Miss Murray now always went twice
to church, for she so loved admiration that she could
not bear to lose a single opportunity of obtaining
it; and she was so sure of it wherever she showed
herself, that, whether Harry Meltham and Mr. Green
were there or not, there was certain to be somebody
present who would not be insensible to her charms,
besides the Rector, whose official capacity generally
obliged him to attend. Usually, also, if the
weather permitted, both she and her sister would walk
home; Matilda, because she hated the confinement of
the carriage; she, because she disliked the privacy
of it, and enjoyed the company that generally enlivened
the first mile of the journey in walking from the
church to Mr. Green’s park-gates: near
which commenced the private road to Horton Lodge,
which lay in the opposite direction, while the highway
conducted in a straightforward course to the still
more distant mansion of Sir Hugh Meltham. Thus
there was always a chance of being accompanied, so
far, either by Harry Meltham, with or without Miss
Meltham, or Mr. Green, with perhaps one or both of
his sisters, and any gentlemen visitors they might
have.
Whether I walked with the young ladies
or rode with their parents, depended upon their own
capricious will: if they chose to ‘take’
me, I went; if, for reasons best known to themselves,
they chose to go alone, I took my seat in the carriage.
I liked walking better, but a sense of reluctance
to obtrude my presence on anyone who did not desire
it, always kept me passive on these and similar occasions;
and I never inquired into the causes of their varying
whims. Indeed, this was the best policy—for
to submit and oblige was the governess’s part,
to consult their own pleasure was that of the pupils.
But when I did walk, the first half of journey was
generally a great nuisance to me. As none of
the before-mentioned ladies and gentlemen ever noticed
me, it was disagreeable to walk beside them, as if
listening to what they said, or wishing to be thought
one of them, while they talked over me, or across;
and if their eyes, in speaking, chanced to fall on
me, it seemed as if they looked on vacancy—as
if they either did not see me, or were very desirous
to make it appear so. It was disagreeable, too,
to walk behind, and thus appear to acknowledge my
own inferiority; for, in truth, I considered myself
pretty nearly as good as the best of them, and wished
them to know that I did so, and not to imagine that
I looked upon myself as a mere domestic, who knew her
own place too well to walk beside such fine ladies
and gentlemen as they were—though her young
ladies might choose to have her with them, and even
condescend to converse with her when no better company
were at hand. Thus—I am almost ashamed
to confess it—but indeed I gave myself
no little trouble in my endeavours (if I did keep
up with them) to appear perfectly unconscious or regardless
of their presence, as if I were wholly absorbed in
my own reflections, or the contemplation of surrounding
objects; or, if I lingered behind, it was some bird
or insect, some tree or flower, that attracted my
attention, and having duly examined that, I would
pursue my walk alone, at a leisurely pace, until my
pupils had bidden adieu to their companions and turned
off into the quiet private road.
One such occasion I particularly well
remember; it was a lovely afternoon about the close
of March; Mr. Green and his sisters had sent their
carriage back empty, in order to enjoy the bright
sunshine and balmy air in a sociable walk home along
with their visitors, Captain Somebody and Lieutenant
Somebody-else (a couple of military fops), and the
Misses Murray, who, of course, contrived to join them.
Such a party was highly agreeable to Rosalie; but
not finding it equally suitable to my taste, I presently
fell back, and began to botanise and entomologise
along the green banks and budding hedges, till the
company was considerably in advance of me, and I could
hear the sweet song of the happy lark; then my spirit
of misanthropy began to melt away beneath the soft,
pure air and genial sunshine; but sad thoughts of
early childhood, and yearnings for departed joys,
or for a brighter future lot, arose instead.
As my eyes wandered over the steep banks covered with
young grass and green-leaved plants, and surmounted
by budding hedges, I longed intensely for some familiar
flower that might recall the woody dales or green
hill-sides of home: the brown moorlands, of course,
were out of the question. Such a discovery would
make my eyes gush out with water, no doubt; but that
was one of my greatest enjoyments now. At length
I descried, high up between the twisted roots of an
oak, three lovely primroses, peeping so sweetly from
their hiding-place that the tears already started at
the sight; but they grew so high above me, that I
tried in vain to gather one or two, to dream over
and to carry with me: I could not reach them
unless I climbed the bank, which I was deterred from
doing by hearing a footstep at that moment behind
me, and was, therefore, about to turn away, when I
was startled by the words, ’Allow me to gather
them for you, Miss Grey,’ spoken in the grave,
low tones of a well-known voice. Immediately
the flowers were gathered, and in my hand. It
was Mr. Weston, of course—who else would
trouble himself to do so much for me?
’I thanked him; whether warmly
or coldly, I cannot tell: but certain I am that
I did not express half the gratitude I felt.
It was foolish, perhaps, to feel any gratitude at
all; but it seemed to me, at that moment, as if this
were a remarkable instance of his good-nature:
an act of kindness, which I could not repay, but
never should forget: so utterly unaccustomed
was I to receive such civilities, so little prepared
to expect them from anyone within fifty miles of Horton
Lodge. Yet this did not prevent me from feeling
a little uncomfortable in his presence; and I proceeded
to follow my pupils at a much quicker pace than before;
though, perhaps, if Mr. Weston had taken the hint,
and let me pass without another word, I might have
repeated it an hour after: but he did not.
A somewhat rapid walk for me was but an ordinary pace
for him.
‘Your young ladies have left you alone,’
said he.
‘Yes, they are occupied with more agreeable
company.’
‘Then don’t trouble yourself
to overtake them.’ I slackened my pace;
but next moment regretted having done so: my
companion did not speak; and I had nothing in the
world to say, and feared he might be in the same predicament.
At length, however, he broke the pause by asking,
with a certain quiet abruptness peculiar to himself,
if I liked flowers.
‘Yes; very much,’ I answered, ‘wild-flowers
especially.’
‘I like wild-flowers,’
said he; ’others I don’t care about, because
I have no particular associations connected with them—
except one or two. What are your favourite flowers?’
‘Primroses, bluebells, and heath-blossoms.’
‘Not violets?’
’No; because, as you say, I
have no particular associations connected with them;
for there are no sweet violets among the hills and
valleys round my home.’
‘It must be a great consolation
to you to have a home, Miss Grey,’ observed
my companion after a short pause: ’however
remote, or however seldom visited, still it is something
to look to.’
‘It is so much that I think
I could not live without it,’ replied I, with
an enthusiasm of which I immediately repented; for
I thought it must have sounded essentially silly.
‘Oh, yes, you could,’
said he, with a thoughtful smile. ’The
ties that bind us to life are tougher than you imagine,
or than anyone can who has not felt how roughly they
may be pulled without breaking. You might be
miserable without a home, but even you could
live; and not so miserably as you suppose. The
human heart is like india-rubber; a little swells
it, but a great deal will not burst it. If “little
more than nothing will disturb it, little less than
all things will suffice” to break it. As
in the outer members of our frame, there is a vital
power inherent in itself that strengthens it against
external violence. Every blow that shakes it
will serve to harden it against a future stroke; as
constant labour thickens the skin of the hand, and
strengthens its muscles instead of wasting them away:
so that a day of arduous toil, that might excoriate
a lady’s palm, would make no sensible impression
on that of a hardy ploughman.
’I speak from experience—partly
my own. There was a time when I thought as you
do—at least, I was fully persuaded that
home and its affections were the only things that
made life tolerable: that, if deprived of these,
existence would become a burden hard to be endured;
but now I have no home—unless you would
dignify my two hired rooms at Horton by such a name;—and
not twelve months ago I lost the last and dearest
of my early friends; and yet, not only I live, but
I am not wholly destitute of hope and comfort, even
for this life: though I must acknowledge that
I can seldom enter even an humble cottage at the close
of day, and see its inhabitants peaceably gathered
around their cheerful hearth, without a feeling almost
of envy at their domestic enjoyment.’
‘You don’t know what happiness
lies before you yet,’ said I: ’you
are now only in the commencement of your journey.’
‘The best of happiness,’
replied he, ’is mine already—the power
and the will to be useful.’
We now approached a stile communicating
with a footpath that conducted to a farm-house, where,
I suppose, Mr. Weston purposed to make himself ‘useful;’
for he presently took leave of me, crossed the stile,
and traversed the path with his usual firm, elastic
tread, leaving me to ponder his words as I continued
my course alone. I had heard before that he
had lost his mother not many months before he came.
She then was the last and dearest of his early friends;
and he had no home. I pitied him from
my heart: I almost wept for sympathy.
And this, I thought, accounted for the shade of premature
thoughtfulness that so frequently clouded his brow,
and obtained for him the reputation of a morose and
sullen disposition with the charitable Miss Murray
and all her kin. ‘But,’ thought I,
’he is not so miserable as I should be under
such a deprivation: he leads an active life;
and a wide field for useful exertion lies before him.
He can make friends; and he can make a home
too, if he pleases; and, doubtless, he will please
some time. God grant the partner of that home
may be worthy of his choice, and make it a happy one—such
a home as he deserves to have! And how delightful
it would be to—’ But no matter what
I thought.
I began this book with the intention
of concealing nothing; that those who liked might
have the benefit of perusing a fellow-creature’s
heart: but we have some thoughts that all the
angels in heaven are welcome to behold, but not our
brother-men—not even the best and kindest
amongst them.
By this time the Greens had taken
themselves to their own abode, and the Murrays had
turned down the private road, whither I hastened to
follow them. I found the two girls warm in an
animated discussion on the respective merits of the
two young officers; but on seeing me Rosalie broke
off in the middle of a sentence to exclaim, with malicious
glee —
’Oh-ho, Miss Grey! you’re
come at last, are you? No wonder you lingered
so long behind; and no wonder you always stand
up so vigorously for Mr. Weston when I abuse him.
Ah-ha! I see it all now!’
‘Now, come, Miss Murray, don’t
be foolish,’ said I, attempting a good-natured
laugh; ’you know such nonsense can make no impression
on me.’
But she still went on talking such
intolerable stuff—her sister helping her
with appropriate fiction coined for the occasion—that
I thought it necessary to say something in my own justification.
‘What folly all this is!’
I exclaimed. ’If Mr. Weston’s road
happened to be the same as mine for a few yards, and
if he chose to exchange a word or two in passing,
what is there so remarkable in that? I assure
you, I never spoke to him before: except once.’
‘Where? where? and when?’ cried they eagerly.
‘In Nancy’s cottage.’
‘Ah-ha! you’ve met him
there, have you?’ exclaimed Rosalie, with exultant
laughter. ’Ah! now, Matilda, I’ve
found out why she’s so fond of going to Nancy
Brown’s! She goes there to flirt with Mr.
Weston.’
’Really, that is not worth contradicting—I
only saw him there once, I tell you—and
how could I know he was coming?’
Irritated as I was at their foolish
mirth and vexatious imputations, the uneasiness did
not continue long: when they had had their laugh
out, they returned again to the captain and lieutenant;
and, while they disputed and commented upon them, my
indignation rapidly cooled; the cause of it was quickly
forgotten, and I turned my thoughts into a pleasanter
channel. Thus we proceeded up the park, and
entered the hall; and as I ascended the stairs to
my own chamber, I had but one thought within me:
my heart was filled to overflowing with one single
earnest wish. Having entered the room, and shut
the door, I fell upon my knees and offered up a fervent
but not impetuous prayer: ’Thy will be
done,’ I strove to say throughout; but, ’Father,
all things are possible with Thee, and may it be Thy
will,’ was sure to follow. That wish—that
prayer—both men and women would have scorned
me for—’But, Father, THOU wilt not
despise!’ I said, and felt that it was true.
It seemed to me that another’s welfare was at
least as ardently implored for as my own; nay, even
that was the principal object of my heart’s
desire. I might have been deceiving myself;
but that idea gave me confidence to ask, and power
to hope I did not ask in vain. As for the primroses,
I kept two of them in a glass in my room until they
were completely withered, and the housemaid threw
them out; and the petals of the other I pressed between
the leaves of my Bible—I have them still,
and mean to keep them always.