For a few months I remained peaceably
at home, in the quiet enjoyment of liberty and rest,
and genuine friendship, from all of which I had fasted
so long; and in the earnest prosecution of my studies,
to recover what I had lost during my stay at Wellwood
House, and to lay in new stores for future use.
My father’s health was still very infirm, but
not materially worse than when I last saw him; and
I was glad I had it in my power to cheer him by my
return, and to amuse him with singing his favourite
songs.
No one triumphed over my failure,
or said I had better have taken his or her advice,
and quietly stayed at home. All were glad to
have me back again, and lavished more kindness than
ever upon me, to make up for the sufferings I had
undergone; but not one would touch a shilling of what
I had so cheerfully earned and so carefully saved,
in the hope of sharing it with them. By dint
of pinching here, and scraping there, our debts were
already nearly paid. Mary had had good success
with her drawings; but our father had insisted upon
her likewise keeping all the produce of her industry
to herself. All we could spare from the supply
of our humble wardrobe and our little casual expenses,
he directed us to put into the savings’-bank;
saying, we knew not how soon we might be dependent
on that alone for support: for he felt he had
not long to be with us, and what would become of our
mother and us when he was gone, God only knew!
Dear papa! if he had troubled himself
less about the afflictions that threatened us in case
of his death, I am convinced that dreaded event would
not have taken place so soon. My mother would
never suffer him to ponder on the subject if she could
help it.
‘Oh, Richard!’ exclaimed
she, on one occasion, ’if you would but dismiss
such gloomy subjects from your mind, you would live
as long as any of us; at least you would live to see
the girls married, and yourself a happy grandfather,
with a canty old dame for your companion.’
My mother laughed, and so did my father:
but his laugh soon perished in a dreary sigh.
‘They married—poor
penniless things!’ said he; ’who will take
them I wonder!’
’Why, nobody shall that isn’t
thankful for them. Wasn’t I penniless
when you took me? and you pretended, at least,
to be vastly pleased with your acquisition.
But it’s no matter whether they get married
or not: we can devise a thousand honest ways
of making a livelihood. And I wonder, Richard,
you can think of bothering your head about our poverty
in case of your death; as if that would be anything
compared with the calamity of losing you—an
affliction that you well know would swallow up all
others, and which you ought to do your utmost to preserve
us from: and there is nothing like a cheerful
mind for keeping the body in health.’
’I know, Alice, it is wrong
to keep repining as I do, but I cannot help it:
you must bear with me.’
‘I won’t bear with
you, if I can alter you,’ replied my mother:
but the harshness of her words was undone by the earnest
affection of her tone and pleasant smile, that made
my father smile again, less sadly and less transiently
than was his wont.
‘Mamma,’ said I, as soon
as I could find an opportunity of speaking with her
alone, ’my money is but little, and cannot last
long; if I could increase it, it would lessen papa’s
anxiety, on one subject at least. I cannot draw
like Mary, and so the best thing I could do would
be to look out for another situation.’
‘And so you would actually try again, Agnes?’
‘Decidedly, I would.’
‘Why, my dear, I should have thought you had
had enough of it.’
‘I know,’ said I, ‘everybody is
not like Mr. and Mrs. Bloomfield—’
‘Some are worse,’ interrupted my mother.
‘But not many, I think,’
replied I, ’and I’m sure all children are
not like theirs; for I and Mary were not: we
always did as you bid us, didn’t we?’
’Generally: but then,
I did not spoil you; and you were not perfect angels
after all: Mary had a fund of quiet obstinacy,
and you were somewhat faulty in regard to temper;
but you were very good children on the whole.’
’I know I was sulky sometimes,
and I should have been glad to see these children
sulky sometimes too; for then I could have understood
them: but they never were, for they could
not be offended, nor hurt, nor ashamed: they
could not be unhappy in any way, except when they
were in a passion.’
’Well, if they could not,
it was not their fault: you cannot expect stone
to be as pliable as clay.’
’No, but still it is very unpleasant
to live with such unimpressible, incomprehensible
creatures. You cannot love them; and if you
could, your love would be utterly thrown away:
they could neither return it, nor value, nor understand
it. But, however, even if I should stumble on
such a family again, which is quite unlikely, I have
all this experience to begin with, and I should manage
better another time; and the end and aim of this preamble
is, let me try again.’
’Well, my girl, you are not
easily discouraged, I see: I am glad of that.
But, let me tell you, you are a good deal paler and
thinner than when you first left home; and we cannot
have you undermining your health to hoard up money
either for yourself or others.’
’Mary tells me I am changed
too; and I don’t much wonder at it, for I was
in a constant state of agitation and anxiety all day
long: but next time I am determined to take things
coolly.’
After some further discussion, my
mother promised once more to assist me, provided I
would wait and be patient; and I left her to broach
the matter to my father, when and how she deemed it
most advisable: never doubting her ability to
obtain his consent. Meantime, I searched, with
great interest, the advertising columns of the newspapers,
and wrote answers to every ‘Wanted a Governess’
that appeared at all eligible; but all my letters,
as well as the replies, when I got any, were dutifully
shown to my mother; and she, to my chagrin, made me
reject the situations one after another: these
were low people, these were too exacting in their
demands, and these too niggardly in their remuneration.
’Your talents are not such as
every poor clergyman’s daughter possesses, Agnes,’
she would say, ’and you must not throw them
away. Remember, you promised to be patient:
there is no need of hurry: you have plenty
of time before you, and may have many chances yet.’
At length, she advised me to put an
advertisement, myself, in the paper, stating my qualifications,
&c.
‘Music, singing, drawing, French,
Latin, and German,’ said she, ’are no
mean assemblage: many will be glad to have so
much in one instructor; and this time, you shall try
your fortune in a somewhat higher family in that of
some genuine, thoroughbred gentleman; for such are
far more likely to treat you with proper respect and
consideration than those purse-proud tradespeople and
arrogant upstarts. I have known several among
the higher ranks who treated their governesses quite
as one of the family; though some, I allow, are as
insolent and exacting as any one else can be:
for there are bad and good in all classes.’
The advertisement was quickly written
and despatched. Of the two parties who answered
it, but one would consent to give me fifty pounds,
the sum my mother bade me name as the salary I should
require; and here, I hesitated about engaging myself,
as I feared the children would be too old, and their
parents would require some one more showy, or more
experienced, if not more accomplished than I. But
my mother dissuaded me from declining it on that account:
I should do vastly well, she said, if I would only
throw aside my diffidence, and acquire a little more
confidence in myself. I was just to give a plain,
true statement of my acquirements and qualifications,
and name what stipulations I chose to make, and then
await the result. The only stipulation I ventured
to propose, was that I might be allowed two months’
holidays during the year to visit my friends, at Midsummer
and Christmas. The unknown lady, in her reply,
made no objection to this, and stated that, as to my
acquirements, she had no doubt I should be able to
give satisfaction; but in the engagement of governesses
she considered those things as but subordinate points;
as being situated in the neighbourhood of O—–,
she could get masters to supply any deficiencies in
that respect: but, in her opinion, next to unimpeachable
morality, a mild and cheerful temper and obliging
disposition were the most essential requisities.
My mother did not relish this at all,
and now made many objections to my accepting the situation;
in which my sister warmly supported her: but,
unwilling to be balked again, I overruled them all;
and, having first obtained the consent of my father
(who had, a short time previously, been apprised of
these transactions), I wrote a most obliging epistle
to my unknown correspondent, and, finally, the bargain
was concluded.
It was decreed that on the last day
of January I was to enter upon my new office as governess
in the family of Mr. Murray, of Horton Lodge, near
O—–, about seventy miles from our
village: a formidable distance to me, as I had
never been above twenty miles from home in all the
course of my twenty years’ sojourn on earth;
and as, moreover, every individual in that family and
in the neighbourhood was utterly unknown to myself
and all my acquaintances. But this rendered
it only the more piquant to me. I had now, in
some measure, got rid of the mauvaise honte that had
formerly oppressed me so much; there was a pleasing
excitement in the idea of entering these unknown regions,
and making my way alone among its strange inhabitants.
I now flattered myself I was going to see something
in the world: Mr. Murray’s residence was
near a large town, and not in a manufacturing district,
where the people had nothing to do but to make money;
his rank from what I could gather, appeared to be
higher than that of Mr. Bloomfield; and, doubtless,
he was one of those genuine thoroughbred gentry my
mother spoke of, who would treat his governess with
due consideration as a respectable well-educated lady,
the instructor and guide of his children, and not
a mere upper servant. Then, my pupils being
older, would be more rational, more teachable, and
less troublesome than the last; they would be less
confined to the schoolroom, and not require that constant
labour and incessant watching; and, finally, bright
visions mingled with my hopes, with which the care
of children and the mere duties of a governess had
little or nothing to do. Thus, the reader will
see that I had no claim to be regarded as a martyr
to filial piety, going forth to sacrifice peace and
liberty for the sole purpose of laying up stores for
the comfort and support of my parents: though
certainly the comfort of my father, and the future
support of my mother, had a large share in my calculations;
and fifty pounds appeared to me no ordinary sum.
I must have decent clothes becoming my station; I
must, it seemed, put out my washing, and also pay for
my four annual journeys between Horton Lodge and home;
but with strict attention to economy, surely twenty
pounds, or little more, would cover those expenses,
and then there would be thirty for the bank, or little
less: what a valuable addition to our stock!
Oh, I must struggle to keep this situation, whatever
it might be! both for my own honour among my friends
and for the solid services I might render them by
my continuance there.