The manor-house of Ferndean was a
building of considerable antiquity, moderate size,
and no architectural pretensions, deep buried in a
wood. I had heard of it before. Mr. Rochester
often spoke of it, and sometimes went there.
His father had purchased the estate for the sake
of the game covers. He would have let the house,
but could find no tenant, in consequence of its ineligible
and insalubrious site. Ferndean then remained
uninhabited and unfurnished, with the exception of
some two or three rooms fitted up for the accommodation
of the squire when he went there in the season to shoot.
To this house I came just ere dark
on an evening marked by the characteristics of sad
sky, cold gale, and continued small penetrating rain.
The last mile I performed on foot, having dismissed
the chaise and driver with the double remuneration
I had promised. Even when within a very short
distance of the manor-house, you could see nothing
of it, so thick and dark grew the timber of the gloomy
wood about it. Iron gates between granite pillars
showed me where to enter, and passing through them,
I found myself at once in the twilight of close-ranked
trees. There was a grass-grown track descending
the forest aisle between hoar and knotty shafts and
under branched arches. I followed it, expecting
soon to reach the dwelling; but it stretched on and
on, it would far and farther: no sign of habitation
or grounds was visible.
I thought I had taken a wrong direction
and lost my way. The darkness of natural as
well as of sylvan dusk gathered over me. I looked
round in search of another road. There was none:
all was interwoven stem, columnar trunk, dense summer
foliage — no opening anywhere.
I proceeded: at last my way
opened, the trees thinned a little; presently I beheld
a railing, then the house — scarce, by this
dim light, distinguishable from the trees; so dank
and green were its decaying walls. Entering
a portal, fastened only by a latch, I stood amidst
a space of enclosed ground, from which the wood swept
away in a semicircle. There were no flowers,
no garden-beds; only a broad gravel-walk girdling
a grass-plat, and this set in the heavy frame of the
forest. The house presented two pointed gables
in its front; the windows were latticed and narrow:
the front door was narrow too, one step led up to
it. The whole looked, as the host of the Rochester
Arms had said, “quite a desolate spot.”
It was as still as a church on a week-day: the
pattering rain on the forest leaves was the only sound
audible in its vicinage.
“Can there be life here?” I asked.
Yes, life of some kind there was;
for I heard a movement — that narrow front-door
was unclosing, and some shape was about to issue from
the grange.
It opened slowly: a figure came
out into the twilight and stood on the step; a man
without a hat: he stretched forth his hand as
if to feel whether it rained. Dusk as it was,
I had recognised him — it was my master,
Edward Fairfax Rochester, and no other.
I stayed my step, almost my breath,
and stood to watch him — to examine him,
myself unseen, and alas! to him invisible. It
was a sudden meeting, and one in which rapture was
kept well in check by pain. I had no difficulty
in restraining my voice from exclamation, my step
from hasty advance.
His form was of the same strong and
stalwart contour as ever: his port was still
erect, his hair was still raven black; nor were his
features altered or sunk: not in one year’s
space, by any sorrow, could his athletic strength
be quelled or his vigorous prime blighted. But
in his countenance I saw a change: that looked
desperate and brooding — that reminded
me of some wronged and fettered wild beast or bird,
dangerous to approach in his sullen woe. The
caged eagle, whose gold-ringed eyes cruelty has extinguished,
might look as looked that sightless Samson.
And, reader, do you think I feared
him in his blind ferocity? — if you do,
you little know me. A soft hope blest with my
sorrow that soon I should dare to drop a kiss on that
brow of rock, and on those lips so sternly sealed
beneath it: but not yet. I would not accost
him yet.
He descended the one step, and advanced
slowly and gropingly towards the grass-plat.
Where was his daring stride now? Then he paused,
as if he knew not which way to turn. He lifted
his hand and opened his eyelids; gazed blank, and
with a straining effort, on the sky, and toward the
amphitheatre of trees: one saw that all to him
was void darkness. He stretched his right hand
(the left arm, the mutilated one, he kept hidden in
his bosom); he seemed to wish by touch to gain an
idea of what lay around him: he met but vacancy
still; for the trees were some yards off where he stood.
He relinquished the endeavour, folded his arms, and
stood quiet and mute in the rain, now falling fast
on his uncovered head. At this moment John approached
him from some quarter.
“Will you take my arm, sir?”
he said; “there is a heavy shower coming on:
had you not better go in?”
“Let me alone,” was the answer.
John withdrew without having observed
me. Mr. Rochester now tried to walk about:
vainly, — all was too uncertain.
He groped his way back to the house, and, re-entering
it, closed the door.
I now drew near and knocked:
John’s wife opened for me. “Mary,”
I said, “how are you?”
She started as if she had seen a ghost:
I calmed her. To her hurried “Is it really
you, miss, come at this late hour to this lonely place?”
I answered by taking her hand; and then I followed
her into the kitchen, where John now sat by a good
fire. I explained to them, in few words, that
I had heard all which had happened since I left Thornfield,
and that I was come to see Mr. Rochester. I
asked John to go down to the turn-pike-house, where
I had dismissed the chaise, and bring my trunk, which
I had left there: and then, while I removed
my bonnet and shawl, I questioned Mary as to whether
I could be accommodated at the Manor House for the
night; and finding that arrangements to that effect,
though difficult, would not be impossible, I informed
her I should stay. Just at this moment the parlour-bell
rang.
“When you go in,” said
I, “tell your master that a person wishes to
speak to him, but do not give my name.”
“I don’t think he will
see you,” she answered; “he refuses everybody.”
When she returned, I inquired what
he had said. “You are to send in your
name and your business,” she replied. She
then proceeded to fill a glass with water, and place
it on a tray, together with candles.
“Is that what he rang for?” I asked.
“Yes: he always has candles
brought in at dark, though he is blind.”
“Give the tray to me; I will carry it in.”
I took it from her hand: she
pointed me out the parlour door. The tray shook
as I held it; the water spilt from the glass; my heart
struck my ribs loud and fast. Mary opened the
door for me, and shut it behind me.
This parlour looked gloomy:
a neglected handful of fire burnt low in the grate;
and, leaning over it, with his head supported against
the high, old-fashioned mantelpiece, appeared the blind
tenant of the room. His old dog, Pilot, lay
on one side, removed out of the way, and coiled up
as if afraid of being inadvertently trodden upon.
Pilot pricked up his ears when I came in: then
he jumped up with a yelp and a whine, and bounded
towards me: he almost knocked the tray from
my hands. I set it on the table; then patted
him, and said softly, “Lie down!” Mr.
Rochester turned mechanically to see what the
commotion was: but as he saw nothing, he
returned and sighed.
“Give me the water, Mary,” he said.
I approached him with the now only
half-filled glass; Pilot followed me, still excited.
“What is the matter?” he inquired.
“Down, Pilot!” I again
said. He checked the water on its way to his
lips, and seemed to listen: he drank, and put
the glass down. “This is you, Mary, is
it not?”
“Mary is in the kitchen,” I answered.
He put out his hand with a quick gesture,
but not seeing where I stood, he did not touch me.
“Who is this? Who is this?” he
demanded, trying, as it seemed, to see with those
sightless eyes — unavailing and distressing
attempt! “Answer me — speak
again!” he ordered, imperiously and aloud.
“Will you have a little more
water, sir? I spilt half of what was in the
glass,” I said.
“Who is it? What is it?
Who speaks?”
“Pilot knows me, and John and
Mary know I am here. I came only this evening,”
I answered.
“Great God! — what
delusion has come over me? What sweet madness
has seized me?”
“No delusion — no
madness: your mind, sir, is too strong for delusion,
your health too sound for frenzy.”
“And where is the speaker?
Is it only a voice? Oh! I cannot
see, but I must feel, or my heart will stop and my
brain burst. Whatever — whoever you
are — be perceptible to the touch or I
cannot live!”
He groped; I arrested his wandering
hand, and prisoned it in both mine.
“Her very fingers!” he
cried; “her small, slight fingers! If so
there must be more of her.”
The muscular hand broke from my custody;
my arm was seized, my shoulder — neck —
waist — I was entwined and gathered to him.
“Is it Jane? What
is it? This is her shape — this is
her size — “
“And this her voice,”
I added. “She is all here: her heart,
too. God bless you, sir! I am glad to be
so near you again.”
“Jane Eyre! — Jane Eyre,” was
all he said.
“My dear master,” I answered,
“I am Jane Eyre: I have found you out
— I am come back to you.”
“In truth? — in the flesh?
My living Jane?”
“You touch me, sir, —
you hold me, and fast enough: I am not cold
like a corpse, nor vacant like air, am I?”
“My living darling! These
are certainly her limbs, and these her features; but
I cannot be so blest, after all my misery. It
is a dream; such dreams as I have had at night when
I have clasped her once more to my heart, as I do
now; and kissed her, as thus — and felt
that she loved me, and trusted that she would not leave
me.”
“Which I never will, sir, from this day.”
“Never will, says the vision?
But I always woke and found it an empty mockery;
and I was desolate and abandoned — my life
dark, lonely, hopeless — my soul athirst
and forbidden to drink — my heart famished
and never to be fed. Gentle, soft dream, nestling
in my arms now, you will fly, too, as your sisters
have all fled before you: but kiss me before
you go — embrace me, Jane.”
“There, sir — and there!”’
I pressed my lips to his once brilliant
and now rayless eyes — I swept his hair
from his brow, and kissed that too. He suddenly
seemed to arouse himself: the conviction of the
reality of all this seized him.
“It is you — is it,
Jane? You are come back to me then?”
“I am.”
“And you do not lie dead in
some ditch under some stream? And you are not
a pining outcast amongst strangers?”
“No, sir! I am an independent woman now.”
“Independent! What do you mean, Jane?”
“My uncle in Madeira is dead, and he left me
five thousand pounds.”
“Ah! this is practical —
this is real!” he cried: “I should
never dream that. Besides, there is that peculiar
voice of hers, so animating and piquant, as well as
soft: it cheers my withered heart; it puts life
into it. — What, Janet! Are you an
independent woman? A rich woman?”
“If you won’t let me live
with you, I can build a house of my own close up to
your door, and you may come and sit in my parlour when
you want company of an evening.”
“But as you are rich, Jane,
you have now, no doubt, friends who will look after
you, and not suffer you to devote yourself to a blind
lameter like me?”
“I told you I am independent,
sir, as well as rich: I am my own mistress.”
“And you will stay with me?”
“Certainly — unless
you object. I will be your neighbour, your nurse,
your housekeeper. I find you lonely: I
will be your companion — to read to you,
to walk with you, to sit with you, to wait on you,
to be eyes and hands to you. Cease to look so
melancholy, my dear master; you shall not be left desolate,
so long as I live.”
He replied not: he seemed serious
— abstracted; he sighed; he half-opened
his lips as if to speak: he closed them again.
I felt a little embarrassed. Perhaps I had
too rashly over-leaped conventionalities; and he,
like St. John, saw impropriety in my inconsiderateness.
I had indeed made my proposal from the idea that
he wished and would ask me to be his wife: an
expectation, not the less certain because unexpressed,
had buoyed me up, that he would claim me at once as
his own. But no hint to that effect escaping
him and his countenance becoming more overcast, I suddenly
remembered that I might have been all wrong, and was
perhaps playing the fool unwittingly; and I began
gently to withdraw myself from his arms —
but he eagerly snatched me closer.
“No — no —
Jane; you must not go. No — I have
touched you, heard you, felt the comfort of your presence
— the sweetness of your consolation:
I cannot give up these joys. I have little left
in myself — I must have you. The world
may laugh — may call me absurd, selfish
— but it does not signify. My very
soul demands you: it will be satisfied, or it
will take deadly vengeance on its frame.”
“Well, sir, I will stay with you: I have
said so.”
“Yes — but you understand
one thing by staying with me; and I understand another.
You, perhaps, could make up your mind to be about
my hand and chair — to wait on me as a kind
little nurse (for you have an affectionate heart and
a generous spirit, which prompt you to make sacrifices
for those you pity), and that ought to suffice for
me no doubt. I suppose I should now entertain
none but fatherly feelings for you: do you think
so? Come — tell me.”
“I will think what you like,
sir: I am content to be only your nurse, if
you think it better.”
“But you cannot always be my
nurse, Janet: you are young — you
must marry one day.”
“I don’t care about being married.”
“You should care, Janet:
if I were what I once was, I would try to make you
care — but — a sightless block!”
He relapsed again into gloom.
I, on the contrary, became more cheerful, and took
fresh courage: these last words gave me an insight
as to where the difficulty lay; and as it was no difficulty
with me, I felt quite relieved from my previous embarrassment.
I resumed a livelier vein of conversation.
“It is time some one undertook
to rehumanise you,” said I, parting his thick
and long uncut locks; “for I see you are being
metamorphosed into a lion, or something of that sort.
You have a ‘faux air’ of Nebuchadnezzar
in the fields about you, that is certain: your
hair reminds me of eagles’ feathers; whether
your nails are grown like birds’ claws or not,
I have not yet noticed.”
“On this arm, I have neither
hand nor nails,” he said, drawing the mutilated
limb from his breast, and showing it to me. “It
is a mere stump — a ghastly sight!
Don’t you think so, Jane?”
“It is a pity to see it; and
a pity to see your eyes — and the scar
of fire on your forehead: and the worst of it
is, one is in danger of loving you too well for all
this; and making too much of you.”
“I thought you would be revolted,
Jane, when you saw my arm, and my cicatrised visage.”
“Did you? Don’t
tell me so — lest I should say something
disparaging to your judgment. Now, let me leave
you an instant, to make a better fire, and have the
hearth swept up. Can you tell when there is
a good fire?”
“Yes; with the right eye I see a glow —
a ruddy haze.”
“And you see the candles?”
“Very dimly — each is a luminous
cloud.”
“Can you see me?”
“No, my fairy: but I am only too thankful
to hear and feel you.”
“When do you take supper?”
“I never take supper.”
“But you shall have some to-night.
I am hungry: so are you, I daresay, only you
forget.”
Summoning Mary, I soon had the room
in more cheerful order: I prepared him, likewise,
a comfortable repast. My spirits were excited,
and with pleasure and ease I talked to him during supper,
and for a long time after. There was no harassing
restraint, no repressing of glee and vivacity with
him; for with him I was at perfect ease, because I
knew I suited him; all I said or did seemed either
to console or revive him. Delightful consciousness!
It brought to life and light my whole nature:
in his presence I thoroughly lived; and he lived
in mine. Blind as he was, smiles played over
his face, joy dawned on his forehead: his lineaments
softened and warmed.
After supper, he began to ask me many
questions, of where I had been, what I had been doing,
how I had found him out; but I gave him only very
partial replies: it was too late to enter into
particulars that night. Besides, I wished to
touch no deep-thrilling chord — to open
no fresh well of emotion in his heart: my sole
present aim was to cheer him. Cheered, as I have
said, he was: and yet but by fits. If a
moment’s silence broke the conversation, he
would turn restless, touch me, then say, “Jane.”
“You are altogether a human
being, Jane? You are certain of that?”
“I conscientiously believe so, Mr. Rochester.”
“Yet how, on this dark and doleful
evening, could you so suddenly rise on my lone hearth?
I stretched my hand to take a glass of water from
a hireling, and it was given me by you: I asked
a question, expecting John’s wife to answer
me, and your voice spoke at my ear.”
“Because I had come in, in Mary’s
stead, with the tray.”
“And there is enchantment in
the very hour I am now spending with you. Who
can tell what a dark, dreary, hopeless life I have
dragged on for months past? Doing nothing, expecting
nothing; merging night in day; feeling but the sensation
of cold when I let the fire go out, of hunger when
I forgot to eat: and then a ceaseless sorrow,
and, at times, a very delirium of desire to behold
my Jane again. Yes: for her restoration
I longed, far more than for that of my lost sight.
How can it be that Jane is with me, and says she loves
me? Will she not depart as suddenly as she came?
To-morrow, I fear I shall find her no more.”
A commonplace, practical reply, out
of the train of his own disturbed ideas, was, I was
sure, the best and most reassuring for him in this
frame of mind. I passed my finger over his eyebrows,
and remarked that they were scorched, and that I would
apply something which would make them grow as broad
and black as ever.
“Where is the use of doing me
good in any way, beneficent spirit, when, at some
fatal moment, you will again desert me —
passing like a shadow, whither and how to me unknown,
and for me remaining afterwards undiscoverable?
“Have you a pocket-comb about you, sir?”
“What for, Jane?”
“Just to comb out this shaggy
black mane. I find you rather alarming, when
I examine you close at hand: you talk of my being
a fairy, but I am sure, you are more like a brownie.”
“Am I hideous, Jane?”
“Very, sir: you always were, you know.”
“Humph! The wickedness
has not been taken out of you, wherever you have sojourned.”
“Yet I have been with good people;
far better than you: a hundred times better
people; possessed of ideas and views you never entertained
in your life: quite more refined and exalted.”
“Who the deuce have you been with?”
“If you twist in that way you
will make me pull the hair out of your head; and then
I think you will cease to entertain doubts of my substantiality.”
“Who have you been with, Jane?”
“You shall not get it out of
me to-night, sir; you must wait till to-morrow; to
leave my tale half told, will, you know, be a sort
of security that I shall appear at your breakfast table
to finish it. By the bye, I must mind not to
rise on your hearth with only a glass of water then:
I must bring an egg at the least, to say nothing
of fried ham.”
“You mocking changeling —
fairy-born and human-bred! You make me feel
as I have not felt these twelve months. If Saul
could have had you for his David, the evil spirit
would have been exorcised without the aid of the harp.”
“There, sir, you are redd up
and made decent. Now I’ll leave you:
I have been travelling these last three days, and I
believe I am tired. Good night.”
“Just one word, Jane:
were there only ladies in the house where you have
been?”
I laughed and made my escape, still
laughing as I ran upstairs. “A good idea!”
I thought with glee. “I see I have the
means of fretting him out of his melancholy for some
time to come.”
Very early the next morning I heard
him up and astir, wandering from one room to another.
As soon as Mary came down I heard the question:
“Is Miss Eyre here?” Then: “Which
room did you put her into? Was it dry?
Is she up? Go and ask if she wants anything;
and when she will come down.”
I came down as soon as I thought there
was a prospect of breakfast. Entering the room
very softly, I had a view of him before he discovered
my presence. It was mournful, indeed, to witness
the subjugation of that vigorous spirit to a corporeal
infirmity. He sat in his chair —
still, but not at rest: expectant evidently;
the lines of now habitual sadness marking his strong
features. His countenance reminded one of a
lamp quenched, waiting to be re-lit — and
alas! it was not himself that could now kindle the
lustre of animated expression: he was dependent
on another for that office! I had meant to be
gay and careless, but the powerlessness of the strong
man touched my heart to the quick: still I accosted
him with what vivacity I could.
“It is a bright, sunny morning,
sir,” I said. “The rain is over
and gone, and there is a tender shining after it:
you shall have a walk soon.”
I had wakened the glow: his features beamed.
“Oh, you are indeed there, my
skylark! Come to me. You are not gone:
not vanished? I heard one of your kind an hour
ago, singing high over the wood: but its song
had no music for me, any more than the rising sun
had rays. All the melody on earth is concentrated
in my Jane’s tongue to my ear (I am glad it is
not naturally a silent one): all the sunshine
I can feel is in her presence.”
The water stood in my eyes to hear
this avowal of his dependence; just as if a royal
eagle, chained to a perch, should be forced to entreat
a sparrow to become its purveyor. But I would
not be lachrymose: I dashed off the salt drops,
and busied myself with preparing breakfast.
Most of the morning was spent in the
open air. I led him out of the wet and wild
wood into some cheerful fields: I described to
him how brilliantly green they were; how the flowers
and hedges looked refreshed; how sparklingly blue
was the sky. I sought a seat for him in a hidden
and lovely spot, a dry stump of a tree; nor did I
refuse to let him, when seated, place me on his knee.
Why should I, when both he and I were happier near
than apart? Pilot lay beside us: all was
quiet. He broke out suddenly while clasping
me in his arms —
“Cruel, cruel deserter!
Oh, Jane, what did I feel when I discovered you had
fled from Thornfield, and when I could nowhere find
you; and, after examining your apartment, ascertained
that you had taken no money, nor anything which could
serve as an equivalent! A pearl necklace I had
given you lay untouched in its little casket; your
trunks were left corded and locked as they had been
prepared for the bridal tour. What could my
darling do, I asked, left destitute and penniless?
And what did she do? Let me hear now.”
Thus urged, I began the narrative
of my experience for the last year. I softened
considerably what related to the three days of wandering
and starvation, because to have told him all would
have been to inflict unnecessary pain: the little
I did say lacerated his faithful heart deeper than
I wished.
I should not have left him thus, he
said, without any means of making my way: I
should have told him my intention. I should have
confided in him: he would never have forced me
to be his mistress. Violent as he had seemed
in his despair, he, in truth, loved me far too well
and too tenderly to constitute himself my tyrant:
he would have given me half his fortune, without
demanding so much as a kiss in return, rather than
I should have flung myself friendless on the wide
world. I had endured, he was certain, more than
I had confessed to him.
“Well, whatever my sufferings
had been, they were very short,” I answered:
and then I proceeded to tell him how I had been received
at Moor House; how I had obtained the office of schoolmistress,
&c. The accession of fortune, the discovery of
my relations, followed in due order. Of course,
St. John Rivers’ name came in frequently in
the progress of my tale. When I had done, that
name was immediately taken up.
“This St. John, then, is your cousin?”
“Yes.”
“You have spoken of him often: do you
like him?”
“He was a very good man, sir; I could not help
liking him.”
“A good man. Does that
mean a respectable well-conducted man of fifty?
Or what does it mean?”
“St John was only twenty-nine, sir.”
“‘Jeune encore,’
as the French say. Is he a person of low stature,
phlegmatic, and plain. A person whose goodness
consists rather in his guiltlessness of vice, than
in his prowess in virtue.”
“He is untiringly active.
Great and exalted deeds are what he lives to perform.”
“But his brain? That is
probably rather soft? He means well: but
you shrug your shoulders to hear him talk?”
“He talks little, sir:
what he does say is ever to the point. His
brain is first-rate, I should think not impressible,
but vigorous.”
“Is he an able man, then?”
“Truly able.”
“A thoroughly educated man?”
“St. John is an accomplished and profound scholar.”
“His manners, I think, you said
are not to your taste? — priggish and parsonic?”
“I never mentioned his manners;
but, unless I had a very bad taste, they must suit
it; they are polished, calm, and gentlemanlike.”
“His appearance, —
I forget what description you gave of his appearance;
— a sort of raw curate, half strangled with
his white neckcloth, and stilted up on his thick-soled
high-lows, eh?”
“St. John dresses well.
He is a handsome man: tall, fair, with blue
eyes, and a Grecian profile.”
(Aside.) “Damn him!” —
(To me.) “Did you like him, Jane?”
“Yes, Mr. Rochester, I liked
him: but you asked me that before.”
I perceived, of course, the drift
of my interlocutor. Jealousy had got hold of
him: she stung him; but the sting was salutary:
it gave him respite from the gnawing fang of melancholy.
I would not, therefore, immediately charm the snake.
“Perhaps you would rather not
sit any longer on my knee, Miss Eyre?” was the
next somewhat unexpected observation.
“Why not, Mr. Rochester?”
“The picture you have just drawn
is suggestive of a rather too overwhelming contrast.
Your words have delineated very prettily a graceful
Apollo: he is present to your imagination, —
tall, fair, blue-eyed, and with a Grecian profile.
Your eyes dwell on a Vulcan, — a real
blacksmith, brown, broad-shouldered: and blind
and lame into the bargain.”
“I never thought of it, before;
but you certainly are rather like Vulcan, sir.”
“Well, you can leave me, ma’am:
but before you go” (and he retained me by a
firmer grasp than ever), “you will be pleased
just to answer me a question or two.”
He paused.
“What questions, Mr. Rochester?”
Then followed this cross-examination.
“St. John made you schoolmistress
of Morton before he knew you were his cousin?”
“Yes.”
“You would often see him? He would visit
the school sometimes?”
“Daily.”
“He would approve of your plans,
Jane? I know they would be clever, for you are
a talented creature!”
“He approved of them — yes.”
“He would discover many things
in you he could not have expected to find? Some
of your accomplishments are not ordinary.”
“I don’t know about that.”
“You had a little cottage near
the school, you say: did he ever come there
to see you?”
“Now and then?”
“Of an evening?”
“Once or twice.”
A pause.
“How long did you reside with
him and his sisters after the cousinship was discovered?”
“Five months.”
“Did Rivers spend much time with the ladies
of his family?”
“Yes; the back parlour was both
his study and ours: he sat near the window,
and we by the table.”
“Did he study much?”
“A good deal.”
“What?”
“Hindostanee.”
“And what did you do meantime?”
“I learnt German, at first.”
“Did he teach you?”
“He did not understand German.”
“Did he teach you nothing?”
“A little Hindostanee.”
“Rivers taught you Hindostanee?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And his sisters also?”
“No.”
“Only you?”
“Only me.”
“Did you ask to learn?”
“No.”
“He wished to teach you?”
“Yes.”
A second pause.
“Why did he wish it? Of what use could
Hindostanee be to you?”
“He intended me to go with him to India.”
“Ah! here I reach the root
of the matter. He wanted you to marry him?”
“He asked me to marry him.”
“That is a fiction — an impudent
invention to vex me.”
“I beg your pardon, it is the
literal truth: he asked me more than once, and
was as stiff about urging his point as ever you could
be.”
“Miss Eyre, I repeat it, you
can leave me. How often am I to say the same
thing? Why do you remain pertinaciously perched
on my knee, when I have given you notice to quit?”
“Because I am comfortable there.”
“No, Jane, you are not comfortable
there, because your heart is not with me: it
is with this cousin — this St. John.
Oh, till this moment, I thought my little Jane was
all mine! I had a belief she loved me even when
she left me: that was an atom of sweet in much
bitter. Long as we have been parted, hot tears
as I have wept over our separation, I never thought
that while I was mourning her, she was loving another!
But it is useless grieving. Jane, leave me:
go and marry Rivers.”
“Shake me off, then, sir, —
push me away, for I’ll not leave you of my own
accord.”
“Jane, I ever like your tone
of voice: it still renews hope, it sounds so
truthful. When I hear it, it carries me back
a year. I forget that you have formed a new
tie. But I am not a fool — go —
“
“Where must I go, sir?”
“Your own way — with the husband
you have chosen.”
“Who is that?”
“You know — this St. John Rivers.”
“He is not my husband, nor ever
will be. He does not love me: I do not
love him. He loves (as he can love, and
that is not as you love) a beautiful young lady called
Rosamond. He wanted to marry me only because
he thought I should make a suitable missionary’s
wife, which she would not have done. He is good
and great, but severe; and, for me, cold as an iceberg.
He is not like you, sir: I am not happy at his
side, nor near him, nor with him. He has no
indulgence for me — no fondness. He
sees nothing attractive in me; not even youth —
only a few useful mental points. — Then
I must leave you, sir, to go to him?”
I shuddered involuntarily, and clung
instinctively closer to my blind but beloved master.
He smiled.
“What, Jane! Is this true?
Is such really the state of matters between you and
Rivers?”
“Absolutely, sir! Oh,
you need not be jealous! I wanted to tease you
a little to make you less sad: I thought anger
would be better than grief. But if you wish
me to love you, could you but see how much I do
love you, you would be proud and content. All
my heart is yours, sir: it belongs to you; and
with you it would remain, were fate to exile the rest
of me from your presence for ever.”
Again, as he kissed me, painful thoughts
darkened his aspect. “My scarred vision!
My crippled strength!” he murmured regretfully.
I caressed, in order to soothe him.
I knew of what he was thinking, and wanted to speak
for him, but dared not. As he turned aside his
face a minute, I saw a tear slide from under the sealed
eyelid, and trickle down the manly cheek. My
heart swelled.
“I am no better than the old
lightning-struck chestnut-tree in Thornfield orchard,”
he remarked ere long. “And what right would
that ruin have to bid a budding woodbine cover its
decay with freshness?”
“You are no ruin, sir —
no lightning-struck tree: you are green and
vigorous. Plants will grow about your roots,
whether you ask them or not, because they take delight
in your bountiful shadow; and as they grow they will
lean towards you, and wind round you, because your
strength offers them so safe a prop.”
Again he smiled: I gave him comfort.
“You speak of friends, Jane?” he asked.
“Yes, of friends,” I answered
rather hesitatingly: for I knew I meant more
than friends, but could not tell what other word to
employ. He helped me.
“Ah! Jane. But I want a wife.”
“Do you, sir?”
“Yes: is it news to you?”
“Of course: you said nothing about it
before.”
“Is it unwelcome news?”
“That depends on circumstances, sir —
on your choice.”
“Which you shall make for me, Jane. I
will abide by your decision.”
“Choose then, sir — her who
loves you best.”
“I will at least choose —
her I love best. Jane, will you marry
me?”
“Yes, sir.”
“A poor blind man, whom you will have to lead
about by the hand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“A crippled man, twenty years
older than you, whom you will have to wait on?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Truly, Jane?”
“Most truly, sir.”
“Oh! my darling! God bless you and reward
you!”
“Mr. Rochester, if ever I did
a good deed in my life — if ever I thought
a good thought — if ever I prayed a sincere
and blameless prayer — if ever I wished
a righteous wish, — I am rewarded now.
To be your wife is, for me, to be as happy as I can
be on earth.”
“Because you delight in sacrifice.”
“Sacrifice! What do I
sacrifice? Famine for food, expectation for
content. To be privileged to put my arms round
what I value — to press my lips to what
I love — to repose on what I trust:
is that to make a sacrifice? If so, then certainly
I delight in sacrifice.”
“And to bear with my infirmities, Jane:
to overlook my deficiencies.”
“Which are none, sir, to me.
I love you better now, when I can really be useful
to you, than I did in your state of proud independence,
when you disdained every part but that of the giver
and protector.”
“Hitherto I have hated to be
helped — to be led: henceforth, I
feel I shall hate it no more. I did not like
to put my hand into a hireling’s, but it is
pleasant to feel it circled by Jane’s little
fingers. I preferred utter loneliness to the
constant attendance of servants; but Jane’s
soft ministry will be a perpetual joy. Jane suits
me: do I suit her?”
“To the finest fibre of my nature, sir.”
“The case being so, we have
nothing in the world to wait for: we must be
married instantly.”
He looked and spoke with eagerness:
his old impetuosity was rising.
“We must become one flesh without
any delay, Jane: there is but the licence to
get — then we marry.”
“Mr. Rochester, I have just
discovered the sun is far declined from its meridian,
and Pilot is actually gone home to his dinner.
Let me look at your watch.”
“Fasten it into your girdle,
Janet, and keep it henceforward: I have no use
for it.”
“It is nearly four o’clock
in the afternoon, sir. Don’t you feel
hungry?”
“The third day from this must
be our wedding-day, Jane. Never mind fine clothes
and jewels, now: all that is not worth a fillip.”
“The sun has dried up all the
rain-drops, sir. The breeze is still: it
is quite hot.”
“Do you know, Jane, I have your
little pearl necklace at this moment fastened round
my bronze scrag under my cravat? I have worn
it since the day I lost my only treasure, as a memento
of her.”
“We will go home through the
wood: that will be the shadiest way.”
He pursued his own thoughts without heeding me.
“Jane! you think me, I daresay,
an irreligious dog: but my heart swells with
gratitude to the beneficent God of this earth just
now. He sees not as man sees, but far clearer:
judges not as man judges, but far more wisely.
I did wrong: I would have sullied my innocent
flower — breathed guilt on its purity:
the Omnipotent snatched it from me. I, in my
stiff-necked rebellion, almost cursed the dispensation:
instead of bending to the decree, I defied it.
Divine justice pursued its course; disasters came thick
on me: I was forced to pass through the valley
of the shadow of death. His chastisements
are mighty; and one smote me which has humbled me for
ever. You know I was proud of my strength:
but what is it now, when I must give it over to foreign
guidance, as a child does its weakness? Of late,
Jane — only — only of late —
I began to see and acknowledge the hand of God in
my doom. I began to experience remorse, repentance;
the wish for reconcilement to my Maker. I began
sometimes to pray: very brief prayers they were,
but very sincere.
“Some days since: nay,
I can number them — four; it was last Monday
night, a singular mood came over me: one in which
grief replaced frenzy — sorrow, sullenness.
I had long had the impression that since I could
nowhere find you, you must be dead. Late that
night — perhaps it might be between eleven
and twelve o’clock — ere I retired
to my dreary rest, I supplicated God, that, if it seemed
good to Him, I might soon be taken from this life,
and admitted to that world to come, where there was
still hope of rejoining Jane.
“I was in my own room, and sitting
by the window, which was open: it soothed me
to feel the balmy night-air; though I could see no
stars and only by a vague, luminous haze, knew the
presence of a moon. I longed for thee, Janet!
Oh, I longed for thee both with soul and flesh!
I asked of God, at once in anguish and humility,
if I had not been long enough desolate, afflicted,
tormented; and might not soon taste bliss and peace
once more. That I merited all I endured, I acknowledged
— that I could scarcely endure more, I
pleaded; and the alpha and omega of my heart’s
wishes broke involuntarily from my lips in the words
— ‘Jane! Jane! Jane!’”
“Did you speak these words aloud?”
“I did, Jane. If any listener
had heard me, he would have thought me mad:
I pronounced them with such frantic energy.”
“And it was last Monday night,
somewhere near midnight?”
“Yes; but the time is of no
consequence: what followed is the strange point.
You will think me superstitious, — some
superstition I have in my blood, and always had:
nevertheless, this is true — true at least
it is that I heard what I now relate.
“As I exclaimed ‘Jane!
Jane! Jane!’ a voice — I cannot
tell whence the voice came, but I know whose voice
it was — replied, ‘I am coming:
wait for me;’ and a moment after, went whispering
on the wind the words — ‘Where are
you?’
“I’ll tell you, if I can,
the idea, the picture these words opened to my mind:
yet it is difficult to express what I want to express.
Ferndean is buried, as you see, in a heavy wood, where
sound falls dull, and dies unreverberating.
‘Where are you?’ seemed spoken amongst
mountains; for I heard a hill-sent echo repeat the
words. Cooler and fresher at the moment the gale
seemed to visit my brow: I could have deemed
that in some wild, lone scene, I and Jane were meeting.
In spirit, I believe we must have met. You no
doubt were, at that hour, in unconscious sleep, Jane:
perhaps your soul wandered from its cell to comfort
mine; for those were your accents — as
certain as I live — they were yours!”
Reader, it was on Monday night —
near midnight — that I too had received
the mysterious summons: those were the very words
by which I replied to it. I listened to Mr.
Rochester’s narrative, but made no disclosure
in return. The coincidence struck me as too
awful and inexplicable to be communicated or discussed.
If I told anything, my tale would be such as must
necessarily make a profound impression on the mind
of my hearer: and that mind, yet from its sufferings
too prone to gloom, needed not the deeper shade of
the supernatural. I kept these things then,
and pondered them in my heart.
“You cannot now wonder,”
continued my master, “that when you rose upon
me so unexpectedly last night, I had difficulty in
believing you any other than a mere voice and vision,
something that would melt to silence and annihilation,
as the midnight whisper and mountain echo had melted
before. Now, I thank God! I know it to
be otherwise. Yes, I thank God!”
He put me off his knee, rose, and
reverently lifting his hat from his brow, and bending
his sightless eyes to the earth, he stood in mute
devotion. Only the last words of the worship
were audible.
“I thank my Maker, that, in
the midst of judgment, he has remembered mercy.
I humbly entreat my Redeemer to give me strength to
lead henceforth a purer life than I have done hitherto!”
Then he stretched his hand out to
be led. I took that dear hand, held it a moment
to my lips, then let it pass round my shoulder:
being so much lower of stature than he, I served both
for his prop and guide. We entered the wood,
and wended homeward.