A house in A—–, the
fashionable watering-place, was hired for our seminary;
and a promise of two or three pupils was obtained to
commence with. I returned to Horton Lodge about
the middle of July, leaving my mother to conclude
the bargain for the house, to obtain more pupils,
to sell off the furniture of our old abode, and to
fit out the new one.
We often pity the poor, because they
have no leisure to mourn their departed relatives,
and necessity obliges them to labour through their
severest afflictions: but is not active employment
the best remedy for overwhelming sorrow—the
surest antidote for despair? It may be a rough
comforter: it may seem hard to be harassed with
the cares of life when we have no relish for its enjoyments;
to be goaded to labour when the heart is ready to
break, and the vexed spirit implores for rest only
to weep in silence: but is not labour better
than the rest we covet? and are not those petty, tormenting
cares less hurtful than a continual brooding over the
great affliction that oppresses us? Besides,
we cannot have cares, and anxieties, and toil, without
hope—if it be but the hope of fulfilling
our joyless task, accomplishing some needful project,
or escaping some further annoyance. At any rate,
I was glad my mother had so much employment for every
faculty of her action-loving frame. Our kind
neighbours lamented that she, once so exalted in wealth
and station, should be reduced to such extremity in
her time of sorrow; but I am persuaded that she would
have suffered thrice as much had she been left in
affluence, with liberty to remain in that house, the
scene of her early happiness and late affliction,
and no stern necessity to prevent her from incessantly
brooding over and lamenting her bereavement.
I will not dilate upon the feelings
with which I left the old house, the well-known garden,
the little village church—then doubly dear
to me, because my father, who, for thirty years, had
taught and prayed within its walls, lay slumbering
now beneath its flags—and the old bare
hills, delightful in their very desolation, with the
narrow vales between, smiling in green wood and sparkling
water—the house where I was born, the scene
of all my early associations, the place where throughout
life my earthly affections had been centred;—and
left them to return no more! True, I was going
back to Horton Lodge, where, amid many evils, one source
of pleasure yet remained: but it was pleasure
mingled with excessive pain; and my stay, alas! was
limited to six weeks. And even of that precious
time, day after day slipped by and I did not see him:
except at church, I never saw him for a fortnight after
my return. It seemed a long time to me:
and, as I was often out with my rambling pupil, of
course hopes would keep rising, and disappointments
would ensue; and then, I would say to my own heart,
’Here is a convincing proof—if you
would but have the sense to see it, or the candour
to acknowledge it—that he does not care
for you. If he only thought half as much
about you as you do about him, he would have contrived
to meet you many times ere this: you must know
that, by consulting your own feelings. Therefore,
have done with this nonsense: you have no ground
for hope: dismiss, at once, these hurtful thoughts
and foolish wishes from your mind, and turn to your
own duty, and the dull blank life that lies before
you. You might have known such happiness was
not for you.’
But I saw him at last. He came
suddenly upon me as I was crossing a field in returning
from a visit to Nancy Brown, which I had taken the
opportunity of paying while Matilda Murray was riding
her matchless mare. He must have heard of the
heavy loss I had sustained: he expressed no
sympathy, offered no condolence: but almost
the first words he uttered were,—’How
is your mother?’ And this was no matter-of-course
question, for I never told him that I had a mother:
he must have learned the fact from others, if he
knew it at all; and, besides, there was sincere goodwill,
and even deep, touching, unobtrusive sympathy in the
tone and manner of the inquiry. I thanked him
with due civility, and told him she was as well as
could be expected. ‘What will she do?’
was the next question. Many would have deemed
it an impertinent one, and given an evasive reply;
but such an idea never entered my head, and I gave
a brief but plain statement of my mother’s plans
and prospects.
‘Then you will leave this place shortly?’
said he.
‘Yes, in a month.’
He paused a minute, as if in thought.
When he spoke again, I hoped it would be to express
his concern at my departure; but it was only to say,—’I
should think you will be willing enough to go?’
‘Yes—for some things,’ I replied.
‘For some things only—I wonder
what should make you regret it?’
I was annoyed at this in some degree;
because it embarrassed me: I had only one reason
for regretting it; and that was a profound secret,
which he had no business to trouble me about.
‘Why,’ said I—’why should
you suppose that I dislike the place?’
‘You told me so yourself,’
was the decisive reply. ’You said, at
least, that you could not live contentedly, without
a friend; and that you had no friend here, and no
possibility of making one—and, besides,
I know you must dislike it.’
’But if you remember rightly,
I said, or meant to say, I could not live contentedly
without a friend in the world: I was not so
unreasonable as to require one always near me.
I think I could be happy in a house full of enemies,
if—’ but no; that sentence must not
be continued—I paused, and hastily added,—’And,
besides, we cannot well leave a place where we have
lived for two or three years, without some feeling
of regret.’
’Will you regret to part with
Miss Murray, your sole remaining pupil and companion?’
’I dare say I shall in some
degree: it was not without sorrow I parted with
her sister.’
‘I can imagine that.’
‘Well, Miss Matilda is quite as good—better
in one respect.’
‘What is that?’
‘She’s honest.’
‘And the other is not?’
’I should not call her DIShonest;
but it must be confessed she’s a little artful.’
‘ARTFUL is she?—I
saw she was giddy and vain—and now,’
he added, after a pause, ’I can well believe
she was artful too; but so excessively so as to assume
an aspect of extreme simplicity and unguarded openness.
Yes,’ continued he, musingly, ’that accounts
for some little things that puzzled me a trifle before.’
After that, he turned the conversation
to more general subjects. He did not leave me
till we had nearly reached the park-gates: he
had certainly stepped a little out of his way to accompany
me so far, for he now went back and disappeared down
Moss Lane, the entrance of which we had passed some
time before. Assuredly I did not regret this
circumstance: if sorrow had any place in my heart,
it was that he was gone at last—that he
was no longer walking by my side, and that that short
interval of delightful intercourse was at an end.
He had not breathed a word of love, or dropped one
hint of tenderness or affection, and yet I had been
supremely happy. To be near him, to hear him
talk as he did talk, and to feel that he thought me
worthy to be so spoken to—capable of understanding
and duly appreciating such discourse—was
enough.
’Yes, Edward Weston, I could
indeed be happy in a house full of enemies, if I had
but one friend, who truly, deeply, and faithfully
loved me; and if that friend were you—though
we might be far apart—seldom to hear from
each other, still more seldom to meet—
though toil, and trouble, and vexation might surround
me, still—it would be too much happiness
for me to dream of! Yet who can tell,’
said I within myself, as I proceeded up the park,—’who
can tell what this one month may bring forth?
I have lived nearly three-and-twenty years, and
I have suffered much, and tasted little pleasure yet;
is it likely my life all through will be so clouded?
Is it not possible that God may hear my prayers, disperse
these gloomy shadows, and grant me some beams of heaven’s
sunshine yet? Will He entirely deny to me those
blessings which are so freely given to others, who
neither ask them nor acknowledge them when received?
May I not still hope and trust? I did hope and
trust for a while: but, alas, alas! the time
ebbed away: one week followed another, and,
excepting one distant glimpse and two transient meetings—during
which scarcely anything was said—while
I was walking with Miss Matilda, I saw nothing of him:
except, of course, at church.
And now, the last Sunday was come,
and the last service. I was often on the point
of melting into tears during the sermon—the
last I was to hear from him: the best I should
hear from anyone, I was well assured. It was
over—the congregation were departing; and
I must follow. I had then seen him, and heard
his voice, too, probably for the last time.
In the churchyard, Matilda was pounced upon by the
two Misses Green. They had many inquiries to
make about her sister, and I know not what besides.
I only wished they would have done, that we might
hasten back to Horton Lodge: I longed to seek
the retirement of my own room, or some sequestered
nook in the grounds, that I might deliver myself up
to my feelings—to weep my last farewell, and lament
my false hopes and vain delusions. Only this
once, and then adieu to fruitless dreaming—
thenceforth, only sober, solid, sad reality should
occupy my mind. But while I thus resolved, a
low voice close beside me said—’I
suppose you are going this week, Miss Grey?’
‘Yes,’ I replied. I was very much
startled; and had I been at all hysterically inclined,
I certainly should have committed myself in some way
then. Thank God, I was not.
‘Well,’ said Mr. Weston,
’I want to bid you good-bye—it is
not likely I shall see you again before you go.’
‘Good-bye, Mr. Weston,’
I said. Oh, how I struggled to say it calmly!
I gave him my hand. He retained it a few seconds
in his.
‘It is possible we may meet
again,’ said he; ’will it be of any consequence
to you whether we do or not?’
‘Yes, I should be very glad to see you again.’
I could say no less. He
kindly pressed my hand, and went. Now, I was
happy again—though more inclined to burst
into tears than ever. If I had been forced to
speak at that moment, a succession of sobs would have
inevitably ensued; and as it was, I could not keep
the water out of my eyes. I walked along with
Miss Murray, turning aside my face, and neglecting
to notice several successive remarks, till she bawled
out that I was either deaf or stupid; and then (having
recovered my self-possession), as one awakened from
a fit of abstraction, I suddenly looked up and asked
what she had been saying.