeping, was much comforted by her perception that two at least of
33076 Fred's boys were real Vincys, and did not "feature the Garths." But
33077 Mary secretly rejoiced that the youngest of the three was very much
33078 what her father must have been when he wore a round jacket, and showed
33079 a marvellous nicety of aim in playing at marbles, or in throwing stones
33080 to bring down the mellow pears.
33081
33082 Ben and Letty Garth, who were uncle and aunt before they were well in
33083 their teens, disputed much as to whether nephews or nieces were more
33084 desirable; Ben contending that it was clear girls were good for less
33085 than boys, else they would not be always in petticoats, which showed
33086 how little they were meant for; whereupon Letty, who argued much from
33087 books, got angry in replying that God made coats of skins for both Adam
33088 and Eve alike--also it occurred to her that in the East the men too
33089 wore petticoats. But this latter argument, obscuring the majesty of
33090 the former, was one too many, for Ben answered contemptuously, "The
33091 more spooneys they!" and immediately appealed to his mother whether
33092 boys were not better than girls. Mrs. Garth pronounced that both were
33093 alike naughty, but that boys were undoubtedly stronger, could run
33094 faster, and throw with more precision to a greater distance. With this
33095 oracular sentence Ben was well satisfied, not minding the naughtiness;
33096 but Letty took it ill, her feeling of superiority being stronger than
33097 her muscles.
33098
33099 Fred never became rich--his hopefulness had not led him to expect that;
33100 but he gradually saved enough to become owner of the stock and
33101 furniture at Stone Court, and the work which Mr. Garth put into his
33102 hands carried him in plenty through those "bad times" which are always
33103 present with farmers. Mary, in her matronly days, became as solid in
33104 figure as her mother; but, unlike her, gave the boys little formal
33105 teaching, so that Mrs. Garth was alarmed lest they should never be well
33106 grounded in grammar and geography. Nevertheless, they were found quite
33107 forward enough when they went to school; perhaps, because they had
33108 liked nothing so well as being with their mother. When Fred was riding
33109 home on winter evenings he had a pleasant vision beforehand of the
33110 bright hearth in the wainscoted parlor, and was sorry for other men who
33111 could not have Mary for their wife; especially for Mr. Farebrother.
33112 "He was ten times worthier of you than I was," Fred could now say to
33113 her, magnanimously. "To be sure he was," Mary answered; "and for that
33114 reason he could do better without me. But you--I shudder to think what
33115 you would have been--a curate in debt for horse-hire and cambric
33116 pocket-handkerchiefs!"
33117
33118 On inquiry it might possibly be found that Fred and Mary still inhabit
33119 Stone Court--that the creeping plants still cast the foam of their
33120 blossoms over the fine stone-wall into the field where the walnut-trees
33121 stand in stately row--and that on sunny days the two lovers who were
33122 first engaged with the umbrella-ring may be seen in white-haired
33123 placidity at the open window from which Mary Garth, in the days of old
33124 Peter Featherstone, had often been ordered to look out for Mr. Lydgate.
33125
33126 Lydgate's hair never became white. He died when he was only fifty,
33127 leaving his wife and children provided for by a heavy insurance on his
33128 life. He had gained an excellent practice, alternating, according to
33129 the season, between London and a Continental bathing-place; having
33130 written a treatise on Gout, a disease which has a good deal of wealth
33131 on its side. His skill was relied on by many paying patients, but he
33132 always regarded himself as a failure: he had not done what he once
33133 meant to do. His acquaintances thought him enviable to have so
33134 charming a wife, and nothing happened to shake their opinion. Rosamond
33135 never committed a second compromising indiscretion. She simply
33136 continued to be mild in her temper, inflexible in her judgment,
33137 disposed to admonish her husband, and able to frustrate him by
33138 stratagem. As the years went on he opposed her less and less, whence
33139 Rosamond concluded that he had learned the value of her opinion; on the
33140 other hand, she had a more thorough conviction of his talents now that
33141 he gained a good income, and instead of the threatened cage in Bride
33142 Street provided one all flowers and gilding, fit for the bird of
33143 paradise that she resembled. In brief, Lydgate was what is called a
33144 successful man. But he died prematurely of diphtheria, and Rosamond
33145 afterwards married an elderly and wealthy physician, who took kindly to
33146 her four children. She made a very pretty show with her daughters,
33147 driving out in her carriage, and often spoke of her happiness as "a
33148 reward"--she did not say for what, but probably she meant that it was a
33149 reward for her patience with Tertius, whose temper never became
33150 faultless, and to the last occasionally let slip a bitter speech which
33151 was more memorable than the signs he made of his repentance. He once
33152 called her his basil plant; and when she asked for an explanation, said
33153 that basil was a plant which had flourished wonderfully on a murdered
33154 man's brains. Rosamond had a placid but strong answer to such
33155 speeches. Why then had he chosen her? It was a pity he had not had
33156 Mrs. Ladislaw, whom he was always praising and placing above her. And
33157 thus the conversation ended with the advantage on Rosamond's side. But
33158 it would be unjust not to tell, that she never uttered a word in
33159 depreciation of Dorothea, keeping in religious remembrance the
33160 generosity which had come to her aid in the sharpest crisis of her life.
33161
33162 Dorothea herself had no dreams of being praised above other women,
33163 feeling that there was always something better which she might have
33164 done, if she had only been better and known better. Still, she never
33165 repented that she had given up position and fortune to marry Will
33166 Ladislaw, and he would have held it the greatest shame as well as
33167 sorrow to him if she had repented. They were bound to each other by a
33168 love stronger than any impulses which could have marred it. No life
33169 would have been possible to Dorothea which was not filled with emotion,
33170 and she had now a life filled also with a beneficent activity which she
33171 had not the doubtful pains of discovering and marking out for herself.
33172 Will became an ardent public man, working well in those times when
33173 reforms were begun with a young hopefulness of immediate good which has
33174 been much checked in our days, and getting at last returned to
33175 Parliament by a constituency who paid his expenses. Dorothea could
33176 have liked nothing better, since wrongs existed, than that her husband
33177 should be in the thick of a struggle against them, and that she should
33178 give him wifely help. Many who knew her, thought it a pity that so
33179 substantive and rare a creature should have been absorbed into the life
33180 of another, and be only known in a certain circle as a wife and mother.
33181 But no one stated exactly what else that was in her power she ought
33182 rather to have done--not even Sir James Chettam, who went no further
33183 than the negative prescription that she ought not to have married Will
33184 Ladislaw.
33185
33186 But this opinion of his did not cause a lasting alienation; and the way
33187 in which the family was made whole again was characteristic of all
33188 concerned. Mr. Brooke could not resist the pleasure of corresponding
33189 with Will and Dorothea; and one morning when his pen had been
33190 remarkably fluent on the prospects of Municipal Reform, it ran off into
33191 an invitation to the Grange, which, once written, could not be done
33192 away with at less cost than the sacrifice (hardly to be conceived) of
33193 the whole valuable letter. During the months of this correspondence
33194 Mr. Brooke had continually, in his talk with Sir James Chettam, been
33195 presupposing or hinting that the intention of cutting off the entail
33196 was still maintained; and the day on which his pen gave the daring
33197 invitation, he went to Freshitt expressly to intimate that he had a
33198 stronger sense than ever of the reasons for taking that energetic step
33199 as a precaution against any mixture of low blood in the heir of the
33200 Brookes.
33201
33202 But that morning something exciting had happened at the Hall. A letter
33203 had come to Celia which made her cry silently as she read it; and when
33204 Sir James, unused to see her in tears, asked anxiously what was the
33205 matter, she burst out in a wail such as he had never heard from her
33206 before.
33207
33208 "Dorothea has a little boy. And you will not let me go and see her.
33209 And I am sure she wants to see me. And she will not know what to do
33210 with the baby--she will do wrong things with it. And they thought she
33211 would die. It is very dreadful! Suppose it had been me and little
33212 Arthur, and Dodo had been hindered from coming to see me! I wish you
33213 would be less unkind, James!"
33214
33215 "Good heavens, Celia!" said Sir James, much wrought upon, "what do you
33216 wish? I will do anything you like. I will take you to town to-morrow
33217 if you wish it." And Celia did wish it.
33218
33219 It was after this that Mr. Brooke came, and meeting the Baronet in the
33220 grounds, began to chat with him in ignorance of the news, which Sir
33221 James for some reason did not care to tell him immediately. But when
33222 the entail was touched on in the usual way, he said, "My dear sir, it
33223 is not for me to dictate to you, but for my part I would let that
33224 alone. I would let things remain as they are."
33225
33226 Mr. Brooke felt so much surprised that he did not at once find out how
33227 much he was relieved by the sense that he was not expected to do
33228 anything in particular.
33229
33230 Such being the bent of Celia's heart, it was inevitable that Sir James
33231 should consent to a reconciliation with Dorothea and her husband.
33232 Where women love each other, men learn to smother their mutual dislike.
33233 Sir James never liked Ladislaw, and Will always preferred to have Sir
33234 James's company mixed with another kind: they were on a footing of
33235 reciprocal tolerance which was made quite easy only when Dorothea and
33236 Celia were present.
33237
33238 It became an understood thing that Mr. and Mrs. Ladislaw should pay at
33239 least two visits during the year to the Grange, and there came
33240 gradually a small row of cousins at Freshitt who enjoyed playing with
33241 the two cousins visiting Tipton as much as if the blood of these
33242 cousins had been less dubiously mixed.
33243
33244 Mr. Brooke lived to a good old age, and his estate was inherited by
33245 Dorothea's son, who might have represented Middlemarch, but declined,
33246 thinking that his opinions had less chance of being stifled if he
33247 remained out of doors.
33248
33249 Sir James never ceased to regard Dorothea's second marriage as a
33250 mistake; and indeed this remained the tradition concerning it in
33251 Middlemarch, where she was spoken of to a younger generation as a fine
33252 girl who married a sickly clergyman, old enough to be her father, and
33253 in little more than a year after his death gave up her estate to marry
33254 his cousin--young enough to have been his son, with no property, and
33255 not well-born. Those who had not seen anything of Dorothea usually
33256 observed that she could not have been "a nice woman," else she would
33257 not have married either the one or the other.
33258
33259 Certainly those determining acts of her life were not ideally
33260 beautiful. They were the mixed result of young and noble impulse
33261 struggling amidst the conditions of an imperfect social state, in which
33262 great feelings will often take the aspect of error, and great faith the
33263 aspect of illusion. For there is no creature whose inward being is so
33264 strong that it is not greatly determined by what lies outside it. A
33265 new Theresa will hardly have the opportunity of reforming a conventual
33266 life, any more than a new Antigone will spend her heroic piety in
33267 daring all for the sake of a brother's burial: the medium in which
33268 their ardent deeds took shape is forever gone. But we insignificant
33269 people with our daily words and acts are preparing the lives of many
33270 Dorotheas, some of which may present a far sadder sacrifice than that
33271 of the Dorothea whose story we know.
33272
33273 Her finely touched spirit had still its fine issues, though they were
33274 not widely visible. Her full nature, like that river of which Cyrus
33275 broke the strength, spent itself in channels which had no great name on
33276 the earth. But the effect of her being on those around her was
33277 incalculably diffusive: for the growing good of the world is partly
33278 dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you
33279 and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived
33280 faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.