THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL
PART 12
CHAPTER XXIII
Feb. 18,
1822.—Early this morning Arthur mounted his hunter and set off in high glee to
meet the — hounds. He will be away all day, and so I will amuse myself
with my neglected diary, if I can give that name to such an irregular
composition. It is exactly four months since I opened it last.
I am
married now, and settled down as Mrs. Huntingdon of Grassdale Manor. I
have had eight weeks’ experience of matrimony. And do I regret the step I
have taken? No, though I must confess, in my secret heart, that Arthur is
not what I thought him at first, and if I had known him in the beginning as
thoroughly as I do now, I probably never should have loved him, and if I loved
him first, and then made the discovery, I fear I should have thought it my duty
not to have married him. To be sure I might have known him, for every one
was willing enough to tell me about him, and he himself was no accomplished
hypocrite, but I was wilfully blind; and now, instead of regretting that I did
not discern his full character before I was indissolubly bound to him, I am
glad, for it has saved me a great deal of battling with my conscience, and a
great deal of consequent trouble and pain; and, whatever I ought to have done,
my duty now is plainly to love him and to cleave to him, and this just tallies
with my inclination.
He is very
fond of me, almost too fond. I could do with less caressing and more
rationality. I should like to be less of a pet and more of a friend, if I
might choose; but I won’t complain of that: I am only afraid his affection
loses in depth where it gains in ardour. I sometimes liken it to a fire
of dry twigs and branches compared with one of solid coal, very bright and hot;
but if it should burn itself out and leave nothing but ashes behind, what shall
I do? But it won’t, it sha’n’t, I am determined; and surely I have power
to keep it alive. So let me dismiss that thought at once. But
Arthur is selfish; I am constrained to acknowledge that; and, indeed, the admission
gives me less pain than might be expected, for, since I love him so much, I can
easily forgive him for loving himself: he likes to be pleased, and it is my
delight to please him; and when I regret this tendency of his, it is for his
own sake, not for mine.
The first
instance he gave was on the occasion of our bridal tour. He wanted to
hurry it over, for all the continental scenes were already familiar to him:
many had lost their interest in his eyes, and others had never had anything to
lose. The consequence was, that after a flying transit through part of
France and part of Italy, I came back nearly as ignorant as I went, having made
no acquaintance with persons and manners, and very little with things, my head
swarming with a motley confusion of objects and scenes; some, it is true,
leaving a deeper and more pleasing impression than others, but these embittered
by the recollection that my emotions had not been shared by my companion, but
that, on the contrary, when I had expressed a particular interest in anything
that I saw or desired to see, it had been displeasing to him, inasmuch as it
proved that I could take delight in anything disconnected with himself.
As for
Paris, we only just touched at that, and he would not give me time to see one-tenth
of the beauties and interesting objects of Rome. He wanted to get me
home, he said, to have me all to himself, and to see me safely installed as the
mistress of Grassdale Manor, just as single-minded, as naïve, and piquante as I
was; and as if I had been some frail butterfly, he expressed himself fearful of
rubbing the silver off my wings by bringing me into contact with society,
especially that of Paris and Rome; and, more-over, he did not scruple to tell
me that there were ladies in both places that would tear his eyes out if they
happened to meet him with me.
Of course
I was vexed at all this; but still it was less the disappointment to myself
that annoyed me, than the disappointment in him, and the trouble I was at to
frame excuses to my friends for having seen and observed so little, without
imputing one particle of blame to my companion. But when we got home—to
my new, delightful home—I was so happy and he was so kind that I freely forgave
him all; and I was beginning to think my lot too happy, and my husband actually
too good for me, if not too good for this world, when, on the second Sunday
after our arrival, he shocked and horrified me by another instance of his
unreasonable exaction. We were walking home from the morning service, for
it was a fine frosty day, and as we are so near the church, I had requested the
carriage should not be used.
‘Helen,’
said he, with unusual gravity, ‘I am not quite satisfied with you.’
I desired
to know what was wrong.
‘But will
you promise to reform if I tell you?’
‘Yes, if I
can, and without offending a higher authority.’
‘Ah! there
it is, you see: you don’t love me with all your heart.’
‘I don’t
understand you, Arthur (at least I hope I don’t): pray tell me what I have done
or said amiss.’
‘It is nothing
you have done or said; it is something that you are—you are too
religious. Now I like a woman to be religious, and I think your piety one
of your greatest charms; but then, like all other good things, it may be
carried too far. To my thinking, a woman’s religion ought not to lessen
her devotion to her earthly lord. She should have enough to purify and
etherealise her soul, but not enough to refine away her heart, and raise her
above all human sympathies.’
‘And am I
above all human sympathies?’ said I.
‘No,
darling; but you are making more progress towards that saintly condition than I
like; for all these two hours I have been thinking of you and wanting to catch
your eye, and you were so absorbed in your devotions that you had not even a
glance to spare for me—I declare it is enough to make one jealous of one’s
Maker—which is very wrong, you know; so don’t excite such wicked passions
again, for my soul’s sake.’
‘I will
give my whole heart and soul to my Maker if I can,’ I answered, ‘and not one atom
more of it to you than He allows. What are you, sir, that you should set
yourself up as a god, and presume to dispute possession of my heart with Him to
whom I owe all I have and all I am, every blessing I ever did or ever can
enjoy—and yourself among the rest—if you are a blessing, which I am half
inclined to doubt.’
‘Don’t be
so hard upon me, Helen; and don’t pinch my arm so: you are squeezing your
fingers into the bone.’
‘Arthur,’
continued I, relaxing my hold of his arm, ‘you don’t love me half as much as I
do you; and yet, if you loved me far less than you do, I would not complain,
provided you loved your Maker more. I should rejoice to see you at any
time so deeply absorbed in your devotions that you had not a single thought to
spare for me. But, indeed, I should lose nothing by the change, for the
more you loved your God the more deep and pure and true would be your love to
me.’
At this he
only laughed and kissed my hand, calling me a sweet enthusiast. Then
taking off his hat, he added: ‘But look here, Helen—what can a man do with such
a head as this?’
The head
looked right enough, but when he placed my hand on the top of it, it sunk in a
bed of curls, rather alarmingly low, especially in the middle.
‘You see I
was not made to be a saint,’ said he, laughing, ‘If God meant me to be
religious, why didn’t He give me a proper organ of veneration?’
‘You are
like the servant,’ I replied, ‘who, instead of employing his one talent in his
master’s service, restored it to him unimproved, alleging, as an excuse, that
he knew him “to be a hard man, reaping where he had not sown, and gathering
where he had not strawed.” Of him to whom less is given, less will be
required, but our utmost exertions are required of us all. You are not
without the capacity of veneration, and faith and hope, and conscience and
reason, and every other requisite to a Christian’s character, if you choose to
employ them; but all our talents increase in the using, and every faculty, both
good and bad, strengthens by exercise: therefore, if you choose to use the bad,
or those which tend to evil, till they become your masters, and neglect the
good till they dwindle away, you have only yourself to blame. But you
have talents, Arthur—natural endowments both of heart and mind and temper, such
as many a better Christian would be glad to possess, if you would only employ
them in God’s service. I should never expect to see you a devotee, but it
is quite possible to be a good Christian without ceasing to be a happy,
merry-hearted man.’
‘You speak
like an oracle, Helen, and all you say is indisputably true; but listen here: I
am hungry, and I see before me a good substantial dinner; I am told that if I
abstain from this to-day I shall have a sumptuous feast to-morrow, consisting
of all manner of dainties and delicacies. Now, in the first place, I
should be loth to wait till to-morrow when I have the means of appeasing my
hunger already before me: in the second place, the solid viands of to-day are
more to my taste than the dainties that are promised me; in the third place, I
don’t see to-morrow’s banquet, and how can I tell that it is not all a fable,
got up by the greasy-faced fellow that is advising me to abstain in order that
he may have all the good victuals to himself? in the fourth place, this table
must be spread for somebody, and, as Solomon says, “Who can eat, or who else
can hasten hereunto more than I?” and finally, with your leave, I’ll sit down
and satisfy my cravings of to-day, and leave to-morrow to shift for itself—who
knows but what I may secure both this and that?’
‘But you
are not required to abstain from the substantial dinner of to-day: you are only
advised to partake of these coarser viands in such moderation as not to
incapacitate you from enjoying the choicer banquet of to-morrow. If,
regardless of that counsel, you choose to make a beast of yourself now, and
over-eat and over-drink yourself till you turn the good victuals into poison,
who is to blame if, hereafter, while you are suffering the torments of yesterday’s
gluttony and drunkenness, you see more temperate men sitting down to enjoy
themselves at that splendid entertainment which you are unable to taste?’
‘Most
true, my patron saint; but again, our friend Solomon says, “There is nothing
better for a man than to eat and to drink, and to be merry.”’
‘And
again,’ returned I, ‘he says, “Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and walk in
the ways of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes: but know thou, that
for all these things God will bring thee into judgment.”’
‘Well,
but, Helen, I’m sure I’ve been very good these last few weeks. What have
you seen amiss in me, and what would you have me to do?’
‘Nothing
more than you do, Arthur: your actions are all right so far; but I would have
your thoughts changed; I would have you to fortify yourself against temptation,
and not to call evil good, and good evil; I should wish you to think more
deeply, to look further, and aim higher than you do.’
CHAPTER XXIV
March
25th.—Arthur is getting tired—not of me, I trust, but of the idle, quiet life
he leads—and no wonder, for he has so few sources of amusement: he never reads
anything but newspapers and sporting magazines; and when he sees me occupied
with a book, he won’t let me rest till I close it. In fine weather he generally
manages to get through the time pretty well, but on rainy days, of which we
have had a good many of late, it is quite painful to witness his ennui. I
do all I can to amuse him, but it is impossible to get him to feel interested
in what I most like to talk about, while, on the other hand, he likes to talk
about things that cannot interest me—or even that annoy me—and these please
him—the most of all: for his favourite amusement is to sit or loll beside me on
the sofa, and tell me stories of his former amours, always turning upon the
ruin of some confiding girl or the cozening of some unsuspecting husband; and
when I express my horror and indignation, he lays it all to the charge of
jealousy, and laughs till the tears run down his cheeks. I used to fly
into passions or melt into tears at first, but seeing that his delight
increased in proportion to my anger and agitation, I have since endeavoured to
suppress my feelings and receive his revelations in the silence of calm
contempt; but still he reads the inward struggle in my face, and misconstrues
my bitterness of soul for his unworthiness into the pangs of wounded jealousy;
and when he has sufficiently diverted himself with that, or fears my
displeasure will become too serious for his comfort, he tries to kiss and
soothe me into smiles again—never were his caresses so little welcome as
then! This is double selfishness displayed to me and to the victims of
his former love. There are times when, with a momentary pang—a flash of
wild dismay, I ask myself, ‘Helen, what have you done?’ But I rebuke the
inward questioner, and repel the obtrusive thoughts that crowd upon me; for
were he ten times as sensual and impenetrable to good and lofty thoughts, I
well know I have no right to complain. And I don’t and won’t
complain. I do and will love him still; and I do not and will not regret
that I have linked my fate with his.
April
4th.—We have had a downright quarrel. The particulars are as follows:
Arthur had told me, at different intervals, the whole story of his intrigue
with Lady F—, which I would not believe before. It was some consolation,
however, to find that in this instance the lady had been more to blame than he,
for he was very young at the time, and she had decidedly made the first
advances, if what he said was true. I hated her for it, for it seemed as
if she had chiefly contributed to his corruption; and when he was beginning to
talk about her the other day, I begged he would not mention her, for I detested
the very sound of her name.
‘Not because
you loved her, Arthur, mind, but because she injured you and deceived her
husband, and was altogether a very abominable woman, whom you ought to be
ashamed to mention.’
But he
defended her by saying that she had a doting old husband, whom it was impossible
to love.
‘Then why
did she marry him?’ said I.
‘For his
money,’ was the reply.
‘Then that
was another crime, and her solemn promise to love and honour him was another,
that only increased the enormity of the last.’
‘You are
too severe upon the poor lady,’ laughed he. ‘But never mind, Helen, I
don’t care for her now; and I never loved any of them half as much as I do you,
so you needn’t fear to be forsaken like them.’
‘If you
had told me these things before, Arthur, I never should have given you the
chance.’
‘Wouldn’t
you, my darling?’
‘Most
certainly not!’
He laughed
incredulously.
‘I wish I
could convince you of it now!’ cried I, starting up from beside him: and for
the first time in my life, and I hope the last, I wished I had not married him.
‘Helen,’
said he, more gravely, ‘do you know that if I believed you now I should be very
angry? but thank heaven I don’t. Though you stand there with your white
face and flashing eyes, looking at me like a very tigress, I know the heart
within you perhaps a trifle better than you know it yourself.’
Without
another word I left the room and locked myself up in my own chamber. In
about half an hour he came to the door, and first he tried the handle, then he
knocked.
‘Won’t you
let me in, Helen?’ said he. ‘No; you have displeased me,’ I replied, ‘and
I don’t want to see your face or hear your voice again till the morning.’
He paused
a moment as if dumfounded or uncertain how to answer such a speech, and then
turned and walked away. This was only an hour after dinner: I knew he
would find it very dull to sit alone all the evening; and this considerably
softened my resentment, though it did not make me relent. I was
determined to show him that my heart was not his slave, and I could live without
him if I chose; and I sat down and wrote a long letter to my aunt, of course
telling her nothing of all this. Soon after ten o’clock I heard him come
up again, but he passed my door and went straight to his own dressing-room,
where he shut himself in for the night.
I was
rather anxious to see how he would meet me in the morning, and not a little
disappointed to behold him enter the breakfast-room with a careless smile.
‘Are you
cross still, Helen?’ said he, approaching as if to salute me. I coldly
turned to the table, and began to pour out the coffee, observing that he was
rather late.
He uttered
a low whistle and sauntered away to the window, where he stood for some minutes
looking out upon the pleasing prospect of sullen grey clouds, streaming rain,
soaking lawn, and dripping leafless trees, and muttering execrations on the
weather, and then sat down to breakfast. While taking his coffee he
muttered it was ‘d—d cold.’
‘You
should not have left it so long,’ said I.
He made no
answer, and the meal was concluded in silence. It was a relief to both
when the letter-bag was brought in. It contained upon examination a
newspaper and one or two letters for him, and a couple of letters for me, which
he tossed across the table without a remark. One was from my brother, the
other from Milicent Hargrave, who is now in London with her mother. His,
I think, were business letters, and apparently not much to his mind, for he
crushed them into his pocket with some muttered expletives that I should have
reproved him for at any other time. The paper he set before him, and
pretended to be deeply absorbed in its contents during the remainder of
breakfast, and a considerable time after.
The
reading and answering of my letters, and the direction of household concerns,
afforded me ample employment for the morning: after lunch I got my drawing, and
from dinner till bed-time I read. Meanwhile, poor Arthur was sadly at a
loss for something to amuse him or to occupy his time. He wanted to
appear as busy and as unconcerned as I did. Had the weather at all
permitted, he would doubtless have ordered his horse and set off to some
distant region, no matter where, immediately after breakfast, and not returned
till night: had there been a lady anywhere within reach, of any age between fifteen
and forty-five, he would have sought revenge and found employment in getting
up, or trying to get up, a desperate flirtation with her; but being, to my
private satisfaction, entirely cut off from both these sources of diversion,
his sufferings were truly deplorable. When he had done yawning over his
paper and scribbling short answers to his shorter letters, he spent the
remainder of the morning and the whole of the afternoon in fidgeting about from
room to room, watching the clouds, cursing the rain, alternately petting and
teasing and abusing his dogs, sometimes lounging on the sofa with a book that
he could not force himself to read, and very often fixedly gazing at me when he
thought I did not perceive it, with the vain hope of detecting some traces of
tears, or some tokens of remorseful anguish in my face. But I managed to
preserve an undisturbed though grave serenity throughout the day. I was
not really angry: I felt for him all the time, and longed to be reconciled; but
I determined he should make the first advances, or at least show some signs of
an humble and contrite spirit first; for, if I began, it would only minister to
his self-conceit, increase his arrogance, and quite destroy the lesson I wanted
to give him.
He made a
long stay in the dining-room after dinner, and, I fear, took an unusual
quantity of wine, but not enough to loosen his tongue: for when he came in and
found me quietly occupied with my book, too busy to lift my head on his
entrance, he merely murmured an expression of suppressed disapprobation, and,
shutting the door with a bang, went and stretched himself at full length on the
sofa, and composed himself to sleep. But his favourite cocker, Dash, that
had been lying at my feet, took the liberty of jumping upon him and beginning
to lick his face. He struck it off with a smart blow, and the poor dog
squeaked and ran cowering back to me. When he woke up, about half an hour
after, he called it to him again, but Dash only looked sheepish and wagged the
tip of his tail. He called again more sharply, but Dash only clung the
closer to me, and licked my hand, as if imploring protection. Enraged at
this, his master snatched up a heavy book and hurled it at his head. The
poor dog set up a piteous outcry, and ran to the door. I let him out, and
then quietly took up the book.
‘Give that
book to me,’ said Arthur, in no very courteous tone. I gave it to him.
‘Why did
you let the dog out?’ he asked; ‘you knew I wanted him.’
‘By what
token?’ I replied; ‘by your throwing the book at him? but perhaps it was
intended for me?’
‘No; but I
see you’ve got a taste of it,’ said he, looking at my hand, that had also been
struck, and was rather severely grazed.
I returned
to my reading, and he endeavoured to occupy himself in the same manner; but in
a little while, after several portentous yawns, he pronounced his book to be
‘cursed trash,’ and threw it on the table. Then followed eight or ten
minutes of silence, during the greater part of which, I believe, he was staring
at me. At last his patience was tired out.
‘What is
that book, Helen?’ he exclaimed.
I told
him.
‘Is it
interesting?’
‘Yes,
very.’
I went on
reading, or pretending to read, at least—I cannot say there was much
communication between my eyes and my brain; for, while the former ran over the
pages, the latter was earnestly wondering when Arthur would speak next, and
what he would say, and what I should answer. But he did not speak again
till I rose to make the tea, and then it was only to say he should not take
any. He continued lounging on the sofa, and alternately closing his eyes
and looking at his watch and at me, till bed-time, when I rose, and took my
candle and retired.
‘Helen!’
cried he, the moment I had left the room. I turned back, and stood
awaiting his commands.
‘What do
you want, Arthur?’ I said at length.
‘Nothing,’
replied he. ‘Go!’
I went,
but hearing him mutter something as I was closing the door, I turned
again. It sounded very like ‘confounded slut,’ but I was quite willing it
should be something else.
‘Were you
speaking, Arthur?’ I asked.
‘No,’ was
the answer, and I shut the door and departed. I saw nothing more of him
till the following morning at breakfast, when he came down a full hour after
the usual time.
‘You’re
very late,’ was my morning’s salutation.
‘You
needn’t have waited for me,’ was his; and he walked up to the window
again. It was just such weather as yesterday.
‘Oh, this
confounded rain!’ he muttered. But, after studiously regarding it for a
minute or two, a bright idea, seemed to strike him, for he suddenly exclaimed,
‘But I know what I’ll do!’ and then returned and took his seat at the
table. The letter-bag was already there, waiting to be opened. He
unlocked it and examined the contents, but said nothing about them.
‘Is there
anything for me?’ I asked.
‘No.’
He opened
the newspaper and began to read.
‘You’d
better take your coffee,’ suggested I; ‘it will be cold again.’
‘You may
go,’ said he, ‘if you’ve done; I don’t want you.’
I rose and
withdrew to the next room, wondering if we were to have another such miserable
day as yesterday, and wishing intensely for an end of these mutually inflicted
torments. Shortly after I heard him ring the bell and give some orders
about his wardrobe that sounded as if he meditated a long journey. He
then sent for the coachman, and I heard something about the carriage and the
horses, and London, and seven o’clock to-morrow morning, that startled and
disturbed me not a little.
‘I must
not let him go to London, whatever comes of it,’ said I to myself; ‘he will run
into all kinds of mischief, and I shall be the cause of it. But the
question is, How am I to alter his purpose? Well, I will wait awhile, and
see if he mentions it.’
I waited
most anxiously, from hour to hour; but not a word was spoken, on that or any
other subject, to me. He whistled and talked to his dogs, and wandered
from room to room, much the same as on the previous day. At last I began
to think I must introduce the subject myself, and was pondering how to bring it
about, when John unwittingly came to my relief with the following message from
the coachman:
‘Please,
sir, Richard says one of the horses has got a very bad cold, and he thinks,
sir, if you could make it convenient to go the day after to-morrow, instead of
to-morrow, he could physic it to-day, so as—’
‘Confound
his impudence!’ interjected the master.
‘Please,
sir, he says it would be a deal better if you could,’ persisted John, ‘for he
hopes there’ll be a change in the weather shortly, and he says it’s not likely,
when a horse is so bad with a cold, and physicked and all—’
‘Devil
take the horse!’ cried the gentleman. ‘Well, tell him I’ll think about
it,’ he added, after a moment’s reflection. He cast a searching glance at
me, as the servant withdrew, expecting to see some token of deep astonishment
and alarm; but, being previously prepared, I preserved an aspect of stoical
indifference. His countenance fell as he met my steady gaze, and he
turned away in very obvious disappointment, and walked up to the fire-place,
where he stood in an attitude of undisguised dejection, leaning against the
chimney-piece with his forehead sunk upon his arm.
‘Where do
you want to go, Arthur?’ said I.
‘To
London,’ replied he, gravely.
‘What
for?’ I asked.
‘Because I
cannot be happy here.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because
my wife doesn’t love me.’
‘She would
love you with all her heart, if you deserved it.’
‘What must
I do to deserve it?’
This
seemed humble and earnest enough; and I was so much affected, between sorrow
and joy, that I was obliged to pause a few seconds before I could steady my
voice to reply.
‘If she
gives you her heart,’ said I, ‘you must take it, thankfully, and use it well,
and not pull it in pieces, and laugh in her face, because she cannot snatch it
away.’
He now
turned round, and stood facing me, with his back to the fire. ‘Come,
then, Helen, are you going to be a good girl?’ said he.
This
sounded rather too arrogant, and the smile that accompanied it did not please
me. I therefore hesitated to reply. Perhaps my former answer had
implied too much: he had heard my voice falter, and might have seen me brush
away a tear.
‘Are you
going to forgive me, Helen?’ he resumed, more humbly.
‘Are you
penitent?’ I replied, stepping up to him and smiling in his face.
‘Heart-broken!’
he answered, with a rueful countenance, yet with a merry smile just lurking
within his eyes and about the corners of his mouth; but this could not repulse
me, and I flew into his arms. He fervently embraced me, and though I shed
a torrent of tears, I think I never was happier in my life than at that moment.
‘Then you
won’t go to London, Arthur?’ I said, when the first transport of tears and
kisses had subsided.
‘No,
love,—unless you will go with me.’
‘I will,
gladly,’ I answered, ‘if you think the change will amuse you, and if you will
put off the journey till next week.’
He readily
consented, but said there was no need of much preparation, as he should not be
for staying long, for he did not wish me to be Londonized, and to lose my
country freshness and originality by too much intercourse with the ladies of
the world. I thought this folly; but I did not wish to contradict him
now: I merely said that I was of very domestic habits, as he well knew, and had
no particular wish to mingle with the world.
So we are
to go to London on Monday, the day after to-morrow. It is now four days
since the termination of our quarrel, and I am sure it has done us both good:
it has made me like Arthur a great deal better, and made him behave a great
deal better to me. He has never once attempted to annoy me since, by the
most distant allusion to Lady F—, or any of those disagreeable reminiscences of
his former life. I wish I could blot them from my memory, or else get him
to regard such matters in the same light as I do. Well! it is something,
however, to have made him see that they are not fit subjects for a conjugal
jest. He may see further some time. I will put no limits to my
hopes; and, in spite of my aunt’s forebodings and my own unspoken fears, I
trust we shall be happy yet.
CHAPTER XXV
On the
eighth of April we went to London, on the eighth of May I returned, in
obedience to Arthur’s wish; very much against my own, because I left him
behind. If he had come with me, I should have been very glad to get home
again, for he led me such a round of restless dissipation while there, that, in
that short space of time, I was quite tired out. He seemed bent upon
displaying me to his friends and acquaintances in particular, and the public in
general, on every possible occasion, and to the greatest possible
advantage. It was something to feel that he considered me a worthy object
of pride; but I paid dear for the gratification: for, in the first place, to
please him I had to violate my cherished predilections, my almost rooted
principles in favour of a plain, dark, sober style of dress—I must sparkle in
costly jewels and deck myself out like a painted butterfly, just as I had, long
since, determined I would never do—and this was no trifling sacrifice; in the
second place, I was continually straining to satisfy his sanguine expectations
and do honour to his choice by my general conduct and deportment, and fearing
to disappoint him by some awkward misdemeanour, or some trait of inexperienced
ignorance about the customs of society, especially when I acted the part of
hostess, which I was not unfrequently called upon to do; and, in the third
place, as I intimated before, I was wearied of the throng and bustle, the
restless hurry and ceaseless change of a life so alien to all my previous
habits. At last, he suddenly discovered that the London air did not agree
with me, and I was languishing for my country home, and must immediately return
to Grassdale.
I
laughingly assured him that the case was not so urgent as he appeared to think
it, but I was quite willing to go home if he was. He replied that he
should be obliged to remain a week or two longer, as he had business that
required his presence.
‘Then I
will stay with you,’ said I.
‘But I
can’t do with you, Helen,’ was his answer: ‘as long as you stay I shall attend
to you and neglect my business.’
‘But I
won’t let you,’ I returned; ‘now that I know you have business to attend to, I
shall insist upon your attending to it, and letting me alone; and, to tell the
truth, I shall be glad of a little rest. I can take my rides and walks in
the Park as usual; and your business cannot occupy all your time: I shall see
you at meal-times, and in the evenings at least, and that will be better than
being leagues away and never seeing you at all.’
‘But, my
love, I cannot let you stay. How can I settle my affairs when I know that
you are here, neglected—?’
‘I shall
not feel myself neglected: while you are doing your duty, Arthur, I shall never
complain of neglect. If you had told me before, that you had anything to
do, it would have been half done before this; and now you must make up for lost
time by redoubled exertions. Tell me what it is; and I will be your
taskmaster, instead of being a hindrance.’
‘No, no,’
persisted the impracticable creature; ‘you must go home, Helen; I must have the
satisfaction of knowing that you are safe and well, though far away. Your
bright eyes are faded, and that tender, delicate bloom has quite deserted your
cheek.’
‘That is
only with too much gaiety and fatigue.’
‘It is
not, I tell you; it is the London air: you are pining for the fresh breezes of
your country home, and you shall feel them before you are two days older.
And remember your situation, dearest Helen; on your health, you know, depends
the health, if not the life, of our future hope.’
‘Then you
really wish to get rid of me?’
‘Positively,
I do; and I will take you down myself to Grassdale, and then return. I
shall not be absent above a week or fortnight at most.’
‘But if I
must go, I will go alone: if you must stay, it is needless to waste your time
in the journey there and back.’
But he did
not like the idea of sending me alone.
‘Why, what
helpless creature do you take me for,’ I replied, ‘that you cannot trust me to
go a hundred miles in our own carriage, with our own footman and a maid to
attend me? If you come with me I shall assuredly keep you. But tell
me, Arthur, what is this tiresome business; and why did you never mention it
before?’
‘It is
only a little business with my lawyer,’ said he; and he told me something about
a piece of property he wanted to sell, in order to pay off a part of the
incumbrances on his estate; but either the account was a little confused, or I
was rather dull of comprehension, for I could not clearly understand how that
should keep him in town a fortnight after me. Still less can I now
comprehend how it should keep him a month, for it is nearly that time since I
left him, and no signs of his return as yet. In every letter he promises
to be with me in a few days, and every time deceives me, or deceives
himself. His excuses are vague and insufficient. I cannot doubt
that he has got among his former companions again. Oh, why did I leave
him! I wish—I do intensely wish he would return!
June
29th.—No Arthur yet; and for many days I have been looking and longing in vain
for a letter. His letters, when they come, are kind, if fair words and
endearing epithets can give them a claim to the title—but very short, and full
of trivial excuses and promises that I cannot trust; and yet how anxiously I
look forward to them! how eagerly I open and devour one of those little,
hastily-scribbled returns for the three or four long letters, hitherto
unanswered, he has had from me!
Oh, it is
cruel to leave me so long alone! He knows I have no one but Rachel to
speak to, for we have no neighbours here, except the Hargraves, whose residence
I can dimly descry from these upper windows embosomed among those low, woody
hills beyond the Dale. I was glad when I learnt that Milicent was so near
us; and her company would be a soothing solace to me now; but she is still in
town with her mother; there is no one at the Grove but little Esther and her
French governess, for Walter is always away. I saw that paragon of manly
perfections in London: he seemed scarcely to merit the eulogiums of his mother
and sister, though he certainly appeared more conversable and agreeable than
Lord Lowborough, more candid and high-minded than Mr. Grimsby, and more
polished and gentlemanly than Mr. Hattersley, Arthur’s only other friend whom
he judged fit to introduce to me.—Oh, Arthur, why won’t you come? why won’t you
write to me at least? You talked about my health: how can you expect me
to gather bloom and vigour here, pining in solitude and restless anxiety from
day to day?—It would serve you right to come back and find my good looks
entirely wasted away. I would beg my uncle and aunt, or my brother, to
come and see me, but I do not like to complain of my loneliness to them, and
indeed loneliness is the least of my sufferings. But what is he
doing—what is it that keeps him away? It is this ever-recurring question,
and the horrible suggestions it raises, that distract me.
July
3rd.—My last bitter letter has wrung from him an answer at last, and a rather
longer one than usual; but still I don’t know what to make of it. He
playfully abuses me for the gall and vinegar of my latest effusion, tells me I
can have no conception of the multitudinous engagements that keep him away, but
avers that, in spite of them all, he will assuredly be with me before the close
of next week; though it is impossible for a man so circumstanced as he is to
fix the precise day of his return: meantime he exhorts me to the exercise of
patience, ‘that first of woman’s virtues,’ and desires me to remember the
saying, ‘Absence makes the heart grow fonder,’ and comfort myself with the
assurance that the longer he stays away the better he shall love me when he
returns; and till he does return, he begs I will continue to write to him
constantly, for, though he is sometimes too idle and often too busy to answer
my letters as they come, he likes to receive them daily; and if I fulfil my
threat of punishing his seeming neglect by ceasing to write, he shall be so
angry that he will do his utmost to forget me. He adds this piece of
intelligence respecting poor Milicent Hargrave:
‘Your
little friend Milicent is likely, before long, to follow your example, and take
upon her the yoke of matrimony in conjunction with a friend of mine.
Hattersley, you know, has not yet fulfilled his direful threat of throwing his
precious person away on the first old maid that chose to evince a tenderness
for him; but he still preserves a resolute determination to see himself a
married man before the year is out. “Only,” said he to me, “I must have
somebody that will let me have my own way in everything—not like your wife,
Huntingdon: she is a charming creature, but she looks as if she had a will of
her own, and could play the vixen upon occasion” (I thought “you’re right
there, man,” but I didn’t say so). “I must have some good, quiet soul
that will let me just do what I like and go where I like, keep at home or stay
away, without a word of reproach or complaint; for I can’t do with being
bothered.” “Well,” said I, “I know somebody that will suit you to a tee,
if you don’t care for money, and that’s Hargrave’s sister, Milicent.” He
desired to be introduced to her forthwith, for he said he had plenty of the
needful himself, or should have when his old governor chose to quit the
stage. So you see, Helen, I have managed pretty well, both for your
friend and mine.’
Poor
Milicent! But I cannot imagine she will ever be led to accept such a
suitor—one so repugnant to all her ideas of a man to be honoured and loved.
5th.—Alas!
I was mistaken. I have got a long letter from her this morning, telling
me she is already engaged, and expects to be married before the close of the
month.
‘I hardly
know what to say about it,’ she writes, ‘or what to think. To tell you
the truth, Helen, I don’t like the thoughts of it at all. If I am to be
Mr. Hattersley’s wife, I must try to love him; and I do try with all my might;
but I have made very little progress yet; and the worst symptom of the case is,
that the further he is from me the better I like him: he frightens me with his
abrupt manners and strange hectoring ways, and I dread the thoughts of marrying
him. “Then why have you accepted him?” you will ask; and I didn’t know I
had accepted him; but mamma tells me I have, and he seems to think so
too. I certainly didn’t mean to do so; but I did not like to give him a
flat refusal, for fear mamma should be grieved and angry (for I knew she wished
me to marry him), and I wanted to talk to her first about it: so I gave him
what I thought was an evasive, half negative answer; but she says it was as
good as an acceptance, and he would think me very capricious if I were to
attempt to draw back—and indeed I was so confused and frightened at the moment,
I can hardly tell what I said. And next time I saw him, he accosted me in
all confidence as his affianced bride, and immediately began to settle matters
with mamma. I had not courage to contradict them then, and how can I do
it now? I cannot; they would think me mad. Besides, mamma is so
delighted with the idea of the match; she thinks she has managed so well for
me; and I cannot bear to disappoint her. I do object sometimes, and tell
her what I feel, but you don’t know how she talks. Mr. Hattersley, you
know, is the son of a rich banker, and as Esther and I have no fortunes, and
Walter very little, our dear mamma is very anxious to see us all well married,
that is, united to rich partners. It is not my idea of being well
married, but she means it all for the best. She says when I am safe off
her hands it will be such a relief to her mind; and she assures me it will be a
good thing for the family as well as for me. Even Walter is pleased at
the prospect, and when I confessed my reluctance to him, he said it was all
childish nonsense. Do you think it nonsense, Helen? I should not
care if I could see any prospect of being able to love and admire him, but I
can’t. There is nothing about him to hang one’s esteem and affection
upon; he is so diametrically opposite to what I imagined my husband should
be. Do write to me, and say all you can to encourage me. Don’t
attempt to dissuade me, for my fate is fixed: preparations for the important
event are already going on around me; and don’t say a word against Mr.
Hattersley, for I want to think well of him; and though I have spoken against
him myself, it is for the last time: hereafter, I shall never permit myself to
utter a word in his dispraise, however he may seem to deserve it; and whoever
ventures to speak slightingly of the man I have promised to love, to honour,
and obey, must expect my serious displeasure. After all, I think he is
quite as good as Mr. Huntingdon, if not better; and yet you love him, and seem
to be happy and contented; and perhaps I may manage as well. You must
tell me, if you can, that Mr. Hattersley is better than he seems—that he is
upright, honourable, and open-hearted—in fact, a perfect diamond in the
rough. He may be all this, but I don’t know him. I know only the
exterior, and what, I trust, is the worst part of him.’
She
concludes with ‘Good-by, dear Helen. I am waiting anxiously for your
advice—but mind you let it be all on the right side.’
Alas! poor
Milicent, what encouragement can I give you? or what advice—except that it is
better to make a bold stand now, though at the expense of disappointing and
angering both mother and brother and lover, than to devote your whole life,
hereafter, to misery and vain regret?
Saturday,
13th.—The week is over, and he is not come. All the sweet summer is
passing away without one breath of pleasure to me or benefit to him. And
I had all along been looking forward to this season with the fond, delusive
hope that we should enjoy it so sweetly together; and that, with God’s help and
my exertions, it would be the means of elevating his mind, and refining his
taste to a due appreciation of the salutary and pure delights of nature, and
peace, and holy love. But now—at evening, when I see the round red sun
sink quietly down behind those woody hills, leaving them sleeping in a warm,
red, golden haze, I only think another lovely day is lost to him and me; and at
morning, when roused by the flutter and chirp of the sparrows, and the gleeful
twitter of the swallows—all intent upon feeding their young, and full of life
and joy in their own little frames—I open the window to inhale the balmy,
soul-reviving air, and look out upon the lovely landscape, laughing in dew and
sunshine—I too often shame that glorious scene with tears of thankless misery,
because he cannot feel its freshening influence; and when I wander in the
ancient woods, and meet the little wild flowers smiling in my path, or sit in
the shadow of our noble ash-trees by the water-side, with their branches gently
swaying in the light summer breeze that murmurs through their feathery
foliage—my ears full of that low music mingled with the dreamy hum of insects,
my eyes abstractedly gazing on the glassy surface of the little lake before me,
with the trees that crowd about its bank, some gracefully bending to kiss its
waters, some rearing their stately heads high above, but stretching their wide
arms over its margin, all faithfully mirrored far, far down in its glassy
depth—though sometimes the images are partially broken by the sport of aquatic
insects, and sometimes, for a moment, the whole is shivered into trembling
fragments by a transient breeze that sweeps the surface too roughly—still I
have no pleasure; for the greater the happiness that nature sets before me, the
more I lament that he is not here to taste it: the greater the bliss we might
enjoy together, the more I feel our present wretchedness apart (yes, ours; he
must be wretched, though he may not know it); and the more my senses are pleased,
the more my heart is oppressed; for he keeps it with him confined amid the dust
and smoke of London—perhaps shut up within the walls of his own abominable
club.
But most
of all, at night, when I enter my lonely chamber, and look out upon the summer
moon, ‘sweet regent of the sky,’ floating above me in the ‘black blue vault of
heaven,’ shedding a flood of silver radiance over park, and wood, and water, so
pure, so peaceful, so divine—and think, Where is he now?—what is he doing at
this moment? wholly unconscious of this heavenly scene—perhaps revelling with
his boon companions, perhaps—God help me, it is too—too much!
23rd.—Thank
heaven, he is come at last! But how altered! flushed and feverish,
listless and languid, his beauty strangely diminished, his vigour and vivacity
quite departed. I have not upbraided him by word or look; I have not even
asked him what he has been doing. I have not the heart to do it, for I
think he is ashamed of himself-he must be so indeed, and such inquiries could
not fail to be painful to both. My forbearance pleases him—touches him
even, I am inclined to think. He says he is glad to be home again, and
God knows how glad I am to get him back, even as he is. He lies on the
sofa, nearly all day long; and I play and sing to him for hours together.
I write his letters for him, and get him everything he wants; and sometimes I
read to him, and sometimes I talk, and sometimes only sit by him and soothe him
with silent caresses. I know he does not deserve it; and I fear I am spoiling
him; but this once, I will forgive him, freely and entirely. I will shame
him into virtue if I can, and I will never let him leave me again.
He is
pleased with my attentions—it may be, grateful for them. He likes to have
me near him: and though he is peevish and testy with his servants and his dogs,
he is gentle and kind to me. What he would be, if I did not so watchfully
anticipate his wants, and so carefully avoid, or immediately desist from doing
anything that has a tendency to irritate or disturb him, with however little
reason, I cannot tell. How intensely I wish he were worthy of all this
care! Last night, as I sat beside him, with his head in my lap, passing
my fingers through his beautiful curls, this thought made my eyes overflow with
sorrowful tears—as it often does; but this time, a tear fell on his face and
made him look up. He smiled, but not insultingly.
‘Dear
Helen!’ he said—‘why do you cry? you know that I love you’ (and he pressed my
hand to his feverish lips), ‘and what more could you desire?’
‘Only,
Arthur, that you would love yourself as truly and as faithfully as you are
loved by me.’
‘That
would be hard, indeed!’ he replied, tenderly squeezing my hand.
August
24th.—Arthur is himself again, as lusty and reckless, as light of heart and
head as ever, and as restless and hard to amuse as a spoilt child, and almost
as full of mischief too, especially when wet weather keeps him within
doors. I wish he had something to do, some useful trade, or profession,
or employment—anything to occupy his head or his hands for a few hours a day,
and give him something besides his own pleasure to think about. If he
would play the country gentleman and attend to the farm—but that he knows
nothing about, and won’t give his mind to consider,—or if he would take up with
some literary study, or learn to draw or to play—as he is so fond of music, I
often try to persuade him to learn the piano, but he is far too idle for such
an undertaking: he has no more idea of exerting himself to overcome obstacles
than he has of restraining his natural appetites; and these two things are the
ruin of him. I lay them both to the charge of his harsh yet careless
father, and his madly indulgent mother.—If ever I am a mother I will zealously
strive against this crime of over-indulgence. I can hardly give it a
milder name when I think of the evils it brings.
Happily,
it will soon be the shooting season, and then, if the weather permit, he will
find occupation enough in the pursuit and destruction of the partridges and
pheasants: we have no grouse, or he might have been similarly occupied at this
moment, instead of lying under the acacia-tree pulling poor Dash’s ears.
But he says it is dull work shooting alone; he must have a friend or two to
help him.
‘Let them
be tolerably decent then, Arthur,’ said I. The word ‘friend’ in his mouth
makes me shudder: I know it was some of his ‘friends’ that induced him to stay
behind me in London, and kept him away so long: indeed, from what he has
unguardedly told me, or hinted from time to time, I cannot doubt that he
frequently showed them my letters, to let them see how fondly his wife watched
over his interests, and how keenly she regretted his absence; and that they
induced him to remain week after week, and to plunge into all manner of
excesses, to avoid being laughed at for a wife-ridden fool, and, perhaps, to
show how far he could venture to go without danger of shaking the fond
creature’s devoted attachment. It is a hateful idea, but I cannot believe
it is a false one.
‘Well,’
replied he, ‘I thought of Lord Lowborough for one; but there is no possibility
of getting him without his better half, our mutual friend, Annabella; so we
must ask them both. You’re not afraid of her, are you, Helen?’ he asked,
with a mischievous twinkle in his eyes.
‘Of course
not,’ I answered: ‘why should I? And who besides?’
‘Hargrave
for one. He will be glad to come, though his own place is so near, for he
has little enough land of his own to shoot over, and we can extend our
depredations into it, if we like; and he is thoroughly respectable, you know,
Helen—quite a lady’s man: and I think, Grimsby for another: he’s a decent,
quiet fellow enough. You’ll not object to Grimsby?’
‘I hate
him: but, however, if you wish it, I’ll try to endure his presence for a
while.’
‘All a
prejudice, Helen, a mere woman’s antipathy.’
‘No; I
have solid grounds for my dislike. And is that all?’
‘Why, yes,
I think so. Hattersley will be too busy billing and cooing, with his
bride to have much time to spare for guns and dogs at present,’ he
replied. And that reminds me, that I have had several letters from
Milicent since her marriage, and that she either is, or pretends to be, quite
reconciled to her lot. She professes to have discovered numberless
virtues and perfections in her husband, some of which, I fear, less partial
eyes would fail to distinguish, though they sought them carefully with tears;
and now that she is accustomed to his loud voice, and abrupt, uncourteous
manners, she affirms she finds no difficulty in loving him as a wife should do,
and begs I will burn that letter wherein she spoke so unadvisedly against
him. So that I trust she may yet be happy; but, if she is, it will be
entirely the reward of her own goodness of heart; for had she chosen to
consider herself the victim of fate, or of her mother’s worldly wisdom, she
might have been thoroughly miserable; and if, for duty’s sake, she had not made
every effort to love her husband, she would, doubtless, have hated him to the
end of her days.
To be continued