Ashby Park was certainly a very delightful
residence. The mansion was stately without,
commodious and elegant within; the park was spacious
and beautiful, chiefly on account of its magnificent
old trees, its stately herds of deer, its broad sheet
of water, and the ancient woods that stretched beyond
it: for there was no broken ground to give variety
to the landscape, and but very little of that undulating
swell which adds so greatly to the charm of park scenery.
And so, this was the place Rosalie Murray had so longed
to call her own, that she must have a share of it,
on whatever terms it might be offered—whatever
price was to be paid for the title of mistress, and
whoever was to be her partner in the honour and bliss
of such a possession! Well I am not disposed
to censure her now.
She received me very kindly; and,
though I was a poor clergyman’s daughter, a
governess, and a schoolmistress, she welcomed me with
unaffected pleasure to her home; and—what
surprised me rather— took some pains to
make my visit agreeable. I could see, it is
true, that she expected me to be greatly struck with
the magnificence that surrounded her; and, I confess,
I was rather annoyed at her evident efforts to reassure
me, and prevent me from being overwhelmed by so much
grandeur—too much awed at the idea of encountering
her husband and mother-in-law, or too much ashamed
of my own humble appearance. I was not ashamed
of it at all; for, though plain, I had taken good
care not to shabby or mean, and should have been pretty
considerably at my ease, if my condescending hostess
had not taken such manifest pains to make me so; and,
as for the magnificence that surrounded her, nothing
that met my eyes struck me or affected me half so
much as her own altered appearance. Whether
from the influence of fashionable dissipation, or
some other evil, a space of little more than twelve
months had had the effect that might be expected from
as many years, in reducing the plumpness of her form,
the freshness of her complexion, the vivacity of her
movements, and the exuberance of her spirits.
I wished to know if she was unhappy;
but I felt it was not my province to inquire:
I might endeavour to win her confidence; but, if
she chose to conceal her matrimonial cares from me,
I would trouble her with no obtrusive questions.
I, therefore, at first, confined myself to a few
general inquiries about her health and welfare, and
a few commendations on the beauty of the park, and
of the little girl that should have been a boy:
a small delicate infant of seven or eight weeks old,
whom its mother seemed to regard with no remarkable
degree of interest or affection, though full as much
as I expected her to show.
Shortly after my arrival, she commissioned
her maid to conduct me to my room and see that I had
everything I wanted; it was a small, unpretending,
but sufficiently comfortable apartment. When
I descended thence—having divested myself
of all travelling encumbrances, and arranged my toilet
with due consideration for the feelings of my lady
hostess, she conducted me herself to the room I was
to occupy when I chose to be alone, or when she was
engaged with visitors, or obliged to be with her mother-in-law,
or otherwise prevented, as she said, from enjoying
the pleasure of my society. It was a quiet,
tidy little sitting-room; and I was not sorry to be
provided with such a harbour of refuge.
‘And some time,’ said
she, ’I will show you the library: I never
examined its shelves, but, I daresay, it is full of
wise books; and you may go and burrow among them whenever
you please. And now you shall have some tea—it
will soon be dinner-time, but I thought, as you were
accustomed to dine at one, you would perhaps like better
to have a cup of tea about this time, and to dine when
we lunch: and then, you know, you can have your
tea in this room, and that will save you from having
to dine with Lady Ashby and Sir Thomas: which
would be rather awkward—at least, not awkward,
but rather— a—you know what
I mean. I thought you mightn’t like it
so well— especially as we may have other
ladies and gentlemen to dine with us occasionally.’
‘Certainly,’ said I, ’I
would much rather have it as you say, and, if you
have no objection, I should prefer having all my meals
in this room.’
‘Why so?’
’Because, I imagine, it would
be more agreeable to Lady Ashby and Sir Thomas.’
‘Nothing of the kind.’
‘At any rate it would be more agreeable to me.’
She made some faint objections, but
soon conceded; and I could see that the proposal was
a considerable relief to her.
‘Now, come into the drawing-room,’
said she. ’There’s the dressing
bell; but I won’t go yet: it’s no
use dressing when there’s no one to see you;
and I want to have a little discourse.’
The drawing-room was certainly an
imposing apartment, and very elegantly furnished;
but I saw its young mistress glance towards me as
we entered, as if to notice how I was impressed by
the spectacle, and accordingly I determined to preserve
an aspect of stony indifference, as if I saw nothing
at all remarkable. But this was only for a moment:
immediately conscience whispered, ’Why should
I disappoint her to save my pride? No—rather
let me sacrifice my pride to give her a little innocent
gratification.’ And I honestly looked round,
and told her it was a noble room, and very tastefully
furnished. She said little, but I saw she was
pleased.
She showed me her fat French poodle,
that lay curled up on a silk cushion, and the two
fine Italian paintings: which, however, she
would not give me time to examine, but, saying I must
look at them some other day, insisted upon my admiring
the little jewelled watch she had purchased in Geneva;
and then she took me round the room to point out sundry
articles of vertu she had brought from Italy:
an elegant little timepiece, and several busts, small
graceful figures, and vases, all beautifully carved
in white marble. She spoke of these with animation,
and heard my admiring comments with a smile of pleasure:
that soon, however, vanished, and was followed by
a melancholy sigh; as if in consideration of the insufficiency
of all such baubles to the happiness of the human
heart, and their woeful inability to supply its insatiate
demands.
Then, stretching herself upon a couch,
she motioned me to a capacious easy-chair that stood
opposite—not before the fire, but before
a wide open window; for it was summer, be it remembered;
a sweet, warm evening in the latter half of June.
I sat for a moment in silence, enjoying the still,
pure air, and the delightful prospect of the park
that lay before me, rich in verdure and foliage, and
basking in yellow sunshine, relieved by the long shadows
of declining day. But I must take advantage of
this pause: I had inquiries to make, and, like
the substance of a lady’s postscript, the most
important must come last. So I began with asking
after Mr. and Mrs. Murray, and Miss Matilda and the
young gentlemen.
I was told that papa had the gout,
which made him very ferocious; and that he would not
give up his choice wines, and his substantial dinners
and suppers, and had quarrelled with his physician,
because the latter had dared to say that no medicine
could cure him while he lived so freely; that mamma
and the rest were well. Matilda was still wild
and reckless, but she had got a fashionable governess,
and was considerably improved in her manners, and soon
to be introduced to the world; and John and Charles
(now at home for the holidays) were, by all accounts,
’fine, bold, unruly, mischievous boys.’
‘And how are the other people
getting on?’ said I—’the Greens,
for instance?’
‘Ah! Mr. Green is heart-broken,
you know,’ replied she, with a languid smile:
’he hasn’t got over his disappointment
yet, and never will, I suppose. He’s doomed
to be an old bachelor; and his sisters are doing their
best to get married.’
‘And the Melthams?’
’Oh, they’re jogging on
as usual, I suppose: but I know very little
about any of them—except Harry,’ said
she, blushing slightly, and smiling again. ’I
saw a great deal of him while we were in London; for,
as soon as he heard we were there, he came up under
pretence of visiting his brother, and either followed
me, like a shadow, wherever I went, or met me, like
a reflection, at every turn. You needn’t
look so shocked, Miss Grey; I was very discreet, I
assure you, but, you know, one can’t help being
admired. Poor fellow! He was not my only
worshipper; though he was certainly the most conspicuous,
and, I think, the most devoted among them all.
And that detestable—ahem—and
Sir Thomas chose to take offence at him—or
my profuse expenditure, or something—I
don’t exactly know what—and hurried
me down to the country at a moment’s notice;
where I’m to play the hermit, I suppose, for
life.’
And she bit her lip, and frowned vindictively
upon the fair domain she had once so coveted to call
her own.
‘And Mr. Hatfield,’ said I, ‘what
is become of him?’
Again she brightened up, and answered
gaily—’Oh! he made up to an elderly
spinster, and married her, not long since; weighing
her heavy purse against her faded charms, and expecting
to find that solace in gold which was denied him in
love—ha, ha!’
’Well, and I think that’s
all—except Mr. Weston: what is he
doing?’
‘I don’t know, I’m sure. He’s
gone from Horton.’
‘How long since? and where is he gone to?’
‘I know nothing about him,’
replied she, yawning—’except that
he went about a month ago—I never asked
where’ (I would have asked whether it was to
a living or merely another curacy, but thought it
better not); ‘and the people made a great rout
about his leaving,’ continued she, ’much
to Mr. Hatfield’s displeasure; for Hatfield
didn’t like him, because he had too much influence
with the common people, and because he was not sufficiently
tractable and submissive to him—and for
some other unpardonable sins, I don’t know what.
But now I positively must go and dress: the
second bell will ring directly, and if I come to dinner
in this guise, I shall never hear the end of it from
Lady Ashby. It’s a strange thing one can’t
be mistress in one’s own house! Just ring
the bell, and I’ll send for my maid, and tell
them to get you some tea. Only think of that
intolerable woman—’
‘Who—your maid?’
’No;—my mother-in-law—and
my unfortunate mistake! Instead of letting her
take herself off to some other house, as she offered
to do when I married, I was fool enough to ask her
to live here still, and direct the affairs of the
house for me; because, in the first place, I hoped
we should spend the greater part of the year, in town,
and in the second place, being so young and inexperienced,
I was frightened at the idea of having a houseful
of servants to manage, and dinners to order, and parties
to entertain, and all the rest of it, and I thought
she might assist me with her experience; never dreaming
she would prove a usurper, a tyrant, an incubus, a
spy, and everything else that’s detestable.
I wish she was dead!’
She then turned to give her orders
to the footman, who had been standing bolt upright
within the door for the last half minute, and had
heard the latter part of her animadversions; and, of
course, made his own reflections upon them, notwithstanding
the inflexible, wooden countenance he thought proper
to preserve in the drawing-room. On my remarking
afterwards that he must have heard her, she replied—’Oh,
no matter! I never care about the footmen; they’re
mere automatons: it’s nothing to them what
their superiors say or do; they won’t dare to
repeat it; and as to what they think—if
they presume to think at all—of course,
nobody cares for that. It would be a pretty
thing indeed, it we were to be tongue-tied by our
servants!’
So saying, she ran off to make her
hasty toilet, leaving me to pilot my way back to my
sitting-room, where, in due time, I was served with
a cup of tea. After that, I sat musing on Lady
Ashby’s past and present condition; and on what
little information I had obtained respecting Mr. Weston,
and the small chance there was of ever seeing or hearing
anything more of him throughout my quiet, drab-colour
life: which, henceforth, seemed to offer no
alternative between positive rainy days, and days of
dull grey clouds without downfall. At length,
however, I began to weary of my thoughts, and to wish
I knew where to find the library my hostess had spoken
of; and to wonder whether I was to remain there doing
nothing till bed-time.
As I was not rich enough to possess
a watch, I could not tell how time was passing, except
by observing the slowly lengthening shadows from the
window; which presented a side view, including a corner
of the park, a clump of trees whose topmost branches
had been colonized by an innumerable company of noisy
rooks, and a high wall with a massive wooden gate:
no doubt communicating with the stable-yard, as a
broad carriage-road swept up to it from the park.
The shadow of this wall soon took posession of the
whole of the ground as far as I could see, forcing
the golden sunlight to retreat inch by inch, and at
last take refuge in the very tops of the trees.
Ere long, even they were left in shadow—the
shadow of the distant hills, or of the earth itself;
and, in sympathy for the busy citizens of the rookery,
I regretted to see their habitation, so lately bathed
in glorious light, reduced to the sombre, work-a-day
hue of the lower world, or of my own world within.
For a moment, such birds as soared above the rest
might still receive the lustre on their wings, which
imparted to their sable plumage the hue and brilliance
of deep red gold; at last, that too departed.
Twilight came stealing on; the rooks became more quiet;
I became more weary, and wished I were going home
to-morrow. At length it grew dark; and I was
thinking of ringing for a candle, and betaking myself
to bed, when my hostess appeared, with many apologies
for having neglected me so long, and laying all the
blame upon that ‘nasty old woman,’ as
she called her mother-in-law.
’If I didn’t sit with
her in the drawing-room while Sir Thomas is taking
his wine,’ said she, ’she would never forgive
me; and then, if I leave the room the instant he comes—as
I have done once or twice—it is an unpardonable
offence against her dear Thomas. She never
showed such disrespect to her husband: and
as for affection, wives never think of that now-a-days,
she supposes: but things were different in her
time—as if there was any good to be done
by staying in the room, when he does nothing but grumble
and scold when he’s in a bad humour, talk disgusting
nonsense when he’s in a good one, and go to
sleep on the sofa when he’s too stupid for either;
which is most frequently the case now, when he has
nothing to do but to sot over his wine.’
’But could you not try to occupy
his mind with something better; and engage him to
give up such habits? I’m sure you have
powers of persuasion, and qualifications for amusing
a gentleman, which many ladies would be glad to possess.’
’And so you think I would lay
myself out for his amusement! No: that’s
not my idea of a wife. It’s the husband’s
part to please the wife, not hers to please him; and
if he isn’t satisfied with her as she is—and
thankful to possess her too—he isn’t
worthy of her, that’s all. And as for
persuasion, I assure you I shan’t trouble myself
with that: I’ve enough to do to bear with
him as he is, without attempting to work a reform.
But I’m sorry I left you so long alone, Miss
Grey. How have you passed the time?’
‘Chiefly in watching the rooks.’
’Mercy, how dull you must have
been! I really must show you the library; and
you must ring for everything you want, just as you
would in an inn, and make yourself comfortable.
I have selfish reasons for wishing to make you happy,
because I want you to stay with me, and not fulfil
your horrid threat of running away in a day or two.’
’Well, don’t let me keep
you out of the drawing-room any longer to-night,
for at present I am tired and wish to go to bed.’