THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL
PART 1
BY ANNE
BRONTË
with
an introduction
BY MRS HUMPHREY WARD
BY MRS HUMPHREY WARD
INTRODUCTION
Anne
Brontë serves a twofold purpose in the study of what the
Brontës wrote and were. In the first place, her gentle and delicate presence,
her sad, short story, her hard life and early death, enter deeply into the
poetry and tragedy that have always been entwined with the memory of the
Brontës, as women and as writers; in the second, the books and poems that she
wrote serve as matter of comparison by which to test the greatness of her two
sisters. She is the measure of their genius—like them, yet not with them.
Many years
after Anne’s death her brother-in-law protested against a supposed portrait of
her, as giving a totally wrong impression of the ‘dear, gentle Anne
Brontë.’ ‘Dear’ and ‘gentle’ indeed she seems to have been through life,
the youngest and prettiest of the sisters, with a delicate complexion, a
slender neck, and small, pleasant features. Notwithstanding, she possessed
in full the Brontë seriousness, the Brontë strength of will. When her
father asked her at four years old what a little child like her wanted most,
the tiny creature replied—if it were not a Brontë it would be incredible!—‘Age
and experience.’ When the three children started their
‘Island Plays’ together in 1827, Anne, who was then eight, chose Guernsey for
her imaginary island, and peopled it with ‘Michael Sadler, Lord Bentinck, and
Sir Henry Halford.’ She and Emily were constant companions, and there is
evidence that they shared a common world of fancy from very early days to
mature womanhood. ‘The Gondal Chronicles’ seem to have amused them for
many years, and to have branched out into innumerable books, written in the
‘tiny writing’ of which Mr. Clement Shorter has given us facsimiles. ‘I
am now engaged in writing the fourth volume of Solala Vernon’s Life,’ says Anne
at twenty-one. And four years later Emily says, ‘The Gondals still
flourish bright as ever. I am at present writing a work on the First
War. Anne has been writing some articles on this and a book by Henry
Sophona. We intend sticking firm by the rascals as long as they delight
us, which I am glad to say they do at present.’
That the
author of ‘Wildfell Hall’ should ever have delighted in the Gondals, should
ever have written the story of Solala Vernon or Henry Sophona, is pleasant to
know. Then, for her too, as for her sisters, there was a moment when the
power of ‘making out’ could turn loneliness and disappointment into riches and
content. For a time at least, and before a hard and degrading experience
had broken the spring of her youth, and replaced the disinterested and
spontaneous pleasure that is to be got from the life and play of imagination,
by a sad sense of duty, and an inexorable consciousness of
moral and religious mission, Anne Brontë wrote stories for her own amusement,
and loved the ‘rascals’ she created.
But
already in 1841, when we first hear of the Gondals and Solala Vernon, the
material for quite other books was in poor Anne’s mind. She was then
teaching in the family at Thorpe Green, where Branwell joined her as tutor in
1843, and where, owing to events that are still a mystery, she seems to have
passed through an ordeal that left her shattered in health and nerve, with
nothing gained but those melancholy and repulsive memories that she was
afterwards to embody in ‘Wildfell Hall.’ She seems, indeed, to have been
partly the victim of Branwell’s morbid imagination, the imagination of an
opium-eater and a drunkard. That he was neither the conqueror nor the
villain that he made his sisters believe, all the evidence that has been
gathered since Mrs. Gaskell wrote goes to show. But poor Anne believed
his account of himself, and no doubt saw enough evidence of vicious character
in Branwell’s daily life to make the worst enormities credible. She seems
to have passed the last months of her stay at Thorpe Green under a cloud of
dread and miserable suspicion, and was thankful to escape from her situation in
the summer of 1845. At the same moment Branwell was summarily dismissed
from his tutorship, his employer, Mr. Robinson, writing a stern letter of
complaint to Bramwell’s father, concerned no doubt with the young man’s
disorderly and intemperate habits. Mrs. Gaskell says: ‘The premature
deaths of two at least of the sisters all the great possibilities of their earthly lives snapped short—may be
dated from Midsummer 1845.’ The facts as we now know them hardly bear out
so strong a judgment. There is nothing to show that Branwell’s conduct
was responsible in any way for Emily’s illness and death, and Anne, in the
contemporary fragment recovered by Mr. Shorter, gives a less tragic account of
the matter. ‘During my stay (at Thorpe Green),’ she writes on July 31,
1845, ‘I have had some very unpleasant and undreamt-of experience of human
nature. . . . Branwell has . . . been a tutor at Thorpe Green, and had
much tribulation and ill-health. . . . We hope he will be better and do
better in future.’ And at the end of the paper she says, sadly,
forecasting the coming years, ‘I for my part cannot well be flatter or older in
mind than I am now.’ This is the language of disappointment and anxiety;
but it hardly fits the tragic story that Mrs. Gaskell believed.
That story
was, no doubt, the elaboration of Branwell’s diseased fancy during the three
years which elapsed between his dismissal from Thorpe Green and his
death. He imagined a guilty romance with himself and his employer’s wife
for characters, and he imposed the horrid story upon his sisters. Opium
and drink are the sufficient explanations; and no time need now be wasted upon
unravelling the sordid mystery. But the vices of the brother, real or
imaginary, have a certain importance in literature, because of the effect they
produced upon his sisters. There can be no question that Branwell’s opium
madness, his bouts of drunkenness at the Black Bull, his
violence at home, his free and coarse talk, and his perpetual boast of guilty
secrets, influenced the imagination of his wholly pure and inexperienced
sisters. Much of ‘Wuthering Heights,’ and all of ‘Wildfell Hall,’ show
Branwell’s mark, and there are many passages in Charlotte’s books also where
those who know the history of the parsonage can hear the voice of those sharp moral
repulsions, those dismal moral questionings, to which Branwell’s misconduct and
ruin gave rise. Their brother’s fate was an element in the genius of
Emily and Charlotte which they were strong enough to assimilate, which may have
done them some harm, and weakened in them certain delicate or sane perceptions,
but was ultimately, by the strange alchemy of talent, far more profitable than
hurtful, inasmuch as it troubled the waters of the soul, and brought them near
to the more desperate realities of our ‘frail, fall’n humankind.’
But Anne
was not strong enough, her gift was not vigorous enough, to enable her thus to
transmute experience and grief. The probability is that when she left
Thorpe Green in 1845 she was already suffering from that religious melancholy
of which Charlotte discovered such piteous evidence among her papers after
death. It did not much affect the writing of ‘Agnes Grey,’ which was
completed in 1846, and reflected the minor pains and discomforts of her
teaching experience, but it combined with the spectacle of Branwell’s
increasing moral and physical decay to produce that bitter mandate of
conscience under which she wrote ‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.’
‘Hers was naturally a sensitive, reserved, and dejected nature. She hated
her work, but would pursue it. It was written as a warning,’—so said
Charlotte when, in the pathetic Preface of 1850, she was endeavouring to
explain to the public how a creature so gentle and so good as Acton Bell should
have written such a book as ‘Wildfell Hall.’ And in the second edition of
‘Wildfell Hall,’ which appeared in 1848, Anne Brontë herself justified her
novel in a Preface which is reprinted in this volume for the first time.
The little Preface is a curious document. It has the same determined
didactic tone which pervades the book itself, the same narrowness of view, and
inflation of expression, an inflation which is really due not to any personal
egotism in the writer, but rather to that very gentleness and inexperience
which must yet nerve itself under the stimulus of religion to its disagreeable
and repulsive task. ‘I knew that such characters’—as Huntingdon and his
companions—‘do exist, and if I have warned one rash youth from following in
their steps the book has not been written in vain.’ If the story has given
more pain than pleasure to ‘any honest reader,’ the writer ‘craves his pardon,
for such was far from my intention.’ But at the same time she cannot
promise to limit her ambition to the giving of innocent pleasure, or to the
production of ‘a perfect work of art.’ ‘Time and talent so spent I should
consider wasted and misapplied.’ God has given her unpalatable truths to
speak, and she must speak them.
The
measure of misconstruction and abuse, therefore, which her
book brought upon her she bore, says her sister, ‘as it was her custom to bear
whatever was unpleasant, with mild, steady patience. She was a very
sincere and practical Christian, but the tinge of religious melancholy
communicated a sad shade to her brief, blameless life.’
In spite
of misconstruction and abuse, however, ‘Wildfell Hall’ seems to have attained
more immediate success than anything else written by the sisters before 1848,
except ‘Jane Eyre.’ It went into a second edition within a very short
time of its publication, and Messrs. Newby informed the American publishers
with whom they were negotiating that it was the work of the same hand which had
produced ‘Jane Eyre,’ and superior to either ‘Jane Eyre’ or ‘Wuthering
Heights’! It was, indeed, the sharp practice connected with this astonishing
judgment which led to the sisters’ hurried journey to London in 1848—the famous
journey when the two little ladies in black revealed themselves to Mr. Smith,
and proved to him that they were not one Currer Bell, but two Miss
Brontës. It was Anne’s sole journey to London—her only contact with a
world that was not Haworth, except that supplied by her school-life at Roehead
and her two teaching engagements.
And there
was and is a considerable narrative ability, a sheer moral energy in ‘Wildfell
Hall,’ which would not be enough, indeed, to keep it alive if it were not the
work of a Brontë, but still betray its kinship and source. The scenes of
Huntingdon’s wickedness are less interesting but less improbable than the
country-house scenes of ‘Jane Eyre’; the story of his death has many true and touching passages; the last love-scene is well, even in parts
admirably, written. But the book’s truth, so far as it is true, is
scarcely the truth of imagination; it is rather the truth of a tract or a
report. There can be little doubt that many of the pages are close
transcripts from Branwell’s conduct and language,—so far as Anne’s slighter
personality enabled her to render her brother’s temperament, which was more
akin to Emily’s than to her own. The same material might have been used
by Emily or Charlotte; Emily, as we know, did make use of it in ‘Wuthering
Heights’; but only after it had passed through that ineffable transformation,
that mysterious, incommunicable heightening which makes and gives rank in
literature. Some subtle, innate correspondence between eye and brain,
between brain and hand, was present in Emily and Charlotte, and absent in
Anne. There is no other account to be given of this or any other case of
difference between serviceable talent and the high gifts of ‘Delos’ and
Patara’s own Apollo.’
The same
world of difference appears between her poems and those of her playfellow and
comrade, Emily. If ever our descendants should establish the schools for
writers which are even now threatened or attempted, they will hardly know
perhaps any better than we what genius is, nor how it can be produced.
But if they try to teach by example, then Anne and Emily Brontë are ready to
their hand. Take the verses written by Emily at Roehead which contain the
lovely lines which I have already quoted in my ‘ Introduction to Wuthering Heights’, p. xl.
‘Still, as I mused the naked room,’ &c. Just before those lines there
are two or three verses which it is worth while to compare with a poem of
Anne’s called ‘Home.’ Emily was sixteen at the time of writing; Anne
about twenty-one or twenty-two. Both sisters take for their motive the
exile’s longing thought of home. Emily’s lines are full of faults, but
they have the indefinable quality—here, no doubt, only in the bud, only as a
matter of promise—which Anne’s are entirely without. From the twilight
schoolroom at Roehead, Emily turns in thought to the distant upland of Haworth
and the little stone-built house upon its crest:—
There is a spot, ’mid barren
hills,
Where winter howls, and driving rain;
But, if the dreary tempest chills,
There is a light that warms again.
Where winter howls, and driving rain;
But, if the dreary tempest chills,
There is a light that warms again.
The house is old, the trees are
bare,
Moonless above bends twilight’s dome,
But what on earth is half so dear—
So longed for—as the hearth of home?
Moonless above bends twilight’s dome,
But what on earth is half so dear—
So longed for—as the hearth of home?
The mute bird sitting on the
stone,
The dank moss dripping from the wall,
The thorn-trees gaunt, the walks o’ergrown,
I love them—how I love them all!
The dank moss dripping from the wall,
The thorn-trees gaunt, the walks o’ergrown,
I love them—how I love them all!
Anne’s
verses, written from one of the houses where she was a governess, express
precisely the same feeling, and movement of mind. But notice the
instinctive rightness and swiftness of Emily’s, the
blurred weakness of Anne’s!—
For yonder garden, fair and
wide,
With groves of evergreen,
Long winding walks, and borders trim,
And velvet lawns between—
With groves of evergreen,
Long winding walks, and borders trim,
And velvet lawns between—
Restore to me that little spot,
With gray walls compassed round,
Where knotted grass neglected lies,
And weeds usurp the ground.
With gray walls compassed round,
Where knotted grass neglected lies,
And weeds usurp the ground.
Though all around this mansion
high
Invites the foot to roam,
And though its halls are fair within—
Oh, give me back my Home!
Invites the foot to roam,
And though its halls are fair within—
Oh, give me back my Home!
A similar
parallel lies between Anne’s lines ‘Domestic Peace,’—a sad and true reflection
of the terrible times with Branwell in 1846—and Emily’s ‘Wanderer from the
Fold’; while in Emily’s ‘Last Lines,’ the daring spirit of the sister to whom
the magic gift was granted separates itself for ever from the gentle and
accustomed piety of the sister to whom it was denied. Yet Anne’s ‘Last
Lines’—‘I hoped that with the brave and strong’—have sweetness and sincerity;
they have gained and kept a place in English religious verse, and they must
always appeal to those who love the Brontës because, in the language of
Christian faith and submission, they record the death of Emily and the
passionate affection which her sisters bore her.
And so we
are brought back to the point from which we started.
It is not as the writer of ‘Wildfell Hall,’ but as the sister of Charlotte and
Emily Brontë, that Anne Brontë escapes oblivion—as the frail ‘little one,’ upon
whom the other two lavished a tender and protecting care, who was a witness of
Emily’s death, and herself, within a few minutes of her own farewell to life,
bade Charlotte ‘take courage.’
‘When my
thoughts turn to Anne,’ said Charlotte many years earlier, ‘they always see her
as a patient, persecuted stranger,—more lonely, less gifted with the power of
making friends even than I am.’ Later on, however, this power of making
friends seems to have belonged to Anne in greater measure than to the
others. Her gentleness conquered; she was not set apart, as they were, by
the lonely and self-sufficing activities of great powers; her Christianity,
though sad and timid, was of a kind which those around her could understand;
she made no grim fight with suffering and death as did Emily. Emily was
‘torn’ from life ‘conscious, panting, reluctant,’ to use Charlotte’s own words;
Anne’s ‘sufferings were mild,’ her mind ‘generally serene,’ and at the last ‘she
thanked God that death was come, and come so gently.’ When Charlotte
returned to the desolate house at Haworth, Emily’s large house-dog and Anne’s
little spaniel welcomed her in ‘a strange, heart-touching way,’ she writes to
Mr. Williams. She alone was left, heir to all the memories and tragedies
of the house. She took up again the task of life and labour. She
cared for her father; she returned to the writing of ‘Shirley’; and when she
herself passed away, four years later, she had so turned
those years to account that not only all she did but all she loved had passed
silently into the keeping of fame. Mrs. Gaskell’s touching and delightful
task was ready for her, and Anne, no less than Charlotte and Emily, was sure of
England’s remembrance.
MARY A.
WARD.
AUTHOR’S
PREFACE [1]
TO THE SECOND EDITION
While I
acknowledge the success of the present work to have been greater than I
anticipated, and the praises it has elicited from a few kind critics to have
been greater than it deserved, I must also admit that from some other quarters
it has been censured with an asperity which I was as little prepared to expect,
and which my judgment, as well as my feelings, assures me is more bitter than
just. It is scarcely the province of an author to refute the arguments of
his censors and vindicate his own productions; but I may be allowed to make
here a few observations with which I would have prefaced the first edition, had
I foreseen the necessity of such precautions against the misapprehensions of
those who would read it with a prejudiced mind or be content to judge it by a
hasty glance.
My object
in writing the following pages was not simply to amuse the Reader; neither was it
to gratify my own taste, nor yet to ingratiate myself with the Press and the
Public: I wished to tell the truth, for truth always conveys its own moral to
those who are able to receive it. But as the priceless treasure too
frequently hides at the bottom of a well, it needs some courage to dive for it,
especially as he that does so will be likely to incur more scorn and obloquy
for the mud and water into which he has ventured to plunge, than thanks for the
jewel he procures; as, in like manner, she who undertakes the cleansing of a
careless bachelor’s apartment will be liable to more abuse for the dust she
raises than commendation for the clearance she effects. Let it not be
imagined, however, that I consider myself competent to reform the errors and
abuses of society, but only that I would fain contribute my humble quota
towards so good an aim; and if I can gain the public ear at all, I would rather
whisper a few wholesome truths therein than much soft nonsense.
As the
story of ‘Agnes Grey’ was accused of extravagant over-colouring in those very
parts that were carefully copied from the life, with a most scrupulous
avoidance of all exaggeration, so, in the present work, I find myself censured
for depicting con amore, with ‘a morbid love of the coarse, if not of
the brutal,’ those scenes which, I will venture to say, have not been more
painful for the most fastidious of my critics to read than they were for me to
describe. I may have gone too far; in which case I shall be careful not
to trouble myself or my readers in the same way again; but when we have to do
with vice and vicious characters, I maintain it is better to depict them as
they really are than as they would wish to appear. To represent a bad
thing in its least offensive light is, doubtless, the most agreeable course for
a writer of fiction to pursue; but is it the most honest, or the safest?
Is it better to reveal the snares and pitfalls of life to the young and
thoughtless traveller, or to cover them with branches and flowers? Oh,
reader! if there were less of this delicate concealment of facts—this
whispering, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace, there would be less of sin
and misery to the young of both sexes who are left to wring their bitter
knowledge from experience.
I would
not be understood to suppose that the proceedings of the unhappy scapegrace,
with his few profligate companions I have here introduced, are a specimen of
the common practices of society—the case is an extreme one, as I trusted none
would fail to perceive; but I know that such characters do exist, and if I have
warned one rash youth from following in their steps, or prevented one
thoughtless girl from falling into the very natural error of my heroine, the
book has not been written in vain. But, at the same time, if any honest
reader shall have derived more pain than pleasure from its perusal, and have
closed the last volume with a disagreeable impression on his mind, I humbly
crave his pardon, for such was far from my intention; and I will endeavour to
do better another time, for I love to give innocent pleasure. Yet, be it
understood, I shall not limit my ambition to this—or even to producing ‘a
perfect work of art’: time and talents so spent, I should consider wasted and
misapplied. Such humble talents as God has given me I will endeavour to
put to their greatest use; if I am able to amuse, I will try to benefit too;
and when I feel it my duty to speak an unpalatable truth, with the help of God,
I will speak it, though it be to the prejudice of my name and to the detriment
of my reader’s immediate pleasure as well as my own.
One word
more, and I have done. Respecting the author’s identity, I would have it
to be distinctly understood that Acton Bell is neither Currer nor Ellis Bell,
and therefore let not his faults be attributed to them. As to whether the
name be real or fictitious, it cannot greatly signify to those who know him
only by his works. As little, I should think, can it matter whether the
writer so designated is a man, or a woman, as one or two of my critics profess
to have discovered. I take the imputation in good part, as a compliment
to the just delineation of my female characters; and though I am bound to
attribute much of the severity of my censors to this suspicion, I make no
effort to refute it, because, in my own mind, I am satisfied that if a book is
a good one, it is so whatever the sex of the author may be. All novels
are, or should be, written for both men and women to read, and I am at a loss
to conceive how a man should permit himself to write anything that would be
really disgraceful to a woman, or why a woman should be censured for writing
anything that would be proper and becoming for a man.
July 22nd, 1848.
CHAPTER I
You must
go back with me to the autumn of 1827.
My father,
as you know, was a sort of gentleman farmer in —shire; and I, by his express
desire, succeeded him in the same quiet occupation, not very willingly, for
ambition urged me to higher aims, and self-conceit assured me that, in
disregarding its voice, I was burying my talent in the earth, and hiding my
light under a bushel. My mother had done her utmost to persuade me that I
was capable of great achievements; but my father, who thought ambition was the
surest road to ruin, and change but another word for destruction, would listen
to no scheme for bettering either my own condition, or that of my fellow
mortals. He assured me it was all rubbish, and exhorted me, with his
dying breath, to continue in the good old way, to follow his steps, and those
of his father before him, and let my highest ambition be to walk honestly
through the world, looking neither to the right hand nor to the left, and to
transmit the paternal acres to my children in, at least, as flourishing a
condition as he left them to me.
‘Well!—an
honest and industrious farmer is one of the most useful members of society; and
if I devote my talents to the cultivation of my farm, and the improvement of
agriculture in general, I shall thereby benefit, not only my own immediate
connections and dependants, but, in some degree, mankind at large:—hence I
shall not have lived in vain.’ With such reflections as these I was
endeavouring to console myself, as I plodded home from the fields, one cold,
damp, cloudy evening towards the close of October. But the gleam of a
bright red fire through the parlour window had more effect in cheering my
spirits, and rebuking my thankless repinings, than all the sage reflections and
good resolutions I had forced my mind to frame;—for I was young then,
remember—only four-and-twenty—and had not acquired half the rule over my own
spirit that I now possess—trifling as that may be.
However,
that haven of bliss must not be entered till I had exchanged my miry boots for
a clean pair of shoes, and my rough surtout for a respectable coat, and made
myself generally presentable before decent society; for my mother, with all her
kindness, was vastly particular on certain points.
In
ascending to my room I was met upon the stairs by a smart, pretty girl of
nineteen, with a tidy, dumpy figure, a round face, bright, blooming cheeks,
glossy, clustering curls, and little merry brown eyes. I need not tell
you this was my sister Rose. She is, I know, a comely matron still, and,
doubtless, no less lovely—in your eyes—than on the happy day you first beheld
her. Nothing told me then that she, a few years hence, would be the wife
of one entirely unknown to me as yet, but destined hereafter to become a closer
friend than even herself, more intimate than that unmannerly lad of seventeen,
by whom I was collared in the passage, on coming down, and well-nigh jerked off
my equilibrium, and who, in correction for his impudence, received a resounding
whack over the sconce, which, however, sustained no serious injury from the
infliction; as, besides being more than commonly thick, it was protected by a
redundant shock of short, reddish curls, that my mother called auburn.
On
entering the parlour we found that honoured lady seated in her arm-chair at the
fireside, working away at her knitting, according to her usual custom, when she
had nothing else to do. She had swept the hearth, and made a bright
blazing fire for our reception; the servant had just brought in the tea-tray;
and Rose was producing the sugar-basin and tea-caddy from the cupboard in the
black oak side-board, that shone like polished ebony, in the cheerful parlour
twilight.
‘Well!
here they both are,’ cried my mother, looking round upon us without retarding
the motion of her nimble fingers and glittering needles. ‘Now shut the
door, and come to the fire, while Rose gets the tea ready; I’m sure you must be
starved;—and tell me what you’ve been about all day;—I like to know what my
children have been about.’
‘I’ve been
breaking in the grey colt—no easy business that—directing the ploughing of the
last wheat stubble—for the ploughboy has not the sense to direct himself—and
carrying out a plan for the extensive and efficient draining of the low
meadowlands.’
‘That’s my
brave boy!—and Fergus, what have you been doing?’
‘Badger-baiting.’
And here
he proceeded to give a particular account of his sport, and the respective
traits of prowess evinced by the badger and the dogs; my mother pretending to
listen with deep attention, and watching his animated countenance with a degree
of maternal admiration I thought highly disproportioned to its object.
‘It’s time
you should be doing something else, Fergus,’ said I, as soon as a momentary
pause in his narration allowed me to get in a word.
‘What can
I do?’ replied he; ‘my mother won’t let me go to sea or enter the army; and I’m
determined to do nothing else—except make myself such a nuisance to you all,
that you will be thankful to get rid of me on any terms.’
Our parent
soothingly stroked his stiff, short curls. He growled, and tried to look
sulky, and then we all took our seats at the table, in obedience to the
thrice-repeated summons of Rose.
‘Now take
your tea,’ said she; ‘and I’ll tell you what I’ve been doing. I’ve been
to call on the Wilsons; and it’s a thousand pities you didn’t go with me, Gilbert,
for Eliza Millward was there!’
‘Well!
what of her?’
‘Oh,
nothing!—I’m not going to tell you about her;—only that she’s a nice, amusing
little thing, when she is in a merry humour, and I shouldn’t mind calling her—’
‘Hush,
hush, my dear! your brother has no such idea!’ whispered my mother earnestly,
holding up her finger.
‘Well,’
resumed Rose; ‘I was going to tell you an important piece of news I heard
there—I have been bursting with it ever since. You know it was reported a
month ago, that somebody was going to take Wildfell Hall—and—what do you
think? It has actually been inhabited above a week!—and we never knew!’
‘Impossible!’
cried my mother.
‘Preposterous!!!’
shrieked Fergus.
‘It has
indeed!—and by a single lady!’
‘Good
gracious, my dear! The place is in ruins!’
‘She has
had two or three rooms made habitable; and there she lives, all alone—except an
old woman for a servant!’
‘Oh, dear!
that spoils it—I’d hoped she was a witch,’ observed Fergus, while carving his
inch-thick slice of bread and butter. ‘Nonsense, Fergus! But isn’t
it strange, mamma?’
‘Strange!
I can hardly believe it.’
‘But you
may believe it; for Jane Wilson has seen her. She went with her mother,
who, of course, when she heard of a stranger being in the neighbourhood, would
be on pins and needles till she had seen her and got all she could out of
her. She is called Mrs. Graham, and she is in mourning—not widow’s weeds,
but slightish mourning—and she is quite young, they say,—not above five or six
and twenty,—but so reserved! They tried all they could to find out who
she was and where she came from, and, all about her, but neither Mrs. Wilson,
with her pertinacious and impertinent home-thrusts, nor Miss Wilson, with her
skilful manoeuvring, could manage to elicit a single satisfactory answer, or
even a casual remark, or chance expression calculated to allay their curiosity,
or throw the faintest ray of light upon her history, circumstances, or
connections. Moreover, she was barely civil to them, and evidently better
pleased to say ‘good-by,’ than ‘how do you do.’ But Eliza Millward says her
father intends to call upon her soon, to offer some pastoral advice, which he
fears she needs, as, though she is known to have entered the neighbourhood
early last week, she did not make her appearance at church on Sunday; and
she—Eliza, that is—will beg to accompany him, and is sure she can succeed in
wheedling something out of her—you know, Gilbert, she can do anything.
And we should call some time, mamma; it’s only proper, you know.’
‘Of
course, my dear. Poor thing! How lonely she must feel!’
‘And pray,
be quick about it; and mind you bring me word how much sugar she puts in her
tea, and what sort of caps and aprons she wears, and all about it; for I don’t
know how I can live till I know,’ said Fergus, very gravely.
But if he
intended the speech to be hailed as a master-stroke of wit, he signally failed,
for nobody laughed. However, he was not much disconcerted at that; for
when he had taken a mouthful of bread and butter and was about to swallow a
gulp of tea, the humour of the thing burst upon him with such irresistible
force, that he was obliged to jump up from the table, and rush snorting and
choking from the room; and a minute after, was heard screaming in fearful agony
in the garden.
As for me,
I was hungry, and contented myself with silently demolishing the tea, ham, and
toast, while my mother and sister went on talking, and continued to discuss the
apparent or non-apparent circumstances, and probable or improbable history of
the mysterious lady; but I must confess that, after my brother’s misadventure,
I once or twice raised the cup to my lips, and put it down again without daring
to taste the contents, lest I should injure my dignity by a similar explosion.
The next
day my mother and Rose hastened to pay their compliments to the fair recluse;
and came back but little wiser than they went; though my mother declared she
did not regret the journey, for if she had not gained much good, she flattered
herself she had imparted some, and that was better: she had given some useful
advice, which, she hoped, would not be thrown away; for Mrs. Graham, though she
said little to any purpose, and appeared somewhat self-opinionated, seemed not
incapable of reflection,—though she did not know where she had been all her
life, poor thing, for she betrayed a lamentable ignorance on certain points,
and had not even the sense to be ashamed of it.
‘On what
points, mother?’ asked I.
‘On
household matters, and all the little niceties of cookery, and such things,
that every lady ought to be familiar with, whether she be required to make a
practical use of her knowledge or not. I gave her some useful pieces of
information, however, and several excellent receipts, the value of which she evidently
could not appreciate, for she begged I would not trouble myself, as she lived
in such a plain, quiet way, that she was sure she should never make use of
them. “No matter, my dear,” said I; “it is what every respectable female
ought to know;—and besides, though you are alone now, you will not be always
so; you have been married, and probably—I might say almost certainly—will be
again.” “You are mistaken there, ma’am,” said she, almost haughtily; “I
am certain I never shall.”—But I told her I knew better.’
‘Some
romantic young widow, I suppose,’ said I, ‘come there to end her days in
solitude, and mourn in secret for the dear departed—but it won’t last long.’
‘No, I
think not,’ observed Rose; ‘for she didn’t seem very disconsolate after all;
and she’s excessively pretty—handsome rather—you must see her, Gilbert; you
will call her a perfect beauty, though you could hardly pretend to discover a
resemblance between her and Eliza Millward.’
‘Well, I
can imagine many faces more beautiful than Eliza’s, though not more
charming. I allow she has small claims to perfection; but then, I
maintain that, if she were more perfect, she would be less interesting.’
‘And so
you prefer her faults to other people’s perfections?’
‘Just
so—saving my mother’s presence.’
‘Oh, my
dear Gilbert, what nonsense you talk!—I know you don’t mean it; it’s quite out
of the question,’ said my mother, getting up, and bustling out of the room,
under pretence of household business, in order to escape the contradiction that
was trembling on my tongue.
After that
Rose favoured me with further particulars respecting Mrs. Graham. Her
appearance, manners, and dress, and the very furniture of the room she
inhabited, were all set before me, with rather more clearness and precision
than I cared to see them; but, as I was not a very attentive listener, I could
not repeat the description if I would.
The next
day was Saturday; and, on Sunday, everybody wondered whether or not the fair
unknown would profit by the vicar’s remonstrance, and come to church. I
confess I looked with some interest myself towards the old family pew,
appertaining to Wildfell Hall, where the faded crimson cushions and lining had
been unpressed and unrenewed so many years, and the grim escutcheons, with
their lugubrious borders of rusty black cloth, frowned so sternly from the wall
above.
And there
I beheld a tall, lady-like figure, clad in black. Her face was towards
me, and there was something in it which, once seen, invited me to look
again. Her hair was raven black, and disposed in long glossy ringlets, a
style of coiffure rather unusual in those days, but always graceful and
becoming; her complexion was clear and pale; her eyes I could not see, for,
being bent upon her prayer-book, they were concealed by their drooping lids and
long black lashes, but the brows above were expressive and well defined; the
forehead was lofty and intellectual, the nose, a perfect aquiline and the
features, in general, unexceptionable—only there was a slight hollowness about
the cheeks and eyes, and the lips, though finely formed, were a little too
thin, a little too firmly compressed, and had something about them that
betokened, I thought, no very soft or amiable temper; and I said in my heart—‘I
would rather admire you from this distance, fair lady, than be the partner of
your home.’
Just then
she happened to raise her eyes, and they met mine; I did not choose to withdraw
my gaze, and she turned again to her book, but with a momentary, indefinable
expression of quiet scorn, that was inexpressibly provoking to me.
‘She
thinks me an impudent puppy,’ thought I. ‘Humph!—she shall change her
mind before long, if I think it worth while.’
But then
it flashed upon me that these were very improper thoughts for a place of
worship, and that my behaviour, on the present occasion, was anything but what
it ought to be. Previous, however, to directing my mind to the service, I
glanced round the church to see if any one had been observing me;—but no,—all,
who were not attending to their prayer-books, were attending to the strange
lady,—my good mother and sister among the rest, and Mrs. Wilson and her
daughter; and even Eliza Millward was slily glancing from the corners of her
eyes towards the object of general attraction. Then she glanced at me,
simpered a little, and blushed, modestly looked at her prayer-book, and
endeavoured to compose her features.
Here I was
transgressing again; and this time I was made sensible of it by a sudden dig in
the ribs, from the elbow of my pert brother. For the present, I could
only resent the insult by pressing my foot upon his toes, deferring further
vengeance till we got out of church.
Now,
Halford, before I close this letter, I’ll tell you who Eliza Millward was: she
was the vicar’s younger daughter, and a very engaging little creature, for whom
I felt no small degree of partiality;—and she knew it, though I had never come
to any direct explanation, and had no definite intention of so doing, for my
mother, who maintained there was no one good enough for me within twenty miles
round, could not bear the thoughts of my marrying that insignificant little
thing, who, in addition to her numerous other disqualifications, had not twenty
pounds to call her own. Eliza’s figure was at once slight and plump, her
face small, and nearly as round as my sister’s,—complexion, something similar
to hers, but more delicate and less decidedly blooming,—nose,
retroussé,—features, generally irregular; and, altogether, she was rather
charming than pretty. But her eyes—I must not forget those remarkable
features, for therein her chief attraction lay—in outward aspect at least;—they
were long and narrow in shape, the irids black, or very dark brown, the
expression various, and ever changing, but always either preternaturally—I had
almost said diabolically—wicked, or irresistibly bewitching—often both.
Her voice was gentle and childish, her tread light and soft as that of a
cat:—but her manners more frequently resembled those of a pretty playful
kitten, that is now pert and roguish, now timid and demure, according to its
own sweet will.
Her
sister, Mary, was several years older, several inches taller, and of a larger,
coarser build—a plain, quiet, sensible girl, who had patiently nursed their
mother, through her last long, tedious illness, and been the housekeeper, and
family drudge, from thence to the present time. She was trusted and
valued by her father, loved and courted by all dogs, cats, children, and poor
people, and slighted and neglected by everybody else.
The
Reverend Michael Millward himself was a tall, ponderous elderly gentleman, who
placed a shovel hat above his large, square, massive-featured face, carried a
stout walking-stick in his hand, and incased his still powerful limbs in
knee-breeches and gaiters,—or black silk stockings on state occasions. He
was a man of fixed principles, strong prejudices, and regular habits,
intolerant of dissent in any shape, acting under a firm conviction that his
opinions were always right, and whoever differed from them must be either most
deplorably ignorant, or wilfully blind.
In
childhood, I had always been accustomed to regard him with a feeling of
reverential awe—but lately, even now, surmounted, for, though he had a fatherly
kindness for the well-behaved, he was a strict disciplinarian, and had often
sternly reproved our juvenile failings and peccadilloes; and moreover, in those
days, whenever he called upon our parents, we had to stand up before him, and
say our catechism, or repeat, ‘How doth the little busy bee,’ or some other
hymn, or—worse than all—be questioned about his last text, and the heads of the
discourse, which we never could remember. Sometimes, the worthy gentleman
would reprove my mother for being over-indulgent to her sons, with a reference
to old Eli, or David and Absalom, which was particularly galling to her
feelings; and, very highly as she respected him, and all his sayings, I once
heard her exclaim, ‘I wish to goodness he had a son himself! He wouldn’t
be so ready with his advice to other people then;—he’d see what it is to have a
couple of boys to keep in order.’
He had a
laudable care for his own bodily health—kept very early hours, regularly took a
walk before breakfast, was vastly particular about warm and dry clothing, had
never been known to preach a sermon without previously swallowing a raw
egg—albeit he was gifted with good lungs and a powerful voice,—and was,
generally, extremely particular about what he ate and drank, though by no means
abstemious, and having a mode of dietary peculiar to himself,—being a great
despiser of tea and such slops, and a patron of malt liquors, bacon and eggs,
ham, hung beef, and other strong meats, which agreed well enough with his
digestive organs, and therefore were maintained by him to be good and wholesome
for everybody, and confidently recommended to the most delicate convalescents
or dyspeptics, who, if they failed to derive the promised benefit from his
prescriptions, were told it was because they had not persevered, and if they
complained of inconvenient results therefrom, were assured it was all fancy.
I will
just touch upon two other persons whom I have mentioned, and then bring this
long letter to a close. These are Mrs. Wilson and her daughter. The
former was the widow of a substantial farmer, a narrow-minded, tattling old
gossip, whose character is not worth describing. She had two sons,
Robert, a rough countrified farmer, and Richard, a retiring, studious young
man, who was studying the classics with the vicar’s assistance, preparing for
college, with a view to enter the church.
Their
sister Jane was a young lady of some talents, and more ambition. She had,
at her own desire, received a regular boarding-school education, superior to
what any member of the family had obtained before. She had taken the
polish well, acquired considerable elegance of manners, quite lost her
provincial accent, and could boast of more accomplishments than the vicar’s
daughters. She was considered a beauty besides; but never for a moment
could she number me amongst her admirers. She was about six and twenty,
rather tall and very slender, her hair was neither chestnut nor auburn, but a
most decided bright, light red; her complexion was remarkably fair and
brilliant, her head small, neck long, chin well turned, but very short, lips thin
and red, eyes clear hazel, quick, and penetrating, but entirely destitute of
poetry or feeling. She had, or might have had, many suitors in her own
rank of life, but scornfully repulsed or rejected them all; for none but a
gentleman could please her refined taste, and none but a rich one could satisfy
her soaring ambition. One gentleman there was, from whom she had lately
received some rather pointed attentions, and upon whose heart, name, and
fortune, it was whispered, she had serious designs. This was Mr.
Lawrence, the young squire, whose family had formerly occupied Wildfell Hall,
but had deserted it, some fifteen years ago, for a more modern and commodious
mansion in the neighbouring parish.
Now,
Halford, I bid you adieu for the present. This is the first instalment of
my debt. If the coin suits you, tell me so, and I’ll send you the rest at
my leisure: if you would rather remain my creditor than stuff your purse with
such ungainly, heavy pieces,—tell me still, and I’ll pardon your bad taste, and
willingly keep the treasure to myself.
Yours
immutably,
Gilbert Markham.
Gilbert Markham.
To be continued